DemorraticAHatdpune, | Bellefo THANKSGIVING. { | i 1 Live fast, you selfish, thankful throng, | For life to-day is fair, ! And when the dinner comes along, Take in a goodly share! The future keeps just out of view : And sorrow waits ahead ; There may be days when some of you Will beg a bit of bread. The blessings of this day do not | Secure a future one : This is to thank the Lord for what | He has already done. | And every laugh, however gay, { By grief shall yet be quelled ; ! O'er each heart that is here to-day A funeral! must be held, | Laugh on in with careless voice, | As soon | grace is said! trod loves to see his folks rejoiced, No matter what's ahead. You're sure of this Thanksgiving day, Whose blessings on you fall A million thanks you should display For having lived at all. - Grief should be checked, with crafty plin, But ne‘er by dreading nursed ; Care for the future all you can, Then let it do its worst ! — Wir CARLTON, THANKSGIVING FOR TWO. BY FREDERICK A. OBER. The Widow Wilson’s farm had seen bet- ter and more prosperous days, and now was traveling backward. It began at the top of Brindle hill, where it was bounded by the county road, and straggled down to the lake shore, its hundred acres or so wandering over hills and dipping into hol- lows, until they terminated at the bay, with its rim of white and glistening sand. One of the most picturesque spots of earth, and right in the centip of if, crown- ing a rounded knoli, surrounded with stal- wart oaks and butternuts, squat the house of its owner. It was always a difficult spot to reach in winter, when the drifting snows piled high their white billows aguinst the low-eaved structure, and hid the windows from the outer world. But in summer it was a de- light, this moss-grown dwelling beneath the oaks, and at one tine had heen a home around whose hearthstone had gathered sons and daughters. Now it was desolate. The passing stranger would have but added it to the category of deserted farms. No sign of life was visible this bright Thanksgiving morn- ing ; from its wide paneled chimney no curl of smoke invaded the crisp and frosty air ; the light fall of snow that had covered the ground the night before showed no trace of footstep leading from the weather- beaten door. And yet there was a stir of life in the hollow among the trees, where the old barn tottered, ready for its fall. There a flock of fowl and turkeys wandered disconsolately about. In the adjacent stall an old horse stamped impatiently for his breakfast, and a forlern cow chafed rest- lessly at her stanchions. Except for these, the old farm was as silent as when its first owner carved it from the virgin wilderness. A rustling of the shrubbery that fringed the tall, stiff-ranked pines on the hill be- yond the barn told that a visitor was com- ing to Lonely Farm. A human head ap- peared in sight. It was crowned by a woolen cap, from beneath which pecred a pair of black, bright eyes. Their owner took off his cap and mopped his brow. He was a rugged country lad of 18, well-knit, and sturdy, with a pair of ruddy cheeks, white teeth and lips rosy, but with a droop of sadness, «ew England, always hard to her child- ren, had taken from this boy the home and mother that make Thanksgiving, even as it had taken from the widow all but the wretched framework of what had once been home. . ‘‘House looks like mother’s used to after she got so she couldn’t get about,” solilo- quized the boy, staring at the smokeless chimney. “I’ll bet there ain’t been no- body near the widder ina week, and I'll bet, while I’m a bettin,” that she nceds something. Guess I'll find out what’s the matter.’ He strode down to the house and knocked. There was no response. Only the crow in the oak tree was disturbed by the unwonted noise and flew away, with a caw of alarm. A second knock startled the fowl in the barnyard, who greeted him with a suppressed chuckle ; but there was no answer from within. ‘‘Guess I might as well go in. He pushed open the crazy door and entered the room which served as kitchen and sitting-room, all in one. A table stood in the centre of it, covered with a snowy cloth, and sct as if for supper. A tall clock ticked in the corner under the stairs, but its rythmatic beats seemed only to make the silence audible. ‘‘It seems kinder creepy, that’s a fact. Hope there ain’t nothin’ happened to her. Wonder where she is! P’raps she’s asleep.” He rapped loudly apd then put his ear down to the keyhole, listening intently. At first there was no response. Then he thought he heard a faint, quavering voice. “It’s me—Jem Hastings, I’ve come to see if you need anybody.’’ ‘‘Come in.”” The feeble voice struggled with a cough, then: ‘Yes, I’m so glad you've come. [I was taken faint yesterday and had just strength enough to crawl to bed. Perhaps’ — “What, an’ you ain’t had nothin’ to eat?’ ‘‘No,”” with a feeble smile. “Well, if you'll let me try, I'll make a cup of tea.” Jem closed the door, set his gun in a corner and looked around for the place in which the widow kept her stores. The dressers, ranged against the wall, were bright with old-fashioned pewter platters and china. Here he found a caddy of tea and then set about making a fire. A huge fireplace yawned at one side of the room, hung with black iron crane, from which was suspended a tea-kettle. The woodpile was outside, near the back door, and, brushing off the show, Jem soon had some dry wood, with which he made a roaring blaze. It was not long before he had the satisfaction of seeing the kettle send forth a volume of steam, aud a few minutes later he tapped again at the bedroom door with a tray, on it a tempting cup of tea and two well-buttered slices of bread. The bread had been intended for his luncheon, the gift of the farmer’s wife who pa.d for his services in ‘‘keep’’—New England wages. Wrapped in a shawl of Canton silk, the heirloom of a grandmother whose father once sailed from Salem to the Indies, the widow sank back into her comfortable arm- chair with a deep sigh of content. She closed her eyes from sheer weakness, while Jem tip-toed about the room, ‘setting things to rights,’’ and preparing the table for a prospective meal. To be sure, there was very little in sight, but he had faith | that there might be something in the cellar and in the cupboards, for the widow was { a silvery halo. ; and how young she looked. He paused a known in the township to have been a “good pervider’’ in her days of affluence. Through the narrow paned southern window an advance guard of the outside sunbeams came streaming in, one of them lighting the gray hair of the woman, with Jem thought he had never seen a woman who appeared so ‘‘lady-like’’ moment to regard her, and she opened her eyes. He retreated in confusion a step or two, the red blushes staining his honest, open face. “You’ve made me very happy, Jem; very thankful.” “We'll, ma'am, I'm glad of it. It’s Thanksgivin’.”’ “What! Really Thanksgiving day? | It’s the first time I've forgotten it—ever. | I must be growing old.” Jem grew bolder. *“There’s a turkey out in the barnyard. He ain’t very fat, but if you say so I'll help you fix a turkey dinner.” The widow urged no objections, and both fascinated at the prospect of a Thanksgiv- | ing dinner with themselves as host and hostess, the boy trudged out to the barn. Some sticks of hard wood were soon piled on the fire, and by the time Sir Tur- key was ready for the oven the widow had peeled the vegetables and dropped them in- to the mysterious depths of the steaming kettles, Jem logking on with glowing but bashful appreciation. A snowy cloth over a round table, with two seats opposite each other, is always an inspiring sight, and when topped by a steaming brown turkey, with all the ‘*fix- ings’’ of a turkey dinner the feast is one to melt hearts harder than that of the lonely widow and the homesick New England lad. “It is the happiest Thanksgiving dinner I had in many a year, my boy,’”’ she said to him, as he cleared away the dishes and brought out the dessert, of fragrant quince preserves. “May God bless you. And to think how the dreadful, gloomy morning has been turned to such bright sunshine by your coming !”’ . Jem turned to the window to hide some tears that would persist in squeezing them- selves oul of his eyes. ‘I wish she wouldn’t be_so sentimental,’ said he to himself, quite wrathfully. But to the wid- ow he said : “Why, ma'am, [ ain’t done nothin’ great ; no more’n you’d have done for me, I'll bet. I ain’t cnjoyed a dinner so, myself, sence I can remember. I wish I could jest stay here all the time.”’ A new light came into the widow’s faded gray cyes, born of a thought that had been struggling for expression for an hour or nore. ‘And why can’t you stay, Jem ?”’ “I could, ma’am, if I could come as— as partners !"’ It was out at last, the boy’s yearning for something as his own, and the chance he saw upon the widow’s farm. ‘I could fix things up,”” he went on eagerly, ‘‘and make the chickens lay eggs and the cows give milk—and”’ Jem stopped, but the widow’s respectful attention led him on. “I could earn my board in saving things that’s goin’ to waste. When I come through your wood-lot this mornin’ I no- ticed cords an’ cords of dead trees that ought to be cut an’ made firewood of. An’ dollars wuth there that'll all be spiled if it ain’t cut an’ sold pretty soon.” The boy hesitated, amazed at his au- dacity ; but the widow nodded her head, and smiled approval. ‘That is true, Jem. The farm is running down for the lack of someone to oversee out of doors. So, then, it is a bargain.”’ : . Al so this strange partnership began. The first winter Jem spent in thinning out the superfluous wood in the neglected lots, stacking up behind the house enough fuel to satisfy even the cravings of that yearning fireplace for years to come, and selling to the sawmill on the pond timber for shipping that came to quite $500. As the spring opened he was soon afield, continuing the good work of improvement, and ‘‘planting time’’ found the farm with more and earlier labor performed than it had ever before experienced. In front of the western door he threw out a platform, protected by a la‘tic2-work covering, and here the widow passed all the spare time she could snatch from her indoor duties. It had never occurred to anyone before that farm work might be made attractive. The widow had looked upon the beanties of her farm around her only through the kitchen window, or during a hasty trip to the well or farmyard. The latticed porch was a revelation to lier, and a haven of rest where she sat and mused during the long twilight of summer. “I never thought I should take such comfort here,” she said. ‘‘Before you came I was more than willing to give up the farm and go away. But now, Jem, I want to live here the rest of my life. I would not leave it for the world. ‘“That’s so, ma’am. It would have been a great mistake to leave the old place. Why, there ain’t a prettier view in all the world than this from your front door. If there is, then it is right there, down in the woods where the great trees meet overlicad, the brook sings a soft song of rest and the fern-covered banks stretch down to the pond. I never traveled any yet, but I don’t want to ; this suits me.” And he returned to his work with a cheery whistle that sent a thrill of satisfaction through the widow's heart. A wonderful change had heen affected by the time another year had rolled another Thanksgiving into the calendar. The roof of the old house no longer leaked ; the barn had been raised from its attitude of deep dejection, and its mows were crowded to bursting with hay and grain. The old horse spent his days chiefly in the pasture, while a younger and more vigorous animal did the work, assisted by a yoke of big and handsome oxen. The solitary cow now had plenty of company and frisky calves gambled about her in the summer time. There was no longer any doubt as to the availability of any of the fat gobblers for a Thanksgiving dinner. Thus the seasons succeeded one another with their measure of content. Each found the widow more and more depend- ent upon ner stalwart helper. She clung to him as she might have clung to the son of whom she had been deprived in the spring time of her wifehood. As her tot- tering footsteps were supported down the aisle of the village church, on a Sunday, few of the congregation knew that the handsome young man who watched over h:r so assiduously was not, in fact, her own son. Those who were cognizant of the relationship between the two shook their heads knowingly, saying to them- selves and to cach other: ‘Lucky boy, that ; stepped right into the farm, just as the old lady was about to leave it. He knows the side of his bread that he has the butter on.” But it is doubtful if Jem had ever given that a thought. So happy and content was he that the merely material conditions of his life had never troubled his conscious- ness. Only one thing troubled his thoughts as fer timber, there’s more’n a hundred’ of late. He was deeply stirred by the soft brown eyes of pretty Susie Jones, a choris- ter in the church ; Susie, who lived as he had done, with friends for board and keep, another of New England’s orphan. He never mentioned this daridg specula- tion, not even to the widow’; but her eyes, though growing dim, were acute enough to penetrate his honest soul. His whole life lay centered in the farm, which had be- come as essential to it almost as the air he breathed. But now there must be young life there. A pair of brown eyes persisted in dancing before his face, in woodpile, in field, in garden. And so it came to pass that'there was a wedding next Thanksgiving in the little cottage, now pretty with vines and cheery within. Susie was glad of so pleasant a place for the troth whiéh she was to plight with Jem, while he; lucky fellow, though | he was, could not take time to travel to Susie’s home, far away over the rough, hilly roads. ‘‘A wife’s a good thing.’’ he soliloquized to the widow the evening be- fore his marriage, ‘‘but there’s cows to be looked after and hens to be fed—more’n you could ‘tend to alone.” “That’s so, Jem,” smiling brightly, “and thanks to you for it all.” Under branches of autumn leaves from thelast redening trees, Jem and Susie prom- ised all things of the simple marriage ser- vice. Then came the country wedding supper. When the last guest had gone, driven away in the farm wagons that had clus- tered around the door all afternoon, the widow turned to Jem and Susie sitting bashfully in the firelight. ‘‘You’re my children, now, both of you,’’ she said. ‘Call me mother just once, Jem and Susie.” “Mother !”’ cried Jem taking the feeble hands together and kissing them tenderly, “‘my darling mother, dearest friend I ever Thanksgiving Dainties. Recipes for a Half-Dozen Kinds of Pudding. For transparent pudding: Cream a pound of butter and sugar together ; add eight well beaten eggs ; flavor the mixture with nutmeg. Line a pudding dish with thin puff paste, pour in the pudding and set in a very hot oven for ten minutes. Serve without sauce. ANGEL’S PUDDING. Beat four ounces of sugar and two ounces of butter together ; add four ounces of sift- ed flour, a pint of thick cream and the beaten whites of four eggs ; flavor with va- nilla ; bake in tart pans and cover with very stiff meringue. QUICK' PUDDING. Sift two cups of flour; add one table- spoonful of butter, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, three well-beaten eggs, with a pint and a half of milk ; flavor with extract of lemon ; turn into a greased pudding pan and set in a quick oven to bake for twenty minutes. Serve with hard sauce. BATTER PUDDING. Sift a quart of flour ; add half a cupful of melted butter, a teaspoonful of salt, sev- en well-beaten eggs, a teaspoonful of soda and two of cream of tartar, with sufficient sweet milk to make a thick batter ; turn into a greased mould ; bake in a very hot oven, and serve with rich pudding sauce. FIG PUDDING. Chop half a pound of figs and mix with a teacup of grated bread crumbs, a teacupful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of melted but- ter, four beaten eggs and five ounces of candied orange and lemon peel ; turn into a greased mould ; steam two hours and a- half. Serve with pudding sauce. ORANGE PUDDING. had.” She returned his loving glance, linger- ingly, gratefully, as they led. her to the door of her room. Next morning Jem knocked again at the Widow Wilson’s door just as he had done on that lonely thanksgiving day four years ago. This time not even a feeble voice answered his repeated calls. Three days later, as the neighbors strug- gled back from the little cemetery on the hill, 'Squire Lothrop drew Jem apart. “I s’spos you know the widder’s left the farm to you? No? Sho! It’s mighty strange she didn’t tell you. She made her will more’na year ago, and you’re her only heir. She seemed to set a lot by you, the widder did, and (lcoking around approv- ingly over the snow covered fields) I d’no’s I blame her. The last four years hev heen the peacefullest of her life, and she’s left her peace with you, for sure !”’ The End of the Turk. The dissolution of the Turkish Empire, so long hoped for and so often deferred, seems at last to be at hand. The final tragedy is like the death agony of some loathsome beast, and as the monster writhcs in his last struggles the situation of the helpless people of the region over which he rolls his slimy bulk is more wretched than it was when he was in health and merely devoured such individuals as were required to satisfy his appetite. But it is hard to see how the end can be much longer deferred. If the European powers could agree on a plan of partition, there would be no Turkey to-morrow. If they would merely take their hands off, the horrible mass of corruption would fall in pieces from ite own rottenness, and, even as it is, with all Europe working for delay, events are hastening to their destined con- clusion. The whole £¥mpire is decaying, but the process is most marked at three centres— Armenia, Crete and Macedonia. The situation of Armenia is the most deplor- able of all from the point of view of hu- manity, and the most shameful to the civi- lized powers that are responsible for it, but it is the least troublesome to the Turks. The Armenians have been dis- armed ; they cannot defend themselves, and as long as Europe does not object to their butchery, the Sultan can have them slaughtered with a mind at ease. But the Cretans and Macedonians are men of the same races that won the freedom of Greece, of Bulgaria, of Servia and of Montenegro. They have arms, which they are not at all averse to using, and they have mountain- ous retreats that make their extermination no holiday matter. With all Europe sit- ting on the lever the Cretan safety-valve keeps popping up, emitting angry hisses of escaping steam, and the pressure in Ma- cedonia, under similar circumstances, is becoming so great that an explosion may come at any moment. Diplomatists used to have an itch for partitions. when partition was a crime. Why is it that the partition of Turkey, which would be the noblest achievement of the nineteenth century, should be be- vond the capacigy of the powers that found it so easy to divide Poland ? ——He was an old man, bent and gray- haired ; but with an eye still as bright as that of « hawk. ‘I tell you, it’s pretty hard,’’ said he, as he left the polling booth. “For forty- five years I have voted, year after year, the straight Democratic ticket. This’’— The old man’s voice shook with sup- pressed emotion. ‘Is the first time I have ever cast a Re- publican vote !”’ ‘And what induced you to vote Repub- lican this time?’ asked a sympathetic bystander. ‘‘Was it silver 2’ ‘Silver ?”’ repeated the white-locked veteran, looking his interrogator indignant- ly in the eye. “Do I look like a man of that sort ?”’ ‘No,’ he added, shaking his head, sad- ly ; ‘‘it was not silver, it was a brand new twenty-dollar gold piece.” ——1It costs a round sum to be elected to Congress in some of the New York districts. The sworn return of James J. Belden, re- elected in the Syracuse district, states he expended $13,180 in campaign expenses, which is $3,180 more than the salary of a congressman for two years. The Repub- lican elected to the court of appeals ex- pended $3,555, and one of the superior court judges returns his expenditures at $3.590. This is a pretty heavy tax on the judiciary and hardly shows that rever- ence we have heen lately taught was the highest duty of the American citizen. It indicates also that the judges are slightly human in putting money where it will do the most good. Scene. Collier's cottage. Wife (leaving for the town, with a basket on her arm. )—An dae ye think, John, that I’ve minded everything I’m to get when in the toon ? . John—Ye micht mind to bring me in half an ounce of snufl. Wife—'Deed, no John ; the times are t)0 hard for sic extravagance! Ye maun jist tickle yer nose wi’ a straw !——Glascow (Scotland) News. Grate the rind of three oranges ; squeeze i over the juice of one lemon and the oranges; | mix with a pound of sugar, half a cup of | butter and the beaten yolks of half a dozen | eggs ; pour intoa deep pudding dish and | set in a hot oven to bake for fifteen min- | utes. Take out, spread with meringue, set J hake in the oven for one minute. Serve ! with lemon sauce. i | 1 The tender parts of a head of celery cut very fine are required for celery sauce. | Pour on just enough water to cover. Cov- | er the saucepaw and let the contents sim- mer for one hour. Mix together two table- spoonfuls of flour and four of butter, and after the celery has hoiled one hour add this, also a pint of cream, with salt and pepper to taste. Boil up once and serve. A number of people like chestnut sauce with roast turkey and oyster or celery sauce with boiled turkey. For the first savory dish boil a pint of shelled chestnuts for three minutes, remove the dark skins {and put to cook in a quart of stock for about an hour. Remove and mash very fine. Put one tablespoonful of flour and two of butter in a saucepan, cook until it is a light brown, stir into the stock and chestnuts ond cook two minutes. Add a tablespoonful of lemon juice, salt and pep- per to taste. Boil up once, then rub through a sieve. Instead of the ordinary bread stufling, which, however, can be made to taste de- licious, I will ‘give a recipe for chestnut stuffing. Blanch twenty-five large chest- nuts by removing the shells and throwing into boiling water. Take off the dark skins by rubbing with a rongh towel. Cover with boiling water, simmer for one hour, drain and mash fine. Chop one pound of veal and one half pound of salt pork very fine, add the chestnuts to this, also half a teaspoonful of pepper, two tablespoonfuls of salt and a cupful of stock or water. A delicions desert consisting of whipped cream, frozen coffee and gelatin is compar- atively new. Dissolve a fourth of a box of gelatin in the same quantity of cold water, add a cupful of clear, hot, strong coffce and a cupful of sugar. Stir until the su- gar is dissolved, then strain through a cloth and cool. Add to this a cupful of whipped cream and stir. When it begins to thicken put in a freezer and stir until frozen hard. Whip a pint of cream as thick as possible, sweeten with half a cup- ful of powdered sugar and add a teaspoon- ful of vanilla. Puta layer of the frozen mixture in a mould, at least an inch thick, pressing in all around the sides. Fill up the centre with the whipped cream, then cover the upper side with the frozen coffce. Put the cover on the mould and pack for two hours. THAKSGIVING DAY MENU. BREAKFAST. Fruit. Sugar and Cream. Hamburg Steak. Scalloped Potatoes. Buckwheat Cakes. DINNER. Oysters on the Half Shell. Consomme a la Royal. Roast Turkey. Oyster Stuffing. Cranberry Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Peas. Browned Sweet Potatoes. Mayonnaise of Lettuce. ‘Wheatlet. Coffee. Wafers. Cheese. Pumpkin Custard. Mince Pie. Fruit. Nuts. Raisins. Coffee. SUPPER. Thin Sliced Tongue. Preserves. Tea. Tr THANKSGIVING DINNER. Roast Turkey. Bread Stuffing Cranberry Sauce. Mashed Potatoes. Peas. Mayonnaise of Celery. Mince Pie. Coffee. ——A few days ago a gentleman who had drank to the health of his friends too often in his rounds among the grocers to sell a wagon load of produce, was somewhat the worse for the imbibing. Success had not crowned his cfforts up to the time he met a well-known Bryan grocer, when he inquired if he wanted to buy any ‘‘on- (hic)ions, butter, cabh(hic)age, potatoes, sausage, vinegar, (hic). ‘No,’ said the merchant. A very strong expression es- caped his lips as he crawled into the wagon, to which he added, ‘‘you can’t sell anything since McKinley’s election.’ Now, that business is improving, we should not forget that the Wilson tariff law is in operation. If there isto be any praise to be distributed why shouldn’t it come in for a share? When we had hard times it was blamed for them. Under an equitable arrangement, therefore it should be given credit for the improvement that has been manifested. ‘It should be further understood that there is no prospect of an early repeal of the Wilson law. So any- thing like that cannot be the reason for the better times. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. A Around the World Route. | The newest project that is broached by | Yankee capitalists is the establishment of a globe circling line of travel It is pro- posed to construct a swift line of steam- ships to traverse the Pacific, which shall be ready by the time the trans-Siberian rail- way is completed, ang by means of that line and such arrangements as can he made with existing land and occan routes of travel to complete the circuit of the planet, and enable anybody, for a comparatively moderate sum, to far surpass the record of Phineas Fogg, whose imaginary journey. completed in 80 days has furnished the world with so much entertainment. While the present reports as to the project may be in- correct, there is little doubt but that some- thing of the sort will be provided as soon as the Siberian route is completed to the Pacific. When that is done the feat that made some of the ancient navigators im- mortal and that required so much of the enterprise, endurance, courage and skill can be accomplished by the nost common- place individual without any serious sacri- fice or personal comfort. And the drum- mer will soon be able to rattle off as fa- miliarly the unpronouncable names of far Siberia, and to relate incidents of his deal- Arizona. train at the Union station and, starting westward, inside of 30 days he can roll in- to the other end, having in the meantime to conquer which men have labored through all timg. In accordance w their usual enterprise the railways provide us with such trams as the Trans- Terrestrial Express, or the Globe Girdling Flyer, and the bureau of information will be compelled to answer questions as to whether there is a stop at Novi Novorgod for breakfast, as to whether there is dinner between Irktusk and Koblonsk, or what the charges for excess baggage are between Viadivistock and St. Petersburg. Special round the world excursions will be gotten up, and special fast trains provided to make the run in specially quick time, i while the novelty lasts, and when we meet time we will not be surprised when he tells us, in answer to where he has been, that he needed alittle rest and change and took ra run round the world. But this will be but a small part of the effect which the competion of this great undertaking of the Russian government is likely to have. It avill open up new ave- nues for a vast commerce which will imme- diately increase by leaps and bounds as soon as it is released from the restrictions which were placed upoa it by the neceessi- ty of being conducted by caravans across Siberia. That country is of vast extent, who have not given the subject study. A ing rich returns to labor and enterprise, and and could be settled by intelligent enter- prising Yankees, it would grow just as our great West has grown during the last gen- eration. But even as itis it cannot but feel very strongly the influences of the fa- cilities of modern civilization, for even the check enterprise or wholly block the spread of intelligence. The completion of a railroad across Asia and the consequent development of Siberia cannot but hasten the general awakening of the vast hordes of China which has been begun as a result of the war with Japan. The teeming millions of that hive of hu- manity cannot long be uninfluenced by the progress that is going on around them, and when they awake from their long sleep of Oriental conservatism and. become active factors in the general forward movement of the world, Asia will become a vast field of enterprise whose activities will be felt in every channel of trade and commerce Igting the difference that would be put wpon the face of things if the millions of ‘Asia should become even half as prosperous as the average of European populations. It would give an impetus to civilization exceeding that which was produced by the discovery of America. When we consider what has been done in Japan in a little more than a generation, it is not extrava- gant to expect that very many of us will live to see the majority of the people of Asia keeping step to the march of civiliza- Nicknames of the States. California-—Bear State. Inhabitants. Pio- neers or Argonauts. . : anasedesentennial State (admitted in 187€.) Delaware—Diamond State. Inhabitants, Blue Hen’s Chickens. Florida—Land of Flowers. Inhabitants, Crackers (applied to the ‘poor whites.’’) Kansas—Sunflower State, Prohibition State or Bleeding Kansas. Maine-—From Maine, France. having been settled bv French Catholics. Inhabitants Down-Easters. Nevada—Snow Mountains. New Jersey—Inhabitants, Jerseyites or Clam Catchers. New Mexico—Inhabitants, Greasers. Pennsylvania—Inhabitants, Quakers or Broadbrims. Utah—Inhabitants, Latter Day Saints. Virginia—Inhabitants, F. F. V's (First Families of Virginia.) Washington—Northwest. Washingtonians. West Virginia—Pan Handle State. Wyoming—\Woman Suffrage State, In explanation of the name, *‘Crackess,”’ is applied to the ‘‘poor whites’ of Florida and’ Georgia, and, to some extent, to the same class of people in the Carolinas, that a hundred years ago or more, the British Government released from imprisonment a number of burglars, or ‘‘eracksmen,’’ on condition that they would emigrate to Amer- ica. The ‘‘cracksmen’’ accepted the posi- tion and settled in the woods southward of the Alleghenies. Inhabitants, ——The folding bed Las gathered in an- other victim in Chicago. Warren IJ. Ma- son, President of the Chicago Acetylene Gas and Carbide Company, arose during the night to see what time it was. In get- ting back into bed he jarred the top so that it fe!l upon him breaking his back and kill- him. A few more victims ought to rele- gate this insane contrivance to the junk shop. —— “What will it cost,”’ asked young Cholly’s father, *‘to give my boy an educa- tion?’? ‘“The Lord only knows,’ replied the professor, eyeing the youth thought- [ fully ; “but you can put him through col- | lege for about $2,000.” YET SIE EEA | | FCR AND ABOUT WOMEN" Bring children up to sleep in the dark, 2%1t is much better for their eyes, the com- plete darkness being an entire rest. Dark green or blue curtains are the best for bed- rooms, and they should be drawn across the window to prevent the glare of the morning light falling too strongly upon the eyes. Never place a child's bed opposite a window, as the bright light falling upon the face in sleep is exceedingly bad for the sight. : Hands that are coarsened by exposure and housework can be made soft and white by a little attention, as follows: Take about one pint of fine white sand, and put it in a wash basin, which fill three | parts up with hot soft scapy water. But- termilk and sulphur soaps are pure and nice for the skin, as well as deliciously per- fumed and refreshing. Wash the hands in thissoapy water, rub- bing them thoroughly with the sand ; then rinse them: in tepid oatineal water, and afterwards. thoroughly dry then. vushing back the quicks and pressing the tips so as to keep them narrow and the nails nicely The traveler will then be able to take a | girdled the carth and crossed every barrier | that nature has enterposed to travel, and | a friend whom we have missed for a short | the plains, the mountains and steppes of | 1001 like braid. in the the globe. There is no calcu- | rounded. At night the washing in oat- meal water can be repeated, and after dry- ings with the strange peoples of that vast | ing them, rub in a little *emolliment to territory, as he is now to entertain his com- | soften: the skin and keep up the natural panions regarding the peculiarities of Geo- | oil so essential for obtaining that softness gia Crackers or the robusi etiquette of | and delierey which wonien can least afford to lose, for a soft white hand isa grand thing. Sleeping in gloves after rubbing in the | emolliment tends to whiten the bands, but [it is as well to cut the tips off, so as to | leave the nails exposed, otherwise the | warmth renders them soft and brittle. Those who are afraid of the back of the | hand presenting a sticky appearance in- Ath stead cf applying glycerine after drying the will | hands, can rub them well with powdered starch or some other harmless toilet pow- der. The effect of the powder is magical. The roughened skin is cooled, soothed and healed, bringing and insuring the greatest | degree of comfort from this by no means insignificant annoyance. Oatmeal water is wonderfully softening and-whitening to the skin, and is, there- fore, much to be recommended for red and neglected hands and florid complexions. Many ladies use oatmeal instead of soap, for it is cleansing and beneficial. Tie up a handful of ordinary oatmeal in muslin, and let it soak in the basin ali night. It will rgive the water a niilky tinge, and will he found very cooling and softening. Toilet oatmeal, scented with violets, isa favora- ite substitute for soap. Black trimmings have Leen revived again with great furore, and the use of the nar- row black velvet ribbon is becoming more popular every day. Rows and rows of it are seen on most of the newest gowns, the favorite width about a quarter of an inch, and it is put on by sewing only one edge, leaving the other free. This certainly pre- vents the stiff look, which, when it was | sewed on both edges, very often made it It seems an odd fad to | put it on muslin gowns, but on pale pink and its resources are not realized by those | 1 yelin, or indeed, on any of the delicate i colors, it is much used on the flounces and great portion of it is like our own country, | ues. equally fertile and equally capable of yield- | : Black satin is used to make the foided ! corselets and bodice-shaped belts, which, if it were under a government equally free | when they are becoming, are extremely so, { and “when unbecoming should be avoided i like the plague. Straps from the shoulders | to the bust are often put on in black satin. i They are finished with a button of rhine- | stones and a fall of lace, and, though it is | an odd caprice, it is one that finds favor. despotic government of Russia cannot | pojeros are worn more than ever separate | from and as auxiliary to the bodice, and [ richly trimmed or embroidered. Buttons will be much worn, placed everywhere, without the least idea of being used or use- ful, only as ornaments. As to the skirts of dresses, they are made clearing the ground : they are gored rather in the umbrella style, but not much gored at the back, leaving fullness enough te make three flat double plaits at the back. The skirts of thick materials are generally made plain ; if trimming is used, it must be flat galons or passementeries. Immense use is being made of braid and of garnitures of all sorts composed of sou- tache and cord. Some of the tight-fitting coats are entirely covered with vermicelli | designs in soutache ; others are trimmed | with military braid and frogs. The postmistress of Gibraltar is Miss Margaret Cresswell, who receives the hand- some salary of $3,500 a year. She is alse superintendent of the various postoffices on the north African coast. The big picture hat that women have worn to theatres with such infinite pleasure is now on the wane—that is to say, none but those who are so bad or homely that they dare not take off their hats or wear mites of bonnets thinks of wearing them to any public assemblage, not even to church. Heretofore no one cared whether big or lit- tle hats were worn to church. In fact, I believe that most persons rather liked them they could enjoy delicious little surrepti- tious catnaps. Mrs. Fashion has now put her foot down, and the unfortunate woman who wears a big hat toa theatre is put down at once as one of three things, each equally reprehensible. One is, ‘‘She is toe poor to have a honnet and hat both,’’ or ‘She is bald and can’t go bareheaded,’’ or ‘She is no better than she should be and is trying to attract attention.’”” -To be able to go bareheaded to the theatre makes dainty little opera hoods, fascinators and scarfs all necessary. Loose coats are the prevailing style for outdoor garments. They are a certain sort of relief from the monotony of the cape or she tight coat, and are thought by many to possess a considerable amount of chic and dash. All this depends. On a slight, wil- lowy figure they may be immensely fetch- ing, but only on such a figure. The loose coat is a trifle longer than the waist quite free and loose all round, and "is plain or plaited, according to the material. The smartest models fit snugly across the bust and shoulders, as well as under the arms, bt flare out, both back and front, in single or double sets of bhox-plaits, gradua- ting from a narrow width at the top to a considerable width at the bottom. These coats are hy far the most effective when made as a part of the suit. They do not seem so detached as when a separate coat of this pattern is worn. A smart costume comprising a new narrow skirt and an Em- pire coat built of pale bisenit colored mel- ton is handsomely braided with black silk cord. The skirt, according to the latest man- dates, clings at the front and sides, spread- ing out in a fan shape at the back with im- mense fullness caught into a narrow point at the top. The front breadth is outlined by the braid simulating a panel. The jaunty coat is exceedingly short, with broad turned back lapels at the front, stiffened and edged with the braid.