= ‘Bellefonte, Pa., August 31, 1923. CS RY THE INCURABLE HURT. ’Tain’t likely ez a awkward chap Like I am, big and stupid, Ud ever go a monkeyin’ ‘round A dandy kid like Cupid; . But, major, dern my ugly mug, I done it once, fer certain, An’ ef I live a hundred years The thing’ll keep on hurtin’. I never know'd a womans ways Till one day little Kitty, Her that’s the banker's only gal, Come down from Timber City, An’ stoppin’ at our boardin’ house, Begun her purty flirtin,’ I guess with all the boys around, An’ me, that’s doggoned certain. Them eyes uv her’n shined like the stars, That speckles night all over, An’ both her cheeks purtier than Two medders red with clover. An’ when she talked—good Lordy, me! Why can’t a man take warnin’ ?— It seemed to me like all the songs The bird sings in the mornin’. I drinked it in an’ wanted more, An’ she, I guess, unthinkin’, Whuz tickled half to death to see A thirsty man a-drinkin’; An’ let me have it every day, From June clear to October, Tell I wuz drunk and crazy wild, An’ she thought I wuz sober. At last I up an’ told her straight That I wuz fairly dyin’ Fer love uv her—and dern my boots, She just broke down a eryin’, An’ told me it wuz all in fun, That she wuz only flirtin'— An’ ef I live a hundred years The thing’ll keep on .hurtin’. —Free Press. A LAW UNTO OURSELVES. Washington Arch—white, upstand- ing, clean—at the intersection of old New York and new! Monument to the spirit of 76! The gate to free- dom! Looking north, the freedom of pro- hibition, censors and ticket specula- tors. Looking south, the freedom of fetish worship, slavery to the uncon- ventional and low ceilinged table d’hotes. North, the sweep of Fifth Avenue trailing her train of silver lights, an arrogant beauty sure of adorers. South, Greenwich Village, a careless grisette sitting in the lap of indifference and kicking up her heels! And between them, though few know it, a square of sod covering the dead of a bygone century. A bit to the west on the south side of the Square squats a little cafe known as the Pink Kitten. For all the world like its name, it crouches on its haunches blinking lazy eyes out of a ripe pink facade, yawning occa- sionally to gulp a guest into its faint- ly illumined interior. They form an odd assortment, the morsels the Pink Kitten assimilates at meal. time—girls with elongated eyes, some bold, some curious, some prom- ising. Their look is direct, unflinch- ing, without guile. Guile has no place in the Village. Sometimes long earrings jangle close to them, supple- mented incongruously by sweaters and flat sport shoes. Sometimes bat- ik smocks in flaring reds, oranges and blues indicate a closer adherence to feminine covenants. Of the men, there are those of the flowing tie and scornfully shady fingernails. There are others not long enough trans- planted from north of the Arch to ig- nore the traditions of the close fitting coats instead of baggy ones and a manicure stolen when the Village is not looking. But whatever the differ- ences in dress, their souls are garbed alike—the law of individualism herds them like sheep. At the far end of the Pink Kitten on a night when the snow covered Square wore a smile of satire, a girl and a man discussed this mooted question of individualism, the impor- tance of their own lives as opposed to the great mass of humanity hide- bound by the law of convention. The girl’s eyes were not so innocent as they were questioning, but one could see plainly that their question still remained unanswered. They were very deep blue and very eager, veiled with gladness half afraid. They were full of the potentialities of pas- sion and languor. They were woman- eyes, with all the possibilities a man wants to read in the eyes of the wom- an he loves. The man who sat beside her at the intimate little table was reading them with an intensity that flamed straight to their depths. It burned, there, reflected in the sudden drop of her lids as if its strength were more than she could bear. “Say you love me,” the man was urging. “Say it—darling!” “Do I have to say it?” came breath- lessly. “Can’t you see it? Can’t you feel it?” Then suddenly answering that call of his eyes she crushed down the barrier of restraint which had held her inarticulate. “I love you so that the fought of you colors every- thing I do. want to be with you everywhere—always. When 1 see beauty, I don’t think of it as the sky or sea or a sunset. I think how I'd love to stand beside you and watch you paint it—splash on the color with that quick reckless stroke and your eyes squinted up so that they don’t see me.” “They always see you—no matter what they're looking at!” ; She pressed the fingers that inter- locked hers. “When I sing—even in practice—it’s to you. And my voice lifts higher than it ever could with- out you! And there’s a note in it— a note that couldn’t be there if I did not feel—all you make me feel. If ever I'm a great singer, Fred, it will be you who have done it! Not study —not practice—just loving you—" She broke off. “And when you’re alone at night— in that dingy little room where you've no right to be—do you think of me then? Do you ever want me—my arms—--" “More than I can tell!” They sat moved to silence by the in- tensity of the force that. held them, not individuals now but one with the mighty surge of men and women down the path of centuries gone and up through centuries to come. They sat with hands gripped and eyes lock- ed and thought they alone had discov- ered a glory as old as time. “Fred,” she murmured finally, “we mustn’t let ourselves be swayed. We must reason the thing out calmly— as calmly as we can. I'm twenty- three and you're twenty-eight—it’s not as if we were children.” “It’s because we're not children that we see things as we do—the only sane way to preserve the most precious thing on earth. Are all these theo- ries of ours merely theories or are we brave enough to live them? If we're not, then we're cowards and hypo- crites.” “Free love,” she mused. “Yes, I've talked a lot about it—and thought a lot about it. It’s in the air down here. But since I’ve known you, I’ve been wondering—is there such a thing? Is love ever free? I'm so dependent on you, you’re so necessary to me—why, if you were to get out of my life now, most of me would go with you. I'd be just a husk. Is that freedom?” “Freedom from forces outside of ourselves—that’s the way to inter- pret it. A law unto ourselves—you to me and me to you, that’s what it means. To be able to do as we please apart from man made laws of conven- tion—not apart from each other! Why, your dependence on me, sweet- heart—I adore it! I want you to want me—need me the way I need you. I'd send the rest of the world to the devil for you—to keep your love— to have you. Near you—away from you—I want that voluntary sense of possession to hold us together. But not involuntary—not the feeling that the church and State bind us when the bonds should be ours to make or break as we choose.” “If you ever broke them—if ever you married any one else, I couldn’t bear it. I couldn’t go on.” “Marry some one else!” He flung up a shaggy head, with a laugh deep and rich as an organ tone. “Why, dear girl of mine, you don’t think this love of ours is the sort that a man could treat lightly just because he be- lieves that the best way to kill love is to marry it! I’m yours as long as you want me—only I want to be yours be- cause you want me, not because con- vention decrees it. You're convinced of that, aren’t you?” He bent down; his lips brushed the hand he held, lingering, one by one, on the sensitive, slim fingers. They responded, tightening their clasp with sudden convulsive tension. The hu- man morsels in the body of the Pink Kitten paid no attention to this slight display of emotion. They were ac- customed to frankness in all its forms, busy with their own little lives, their own important little passions. “You are convinced of it, aren’t you, dear heart?” the man persisted. “You do believe with me, don’t you?” “Yes, of course,” she answered hur- riedly. “That’s been my belief ever since I've been in New York—ever since I've lived down here, that is. Only it’s always been in the abstract. Until I met you, I never thought I'd —live it.” “What use are abstract beliefs? It’s like trying to paint a picture with an imaginary brush. If we don’t live Nok Werthink, we’re not living, that’s all. Her brow wrinkled and she looked away, speaking very low. “Mother would think we ought to marry. She’d say there was nothing real to prevent it.” “She’s the best argument against it,” he put in hastily. “From all you tell me, her marriage has been hell— ragged and bullied by an arrogant Puritan who thinks she hasn’t the right to breathe without him. You were afraid of him, weren’t you?” “Sometimes I hated him,” came through pressed lips. “Sometimes when he humiliated and hurt her, I wanted to kill him. She couldn’t call her soul her own. It belonged to him and he never let her forget it. That’s why I came away the minute I could. I couldn’t stand it, and she wanted me to get away from it. Living there— in that narrow New England town with my father and brother—they’re so alike—would have killed all the song there was in me.” “Wait till we're in Paris,” he whis- pered. “You won't realize the extent of the song in you until you know the city of song. The broad boulevards, the Luxembourg Gardens, the crowd- ed little houses of Montmartre, the balls in the Quartier, Notre Dame frowning over the Seine, it’s all so paintable, so bubbling with beauty, you'll have to sing for sheer joy of living. And you and I togethor——" Her forehead furrowed again and the deep, intense blue eyes clouded. “But, Fred, if I go abroad with you, it will eat up the money I’ve got put away for singing lessons. I won’t be able to study over there at all.” “Nonsense!” He swept aside her fears. “What do you suppose all my money is good for if not to defray the expenses of both of us?” “No—no!” The hand interlaced with his tried suddenly to pull away. “That’s not in our compact. That's not freedom! That’s the pendulum swinging the other way—that’s put- ting me in the class of a—a kept woman. Her head dropped with the words and he leaned over to lift it, his ar- dent eyes once more engulfing hers. “Dear, there must be no talk of money between us—ever. I have so much. The Emery fortune made in patent medicine! What better way to spend it than in art—your art and mine? Your voice—my paints— whatever I have belongs to us both!” “No—we must both be free! I must pay my way—you, yours. If I give myself to you, it must be a mutual gift—not for support or—or clothes— or anything but the joy of giving. I wouldn’t take a cent from you, Fred —not one penny.” He sat silent a second—this time the silence of thought rather than emotion. The consistencey of her de- termination he had not taken into con- sideration. It was his own argument applied with unswerving fidelity and he found for the moment ne way to combat it. Yet it seemed too absurd to take seriously. He, with the Em- ery millions backing him, the golden flood that had poured into the Emery household with the sudden vogue of Emery Reducing Tablets! It had in- undated their happiness, that flood— sent his father scurrying after pleas- ures a hard working youth had denied him—his mother into the divorce | court—his sister struggling out of its depths up the bank of social ambi- tion—and himself, disgusted, away from it all to art and the Village, where money is almost a shameful possession that makes one declasse. Now for the first time had come an opportunity to spend his vulgar al- lowance decently—on this girl he adored. His girl whose eyes so full of promise and red-brown hair that shone like fire where the light touch- ed it, whose luscious lips and deep cleft chin, whose voice and tenderness spelled happiness for him! This girl from a parsimonious family in a hide- bound Massachusetts town—he want- ed to lavish on her the luxury for which she was made. And because of their belief, their law of individual- ism, their religion of love that must be free, she was insisting upon the use of the little hoard, gathered to- gether for her musical education, to de- fray her end of their love trip to the land where love is lord. It was idiot- ic—a humiliation. Yet how could he meet it—what could he say? “Suppose you were to find a back- er,” he put to her slowly, “with such faith in the beauty of your voice that he’d be willing to pay for your lessons anywhere until such time as you could repay him.” She looked up and smiled a smile that glowed. “That’s a heavenly way to get round it, and just like you, but I couldn’t accept—you know I could not.” “But if I arrange to take a lien or something on every cent you earn— that’s the way all big singers do things—and you’d be absolutely inde- pendent.” “Would I?” Do you think I'd ever earn enough to pay you back?” “Of course! You don’t know what a golden tone you have, darling. You can’t hear it as I do. Why, I'd look upon the whole matter as the wisest investment I'd ever made.” Her head went to one side as she leaned nearer, so near that his lips touched the wave of hair falling across her brow. “It would be sweet to feel that whatever success I might have years from now would be due to your faith. I'd love it!” Once more they sat breathlessly still. When he spoke it was with hus- ky intensity that swayed round her like the veil of smoke above them, like the mystic aura of yesterday, the perfumed secrets of tomorrow. “We'll sail Saturday. You can be ready by that time, can’t you?” “Yes.” “My darling!” “I—I shall have to lie to mother. I hate doing it! It’s not that I'm ashamed but she wouldn’t under- stand.” “Don’t see her! It would be too hard on you. Write and tell her of this sudden opportunity to go abroad and study—that you’ve found some people who are backing you. That will satisfy her and it will be the truth.” “A half truth, dear!” “But if she wouldn’t understand— | and we know she wouldn’t—it’s to | protect her, isn’t it?” “Yes.” “Jean—love—we’re going to make each other so happy!” At the mention of the modest little name, she raised eyes whose radiance was a torch. “They’ll call me Jeanne in France, won’t they?” “My little Jeanne d’Arc—my adora- ble soldier maid with the courage to live her vision!” Four musicians in shabby green, blue, purple and red velvet jackets with tams to match took their places in a tight alcove and, elbows touch- ing, jazzed up their instruments. A girl at a table against the wall pulled her wide felt hat over a broad fore- head that nothing could furrow, blew the smoke of her cigarette specula- tively into the eyes of her escort, then chucked it aside, paid her check as he paid his, and both got up to dance. The first high pitched chord of the latest fox trot fell across the hazy air. “Jeanne—come!” the man murmur- ed. “I want to be with you—alone.” They rose, hands still clasped. A bobbed haired girl in a pink tam and black apron shaped like a cat with ears forming the shoulder straps re- minded him that there was a bill to settle. He smiled apologetically, dove into his pocket and left a greenback of astonishing proportions in the open palm. Together the two who were a law unto themselves made their way among the tables to the door that opened on the snow draped Square, silent as its secret dead against the luminous night. The swaying song of the banjo followed them, the swish- ing sound of dancing feet, the mur- mur of voices. The sides of the Pink Kitten shook with laughter. II Paris—belle chanteuse! Paris— with head flung up and song trilling from longing lips! Paris—with laughter in her eyes and confetti trailing from her skirts! Paris—on the eve of Mardi Gras, gay cocotte for whose favors all the world pleads! The narrow streets of Montmartre were laid thick with a pattern multi- colored and soft as a Persian prayer rug. Over it tripped feet, young for tonight even though the hair were gray or had disappeared altogether. yes bright with anticipation looked through the windows of saucy cafes, seeking the most gay, the most aban- doned to frolic on this night of aban- don, Passers-by shouted to one anoth- er, then flung handfuls of confetti in- to the laughing faces turned to an- swer. Men grasped the arms of un- known women and skipped along the velvety sidewalks. Students with caps perched over one ear marched in groups of four chanting solemnly songs that would not bear translation. Festive and festooned, Paris was play- ing as only Paris can. In one of those side streets whose tortuous curves and mysterious off- shoot of alleys still bear the mark of the Medici, couples incongruously mated as to costume were streaming under an arched doorway. Above it rose-colored lights announced: BAL DE FANTAISIE DU SOIR AU MATIN ENTREE! electric | The building was one of the oldest ' of the neighborhood but only the shell of the ancient structure remained, probably the hotel of some stately family demolished by the Revolution, even its name forgotten. The inter- ‘ior had completely vanished under modern carpentry and electricity. It was from floor to dome a vast dance hall. A staircase spreading fanlike at the bottom led up to the balcony where tables were laid. On each stood a silver champagne cooler from which a gold-coiled bottle neck protruded. The stone walls were covered with drawings in charcoal and colored chalks—dancing girls, cartoons of men in public life, unfinished sketches, all of them contributed by habitues. The floor was covered with swaying fig- ures in costumes of dress and undress fantastic as the name of the ball in- vited them to be. The instruments of the shoulder shaking musicians were all of American vintage. The dance they were playing was a fox trot from a popular musical comedy. But they played it with a little French lilt that was like the raising of an eye- brow, the winking of an eye. Moving as one through the throng were a man in the tights and doublet of a troubadour and a girl whose slim limbs ended in the soft pointed shoes of the fifteenth century. They danced with that complete oblivion that be- speaks complete harmony. She wore a tunic of light chain armor in replica of an old painting of Jeanne d’Arc. It clung gently to her young form, out- lining its grace. Her helmet she had discarded early in the evening and the mass of her bronzed hair shone with varying light under the colored lan- terns. He leaned down, letting his lips rest against it. “Happy ?” he murmured. “Heavenly!” “Mon adoree!” He lapsed into the language made for love. She did not look up, did not answer —simply nestled her head where it seemed to fit, against his breadth of shoulder. When the lilt died away with a lingering wail, they mounted the steps to one of the tables and waited for the rest of their party. In hilarious two’s they came stumbling up—Felix, cubist sculptor of the new French School, with Evelyn, his mod- el; Coningsby Hoyt, dilettante, who had come to France to escape the chil- ling confines of British middle class respectability; with him Nanette, the dainty little dancer who was helping him escape them; St. Espere, a young writer whose epigrams all Paris was quoting, and Henriette, new favorite at the Comedie Francaise. “A nous!” Felix announced, rais- ing his glass, emptying it at one gulp. “We who know how to work and play, who have made a slave of life because we do not make ourselves slaves of living!” “We,” St. Espere added, tongue rolling a bit, “who live to love and love to live!” “We,” mumbled Hoyt, and only ourselves!” “To France, real life of the free,” Fred Emery supplemented, glancing with the lift of his glass at the girl next to him, “where a man is not afraid to be himself!” They rose, those who were seated, and eight glasses tilted. Nanette pouted. “In you drink now only with the eyes— hein 7” Emery laughed. could notice it!” Felix, the sculptor, swayed a bit un- certainly toward Jean. “I should not want to drink to your eyes, mon ange, I should want to drown myself in them!” His arm slipped round the back of her chair, lips close to hers. “Give them to me for one little mo- ment.” Emery leaned swiftly in front of her flushed, averted face. In spite of the laugh in his answer, his brows were forming a straight black line. “If you try any more drowning, Felix, you’ll be gone for good—never come up again, my friend.” “Eh bien!” Felix shrugged, not one whit nonplussed. “What more sublime death? The eyes—and arms —of la petite Jeanne—you have died and lived in them many times, eh mon Americain 7” Emery started up. Jean’s hands went out to halt him. “Don’t pay any attention, dear,” she whispered hurriedly. “Can’t you see, he’s not responsible for what he’s saying 7” “He’s responsible to me!” “Our Frederick is jealous, my friends!” sputtered the futurist Felix. “He thinks he is a modern! Mon Dieu, he is primitive—like the man of the cave, like the beast who snarls when one approaches his mate!” He looked up impudently at the towering American. “Should you not be flat- tered, my friend, that a Frenchman with the taste of a connoisseur bows to yours? Your little Jeanne is ador- able—why should not another find her desirable—an artist who knows line better than you?” He made a flour- ishing, unsteady bow. Emery’s lips went white. Before the girl could stop him, his fist shot out and the little Frenchman, with a look of soggy astonishment, went roll- ing to the floor. “Fred—don’t!” Jean’s frightened breath caught. “Don’t make a scene! He doesn’t mean anything—pick him up. Fred—please!” The music intervened with an al- luring tango and the rest of the par- ty, except for Evelyn, seized the op- portunity to hurry down the stairs. She sent the dart of an arrow from her eyes at the assaliant of Felix and stooped over to help him to his chair. The sculptor’s teeth were chattering with inarticulate Gallic rage. “Fred,” pleaded the girl in the Jeanne d’Arc warrior costume, “don’t say anything more to him! Let’s go! I'm tired anyway and it’s almost day- light. Dear—won’t you?” Without a word Emery took her arm and they went down the steps, she trembling a bit as she clung to him. They pushed through the sway- ing crowd. She was trembling as he lifted her into a cab and gave their address. “If that dog hadn’t been drunk I'd have killed him,” he muttered, arms going around her. “Darling, you're all unnerved.” “Tt’s nothing—nothing! Only, Fred, he felt he had the right to talk to me that way. He's been sweet and chiv- alrous every time he’s called but he “ourselves “Not so that you two America, | ' showed tonight the class he really puts me in—with Nanette and——" “Forget him!” Emery broke in. “We both will—the whole episode. It’s not worth thinking about. To- morrow he’ll come over to the flat and apologize. He’ll be all contrition. Jean—dearest, tell me, you're not going to let the thing bother you!” “Fred—am I in that class? The sort that can be insulted? Isn’t our love the beautiful thing we thought it would be? Tell me—tell me!” “Of course it is!” And anxiously he answered her question with anoth- er. “Haven’t we had a perfect time? Haven’t these months together been heaven ?” “Yes—they have. I didn’t think there could be such happiness.” (Concluded next week). INFORMATION FOR SPORTSMEN. The hunters’ licenses and tags for every county in the State have now been completed and shipped. Sports- men are urged to obtain their licens- es at an early date to avoid the rush that is sure to follow later. Hunters who neglect to make application for their licenses far enough in advance of the time they want to use same cannot expect to go hunting, but must wait until the license and tag have been received by them. Up to this time the 1922 tags and licenses have been recognized. No one will be per- mitted to use their old license and tag after the licenses have been in the hands of the county treasurer a suffi- cient length of time to permit appli- cants to secure licenses. The blackbird season has been on since August 1st. In many sections thousands of blackbirds have been killed, and “blackbird pie” is being en- joyed by hundreds of sportsmen and their families. This is one game bird that may be killed in unlimited num- bors without affecting the future sup- ply. The season for training dogs open- ed August 20th, instead of September 1st, as heretofore. Training is per- mitted from one hour before sunrise until 10 p. m., eastern standard time, on all game, except elk, deer and wild turkeys. Dogs may be trained on rac- coons at any hour of the night. No training is permitted on Sunday and no firearms usually raised at arm’s length and fired from the shoulder may be carried. Training at any time during the training season is permis- sible only so long as dogs are accom- panied by their owner or handler and are under control at all times. Per- sons who take out dogs for training purposes that cannot be controlled, or persons who are careless and permit dogs to injure game pursued assume the responsibility and are liable to fines. Where training is contemplated on privately-owned land, it is recom- mended that the permission of the owner to train be obtained in all in- stances before so doing. While not compelled by law to do so, it is rec- ommended that persons training dogs carry their licenses and display their tag as a means of identification. GAS TO DECIDE WARS, EXPERT DECLARES. Whole armies put to sleep and tak- en prisoner in gas warfare is by no means an impossibility twenty-five years hence, Col. Raymond F. Bacon, chief of the technical division of the chemical warfare service, A. E. F., says in a description of the possibili- ties of the future art of war made public by the American Chemical So- ciety. The $2,000,000 spent on the re- search organization did more toward winning the war, Col. Bacon asserts, than any $200,000,000 spent in other ways. One of the greatest lessons of the war has so far gone almost un- heeded, according to Col. Bacon, who continues: » “To say that the use of gas in war- fare must be abolished is almost the same as saying that no progress must be made in the art of warfare toward making it more efficient or more hu- mane. If one reads of the great bat- tles of history, one will find that the victorious General conquered his ene- my usually because of the fact that he so chose his position as to have his flank protected by river, mountain range or some naturally strong bar- rier. : “Much of the strategy of these bat- tles consisted in maneuvering so as to obtain the advantage of position. With the use of gas it is possible to saturate a piece of ground so that no troops can cross it, and thus make an artificial barrier for the flank or pro- tect the lines of communication. Moreover, these artificial barriers can be kept barriers for just as short a time as the strategy of the particular battle demands. These are but hints, but show the tremendous unexploited possibilities of gas warfare.”—Ex. CONTRAPTION OF 1876 NECESSITY OF TODAY. Since 1876, when the telephone as demonstrated at the Centennial Ex- position in Philadelphia was regard- ed as a “clever contraption but im- practicable for business purposes,” the world’s continents have literally been swathed in communication lines. At the time the first demonstration of the telephone was made in Phila- delphia, there were two instruments in New York city. These were con- nected by a single strand of wire at- tached to the supports erected for the Brooklyn Bridge then under construc- tion to span the East River and join New York’s oldest borough. . In the 47 years intervening be- tween then and today, the telephone business in New York has seen some- thing of an increase. The two puny instruments of Manhattan and Brook- lyn have given place to more than one million in the five boroughs. That is just one striking illustra- tion of the development of the tele- phone industry in the United States in less than half a century.—Ex. “I see,” remarked a gentleman as he paid a small newsboy for his paper, “that you are putting up a good many new buildings in your town.” “That is the only kind we put up here, sir,” replied the little fellow with a touch of civic pride. RR FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Let old Timotheus yield the prize Or both divide the crown; He raised a mortal to the skies, She drew an angel down. Keep in your work basket several large-size safety pins, and use them to string loose buttons, hooks, eyes, etc. Keep those of the same size on the same pin, black hooks on black pins, white eyes on white pins, ete. Thus you never will have an untidy work basket, or be delayed by not be- ing able to find instantly what you are looking for. Fasten the safety pins to one side of the lining of your basket—and your method of securing neatness will be complete. To darn a worn place in a shirtwaist or other thin material, lay a piece of paper—not too stiff—on the wrong side and stitch back and forth on the sewing machine to cover the spot. The paper will keep the material from puckering and will come off in the wash. This looks much nicer than patching and is done faster. Speaking of last season’s clothes reminds me of the value of following a rather rigid plan of regularly send- ing certain articles of apparel to be dry-cleaned, or, if you happen to be skillful in such work, as some women naturally are, doing this work at home at stated times. There is no de- nying the fact that such a plan faith- fully followed will and does prolong the usefulness and good appearance of all apparel, and the woman who ap- preciates this fact and persists in such a plan has always an advantage in appearance and in economy over her less particular sister. You can lengthen your last year’s sport skirt by adding a hem of gros- grain ribbon of matching or contrast- !ing color, and perhaps running two additional bands of the ribbon above the hem extension to further carry out the trimming effect. Sleeping gowns and pajamas of wash silk, piped with color, are an au- tumn innovation in lingerie. Fine striped and checked silks in two col- ors on a white ground are much used; as, for instance, a tiny line of red crossed by blue for the check effect, and two or more lines of varying width arranged in clusters for the stripe designs. . Cascades of narrow accordian plait- ing matching the dress material as a side front and side back trimming on the skirts of simple line dresses are a summer fashion that will continue through the autumn. Blouses for the coming autumn and winter show a strong Chinese influ- ence, traceable in the trend of neck- liness, the shaping and treatment of the sleeves, and particularly. in the fabrics and their colors and trim- mings employed. It is particularly desirable to can or dry the fruits and vegetables raised on the farm, as the raw products can be gathered and treated when abso- lutely fresh and at just the proper stage of ripeness and tenderness for best results. The average farm family probably cans annually more than 150 quarts of fruits and vegetables, the greater part of which is fruit. Canning clubs have been instrumental in stimulating interest in canning on the farm. The drying of fruits and vegetables, sn old farm art until recently on the de- cline, has been revived quite gener- ally within the past two years. This process offers a good means of pre- serving perishables without entailing expense for containers, as in canning. The tea hour forms a delightful background for all the little individu- al touches of hospitality which one is usually at a loss to know how to in- troduce into the merely formal call. As the custom of serving tea infor- mally whenever callers drop in at the tea hour is advancing so rapidly into general usage, many hostesses, who are just beginning to make the tea hour an occasion, will be glad for some suggestions as to menus, meth- ods, and graceful service. . Tea must be either piping hot or icy cold, and while hot tea may be served throughout the year, iced tea is infinitely more refreshing in the summer months. Temperature is the first essential of delicious tea; flavor is the second, and lies in the variety selected. For serving with lemon, Orange Pekoe or a good quality of green and black mixed is more agree- able in flavor than other teas, which are more delicious with cream. As tea may be considered a thin, rather acid beverage compared with the richness and body of coffee and choc- olate, the thinner quality of cream is the better choice. Hot tea must be served “hot,” whether brewed in Brown Betty or the electric urn, or made with boiling wa- ter and the tea-ball. If the tea hour is protracted, it is always advisable to have another pot of water simmering, so that additional tea may be made instantly. The most delicate tea fla- vor requires fresh, boiling water, but this is not always possible under all circumstances. Cream and lemon in the thinnest of slices should be serv- ed, sometimes inserting in the lemon one or two of the smallest of spicy cloves, or notching the edges as an ornamental touch. A new device for serving hot tea is the electric or alcohol urn with a large tea-ball attached by a chain to the cover, so that it may be drawn up when the tea is sufficiently strong, or lowered when more strength is desir- ed or additional tea is required. When a separate tea-ball is used with the hot-water urn, it is a clever idea to have a supply of tiny cheesecloth bags holding the same quality of tea as the ball. This obviates the necessity for refilling the ball at the table. These little bags, kept in an air-tight re- tainer, are ready at a moment’s no- tice, and the new tea-caddy with the glass base is an ideal receptacle, since it displays the number remaining. The tea may be made in the kitch- en, using a Japanese earthenware pot, which gives it an especially delicate flavor. Then pour it into a silver or china tea-pot, which has already been warmed with hot water.