Demorrali Wald, = Bellefonte, Pa., May 23, 1924. EE EIT TEE, ON MEMORIAL DAY. There's a thrill and a throb in the air to- day, A throb and a thrill ever new, For billows have broken o'er wall and town Of red and of white and of blue. The blood runs swift and a shrill huzza Springs glad to the lips of youth, ‘While louder the silence speaks of those Who fought, dear God, for thy truth. It floats up the aisles of the village church; It springs from the statehouse dome, Jt kisses the breeze wherever it please, Set firm in the heart of the home. And all through the hours the incense of flowers, Of prayers and of praise is swung From a censer of gold that the children hold While the storied past is sung. The censer is memory’s storied urn That holdeth for love and rue The ashes of those whom each heart knows Fought for the gray or the blue. Fewer each year as the end draws near, ‘When none will be left, not one, Who saw the sorrowful sights of war Or shared in the brave deeds done. But unto the children we tell the tale, And once in each twelvemonth long ‘We honor the men who died for us ‘When the goodly land went wrong. —Selected. THE WISDOM OF SILENCE. Antonia, only and very precious daughter of Lucian, the great mer- chant of Thessalia, now the betrothed of Valerius, the brilliant young mag- istrate of Cyprus, sat in her father’s house, alone with her lover. Shock- ing! sighed her august aunt Octavia, their guest from Rome. But unto Antonia, motherless and cherished, many privileges were granted. And whatever rights her father forebore to grant, she took anyway in all se- renity. Today, she and Valerius had spent long hours on the vine-shaded gallery. But not in love-making. For today, only three days before their marriage, Valerius had come to make his bride a confession; a confession— and a demand. By that confession, by that demand, their whole life would be ruled. Small, im)erious, very childlike, de- spite her sumptuous robe, her blazing jewels, Antonia sat watching her lov- er’s face with grave, wondering eyes. Dark and vivid and splendid, Valer- ius stood before her, his eyes flashing, his eloquent hands flung wide. “Shame on me, Antonia, that I have not told you all this, long ago. But you will understand. And—you will do as I ask? You will grant my de- sire, share in my heart’s dream?” “You haven’t told me what your dream is, Valerius. But I understand, as far as you’ve told me. Years ago, when you were just a little boy, your father was sent from Rome to review the Syrian legions. He took you along because he hoped the journey might make you stronger. Your right leg had been withered from birth. And your father was forever searching a climate that might heal you. And while in Galilee, you took a fancy to a certain centurion, and insisted on staying at his house, while yaur fath- er and his officers inspected the coun- try. What more?” “Well—" Valerius’s voice deepened. His boyish face glowed. “If only you’d known that centurion, Antonia! Decius, his name was. The wisest, kindest old fellow! Always he griev- ed because I must go lame through life. Always he petted me, as my stern, proud father never thought of doing. And I loved him dearly, and tagged him like a little lame puppy, wherever he went.” “I wish,” said Antonia, under her breath, “that I'd known you when you were a little boy. You must have been such a darling.” “Early one morning I looked from my window to see Decius setting forth in his chariot alone. This was amazing. Always he drove in state, as befitted his provincial rank. “ ‘Wait, Decius! Take me!” I shouted. Then I saw how worn he was, how haggard. I knew that his heart was sore. Joseph, his favorite servant, lay dying. All the wise phy- sicians of Capernium had tried to heal him, and tried in vain. “Ts Joseph worse?’ I asked. He did not answer. He stared up at me, intent, judging. Suddenly he ran up the courtyard stair very softly, and caught me up without waking the slave who slept at my feet, and ran with me to the chairot. The horses, silvery Arabs, fled away like the wind. “It was a long, hot ride. At last we halted, in a mean by-street. A lit- tle knot of people stood there. Talk- ing to them, slowly and gently, stood a tall man in a straight, white, seam- less robe. “The centurion leaped out. He went straight to the tall man. I tag- ged after. “The man turned, looked at us. Never, Antonia, have I known such a look. He didn’t smile. He didn’t need to. It was as if that one glance sum- moned us, welcomed us, made us glad and content. “ ‘What will you of me?’ “The centurion bowed low. It was strange to see him, the ruler, bent so humbly before this common street preacher in his seamless robe. “ ‘Lord, my servant lies sick.’ The centurion’s voice shook, his big hands trembled. ‘I beseech thee, heal him.’ “I gaped. Ask this stranger to heal poor Joseph, when all the great doc- tors could not even ease his pain? “Then I gaped some more. The man didn’t look surprised, even. But his face shone as if there'd been a light behind it. “(Go thy way. And as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee.’ His voice rang out like a great gold bell. “The centurion bowed to the earth. Then, his own face aglow, he turned back toward his chariot. But in that instant, the strange preacher stooped and touched my little withered knee. He didn’t say one word. He just look- ed into my eyes. The gentlest glance, but with a little spark of fun in it. ‘We have a secret, we two,” that spark said. And then—" “Then—the centurion hadn’t seen. He stooped to pick me up. But I squirmed away, and shouted: “Don’t carry me! Now I can walk! And—oh! I can run! I can run!’ ” Antonia cried out. Her wide eyes flashed, wet. “The strange preacher had healed you. Though you'd gone lame, all your little life!” “Aye. He had healed me. And the centurion—he was like a man struck dumb, for gratitude and delight. And when we reached home, the servants all swarmed out to meet him. They’d forgotten all decoruui. They fell over each other to be the first to tell. “ ‘Master! Master! Joseph is healed. Is risen as from the dead! Behold im! “All my life shall I remember that hour. And all my life cannot blot out the day of my father’s return, his joy at my healing, his bland scorn of the miracle that had been wrought for me. “(So you swear that he and thy servant were both healed by that freakish new prophet, Jesus of Naz- areth? Tut, good Decius, where are thy wits? My son is well, thanks to the keen reviving air of this country. Thy servant cast off his fever be- cause it had run its course. Miracles, forsooth! Can any such come out of Nazareth ?’ “Very soon he took me back to Rome. And that was all.” Antonia studied her lover’s face. “Not all, Valerius.” “No. For now begins a new chap- ter.” He leaned close. His voice took on a pleading tenderness. “List- en my heart. All these years, I have gone strong and well, because of that great mercy. All these years I have longed to pay my debt, my measure- less debt: it has been my life’s dream, my one great hope. Now, at last, comes my chance to repay. Yester- day I had audience with the governor. He tells me that I stand high in favor with the Senate. ‘Speak, what post do you most desire,” he said. ‘It shall be yours.’ ” “Oh, Valerius! How splendid!” Antonia sprang up, clapping ecstatic hands. “Oh, tell him, Alexandria! How I've always longed to live there, in that beautiful merry city! Or— maybe a magistracy in Rhodes. You could put your fortune into ships, and trade with the far East. No, let’s go to Messina! Think, a villa on those sunlit cliffs, and Rome, glorius gay Rome, only five days’ journey away!” Valerius looked at her steadliy. His face grew pale. “Do you, then, care so greatly for these splendors?” “Care for splendors? To be sure I do. Who doesn’t?” “But—" He spoke slowly, as against his will. “I—I'm sorry, An- tonia. I didn’t think * * * Hark, my darling. I have already chosen. I go to Moesia.” “Moesia!” Antonia gasped out. “Yes, Moesia. Chief magistrate of the whole province.” “But, Valerius!” Antonia was trem- bling, now; Resentful crimson burn- ed in her cheeks. ‘“Moesia! Why, it’s the very ends of the earth! It’s cold, and lonely, and ugly, and only half- conquered—revolts and battles every day, almost. And no fine houses, and no real society whatever! Why on earth should you go there?” “For just one reason.” Valerius’s hard young jaw set. “Because I've found out that scattered through Moe- sia are many bands of Christians. These worship in secret. They are in danger hourly of their lives. If I go to Moesia I can watch these people, I can guard them, befriend them. It is my chance, at last, my great chance, to repay my debt, Antonia! It will be my life’s dream—come true!” “Pay your debt sone other way Va- lerius. Give the Christians money. Much money.” “Could all my wealth pay for one hour of my strength?” “N-no.” She softened. “I, too, am grateful. I shall search out Chris- tians, and help them, as long as I live. But—Moesia! How can you ask it, Valerius 7” She sprang up and caught his face in both soft little palms and put her soft cheek to his own. And as Valer- ius snatched her close, she felt his strong arms quiver, and she knew her power, and forced it shamelessly. “Think, Valerius! Up in those lonely fortresses, I'd be a captive, a trapped thing. I could never have any good times, I'd never be happy, one min- ute. I couldn’t even wear the beauti- ful robes my father has given to me!” “No,” said Valerius, gently. “No, you’d never have the heart for gauds or jewels, in that lone country. I hadn’t thought of that. Maybe— maybe—"' “Maybe what?” “Maybe it is better for me to ‘go alone.” “Valerius! You wouldn’t!” “I may have to.” Valerius was all tenderness. Yet his clear gaze did not yield. “I go now. Think on this matter, my dearest. Now—until to- morrow!” He gathered her up, put his lips to hers in a long kiss, set her back upon her ivory couch. Beyond the walls, she heard his charger’s hoof beats die away. Through the long sunny hours that followed, Antonia centered every thought on this amazing problem. “Go to Moesia! Bury myself in those endless lonely forests! I think I see myself!” “But Valerius wants this thing.” A small inward voice awoke and clamor- ed. “His one great wish—his whole life’s dream—" “Yes, I know he wants to do it.” Antonia flushed. “That’s what hurts so. Why, I don’t want anything in this world, but Valerius. And our home. And—our children.” Her clear eyes misted, shone. “But Valerius! He wants all that—and more. A thousand times more. It isn’t fair.” “But that dream is Valerius’s one desire, his far horizon.” : “His horizon is too far!” Antonia stamped her foot. So she fumed and debated. At last, when the shadows grew long, she rose up and put on her prettiest tunic, and washed her hands in a lotion of roses that Euphemia, her old nurse, had made for Antonia’s mother before her. seek her father. | She found him in the atrium, scowl- ing over a heap of scrolls; reports of | unpaid accounts, these. “Run away, I'm busy,” he said curt- ly. ¥ antonts pushed the scrolls aside, | planted herself on her father’s knee, slid a slim fragrant arm around his neck and took a firm proprietary grip of one ear. “The scrolls can wait. I want you | to talk to me.” “Talk? What folly brings you | now?” Her father attempted to be gruff, failed dismally, after the man- ner of fathers, and leaned a bearded , cheek against her braids. “Only two things this time. do you know of the Christian faith?” “The Christian faith?” Her fath- er gaped, then shouted, “Little feath- er-top, what have you to do with the Christian faith, or any other mum- mery? Know you not that we are but | motes in the sunlight, tomorrow gone forever? That it behooves us to live | our lives, each hour? For tomorrow . —dust, ashes, silence.” His high, amused voice hardened. His fine eyes grew bitter. “For that is all of life. And all of hope.” I “Then you think Christianity is all wrong ?” “I don’t weary myself to think about it a moment. It contradicts all that I have been taught from my youth up. Therefore, I know it is the talk of fools. Now, your second ques- tion, small tyrant?” “I want to know—" Antonia fal- tred. Her father looked down into her lovely musing face. His face grew dark with pain. Twenty years ago, another little girl, even more lovely than this darling child, had sat, thus musing, in the circle of his arms. Flesh of his flesh, heart of his heart, wife of his youth. Here, in his clasp, her precious replica, whose beauty could only stab, it was so like the mother’s glance was an anguish of remembered joy. “Well! Your question?” “I want to know—what a man likes best in a woman.” “What he likes best—"” Lucian’s cool authoritative voice shook. A mo- ment he was silent. “All things are lovely in a woman like your mother,” he said, slowly. “But most lovely, to my mind, was her trustfulness, her faith in me. Many things, in our first wedded days, were to her hard and strange. Long jour- neys, rude ways of living, sleep in the tents of the desert, years of homesick- ness. But never did she murmur, nor hold back. Always, she felt I must be free to carry out my plans and my ambitions. ‘Thy country is my coun- try,” she would say. ‘Thy hope, mine.” He halted. Suddenly, almost rough- ly, he put Antonia on her feet and pushed her away. “Go, now. Is this the way you would waste my time? And do not come to me again with that—that fra- grance on yaur hands. Do you hear?” Antonia left the small head high. , “Anyway, he told me what a man wants most,” she confided to her pet peacock. “They want us, and their own children, and their own way. They want everything. Greedies!” She crossed to the Court of the Women. In her own room, she crouched before the chest that held her briday finery. Like every other girl, she forgot all else in the joy of her treasures. Silks colored like spring flowers and stiff with handi- work; furs brought by daring hunters from the northern seas; jars of sweet unguents; plumes; girdles of carved- coral rosebuds. And then the jew- els! ““You’d never have heart for jew- cls ” Valerius’s words struck on her ear. Oh, how could Valerius ask her to for- swear them! These graven emeralds, these moons of opals, these sapphires like blue flames! Again she sat and thought, intent- ly, deeply. Till upon her musing came her aunt, the superb and formidable widow, Octavia. Antonia rose and gave her defer- ence. “What were you dreaming of, here alone?” asked Octavia severely. Sheer mischief impelled Antonia’s ” room with her eply. “Of ways to rule a husband.” “Humph!” Her aunt sniffed. Only a Roman lady of high degree could have achieved that sniff. “There is but one way: Be yourself sole ruler of your house.” “But suppose that your husband wanted to do a certain thing. A thing you hated. Suppose you felt that he’d never be content unless you gave him his way. What then?” “Put your foot down. Keep it down.” “But—if you feared he’d always be miserable—"’ At once. “Nonsense! Listen, child.” Her aunt’s florid color deepened. Her firm hands twitched. “Never have I told any woman this thing. But for your own good, I tell you. When I was a bride, my husband gave me more trouble than a little. My dear, he had great skill as a bonesetter, and, if you'll believe me, he went daily among the common folk of Rome and tended on their hurts, and would not let them pay one farthing! For a wealthy young bachelor twas but a harmless notion. But the very day we were wed, he told me that he planned to give himself outright to this ridicu- lous whim! ‘Some days, I shall spend on my own concerns. But for the most part, my stewards can oversee my laborers. My real time and strength I shall give to these others, the sick and helpless who so need me.’ Have ever ye heard talk so outland- ish? Be sure I brought my young man up with a round turn. ‘Oho,” said I. ‘And what of me? Will you fill my house with your sick and fret- ful friends, must my servants wash their feet and bring them wine? Wiil you forget your bride, and the duty you owe to her?’ At that, he plead- ed, and then grew harsh. But I only stormed and wailed and vowed I would not endure such shame. At last he yielded, and promised, but in black anger. ‘Anything for peace,” he said, I recall. And for long he was wroth and grieved and surly. But as time passed, he set himself to widen his es- | pretty one. heap up wealth and gear. And he forgot.” “pid he ever reproach you?” “Reproach me? Because I had saved him from his own foolishness? | Oh, now and then he threw me a hard word, yes. But what are hard words, when you have gained your will? But get you to bed, now. The early sleep will hold the roses in your cheeks, my Good night!” Her bangles clinked. robes swept away. Her long Antonia sat still long minutes. Be- fore her she saw the fact of her aunt’s husband, dead ten years ago. A grim, silent man with a face like granite, What and dim, cold eyes, and on him always a gaunt and terrible weariness. Antonia clapped her hands and there entered to her a servant, her fa- | vorite, a Jewess whom all called Si- | was when lence, since she so rarely spoke. Be- tween the two, girl mistress and se- date attendant, there had been little Then she went to tates, to make great his argosies, to SIRENS FLOCK TO GOTHAM TO PREY ON DEMOCRATS. | New York.—Danger signal—for Democrats only! The most beautiful and voracious adventuresses known to the police of Europe are said to be headed toward Madison Square Gar- en. They are coming on every steamer, with designs on the crowds attending | the Democratic National convention. The delegates themselves, being as- , tute in the ways of the world, as in | politics, are thought to be in no dan- ger, but there are always hordes of less sophisticated persons attendant upon great public gatherings who fall easy prey to the wiles of the accom- plished eriminal. | SOB STORIES REPLACE “BRICKS.” { Fashions in criminals change. Time New York was charged with i selling gold bricks to the visitors i from “loway” and Down East, but ‘nowadays the masculine confidence : A A A ED SRT, FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Life is too short to waste In critic peep or cynic bark, Quarrel or reprimand; | 'Twill soon be dark.—Emerson. | Alligator or lizard skin is a type of t shoe now being worn for sports in the ' South. This kind of shoe is now a ri- val of the ever popular sport shoes of buckskin or kid dazzling in their ! whiteness relieved often by straps and saddles of colored leather to match i the wearer’s gay sweater or jacket. Softer than leather, beautifully mark- i ed, the sport slipper of alligator skin | is bound for high favor during the i coming sports season. It is smartest jin its own warm brown, but the skin [is dyed black or gray or colored ac- cording to one’s own preference. These shoes are cut very simply, with | perhaps a single strap to give them fan atmosphere of semi-formality. | They have no caps, but depend on talk. But tonight, as she braided An- I man has given place to the woman ! their marking to break and soften any tonia’s hair, the girl turned imper- iously upon her. “Silence, you have never told me of your life berore I knew you.” “Little to tell, my mistress. A childhood in Damascus; wedded at fit- teen to Jesse, a trader in camels; a life of twenty years with my husband | and my children, in the desert. Then —my children grown and scattered, my beloved taken from me. Hither I came, and asked at this house for work in the weaving. And here I stand.” “A childhood in Damascus? Da- mascus, the beautiful? On the des- ert, were vou not homesick?” “Homesick 7?” Silence smiled. “All my days, have I breathed the spiced wind that blew through the palms in my father’s garden. All my nights have I hearkened to the drowsy song of its fountains.” “And you gave up all that!” An- tonia looked hard at her. For the first time, she saw how clear were Si- lence’s dark eyes, how sweet her mouth, how serene her brow. “At first I thought I could not bear : it.” The grave amusement deepened in Silence’s face. “I was a selfish lit- tle goose; and when my lover implor- ed me to go with him, I mind well how badly I behaved. I wept, I sulk- ed, I scolded. Almost, I had my will. For he was mad for love of me, and would have yielded, and moiled, all his glorious life, a dull clerk, slaving in my father’s warehouses. But, heav- en be praised, at the very last mo- ment, I caught the look in his eyes. The look of a little boy who sees his dearest plaything torn from his hands. The look of a man who sees his life’s hope shattered at his feet.” Silence paused. Her calm face was softly rose-flushed now. Her veiled eyes were stars. “So you gave way.” : “So I gave way. For you know not yet, my little dear mistress, the truth of your own man. But soon you will learn. Learn that he is your own lit- tle boy, your darling. And you can- not have him grieved. But, while he is as your son to you, yet he is ever eh man, your prince, your lover. But —your lover who dreams and whose dream is to him even more than your ove. “So you went to *he desert with! him. Because—" “Because he was my heart’s heart. And I—Oh, my little dear lady, they love us, they love us! But dearer than wife or child, more precious than life itself, is their freedom. So take this, my own wisdom, hold fast to it al- ways, my sweet. You may ask all other things of a man, and he will grant them, and love you the better for asking. But you shall not thwart his High Hope. You shall not chain him, trammel him, that he dares not follow his Dream.” Antonia did not speak again. Si- lence finished her work, touched her arm with the lightest caress, slipped away. After a long while, Antonia roused. She took up the bronze lamp, crept away down the corridor to the dusky, empty atrium. Here she helped her- self to her father’s newest wax tab- let, his pet stylus, his finest perfumed seals. Then she went back to her room. Daughter of patricians though she was, Antonia was not a facile pen- man. It took her a long half-hour, brows bent, small pink tongue stuck out considerably with the ardor of her effort, to put it down. To Valerius, Honored Betrothed of my unworthy self: I have been thinking over what you told me. I said today that I wished I had known you when you were a little boy. I do not wish that any longer, for I know now that you are just a little boy still. And you are very pig- headed, and stubborn, and set in your way, and I would not have you other- wise, because you are my little boy, and I love you exactly as you are. And because you are mine, your way shall be my way, and your land my land, and your dream shall be my dream. And we will set forth to Moe- sia the day we are wed. She to whom you are more precious than the breath of life, the light of day, THY ANTONIA. P. S.—I shall take all my beautiful robes and jewels to Moesia, and I shall wear them every day if I feel like it. There, now!—A.—By Katha- rine Holland Brown, in Woman’s Home Companion. The Return of the Southern Flags. When it was first proposed to re- turn to the southern States the Con- federate flags which had lc-n captur- ed in the battles of the Civil war the proposition met with a storm of pro- test. In 1905 the flags were ret:rned, Massachusetts being the first tc act, though it had been loudest in den n- ciation when the proposal was aave- cated by Sumner. In the following year the command- er in chief of the G. A. R., James Tan- ner, asked in his Memorial day order that the graves of the soldiers of both armies should be decorated without discrimination, saying, “The old flag has been rebaptized since 1865 with the blood of the North and the South alike, and the ship of State is secure- ly anchored for all time.” ! with the sob story and the latest po- Iker tricks. It is even hinted that some of the most advanced adventur- ‘esses will pull a political line, seeking the advice of the rural statesmen on how to form a finance committee for the old home town. However, the police department is watching for the vampires. Their names and habits are already known here and special squads of police women have been assigned to the task of patroling the hotels to watch for | their appearance. Twenty-five wom- 'en detectives have been withdrawn | from other tasks to guard the Demo- | cratic convention, it was learned. | The women have been assisting in making a preliminary survey of dance halls and cabarets in order that New { York may present itself 100 per cent. clean to welcome the visiting politi- cians. Mrs. Mary Hamilton, in charge of the women police, said that large i numbers of criminals always gather- ! ed during a big convention and that it had now become necessary to provide women police in oraer to keep track of the new-fangled women blackmail- ers and card sharks. She and her squad were busy during the last Chamber of Commerce convention in New York, and last summer they were invited to Washington to help the lo- cal authorities protect the Shriners. “New York resorts are not so bad ilton. “Of the public dance halls not more than 2 per cent. are vicious. What disorderly dancing occurs is in the so-called private clubs, where no license is required. We need legisla- tion to curb the evil of the dancing club. But it makes me furious to hear these tales of ithe wickedness of New York. Our streets are the cleanest in the world. Most of the Democrats {will find nothing to disturb them.” | i Pennsylvania Has Fourth Largest Agricultural School. Pennsylvania can boast of the i fourth largest agricultural school in | the entire United States, that at The | Pennsylvania State College. i Figures recently compiled also show that only one other agri¢ultural school in the | country has lost fewer students in the past five years than has that at Penn State. Only two States made a gain in the enrollment of agricultural stu- dents, Maryland and Texas, but all others lost from four to forty-six per cent. in the five year period. The losses are believed to have come as a result of the unusual post-war manu- facturing activities. There has al- ways been an unusual demand for Penn State agricultural graduates. It is an outstanding fact that the agricultural school enrollment of 570 men and women at Penn State is larger than that in the great State Universities of Wisconsin, Illinois, California and Ohio and the Michigan Agricultural College. Iowa, Cornell and Texas lead Penn State in the number of four-year agricultural stu- dents, the first mentioned having the largest, a total of 796. The agricultural enrollment at State College in 1919 was 633 stu- dents. The loss has been less than ten per cent., and the only other State with a better record is Nebraska with 4.2 per cent. Lee’s Retreat from Gettysburg. One of the most dramatic incidents of the Civil war was the retreat of Lee’s army after Gettysburg, with its hundreds of wagon loads ot wounded soldiers. A woman who lived by the road down which this long line of scream- ing, groaning and dying men was be- ing hauled said it was the most awe- some event of her life. They went by her home during the night. But even the wounded had to make way for the guns. When the artillery came thundering along the road the officers in command of it forced the wagons loaded with wounded to give them the right of way, which was done. A good many of the thousands of the Union wounded at Gettysburg were taken to Philadelphia war hos- pitals by railroad trains. The nearly 6,000 dead in blue and gray who lay on the sunny fields at Gettysburg gave the opposing armies far less worry than did the hosts of wounded. The Flag on Memorial Day. The following question is asked fre- quently: What is the correct way to put out a flag on Memorial day, May 30? Here is the answer, taken from the United States army regulations: “On Memorial day at all army posts and stations the national flag will be dis- played at half staff from sunrise un- til noonday, and before noon the band will play a dirge or some appropriate {air. At the conclusion of this memox- ial tribute, at noon, the flag will be hoisted to the top of the staff and will remain there until sunset.” On Memorial day or other occasion when the flag is displayed at half staff, on raising the flag it should go to the peak and then be dropped one width of the flag. In striking the ‘flag it shonld be always returned to the peak before retiring. pen. —Subseribe for the “Watchman.” as has been charged,” said Mrs. Ham- | land grant colleges of the severeness of line. One very smart { costume in “log-cabin” brown was completed by slippers, bag and hat ‘band of alligator skin. Lizard skin being a trifle finer, is better suited to: more formal wear; { afternoon and even evening slippers are made of it or trimmed with it. It adapts itself more graceuflly to the "slimmer curves of the formal shoe hon does the more substantial alliga- or. { While these two skins are most at- ‘tractive and decidedly new, the con- ' servative woman who prefers not to , be among the very first to adopt a | novelty can take refuge, as always, | with perfect safety and good taste, in the perennial patent leather. There is every indication that the shoes of | the coming season are to be far less | complicated affairs than were the i shoes of last spring with their many ‘colors and tortuous straps. It almost seemed as if some of the slippers of ‘last season might have been designed by the magician Houdini, so intricate ' were their straps and buttons. The single strap, running across the in- | step, or the centre strap that joins the cross strap at the ankle, are still good, and many of the newest shoes are made in this fashion, particularly the dress shoes. i One versatile patent leather shoe | with graceful tongue is worn with a "bronze buckle to complete a brown « costume, a silver buckle to complete a gray and a buckle of blue steel to set | off a blue frock. With the exception | of the strap-slipper, the shoes of the { mode do not show the instep, but are a far up over it, with gorings of elastic to permit of their being pulled on easily. On the very chic suede shoe, such as are worn for afternoon, the goring is concealed by a buckle, and the clever woman again produces the effect of wearing different shoes | at different times by using a kid buck- "le for the street and a metal buckle for the matinee or the tea. i. Cut work is still being used but it is confined largely to the instep or the , newest slippers, and is far less ornate i than it was last year. Shoes, too, are swinging with the pendulum that | seems to be carrying us back to the i happy medium. While evening shoes of satin or vel- vet still have their adherents, the slip- per of gold or silver brecade is, as we predicted, by far the smartest shoe for party wear. A delightful feature of these metallic fabrics is that they can be, and are, tinted by hand to match one’s favorite evening frock, the little flowers or leaves in the de- sign being painted pink or pyrple or rose or green against the background of silver or gold. In fact, the metal- cloth shoe is so universally worn that it depends on its buckle for individu- ality. These buckles can be procured In a variety of designs—bowknots of rhinestones, rosettes of bright-colored synthetic gems, flat plaques of seed- pearls. One very distinctive model boasts a conventional buckle of rhine- stones with a semi-circular flare of lovely point lace extending over the instep. Another beautiful shoe of the sea- son is designed for wear with the robe j de style, or the period frock of bro- | cade or heavy taffeta. It is fashion- ‘ ed of silver kid, cut in genuine eight- | eenth century style—not our very pointed, modern adaptation of the so- called Colonial shoe—with a broad, round toe, a low heel, and a buckle that is nothing more nor less than an exquisite square miniature, bordered with seed-pearls and backed by a ti- ny frill of gray satin. One’s best sleep is when the stom- ach is practically empty. It is true ! that food puts one to sleep at first, by diverting blood from the head; but it disturbs sleep later. If one goes to bed with an empty stomach, one can often get along well with six or sev- en hours’ sleep, but if one goes to bed soon after a hearty meal, one usual- ly needs from 8 to 10 hours of sleep. The only way you can modify the projecting shoulder blades is to put on enough weight to hide them, or at least round them with flesh. This means you must sleep eight or nine hours, eat fattening foods, and spend as much time outdoors, breathing in pure oxygen, as you can. To avoid pyorrhea, soft, starchy and gelatinous foods, cake, and the like— should never be taken between meals or the last thing at night. They should be followed by food which will act as a cleanser, such as uncooked fruit and foods of fibrous nature. The teeth must be brushed not less than twice a day. Don’t use ammonia or borax on vour hair when you shampoo it—at least, don’t use it in such quantities as you are doing. A pinch of borax or a drop or two of ammonia wouldn't do any harm, but its too frequent and overuse brittles and dries the hair. Apple Salad.—Peal six round ap- { ples and take out large core, rub over with lemon juice. Have a syrup of | one cupful sugar, one cupful water, | juice of one lemon, boiling before put- { ting apples in to cook. Turn apples from time to time until tender, remove and set aside to cool. Stick salted al- | monds in the sides of the apples; fill core with pineapvle, crystalized cher- ries and marshmallows. Serve as a | salad with boiled dressing or as a des- sert with foamy sauce.