Bewonaiatcn Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 26, 1897. TT JEHIAL; SLAB'S THANKSGIVING. Of course they's changes in the ways An’ methods of aour livin’, An’ long among the holidays, Some folks fo'git Thanksgivin’ We might, of course, let some things go, An’ “vaporate” an’ die, But what in sin I'd love tew know Is the matter with punkin pie? Iain’t agin the trolley car , Much less the tellerphone, They may or mayn't be folks in Mars, Ef they let me alone. An they may string electric lights, I hain’ no stock in gas, The question thet my wrath excites, Is whar’s your cranberry sass? I'm as peaceful as a side hill plow, An’ as tew Venzueeler, Just settle it, [ don’t keer how, Er let the British steal her, But on American ideas I stick right tew my celors, An’ jest you promptly answer please, What's crooked with aour crullers? An’ you may scoot aroun’ on wheels, An’ telescope yer stummick, An’ then walk crazy on your heels, An’ give yer back a hummick. That ain’t my biz the country’s free, You won't ketch me a huffin ; But. Lordy don’t treat carelessly A good old oyster stuffin’. Chew gum, smoke cigarets, play ball, Wear foot ball hair er bloomers ; Wear Jenness Miller skirts and all The fuds of fashion boomers ; Read high eugene, Kneipp's water cure, Until yer reason wabbles, But at Thanksgivin’ time be sure Tew roast the bird that gobbles. What cruel things is said of pie, "Pernicious thoughts instillin’. The saltry teardrops fill my eye When I think of mince pie fillin’ The meat and apples, cloves and spice, The light crust as a rider; The sugar, citron, suet nice, All drowned in good biled cider. Then let the preacher hev his fling At preachin’ an’ at eatin’. An’ when you've heered 'em preach an, sing An’ slide home after meetin’. Tew find the turkey smokin’ hot, You're thankful you are livin’, You,ll smile and murmur, like as not, *‘Thar’s no day like Thanksgivin’.” —A. T. Worden in New Orleans Picayune. THE HAPPY THANKSGIVING OF THE BURGLAR AND PLUMBER. Miss Elinor Merryweather went to bed Thanksgiving evening in a graceless frame of mind, at least in a frame of mind, that may pass for graceless in a woman of such kindly nature as Miss Merryweather. “You may go, Robbins,’ she said to her faithful maid, ‘‘and you and Harriet’’ (Harriet was the cook), *‘and Matilda’ (Matilda was the waitress, ) “may all go to that party at James ’’ (James was the gardener.) ‘‘I shall not need any of you.” ‘‘I hate to leave you alone, Miss Elinor,’ said Robbins; and hesitated, knowing Miss Merryweather well enough not to ask her would she be afraid. She did not do much better than to blurt out: ‘They do say there’s burglars in town ma’am.?”’ ‘Very well,,’ responded Miss Merry- weather with unshaken calm—whatever her faults, timidity never was charged to her—*"be sure you lock all the doors and windows securely. And you may as well see the galvanic battery works all right, and that thesilver is all in the safe. Good night, a pleasant time to you.” Robbins knew when her mistress used this tone that argument would be vain, so, discomfited and with more than one wist- ful glance backward in the hall she re- tired. Miss Merryweather began to walk u p and down the room. It was an attractive room with the soft ivory gleam of the paint and the sparingly, old fashioned flowers on the creamy walls. These walls were thickly hung with water color sketches and pen and ink and wash drawings which gave one an eerie sensation of familiarity, like faces seen in a dream, and sometimes by some clever people of long memories were traced to a favorable illustrator, being in fact, by famous artists, their original drawings for well-known magazines. Whatever her eccentricities—I must grant her some—she was greatly beloved by her fellow townsman, and those who knew her best loved her most strongly. She had, however, a will of her own, and she was one who, in the language of Holy Writ, kept her promise to her hurt. Thus some- times an impetuous temper led her into imprudent declarations, out of which she could not always extract herself without great exercise of her wits. Her latest di- lemma engrossed her to-night. Having the plumbing of her dwelling repaired, in an unlucky moment she had a quarrel with the plumbers’ union over a bill, and the result was that she sent away ‘‘every man swindler of them all”’— I would not be understood to indorse her words—and was left with the water service of the house cut off and water hauled from the cisterns and a single faucet in the garden, while friends sniffed apprehensively whenever they en- tered the house, and asked, was she not afraid of sewer gas? And her niece (who was as a daughter to her) did not dare to bring the baby to spend Thanksgiving, be- cause the child might catch diphtheria through the deadly leaking pipes. “Stuff I’? said Miss Merryweather, who used strong exrpessions sometimes, being by birth and brecding quite too great a lady to disturb herself about the minor conventions; ‘‘stuff and nonsense !”’ There are no leaks, Helen ; I shall get a plumber and have you come Thanksgiving.” She went to bed early ; but for a long while she could not sleep. She thought of the plumbers’ union and her own defeat and raged anew. And when, at last, she was just slipping off into the shadows of peace, she heard the softest of footfalls. Surely she had closed the door on Diogenes, the dog! Hadn’t she closed the door ? Her mind drove her hack- ward over that hasty journey through the rooms down stairs. Diogenes had a mat in the laundry, and the range of the kitchen, she certainly had closed one of the kitchen doors. didn’t she close the kitchen door, upstairs ? She did—at least she had seen that the door to the cellar was fast and she thought she had bolted the door upstairs— how did the people ever feel certian about anything enough to swear that it happen- ed ?- The footsteps were nearer, in the sit- ting room which adjoined the chamber. Her first thought was for the safety of the tea table with its precious freight ; she was sure if she called to the dog kindly he would begin wagging his tail, that tremen- dous brush which with one sweep might hurl her idols into irredeemable, smashing, crashing ruin. Sternness was the only chance ! ‘‘Down charge, die !”” she commanded. ‘‘Bad dog ! Down !”’ A particularly mild voice answered her. It ain’t a dog, miss; it’s a man !”’ ‘A Man?” repeated Miss Merryweather. “Well 1? “Yes, ma’am,’”’ the voice repeated. “Don’t be alarmed; I'm a man, a bur- glar !” Miss Merryweather showed no signs of alarm; in the first place she had a fearless soul; in the second place the voice was so mild, so almost apologetic that it aroused her sense of humor. ‘‘Idon’t know but that you are less of a nuisance than the dog would be,”’ said she. ‘You stay right where you are and I will turn on the electric lights as soon as I get on a few things. Don’t move or you’ll hit something ?’’ ‘All right, ma'am,” said the burglar ; ‘‘only no pulling out a pop, you know, and firing it off at me in the dark, hit or miss !”’ "Certainly not, at least not until I can see you,’’ said Miss Merryweather. All the while she was hastily donning a wrap- per and slippers. Then she turned on the lights. The burglar stood directly under the blaze. He did not look like a burglar; there was nothing much 1n his pale face ex- cept the look of recent sickness and hope- | lessness. His clothes were like any work- | man’s, a pair of blue overalls, with some- | thing like a bib front, and a patched check shirt. His hat (it wasa hat and not the cap in which artists, for reasons best known to themselves, delight to depict the burg- { lar) was a very battered soft felt, and it was not pulled down over his black brows; it was pushed back from dark-brown locks. | He looked like a workman out of a job. | His hands, one of which held a pistol, were I calloused and stained—a workingman’s | hands. . [ “I don’t want to disturb you, ma’am,”’ | he repeated; ‘but I’ve got to have some | money !’ | “Why ?” said Miss Merry weather. She was quite at her ease and had taken a rock- | ing chair. “Why ?’’ the man echoed bitterly ; ‘‘be- cause I prefer to steal to seeing my wife dying for want of things done for her, and my children without shoes to their feet, and never a bite amongst us all this day, by ——. I beg your pardon, lady, I wasn’t meaning to swear, but I’m wore out !”’ “‘Haven’t you had anything to eat to- day ?’’ said Miss Merryweather. He shook his head. A stiff lock of brown hair which stood up on the top of his head waggled at the motion; it gave him a gro- tesque look. He certainly was frightfully thin. “Humph !” said Miss Merryweather. “You sit down in that rocking chair and stay there until I come up again. Don’t you burgle any until I come back; then we’ll see what we can do.”’ “You ain’t going to telephone to the police to nab me ?’’ Miss Merryweather waved her hand to- ward the wall at a telephone. “It isn’t customary in houses of people who are not millionaires to have two tele- phones,” shesaid. *‘I am going to bring You something to eat.’”’ Never, it seemed to her, had she heard So many sinister noises at night as pricked her ears while her candle flitted from pan- try to sideboard. Boards creaked under her tread as they never creaked in the daytime and every door she touched sent up a long shriek of remonstrance. But Diogenes slept calmly in the laun- dry. Miss Merryweather shook her head. She carried a revolver in her hand, which she laid on the tray. ‘He seems like a decent sort of submerged unfortunate’’— thus ran her meditations while she pro- visioned the tray—‘‘but he may be wicked and run after me down stairs. If he does Di and the gun will have to hurt him." “And I won’t talk to him away from the telephone.”” She thought of waking the sleeping dog and taking him up stairs, but the peril to the china of Diogenes’ clumsy bulk seemed so much greater to her intre- pid soul than any personal danger from the mild-mannered burglar that she dismissed the suggestion as soon as it appeared. And when she entered her sitting room again and saw how starved and tired her burglar looked she was glad of her decision. His eyes brightened at the sight of the tray. Miss Merryweather, making no comment, lighted the lamp under the sil- ver chafing dish, and as it burned she but- tered the slices of bread and placed beef between them. ‘I am afraid the beef isa little under- done for your taste,’’ observed she kindly, ‘‘and I hope you don’t care for mustard, for I forgot it ; but I’ve put on salt and pep- per, and they were the best done pieces I could find. The soup will be warm in a minute. Now, you drink the glass of wine.”’ The man drank it, keeping his eye on her. Then he laid the pistol on the table. “I ain’t going to use it,” he said. ‘You are not at all like a professional burglar,’’ remarked the lady, who had now come to ladling out the steaming sotip, ‘I think you must be an amateur.’’ *‘I never touched a thing wasn’t my own before lady. so help me—’ ‘Well, you haven’t touched anything yet, now,’’ interrupted Miss Merryweath- er, who had a mania for accuracy. She continued, *‘I suppose you are putting that sandwich into your pocket for your family, don’t do it ! I’Il make you up "a basket for them. Tell me what brought you, such a decent man, to this pass ?*’ The man smeared his eyes with his hand before he began. ‘‘I never seen a lady like you,” he said. “I’m just going to tell you the honest truth. I was working in Chica- 80. I belonged to the junior plumbers— ‘‘Oh, if you are a plumber, it must have come natural to you to rob !”’ . The burglar acknowledged the sally bya faint smile. ‘‘We ain’t so bad as they make us out. Well, hard times come and work fell off and the union wouldn’t let us work below wages, so I left the union, fact is, I couldn’t keep up my dues— — ‘‘Do you mean to tell me,” cried Miss Merryweather, springing from her chair in strong agitation, ‘‘do you mean to tell me you are not a union man.” Don’t think of burgling me ! I can give you a great deal better job, and I will advance you money on it, too. This house is only about haif plumbed ; if you will take hold and get this plumbing done by 6 o'clock to-morrow I'll pay you well ! And you shall have two men to help you who aren’t plumbers but have some sense ! And a boy to run to the shop to get the tools. Are you a good plumber ?”’ ‘‘Yes'm, I was ; but you see I went to Pullman and worked there till the strike came. I didn’tstrike ; but I joined the A. P. U. afterwards, soasto get the relief The strike lasted so long I used up all my savings, and then I didn’t get ‘back, after all. So I'ma little out of practice." But I guess I can satisfy you, I'll try hard.” rr —— ‘‘But how did you get in? the windows are barred down stairs—’ ‘‘Yes’m, they look like good winders. But I come in by the door, the kitchen door. I reasoned like thegirls would have some place where they hid the kitchen key and I could hunt it up. Most like it would: be under the door mat. That's where it was, t00.”’ ‘‘They shall have a latch key, every one of them ; of course, you got in. But didn’t you waken the dog?’’ ‘No, ma’am, he jest slept like the dead. Them big dogs is just like men about sleep- ing, they sleep sound.’’ ‘But when you came up the stairs what did you do about the mat at the foot of the stairs ? The lights ought to have sprung up and the bells rung, the instant your foot touched the mat !”’ “Why, you see, lady,’ said the burglar apologetically,—he seemed to fear lest she should be hurt by the failure of her care- fully-planned burglar trap—:‘you see, I naturally struck a match, now and then, to see my way, and when I come on that plain, common mat in that beautiful hall, with the handsome rugs about, I knowed it to be a burglar mat, so I jest stepped over it ; I've no doubt all the things would have happened, if I had stepped on it right.”’ Miss Merryweather had very much the sensations of a burglar in her own house when later on she despoiled the larder to make up a basket for the plumber to take home. ‘Robbins never did stay out before later than 12 or 1; it’s a quar—Great Heavens!” Miss Merry weather jumped. Suddenly she was bathed in a flood of light and bells seemed to be ringing all over the house ! ‘IT guess the mats is straight goods,”’ said the burglar ; ‘‘you trod on one by mis- take, ma’am. Say, what's that? They’re a hollering in the yard ! I'll try thisdoor.’’ ‘No, you will not,’ said Miss Merry- weather, all herself again; “‘you will stay just where you are, while I open the door.” She was at the hall door before she ended, calling loudly to the shrieking maids, who came in timidly (except Robbins) in the rear of the two men, who were none too valorous. *‘Nothing is the matter,’’ said Miss Mer- ryweather. ‘‘I stepped on the mat myself. Iv works perfectly. Harriet, I’ve engaged a plumber, and he is to work all night and the plumbing will be done by to-morrow afternoon. If you need those extra tools you better go home and get them now” — turning upon the bewildered burglar— ‘and you don’t need that candle any more; put it down. Don’t forget the basket.’’ ‘No, ma'am; thank you. ma’am,”’ the burglar responded meekly, ‘and I'll be back—"’ ‘As soon as you can; there’sno time to lose,’’ said Merryweather. “He isa good plumber,”’ she announced calmly to her dazed domestic staff, and I was lucky to get him. I have sent a basket of things to his family. Get him a good breakfast to- morrow morning; and hope we shall have a Thanksgiving after all. I shan’t forget how good you all are in these emergencies.” The plumbing was done, and well done, by 4 of the next afternoon: The burglar’s family, as well as the Merryweather gath- ering, dined late that Thanksgiving, — Octave Thanet. As to Selling Game. Provisions of a Section of the Revised Law. There have been so many questions asked concerning that clause of the revised game laws which prohibits the selling of certain kinds of game birds and animals that we herewith publish ‘the clause in full for the benefit of many inquirers. The section in the game law prohibiting the selling of game is causing considerable comment. The law reads as follows : “That it shall be unlawful at any period or season of the year to kill, entrap or pursue with intent to kill or entrap any elk, deer, fawn, wild turkey, pheasant, grouse, quail, partridge or woodcock, in any part of this common- wealth, for the purpose of selling the same. And it shall be unlawful for the proprie- tor, manager, clerk or agent of any market or firm or other person, firm or corporation to purchase, sell or expose for sale any elk, deer, fawn, wild turkey, pheasant, grouse, quail, partridge or woodcock killed or en. trapped within this commonwealth. That it shall be unlawful for the proprietor, manager, clerk or agent of any market, or any other person, firm or corporation, to purchase for the purpose of again selling the same, any elk, deer, fawn, wild turkey, pheasant, grouse, quail, partridge or wood- cock killed or entrapped within this com- monwealth. Whosoever shall offend against any of the provisions of this section shall be liable to a penalty of $100 for every elk, deer or fawn so taken, purchased or sold, and $25 for every wild turkey, pheasant, grouse, quail, partridge or woodcock so taken, purchased or sold, or by imprison- ment in the county jail for a period of one day for each dollar of penalty imposed.” SE ——— The Late Dr. Evan's Estate. Of Probably $15,000,000 Value—The Bulk of It to Endow American Institutions. Dr. Thomas W. Evans, the Philadel- phian, who has been practicing dentistry in Paris for many years and who through his intimacy with Napoleon and many of the royal families of Europe, was able to ac- cumulate a vast fortune, died last week in Paris. In September his wife died suddenly and when he brought her hody home, for burial in Philadelphia, he in- quired minutely about many of the educa- tional institutions of the United State and intimated that he ini-oded to remember them in his will. His estate is valued at $12,000,000 or $15,000,000 and both his lawyers and friends acknowledged that the buik of it is to come to America for educational institu- tions. Tammany’s Generous Hand. Gives $20,000 to Cuba and the Same to the New York Poor. The executive committee of Tammany Hall has shown its generons hand by giving $20.000 to the poor Cubans and $20,000 to the suffering poor of the city. The money is the surplus of the campaign fund. Asa supplement to the donation of money for the benefit of the city poor, Nathan Straus made a contribution of 1,000 tons of coal, by the same committee which will dis. burse the money. Sire btimicsmiaseis Languages of America. There are, according to an eminent arch- i aeologist, no less than from 120 to 130 | absolutely distinct languages in North and ! South America. As the growth of language is very slow, he thinks the fact of the ex- istance of so great a variety of speech on | the western continent proves that the na- | tive red men have inhabited them for many thousands of years. | The Jews and Palestine. The Jewish world, but to a much greater extent in. Europe than in the United States, is much interested in the Jewish state pro- posed to be established in Palestine, where *‘the “chosen, people’ from all the world will be invited to congregate with the in- tent of establishing an independent polit- ical state amid the scenes of the ancient glory of the Hebrew race. The Zionist congress recently leld in Zurich, Switzer- land, has given a considerable impetus to the movement. Its significance is political and economic. The avowed purpose is to reawaken the Jewish national spirit and bring about the reconstruction of the Jews as a nation. Nationality is what is deem- ed the invaluable missing quantity of the Jewish people. Dr. Herzl. president of the Basle congress, has been the most prominent leader in the movement, and he seems to have no doubt of its entire prac- ticability. His plan is to send to Pales- tine a well-equipped expedition to explore the country and build roads and telegraph lines as a preliminary to colonization. A political organization called the society of Jews, and the Jewish company, a corpora- tion under English laws, said to have im- mense capital, are at the head of the pro- ject. The Basle meeting was an intensely interesting occasion to the enthusiasts en- gaged in the work. It took measures to carry it on with system and energy. Vien- na, a city in which Jews are often ill treated, was selected as general head- quarters. It was stated at the conference that the sultan of Turkey would sell Palestine for $50,000,000, and the Zionists propose to raise that sum. Since 1840 the number of Jews in Pales- tine has steadily increased, and is now esti- mated at 65,000. At that time of the 12,- 000 inhabitants of Jerusalem only about 4,000 were Jews. In 1896 of the 45,520 people in the city 28,112 were Jews. Scat- tered over the world there are plenty of Jews to found an independent state, and their great wealth is well known. The Jewish bankers of Europe make peace or war by their control of great reserves of money. The Rothschilds are as important a factor as kaiser or czar. Within the past sixteen years more than one million Jews have been driven from their homes in Russia hy restrictive laws, and a high Jewish authority asserts that the anti- Jewish element in Russia will not be satis- fied until all the Jews are expelled from the country. The number now in Russia is estimated at from three to four millions, and the question is what is to be done with them and where are they to go when they becomg friendless wanderers on the face of the earth ? The solution of the problem is sought in the return of the Jews to Pales- tine and the inauguration of a system of colonization which would be a real home- going. That is the meaning of the move- ment started in Europe by the Basle con- gress. American Jews, prominent with this people, do not as a rule take much stock in the Zionist movement. Rabbi Isaac M. Wise, of Cincinnati, a man of great learn- ing and influence, warns the Jews in this country not to put any faith in the scheme ofa Hebrew state in Palestine. He says this congress at Basle was ‘‘a gathering of visionary and impracticable dreamers, who conceived and acted a romantic drama, and applauded it, all by themselves.” He re- views the history of the Israelites in their dispersion and calls special attention to the fact that while they migrated from land to land they never went to Palestine, except a few of the extra pious, who went to the Holy Land to subsist on the charity of Jewish congregations the world over, and to die there and have their hones buried in the sacred soil. It is the opinion of this eminent Jewish divine that there is not the barest possibility of purchasing any coun- try, of forming and establishing a new gov- ernment anywhere with the consent of the European powers, or of securing the $400,- 000,000 to $500,000,000 which, he says, would be required for such an enterprise anywhere among Jews and Gentiles, the world over ; “nor is there even the shadow of a possibility to get, among all the Jews in this world, within the next ten years, 200,000 immigrants to goto Palestine to begin life anew under the precarious pro- tection of a dwarf statelet.” However it may be in Europe, there is not much doubt Rabbi Wise indicates the best judgment of his people in this coun- try. They are liberal, and spend millions annually in charitable works, but it is not likely they will become large contributors to the Zionist movement. The American Jews are intent on cultivating and grafting on their people an American nationality. In merchandising and trading, in banking, at the bar, 1n other professions and in poli- tics they have achieved wonderful success considering the ancient and deep-seated prejudices that have been overcome within a few years. Costly Deafness. A Washington correspondent tells of a public man who is a little hard of hearing and who sometimes attempts to save him- self from annoyance by pretending to be more deaf than he is. In a public place, one day, this man was approached by an office-seeker who, he had reason to believe, was about to bore him with his tale of woe. The office-seeker said, in a low voice, which the others pres- ent could not hear : “Will you please lend me five dollars?’ ‘What do you say ?’’ asked the public man, in a tone which, he thought, would deter the applicant from repeating his re- quest in the presence of so many ; but the man said, in a voice which drew the atien- tion of everybody within hearing distance : ‘Will you lend me ten dollars, please?’ The public man was ashamed to refuse. “Why, yes,’? he said, and gave the man a ten dollar note. As the borrower went away the lender looked ‘after him bitterly and said, with a sigh : fra have saved five dollars if I'd heard him the first time !’’ Origin of “Tip.” Here is an interesting hit of philology. It concerns the origin of the word ‘tip,’ and throws a little light on the origin of the custom. In old English taverns a re- ceptacle for small coins was placed con- spicuously, and over it was written, *‘To insure promptness.”” Whatever was drop- ped in the box by guests was divided among the servants. In the course of time the abbreviated form, ““T. I. P.”” was used. Giving rheir Employes a Chance The Shawmut coal company is giving its employes an opportunity to become land owners in Elk county. Messrs. Hall & Kaul employ over 1,000 men in their col- lieries and lumber plants and are offering them 10,000 acres of land at two dollars per acre on easy payments, furnishing ma- terials for building on time, and guarantee- ing to furnish the men employment. Republican Silverites. Senator Chandler, of New Hampshire, is a Republican silverite. He did not join Senator Teller, Dubois and others in repu- diating the platform of the St. Louis con- “vention, hecause-he-believed in giving the plan to secure international bimetallism a fair trial, and he has declared time and again that but for that pledge in the St. Louis platform Mr. McKinley would have been defeated, as the country is overwhelm- ingly for the continued use of both gold and silver as the money of final redemption. Senator Chandler is a power in the Repuh- lican party. He has heen three times elect- ed to the Federal Senate, and his present term will not expire until 1901. He was also a member of President Arthur’s cabi- net. His prominence and leadership in the party cannot be challenged. This gives importance to a letter published recently in the Washington Post on ‘The Next Duty of Republican Bimetallists.” We give the essential parts of this letter. Senator Chandler starts out with the les- son of the late elections, and says : ‘‘As to the elections, they prove with rea- sonable clearness that if the Republican party permanently acquiesces in “‘the ex- isting gold standard’’ and gives up the struggle for bimetallism, that party will be defeated in the congressional elections of 1898 and in the presidential election of 1900. The silver monometallists will then take possession of all branches of the Na- tional Government, and a free coinage bill, with silver made the tender for all debts, public and private, domestic and foreign, will pass both houses of Congress and be signed by President Bryan.” Reviewing the elections in the different states, the great numbers of rural Republi- can bimetallists, and that New York will be lost to the Republicans by their votes, Senator Chandler goes on : ‘“There may be infatuated individuals who think, in view of the recent elections in Iowa, Ohio, Kentucky and Ne- braska, that the Western Republican States can be kept in line if future party plat- forms shall completely yield to gold and give up the effort to remonetize silver, but the wiser and safer view is to assume that with the issue so framed the Republican party will meet with overwhelming politi- cal disaster inflicted by a solid South and a West almost solid, aided by Tammany hall and the free silver Democracy of the | Empire State. This comes very near being a country of free voters, and our elections come very near being honest transactions, and an intelligent people, with their votes freely cast and honestly counted, will never adopt or submit to the permanent demon- etization of silver and the fixed ascendency of the single gold standard prescribed by England. So the pathway of safety is only in one direction. Mr. McKinley was elected only because his platform and his previous utterances promised efforts to se- cure bimetallism.’’ ‘‘We Republicans,’’ says Senator Chand- ler with marked emphasis. ‘‘did not prom- ise to establish bimetallism if we could, believing it to be a bad thing, but because we believed it to be a good thing. If we now faithlessly abandon the pursuit of that good thing we doom ourselves to political annihilation.” ‘Political annihilation” is a strong phrase. Evidently the republican New England senator does not believe silver a dead issue. He compares that pretense to the frequent Democratic and Whig com- promises before the war ‘‘that proclaimed the doom and death of the anti-slavery agitation.” We all know how they panned out. Senator Chandler next discusses the dis- appointing action of Great Britain in refus- ing to join France and America in helping bimetallism. That we had a right to ex- pect better things the senator shows as fol- lows: On Mareh 17, 1896, the house of com- mons unanamously declared that the best interests of the country had been injured by silver’s demonetization in 1873, and urged the government to do all in their power tosecurean international agreement. In the debate the chancellor of the ex- chequer (Sir W. E. H. Beach) promised that the government would obey this in- junction. The first lord of the treasury (Mr. A. J. Balfour) made the same prom- ise in many words, among them these : ‘‘We will reopen the India mints. We will engage that they shall be kept open, and we will therefore provide for a free coinage of silver within the limits of the British empire for a population greater in number than the population of Germany, France and ‘America put together.”’ The British ministry and parliament having once changed its mind may do so again. We oall particular attention to this part of Senator Chandler’s letter, in which he says of British action : ‘‘At first they ( the English ministry ) were undoubtedly inclined to listen favorably to the French and American proposals, and induced the Bank of England to promise to contribute to remonetization: the holding of a portion of its reserve in silver bullion, as the bank law allows. But the money power of England was aroused and ex- pressed its disapprobation. The potent Mr. Robert Benson tried to convince the ministry, by impressive facts, that the American movement was not in earnest, and that Secretary Gage’s proposed meth- od of currency reform and the self-consti- tuted currency reform commission were conceived in hostility to the remonetization of silver, and that President McKinley was not sincerely in favor of an international agreement. Senator Chandler appeals to silver Re- publicans, if they desire their party to re- main in power, to ‘renew the pledges to bimetallism and devise ways and means for fulfilling them.” With that we have no special concern. It is for Republicans to determine. The ways and means he suggests are that the people and govern- ments of the two Americas shall, by a Pan- American remonetization congress., sub- mit their united request to European pow- ers. It will be heeded even by England, he says. Senator Chandler evidently thinks this will be a stop-gap, and answer the same- purpose with the American voters that the bimetallic declarations of the St. Louis platform answered in the McKinley- Bryan canvass. They cannot he fooled again. — Pittsburg Post. Engines for Foreign Countries. Foreign orders have been received by the Baldwin locomotive works for fifty-nine locomotives of varying types involving an expenditure of nearly $600,000, and caus- ing an early strengthening of the working force. These make one of the largest or- ders booked by the company for some time, and, with one exception, are from foreign countries, a number of which have here- tofore awarded their contracts to English and other foreign builders. This latest order includes ten passenger and twelve freight locomotives for the Finland state railway. The Central railway of Brazil orders sixteen freight and eight passenger engines, the Grand Trunk railway of Canada ten freight engines. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. To suit a long, narrow face the hair should be dressed round, and it is always best to show a coil or so from the side be- hind the ears ; also endeavor to fill up the nape. of the neck as much as possible. For a sharp-featured face always avoid dressing the hair right at the top of the back of the crown in a line with the nose, as this so accentuates the the severe out- lines. Dress the hair low down or else quite on top to meet the fringe. For a broad face narrow dressings are Dieleraide, but should be kept somewhat igh. Exceedingly tall people should keep the hair dressed rather low and decidedly round. : Very short women should have their hair dressed high, as it gives addition to their stature. It is very rarely that we find purely white hair ; it is usually a gray-white, and with this latter no colors are so suitable as dark greens, browns, ambers, purple tints. deep cream, dark reds and warm shades of dark blae. Strange to say, there is more oxide of iron contained in vegetables than in meat, and it is iron which makes rosy cheeks and rapid coursing of blood through the veins which gives the clearing complexion. The potash in vegetables also aids in purifying the blood, driving away gouty tendencies. The beautiful teeth of the Italian peasantry are said to be due to their maccaroni diet and the polenta (mush) which America has taught them to use. Beauty-seekers, however, in the direction of attractive mouths should take their oatmeal in baked biscuit form, as the teeth need more exer- cise on this grain than the mere swallow- ing of soft porridge, unchewed, can give. It is amusing to note that there is even a vegetarian bicycle club in London, though how ‘these would compare with the beef- eaters in a century run is not stated. When a man is ordered by his physician to eat meat only once a day, and not red meat at that, he finds amusement, not satisfac- tion in the astonishing list of things served at these London restaurants, from oyster plant croquettes to the mince pie made of apples, raisins, currants, lemons, citrons and lemon peel. The shaddock or grape fruit, te begin a breakfast with, is as good as a dose of quinine ; and fig-bread, con- taining a generous supply of chopped figs in the household bread, is very appetizing. The cardoons make the boiled celery which all travelers in Italy learn to like exceed- ingly ; and celery in every form is excel- lent for the nerves. So, between com- plexion and comfort the fruit diet and vegetable varieties offer a larger choice than one would think for a large propor- tion of the meal. The ever-popular shirt waist will be worn through the winter, for shopping and business, made in velvet, silk or pretty woolen material, plain taffeta, is more popular this year than the shaded. Russian blouses are still most fashionable but if you cannot afford two or three wraps do not buy one to wear for a coat as they are only becoming to very slender tall people. Grey still leads the fashion. Every indication, we are assured points to continued and even increased favor for neck garnitures that completely conceal the throat and well-nigh the ears. The latest shown have a large bow under the chin and combine the ribbon stock with ribbon plisse and lace in a truly hewilder- ing manner. In addition we shall’ have little scarfs ending in big bows, lace scarfs and at least two novelties that are easily made at home. The one is of five-inch ribbon, the other of silk, but both are simple in the extreme; at the same time they are effective and becoming. To make the former is required only a bias strip of taffeta four inches wide and 40 long. All the edges are finished with narrow hems, and exactly at the centre is placed a loop of narrow ribbon, or mad« from a tiny band of the silk. The scarf is vassed round the throat, crossed at the Lack and brought round to the front a second time, when the ends are passed through the loop and al- lowed to hang without forming a bow. The ribbon is made to cover a stiff stock that closes at the back, where two ends are at- tached that pass round to the front and tie. The ends are simply fringed, and when the ribbon is of a well-chosen plaid or Roman stripe the effect on a gown of quiet tone is difficult to outdo. Modish women adhere to the nose-tilt hat, in spite of the vogue of the Pompa- dour style of coiffure. And wise, indeed, are they, as the flare-back hat is merciless to the wearer and betrays every tell-tale line and blemish of the not-too-fresh com- plexion. The short straight front corset continues its vogue, and the only objection to them is the extraordinary high prices charged. They give full scope to the hips and back, while keeping a tight rein in front, a decided advantage where there is a ten- dency to embonpoint. There will be an epidemic of suddenly developed hips this winter, and it will not be because the old- time pad has been resurrected, The wise woman is simply paying more for her corset, and studying carefully the lines of her figure. Even when not made to order, the trying on has become a serious matter. ‘The straight front has a very great merit } it simply starts in by doing the very best for what is already there. Shoulder drapery continues to be a fea- ture of the modern woman of fashion. It is no longer a mere matter of bunching up, for an effort is made to keep the shoulder flat and to square off with military-looking epaulette what was once a huge circular of material, puffed and tucked here and there. The shoulder drapery, then, should not he allowed to puff up, still less be per- mitted to droop listlessly, but should be squared off with sharp angles and true edges. A generation ago the little girls of the family were made happy by a gift of a Roman sash presented by the aunt or uncle who returned from a European visit. Heavenly blue, barred with gold, the Italian colors, red, green and white, deli- cate combinations of rose-pink and pale blue, striped these heavy sashes. There is nothing handsomer to-day. One Roman sash outlasts three or four sashes of ordinary ribbon. They are now once more the height of the fashion, and will be worn with white frocks by the young, and on gray or black for afternoon and evening by more mature women. A Roman sash smartsns a dull black silk. Most of them have long tied fringe of white silk. When this becomes rough, tangled or soiled it is clipped off and the edge hemmed and hordered with black lace. Tie your sash with short loops and quite long sash ends.