Deworeaic Watch. Bellefonte, Pa., March 19, 1897. A CHARACTER. He was always a saying : “It's all for the best ;” No matter what fortune was bringing. And he did what he could—left to heaven the rest, And went on his pathway a singing ! By day and by night—in the dark, in the light You'll find him serene and contented ; The world, to his notion, was treating him right, And his way with its roses was scented. His life was a lesson all comforting—sweet ! A life that was kind and forgiving, For who, when the sharp thorns are piercing his feet, Can thank the good Lord that he's living ? But sometimes I think when the heart in the breast Is sick with its sorrow and grieving, If things never happen at all “for the best," We can make them the best by believing ! ADAM. BX LISETTE W. REESE. The postmaster stretched a greasy hand across his grocer’s counter and held out a letter to the tall and middle-aged woman standing there. ‘*Miss—Adelaide—Spring. for you I guess.” ‘‘Oh, thank you,” she said indifferently. She slipped the letter into her basket and walked out of the store. One glance had told her the writer. Her lilac calico gown, laid away for years in a garret trunk, was dimly reminiscent of him. He had been in her mind a good deal the past week. The pike curved upward to the moun- tains, a dusty, warm-colored line, with here a house, there an orchard or some pas- ture land beside it. It had rained the night before, and the sudden little winds that beat down it were thick with the late August odors, that of withering grass or the ripening apples. Puffs of this red dust followed the tall woman up the road. She carried her head high as she walked. ‘Her stately name seemed to suit her. Un- der her thoughts and over and through them ran that one of her letter. ‘‘Adelaide ! Adelaide !”’ . She turned. Jane Roseborough held her skirts well up out of the dust as she came. Her round, good-natured face shone like a full moon from under her starched sunbonnet. “I have just been down to the drug store after some liniment,’’ she stopped to say. ‘‘I wonder what makes you walk so fast, Adelaide? You only had a minute ahead of me.”’ “I didn’t know you were following.” ‘You ain’t as fat as I am, Adelaine, or you'd realize how I feel. Well, let's go on.” “I guess the worst of the hot spells over,’’ said Adelaide a minute later. ‘‘I hope so anyway.’’ Jane was staring wide-eyed at her neighbor. ‘‘How old- timey you look, Adelaide! I believe you had a dress like that when he first came to see you.’’ ‘Who?’ asked Adelaide, unflinch- ingly. te ‘‘Adam.”’ They toiled along, one heaving and crimson, the other erect and high-headed. A loaded hay wagon, moving ponderously in the opposite direction, went by them. It seemed to Adelaide that the farmer’s boy, perched on top, looked at her cur- iously. / ‘‘He’s been talkinga good deal about you to-day, Adelaide.’’ “Who 9”? ‘‘Adam.” The tall woman’s face was like stone. ‘‘He just came back last night. I tell you I was mighty glad tosee him. Eigh- teen years is a long time to do without see- ing your only brother.’ Adelaide kept dumb. ‘His wife's dead, and his children’s dead, and he’s come back here to stay— that is—that is—'’ She ended vaguely. ‘‘Jane Roseborough !"’ “Well, Adelaide?’ *‘You needn't be afraid to say anything to hurt. You can talk all you want to.’ There was a moment’s silence. ‘Adelaide !”’ “Well 2” re ‘What was it that made you and Adam fall out ?”’ The only sound in the road was that of their mufiled feet going along through the dust. Farther down the hay-wagon still lumbered. Adelaide measured out her words when she spoke ; there was a snap to them* “I’ve never told anybody yet, and I never expect to.”’ ’ ‘I didn’t think you would,’ said Jane, shrilly. “but I thought I'd ask, anyhow. Do you see this?’’ holding up the package in her hand ; “it’s liniment. Do you know what he’s gone and done to himself ?”’ “No.” ‘He was fixing up my grape vine for me this morning, and he slipped and fell and hurt his back. ‘The doctor says he'll have to keep quiet for a week. Adam al- ways was unlucky about some things. When he was a baby he didn’t do any- thing but bump his head, and when he got older he stumped his toe. They used to call him Stumping Adam.” They were coming to a small frame house set well back from the road. Two rows of box, each bush as tall asa man, led up to the front door. - ‘‘How’s Ellen ?”’ persisted Jane. ‘‘She’s gone down to Haversham.”’ ‘John Emmet sticks as close as ever, don’t he? You’ll miss her when she goes.”’ *‘She ain’t married yet.” They had reached the stopped, irresolute. ‘‘You might let by- gones be bygones,’”” she blurted out. “You might send him a word or two, Ade- laide. He hasn’t forgotten you.”’ “It’s no use going on like that Jane Roseborough.”’ “I know it ain’t. Well, good-by.” “‘Good-by,”" said Adelaide. She lifted the latch and passed austerely along between the tall rows of box. ‘‘Miss Adelaide ! Miss Adelaide !”’ “Oh, dear !”’ she said. Back of the little house stretched a fat vegetable garden, and over the fence that divided it from the green, alley-like lane beyond, hung the owner of the voice, young, stalwart’ white shirted. ‘‘Heard anything from Ellen Miss Adelaide ?" ‘Not a word.’”” She put down her bas- ket and faced him judicially. ‘What's the matter between yon and Ellen, John Emmet?’ He groaned. “Who began it >” ‘Ellen. She saw me stopping down the road talking to one of the Bean girls, I only asked her how her mother was, and I couldn’t run right off when she began to tell me all about the old lady’s rheumatism. I Something gate. Jann lately, just stuck it out, though by the time she was through I felt myself all wrapped up in red flannel, with a hot iron dragging at each foot. And Ellen got jealous, and wouldn’t listen toany thing I said, and the next day she was down in Haversham. Miss Adelaide, she’s been there a week,and I haven’t heard a word since.’’ “That's like Ellen.” ““T love the very ground she walks on,”’ he cried vehemently. She looked at him kindly. it’ll all come right !"’ He swung himself off down the lane. She watched him with a new and yet strangely familiar pang at her heart. It seemed to her as if she were listening to some old story again. In the house she remembered her letter. She read it seated on the edge of a chair in “I guess her solemn little parlor. Adelaide : I'm coming back to Green Meadow just to see’ you. ADAM. Her face hardened, grew soft, and har- dened again. At last she cried out : ‘“‘But he got married, he got married !”’ and flung the letter from her. Over the mantel in a cheap gilt frame hung the photograph of a young girl. Her face was dimly like Adelaide’s. She rose and crossed over to it, and shook her finger at the soft and smiling eyes. ‘Is that the reason you went off to Ha- versham ?’’ she hegan, sharply. ‘It was ‘Aunt Adelaide’ this, and ‘Aunt Adelaide’ that, until I said yes. You ought to have said : ‘I’m going away “and make a fool of myself.” It’s in your blood, Ellen Spring. It was in your father’s blood, and in his father’s before him, and way back as long as there was any Springs. We're all alike. © IT wouldn’t make up with Adam Roseborough, and you won’t make up with John Emmet, and you'll be sorry for it all the rest of your life.”” Her voice was trembling as she drew toward the end ; her last words were almost a wail. She picked up the letter again and held it out full in the face of the mysterious likeness. ‘‘And look at this, Ellen Spring ! But I can’t make up my mind to answer it. I'm soft one minute and hard the next. He got married and I stayed single. Seems to me I can't get over his taking a wife. I can’t---I can’t. She plucked at the waist of the gown she wore. ‘Ellen Spring, did you ever see this trunk this morning, where it’s been folded up ‘most 20 years. I knew he was com- ing, and I wanted something to put me in mind of him. He always liked this lilac so. That’s what you'll come to, Ellen Spring. You’ll hunger abd thirst and find nothing to satisfy you but a rag or old rib- bon or an old pile of letters or something else. Some other woman'll get your hangs: ness, and you’ll sit and look on and make out you don’t care.” Her voice was stern and appealing and passionate by turns. It came back in tink- ling echoes across the empty room. It seemed to her as if the house were full of ghosts. Then she said suddenly: right up now and take it off.” She climbed the steps to the garret with the letter still in her hand. The blacken- ed door ereaked ; she found herself for the second time that day in the dim place, antique with the scent of herbs. The trunk out of which she had taken the gown a few hours before stood under the sloping eaves. She crawled toward it on her hands and knees, and dragged it out to the middle of the floor. Then she began mechanically to unfasten her dress, and little by little as she did so, there grew out of the half light in the room the figure of another woman, younger than herself by some 18 years, who watched her with sad and reproachful eyes. Herself, in truth, in the likeness of her youth, the youth she had flung from her with a stubborn hand. She opened the trank. An odor of camphor struck across that of the herbs. Here lay her wedding things, in careful and separate folds, berihhoned and be-. ruffed, yellowing with age. She ran her fingers along the top-most garment ; it was trimmed with rows of some delicate, hand- knit lace, and she remembered having walked two miles in the sun to beg for the pattern. Below this showed a loosened breadth of something fine and dove-color- ed. It was the dress in which she had ex- pected to marry Adam Roseborough. She gave it a long look ; then smoothed the lilac calico into decent creases, and laid it down in a heap on the rest, and the letter last of all. She felt as if she had just fin- ished making a shroud. Late that afternoon her niece came home. “I thought you were going to stay anoth- er week,’’ said Adelaide. “I got tired of it,’’ said the girl. She dragged out a chair and sat down on it. ‘‘Yon needn’t get me any supper. I’m not hungry.”’ Her aunt stopped in her passage across the kitchen. ‘John Emmet was 'ronnd here to-day, and he told me all about it. He’s most crazy for you to make up, Ellen.”’ *‘I feel's if I'd rather die than do it.”’ Adelaide Spring set her dishes down again on the table, and looked curiously at her. *‘I’'m going to tell yon something,’’ she began. ‘‘I guess you've heard about Adam Roseborough ? And that once he and I were going to be married, and then we had a quarrel, and we never made up, and he went away and got another wife ? Every- body in the village knows that story. Well, he’s back here again at his sister Jane's. He’s come back just to see me. I got a letter from him this morning, and he told me so. But it’s too late, Ellen Spring.” ‘Well 2”? said the girl. “But don’t you go and make a fool of yourself like me. I'm too old to change, but you're young, and you can ; you must.”’ ‘What was it about 2’ asked Ellen. “He thought I talked too much to the minister. We had just got him, and he was handsome and had a tongue. And I said I would, and Adam said I mustn’t, | and there it all ended. Adam begged and begged, bat I held out, and so he stopped begging and went away.” The young face stared up into the mid- dle-aged one. “I look at you, Aunt Adelaide, and it seems as if I were looking at myself, only older.” “And I look at you,” said Adelaide, “and it scems as if yon were me, only younger.’’ The rattle of china sounded again. Ade- laide’s heels made clicking noises over the bare kitchen floor. ‘You go up to bed, Ellen,” she said, suddenly ; ‘‘you’re as pale as a ghost. I’H bring you a bowl of hot tea.” It grew late ; the light faded. From one of her windows she could.see the Rose- borough chimneys, showing very black and plain against a sky that was all pale rose and emerald. From the stove came a pleasant bubbling and boiling, and the room was full of a “I'm going lilac calico before ? I pulled it out of the | homely odor. It was time to take Ellen her tea. The girl drank the steaming liquid down at one gulp. ‘‘Aunt Adelaide !”’ “Well 2” “I’ve been lying here and thinking about what you told me.” : “Well on ‘‘If you make up with Mr. Roseborough I’ll make up with John Emmet.”’ Adelaide turned on her in a sudden pas- sion. “I don’t see why you should try to make me do that, Ellen.”’ “I’ll do just what you do,” said Ellen. She had been sitting up ; she lay down again. ‘‘Suppose somebody that said he cared all the world for you went off, and forgot, and got married?’ asked the older woman. ‘‘You wonldn’t let him marry you, Aunt Adelaide. I don’t blame him.”’ ‘“You’d remember it if John Emmet treated you that way.’’ “I'd die!” Ellen sat up once more. ‘Oh, it seems to me that if you “yield, I'll yield, too.” A curtain flapped in the wind that was pouring down the pike. Up from the gar- den came the old and straitened odor of box. A door creaked. Adelaide Spring went falteringly out of the room. Once more she climbed the stair to thegarret. The minutes passed ; it grew dark outside. When she returned she carried over her arm the lilac calico she had worn to the store that morning. She began putting it on ; her fingers trembled ; a look of her girlhood came into her face. Ellen watched her. “I'm ready,’ she said, at last. Late August pinks bloomed thickly along the garden path Adelaide trod that night. She stoopéd and pulled a great handful. The pike was a dim track running east and west ; there was no moon ; the stars were scattered and few. Far ahead shone light in a window. It was lit in Jane Roseborough’s little parlor, and behind it was the lover of Adelaide’s youth She hurried toward it. The gusts plucked her by the skirts ; they beat the spice out of the pinks she had gathered. Vague whiffs of them reached her now and then. The light drew nearer. The shrubs in a corner of the Roseborough front yard sway- ed in a sea of glory. Adelaide knocked. Jane opened the door. Adelaide did not see Jane ; she was blind to the shadowy other figures in the room ; she saw only Adam Roseborough sitting pale and middle-aged by the.chim- ney place. ‘I’ve come to see how you are, Adam.” She held out the pinks. His hand caught hers and them in the same grasp. - “I've thought of you every hour since I’ve been here, and long before,’”’ he said. ‘‘You ain't changed a bit, Adelaide.”’—N. Y. Outlook. India's Tanning Industry. Leather 8aid to Be as Good ae the English Ar- ticle. The tanning industry in British India ie steadily assuming important dimensions. Last year's exports of tanned skins and hides by sea to foreign countries indicated a steady annual expansion, an in of 42 per cent being shown th v§ years. The trade-i i to which there seems to be prospects of still further devel- opment on a large scale. In the case of finished leather goods a very general im- ression has hitherto prevailed that Eng- ish leather was infinitely superior to the Indian article, and - to a great extent gov- ernment and private purchasers hive been content to buy the censiderably higher cost of British made articles in the belief that they were getting relatively hetter value for their money. This, however, can no longer be accepted as a general rule, prac- tical experience iia numberless instances proving the contrary. The foremost leather manufacturers in India keep well abreast of the times, and have shared in all that the application of modern science has done for the tanning in- dustry? Recent comparative experiments undertaken in England between artillery harness made of Indian leather turned out in the Government harness and saddlery works at Cawnpore, and the same made in England of home-produced leather, proved the former to be the stronger; and pre- sumably, there could hardly have been a severer test. Cawnpore is the centre, no doubt, of a great leather industry, but one which is probably in its infancy as yet. Operations locally are in the meantime apparently confined to the production of material suf- ficent in quantity to meet the demands of manufactured articles. In the foreign ex- port trade in tanned hides and skins, Mad- ras, far to the front, five-sixths of the total exports from India being shipped from that seaport. It Baffles the Doctors. Miss Lizzie Kellagher, of Locust Gap, near Shamokin, was taken suddenly ill just after eating her dinner on Monday last, up to which time she had beengin the enjoy- ment of apparent good healthy Since Mon- day she bas been confined to her bed and often lies in a comatose condition for hours. During her lucid intervals she speaks in a rational way of some girl friends who have recently died, and insists upon it that she has seen and conversed with them during her period of somnolency. Some time ago she sustained a fall, and it is now thought her skull was injured, and that her illness is due to some foreign pressure on the brain. An operation will be performed in a day or two to determine if such is the case. Her condition has created much in- terest among the medical profession. Floods on the Mississippi. The Highest Water in Twenty-Five Years—Levees Protected by Guards Who Shoot. Last Sunday the Mississippi river was ingher than since the establishment of the weather office in 1872. "The rise Monday was slightly above Lalf a foot. On all the islands near and in the lowlands of Arkan- sas there was great suffering and loss of live stock and property, but no authentic re- ports have been received of persons being drowned. People are leaving the lowlands for this side of the river and bringing all the stock and property they can. The levees were closely watched, and 20 shots were fired at the steamer Bluff City because she went nearer to the embankments than he guards thought she should. 4 ——Arizona Al—‘‘Wal, what do you think of that? Here's Jim goin’ an’ gittin’ married !”’ Chloride Charley—‘‘Wal, that’s the way of the world !” Arizona Al—'Right enough ; but look at this : ‘No cards.” That’s what comes of marryin’ inter a pious family.” © Corbett and Fitzsimmons. History of Their Scraps From 1894 to the Present Time. > On the night of Sept. 26, 1894, Robert Fitzsimmons defeated Dan Creedon by knocking him out in two rounds in the arena of the Olympic club, New Orleans. A few hours after the fight Wm. A. Scholl, president of the Olympic club, sent the fol- lowing telegram to Champion J. J. Cor- bett : ‘‘Fitzsimmons has signed articles of agreement to meet yon in February for the world’s championship, for a purse of $25,- 000 offered by the Olympic club, and a $10,000 side bet. That was the beginning of fistic hostili- ties between Corbett and Fitzsimmons. The bold challege of the Australian sur- prised the majority of sports in the coun- try, but the most surprised man was Cor- bett himself. Fitzsimmons issued an open challenge to Corbett and the latter answer- ed in an open letter. In the letter Corbett declared he would not accept the challenge unless ‘‘you prove yourself a .champion heavyweight, and not a middleweight.” He then asked Fitzsimmons to meet Steve O'Donnell, ‘an undefeated man.’’ The Australian answered that he would meet O’Donnell after he had won the champion- ship. Corbett again refused to accept the challenge, but announced that in a week he would deposit $10,000 and invite all the fighters in the world to cover the amount. On October 3, 1894, the board of direc- tors of the Olympic club formally declared Fitzsimmons ‘‘heavyweight champion of the world,’’ because it was in the Olympic club that Corbett gained the title by de- feating J. L. Sullivan. The declaration, of course, was laughed at by the whole coun- try, but it had the effect of stirring up Cor- bett, who covered Fitzsimmon’s $1,000 de- posit, and on October 11 the two men sign- ed articles to fight before the Florida Ath- letic club, of Jacksonville, for a purse of $41,000 and $10,000 aside. There were three bidders for the fight. Wm. A. Scholl, of the Olympic club, offered a purse of $25,- 000 ; Captain Frank Williams, of the Aua- ditorium club, of New Orleans, also offered $25,000, and Joe Vendig, representing the Florida Athletic club, offered $30,000. Then Williams offered $35,000, Vendig $37,000 and School $40,000. Vendig fol- lowed with $41,000 and Scholl raised it to $50,000. Here the bidding stopped. Scholl was unable to deposit $5,000 as a forfeit and Vendig planked down the amount, and got the fight. Corbett deposited the whole amount of his side bet ($10,000) in the hands of Phil Dwyer, the stakeholder. Fitzimmons agreed. to deposit his in installments. After having deposited $5,000 the unfortunate af- fair with Con Riordan took place, and Fitz- simmons requested Corbett not to insist on the deposit and the champion consented. Fitzsimmons deposited the balance of his side bet in April, and both fighters waited 4 the Florida club to name the date of the ht. Now Dan Stuart appeared on the scene. He was a widely known sporting man of Dallas, Tex. It was impossible to pull off the battle in Florida, and on June 4th Stuart took full charge of the fight and an- nounced that it would take place in Dallas under the auspices of the Florida athletic club, which had placed a certified check in the hands of the stakeholder covering the amount of the purse, each fighter having received $1,000 for training expenses. The fight was scheduled for October 31st at Dal- las, and the two pugilists began to train for the event. Corbett trained at Asbury Park and Fitzsimmons on Coney Island. On September 30th the latter entered his training quarters at Corpus Christi, and a little later Corbett selected quarters at San Antonio. : Governor Culberson, of Texas, convened the legislature in extra session, and on October 2nd it passed a bill prohibiting ‘‘pugilistic encouuters between man and man, or a fight between: man and bull, or any other animal,”’ under a penalty of im- prisonment in the penitentiary for not less than two or more than five years. This settled the fight as far as the state of Texas was concerned. . There was then talk of pulling off the fight in Mexico, but President Diaz threat- ened to send tho whole Mexican army to the border to prevent the meeting. The Indian territory was also under discussion, but the Secretary of Interior at once in- structed the military commander there to prevent the fight, even if he had to resort to force of arms. Carson City, Neb., bob- bed up with a purse of $100,000 for the battle, but no person paid the least atten- tion to the city which is now the centre of attraction. Finally Hot Springs, Ark., encouraged by its mayor and other prominent citizens, opened its doors to the fighters and that place was selected for the battle. The date, October 31st, was not changed. Two other fights were on the program, one between Peter Maher and Steve O’Donnell and the other between Tommy Ryan and Myster- ious Billy Smith. In spite of the fact that at meeting of over 1,000 citizens presided over hy the mayor of Hot Springs $5,000 were raised to bring the fight over into their city, and 200 laborers were hired to erect the arena in Whittington park, the Govenor declared that the fight should not take place ih Arkansas and instructed the sheriff to do his duty. Governor Clarke ina personal letter to Corbett advised him to keep out of the state and that the fight would not be per- mitted in Arkansas. On October 14th Cor- :bett left San Antonio and took up training quarters at Lake Springs. On Cetober 17th he entered Hot Springs and was arrested for ‘‘threatening, in conspiring and is about to commit an unlawful assault upon one Robert Fitzsimmons.” Next day he was released ‘by . Chancellor Leatherman, who decided that ‘‘the proposed glove contest, from the evidence, will not be a violation of the common law making prize fighting punishable as a simple assault, because there was nothing to show that a glove con- test was a prize aught.” v Having now apparently a clear field, Dan Stuart set to work to bring off the big fight. but asked for a postponement of the date to November 11th. Corbett readily agreed, but Fitzsimmons, through Julian, stubbornly objected to a postponement. This made Stuart so angry that he called off the whole affair. Some time before Fitzsimmons’ side het of $20,000, in the hands of the stakeholder, had been attached by Lawyer Friend, who defended the Australian in the latter’s trial for killing Riordan, and by a printing | company, so that Corbett’s $10,000 was un- | covered. Julian claimed that a man in New Orleans had offered to put up the stake money, but would not do so unless the fight took place on October 31st. This ws one of the reasons advanced against a postponement. The citizens of Hot Springs organized an athletic club and of- fered a purse of $10,000 for the fight. Fitzsimmons signed to fight Corbett for the purse. but the latter refused unless Fitz- simmons put up a side bet of $10,000. Although on October 24 Corbett declared that he would leave for New York the next day he reconsidered the step and determin- ed to remain in Hot Springs to meet Fitz- simmons in the ring on the date, October 31, and thus prevent the Australian from claiming the forfeit placed by the Florida athletic club in the hands of the stakehold- er. The governor again threatened to have the pugilists arrested. On October 29 Fitz- simmons left Corpus Christi for Hot Springs When the train entered the state of Ar- kansas Fitzsimmons was arrested and taken to Little Rock: A special train was at the disposal of Fitzimmons which would have taken him safely to Hot Springs, but he re- fused to make use of it, The Australian consented to a postponement of a hearing to November 1, a day after the date set for the fight. This settled the affair. A few days later both pugilists left the state of Ar- kansas. On November 11, 1895, Peter Maher de- feated Steve O’Donnell in one round be- fore the Empire athletic club, and Corbett jumped into the ring and presented him with the championship. Maher then chal- lenged the world. He signed to fight Fitz- simmons and was beaten in one round in Mexico on February 21, 1896. Now Corbett began to chase Fitzsimmons just as a year or more before Fitzsimmons had chased him. Fitz ignored- Corbett, went to England, came back, and last Sep- tember at a banquet in New York, formal- ly challenged Corbett ‘to a fight for a purse and a side bet of $5,000 or $10,000, the fight to take place inside one week, one month or three months.’”” Corbett at once accepted. They met two days later and agreed to fight for $10,000 a side. It af- terward was learned that neither man had deposited a cent, and that really no match had been made. Dan Stuart then offered a purse of $15,000 and both fighters signed articles to meet in the ring on March 17th, 1897, between the hours of 7a. m. and 12 p- m. at a place to be selected by Stuart. Each man deposited $2,500 as a guarantee that he will appear in the ring. The legis- lature of Nevada passed alaw sanctioning prize fights, and Carson was selected by Stuart as the battleground. A True Bear Story. A Yellowstone Park Bruin Gives a Great Moral Lesson to Parents. , Speaking of law and the enforcement of discipline in Yellowstone park, I heard the story of a bear there which I consider ex- ceedingly important not only as a comment on the discipline of the park, but as a moral lesson to parents in domestic obedi- ence. The story is literally true, and if it were not I should not repeat it, for it would have no value. * Mr. Kipling says, ‘‘The law of the jungle is—obey.”” This also seems to be the law of Yellowstone park. There is a lunch station at the upper basin, near Old Faithful, kept by a very intelli- gent and ingenious man. He got acquaint- ed last year with a she bear, who used to come to his house every day and walk into kitchen for food for herself and her two cubs. The cubs never came, The keeper got on very intimate terms with the bear, who was always civil and well behaved and would take food from his hand without taking the hand. One day toward sunset the bear came to the kitchen, and, having received her por- tion, she went out of the back door to car- ry it to her cubs. To her surprise and an- ger, the cubs were there waiting for her. She laid down the food and rushed at her infants and gave them a rousing spanking. ‘‘She did not cuff them ; she spanked them and then she drove them back into the woods, cuffing them and knocking them at every step. When she reached the spot where she had told them to wait, she left them there and returned to the house. And there she staid in the kitchen for two whole hours, making the disobedient children wait for their food, simply to discipline them and teach them obedience. The explanation is very natural. When the bear leaves her young in a particular place and goes away in search of food for them, if they stray away in her absence, she has great difficulty in finding them. The mother knew that the safety of her cubs and her own peace of mind depended upon strict discipline in the family. Oh, that we had more such mothers in the United States ! Queen Victoria's Favorite Apple. In Montgomery county, Virginia, on an extensive plateau of a spur of the Blue Ridge, an apple is raised that in size, sym- metry, and flavor can only be surpassed, if surpassed at all, hy the genuine Albemarle pippin. Unfortunately it would seem that the real home of this last most delicious fruit is limited to a small area in and around Rockfish Gap, partly in Albemarle and partly in Nelson county. But a pip- pin much resembling it, even though not in all respects so excellent, may be advan- tageously cultivated through a stretch of a hundred and fifty miles along the slope of the Blue Ridge. More than forty years ago a barrel or two of the Albemarle pippins were sent as a present to Queen Victoria, and from that day to this it is the favorite apple at her court. Sugar Coffee War, In the sugar-coffee fight between the Sugar Trust andthe Arbuckle Coffee Com- pany an announcement has heen made by the Arbuckles that the price price of Ariosa coffee would be fixed at 11 1-2 cents. This bring it to the price of the rival ‘‘Lion brand’’ of coffee produced by the Sugar trust. It has been said that the trust is mark- ing up the price of sugar to make up losses made in the coffee fight, but the sugar trade explains that the rise is due to an ad- vance in raw sugar, in anticipation of possi- ble tariff legislation. A Loss to Mifflin County. The decision of the commissioners ap- pointed to locate the contested line between Huntingdon and Mifilin counties has been made, giving the award to Huntingdon county. This, if confirmed, will take from Mifilin county its richest farming district, including thousands of acres and the im- portant town of Allensville. Exceptions have been filed to the deci- sion by the attorneys for Mifflin county and the final decision will be given by Judge Bailey on April 5. -——The Carsonites now have it figured out that the visitors to the big fight will spend $900,000 in the town. MARCH. Like a frolicsome lion March comes with a roar, And stirs up the weather as never before. But the days of Old Winter are passing away ; His breath becomes feeble ; he stops in his play. The Brooklets are melting, the winds cease to blow, And the trailing snow, While far in the distance the bobolinks sing Tis the Winter's good-by and the greeting of Spring. arbutus peeps out from the FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN: Mrs. C. H. Lippincott, of Minneapolis, has raised flower seeds for the general mar- ket for more than ten years. She is said to be the pioneer in this business. Sufferers from oiliness of skin must, of course, consider what produces this com- plaint, and take active measures to cure it. It is caused by either weakness or some disorder of the system, and the diet should be carefully attended to first of all. Rich foods of all kinds must be given up, and plain nursery cooking, with plenty of fruit and vegetables, taken instead. Hot, ill-ventilated rooms must be avoid- ed, as well as late hours and heavy bed- clothing. Plenty of out-door exercise mus be adaily item in our life. A daily bath of tepid water, douche baths and an occa- sional Turkish bath must be taken except under medical orders. Aperient medicines should be taken in the morning and fresh fruit eaten while dressing. Apples or oranges are advised at this hour. If fresh fruit is difficult to ob- tain French plums, figs dipped in oil or prunes. may be taken instead. Salads should be taken for breakfast and lunch : watercress and dandelion can be advanta- fensly used for this purpose, as well as ettuce. _ But lately we have been going to many little dinners ; and since at little dinners in Paris people are extremely apt to wear high gowns, we have remarked that the smartest women were almost invariably clad in colored blouses and black skirts. I have not seen one skirt of black moire poplin I have seen dozens of black satin. The blouses are almost invariably of mous- seline de soie. One charmingly dressed woman in half-mourning wore a black sat- in skirt—take for granted that all these skirts are black satin, unless I say to the contrary—and and a blouse of white mous- seline de soie with white satin sleeves striped with black. The blouse was deco- rated with crystal spangles, put on a foundation arranged in a modified bolero, with tiny epauletts of the same on the shoulder. In the collar was a little note of black and white at the back ; but mark my words, elaborate neck arrangements are going out. Ido not know but one might say they have gone out, so on no acconnt whatever have them put into any dress af- ter the date of this letter. By spring all that will be seen at the back of the collar will be a little frill of mousseline de soie, or little revers of lace or velvet or silk. One of the smartess dresses I have seen lately was a gray don- ble-faced cashmere made with a little bolero tucked up and down, the tucks in bunches with the tops of the sleeves tucked round and round. The collar was a perfectly stiff, straight collar such as we used to wear, made on a foundation, with gray mousseline de soie falling over it, quite at the back. Hair is worn much higher than formerly in Paris. No chignon should now be seen at the back of the hat. The proper thing now is to wave your hair behind, and fast- en it up straight, not twisted, with a comb that goes across the back of the head and is just seen below the edge of the hat. Then the hair is made into a loose twist just a$ the top of the head.— Harper's. Basar. en Just at present the sleeve question is one of absorbing interest to all womankind, and to the home dressmaker it is more or less of a difficulty unless she is perfectly splighienad. boi . ¢ Of course everybody r izes the fact that large sleeves are ae the past, and that a gown is no longer really stylish that is encumbered with them. It is an easy matter, however, to cut them over if one only understands how, and a pattern is not needed in many cases. With the sleeves made smaller a last year’s gown. takes a new lease of life and comes out fresh and smart, for in other ways gowns have not changed in any striking manner. Any of the large, old style leg o’mutton or balloon sleeves will easily furnish ma- terial for the small sleeves of present fash- ion, and worn places may be avoided, only the best of the goods being put into the new sleeves, by following the diagram giv- en here, The larger, outer part of the sleeve is cut across the top, and this is made to form the puff in the new sleeve. The lower part of the outer large leg o’ mutton is cut to fit the inner lining, to which it and the top puff are sewn. This is one of the mosh popular sleeves in vogue at’present and is the easiest to make. It may be left per- fectly plain or dressed up as much as one likes, for a great deal of trimming on sleeves is very fashinable. If the sleeves is of wool goods, little puffs of bias silk may be set an inch apart, covering gracefully any worn or stained places. Another fan- cy is to have many rows of velvet ribbon set an inch apart, or little frills of narrow lace. All sleeves are made long over the hands, either the bottom of the sleeve itself being long, or made to appear so by a frill of silk, lace, chiffon or whatever ome fan- cies. Very little stiffening is used, and it is confined entirely to the top of the puff, a straight piece of stiffening three inches deep and eighteen inches long being gath- ered into the arm along with the sleeve ; this sets out sufficiently to keep the puff from drooping. A white marble mantel in some old- fashioned house is often a difficult obstacle to the furnisher who is striving after har- monious effect. As a woman complained not long ago, ‘‘there is no coaxing such a mantel into the scheme of the room ; it will assert itself, standing out alone and cold, and the first thing to be seen.’ A suggestion in this emergency, which is got from a well known decorator, is to give the room a wainscot of plain cartridge pa- per, mouse gray, green ora good art brown bringing it up to the height of the mantel, , and finishing it all around the room with a ‘narrow white molding. Above the mantel, cover the wall straight to the ceiling with the same plain paper. The mantel is then, in spite of itself, a part of the whole effect, and when a platerack and pictures are hung above it the harmony of the treat- ment is evident. Remember if you have been out in the rain or damp with a hat trimmed with os- trich feathers or with a boa or a gown fin- ished with this trimming you should put it in front of your register and let the warm air blow on it until it is perfectly dry. This will materially aid in keeping it in good condition. When the curl has gone from ostrich feathers the beauty is gone. Nothing spoils a woman’s appearance so much as a worn out skirt binding. See to yours if necessary. The gingham frocks are nearly all made with straight full skirts gathered and sewed to the waist. This is in’ the I'rench style, or it is made with something of a surplice in front. .