- EE — was scarlet, perspiration poured from & him in a stream, his heart beat fur- iously. rad | “Is it far?” asked Mrs. Allan. _——— = Bellefonte, Pa., April 2, 1926. —————————————————————— EASTER WHISPERINGS. The messages of Easter sound From every budding tree They turn the grim, ground, Into a garden place. They rise with tender mystery, Above the calling of the sea, They whisper, in a splendid way, From young love's smiling face! frost-hardened Oh, some of them are very gay. And some of them are sad; Some steal to us, from yesterday, Some make to-morrow glad! Some speak to us from meadows, where Blue flowers lift wide eyes, And some sound like a silver prayer, Through the rain-touched April skies. The messages of Easter creep Across that lonely land, ‘Where little dreams lie fast asleep— (Some of them never wake!) And, oh, they make us understand The patience of a nail-pierced Hand— They heal the wounds, however deep, In hearts that Life would break! —From The Designer Magazine for April. THE CRUCIFIX. (Concluded from last week.) He rose in the morning determined to invite Mrs. Allan into his house and he set feverishly and awkwardly to work to make it presentable. He opened a window. in the parlor and moved in two chairs from the kitchen and polished the smooth surface of the crucifix; then he knelt before the fireplace and polished the beautiful design at the back. As he did so, he observed that the outer border was not of a conventional pattern, as he had always supposed, but that what he took for the edge of the design was the lower section of lettering, hidden by overlapping mortar, burn- ed and blackened a hundred years ago. He took out his knife and began to scrape it clean. But he would have to have more time. At ten o'clock Mrs. Allan came up the road, driven in a smaller and less handsome car by the same imposing person. She smiled as she saw Dan- jel standing in the door and her chauffeur lifted down a heavy basket. “1 brought you some things for your cupboard,” she said. “I thought that with this car we might follow the old bi road. Do you think we can?” Daniel blushed scarlet. He post- poned his invitation until they should return. He was even too shy to sit by her. “T']l go ahead and show the way.” The chauffeur’s profile was non- committal, but in his eyes was dis- gust at this wild project. Daniel had closed and bolted the shutter and he now locked the outer door. “Are you alone?” asked Mrs. Allan. “Yes, ma'am.” The chauffeur drove with increas- ing difficulty for half a mile, then he said he could go no farther. “Here's an open place, madam; it’s doubtful whether I could turn beyond. Mrs. Allan stepped eagerly down, her cheeks flushed. “I know the way,” she said. “Through the trees you can see the granite ridge on top of the hill.” Mrs. Allan had gone only a few steps when she stopped, bewildered. The trees closed about them, the mass of rock topping the ridge down which Tumbling Run plunged had vanished. “I'm lost,” she laughed. “You'll have to go ahead.” Daniel stepped over a fallen tree with a thick trunk and, failing to hear her, glanced back. “You'll have to help me,” she said, amused. Flushing scarlet, he took her out- stretched hand—how smooth it was and how small! She leaned her weight upon his arm and stepped up, then down. He could carry her to Tumbling Run! He led the way slow- ly deeper and deeper into the woods. Presently she stood still. “What heavenly quiet!” . He heard her with delight; he did not know there was anyone else in the world so foolish as he about the woods. He wished that he had brought his precious crucifix and his carvings; here he could have spoken. Perhaps at Tumbling Run she would rest and he could tell her there. But they did not quite reach Tumb- ling Run. They could hear already the light plashing of the fall when Mrs. Allan stood still. “Stop!” she said in a changed voice. Paleness overspread her face; she looked down at her foot in its low shoe. “Something has bitten me,” she said quietly. Daniel’s gaze traveled quickly to right and left and he stamped fur- iously with his heavy heel. There lay dead, but still writhing, a brown, mottled body, with a queer ending to its tail. “He should have warned us,” said Mrs. Allan lightly. “Take off your shoe,” commanded Daniel. When he saw her tremulous, unsteady hands, he knelt and strip- ped off shoe and stocking and laid his lips to a red mark on the ankle. “I'm sorry,” said Mrs, Allan, “We'll have to make a tourniquet.” She directed Daniel how to apply her stocking and handkerchief and to twist them tightly with a stick. He obeyed until the ligature sank into the flesh. “Does it hurt?” “It doesn’t matter. Will you put on my shoe and give me your arm?” “1’1] have to carry you.” Mrs. Alian looked up at him, know- ing the preciousness of every minute. “Can you?” “Oh, yes.” He lifted her with reassuring strength, one arm under her should- ers, the other under her knees. She said nothing except, “It was very stupid of me,” as though silence would lighten his burden. Can’t you rest a little?” she asked after a long time. Daniel set her on her feet; his face “ » “Then shout to my chauffeur.” Distress which was not physical gripped Daniel in the throat. In a few moments she would be gone, and life and hope with her. : “I can get along,” he insisted stub- bornly. The chauffeur came plunging to- ward them, green with fright. «Youll have to get me home quick- ly,” said Mrs. Allan. “A snake has bitten me.” Daniel lifted her into the car and closed the door. «We'll take you to your house,” she offered. “You can go faster if you travel light,” said Daniel. The chauffeur showed his disgust in both profile and full face and in it Daniel was plainly included. He sent the car roaring down the track which it had made. In a few moments the wood was quiet. Daniel went slowly homeward, his body trembling. In his absence simeone, perhaps Maria Scholl, had come up the road and had entered his house. The basket was gone, the old lock on the parlor door was broken. He staggered into the room. The fireplace and the crucifix were still there; the fireplace they could not carry away and the crucifix they did not wish. But these were of no use to him now. He did not believe she would die—when a snake bite was sucked quickly there was little danger —but she would never come back. He sat by the kitchen table, his bright head on his arms. After a long time he remembered the inscription on the fireplace and went into the parlor. He uncovered a rough d, then an a, then an n. They were the letters of his name! Des- perately he worked on. The inscrip- tion said: daniel—la—roche—he —made—this—pine—grove—1792. Daniel sat still, his hands clasped round his knees, his eyes staring. His ancestors had lived here for genera- tions; he was doubtless named for this Daniel. His skin pricked and he felt with awe the course of his blood, not as though it were a stream en- closed within his body, but as though it had its spring elsewhere and flowed through him, bestowing life, making his eyes to see and the tips of his longing fingers to tingle. He spoke in a whisper. “I guess my mammy never knew about him. What he could do, I can The July sun beat on the oval val- ley. It was three o’clock in the after- noon and the basket-makers had com- pleted not only to-day’s peeling but their summer’s task. Only Daniel, whose stint was not finished, worked on. Scholl sat smoking his. pipe. He wanted his daughter to marry and leave; she and her mother quarreled from morning till night. He detect- ed Daniel’s ill-hidden dislike and hat- ed him in return. He surmised that Daniel expected to weave his baskets alghe in his own house. “No one is to take willows home,” he announced. “Them that works will work here. I ain’t got no favor- ites.” Daniel was aghast. He knew the the large room in the old house where the weavers sat and quarreled all day. It was heated by a stove into which wood was piled until the tem- perature was eighty degrees; the win- dows were never opened. “Pll have to stay home and keep my fire,” he protested. “You get somebody to keep your fire,” advised Scholl. “I don’t look with favor on this fooling round no girl.” Daniel’s angry grasp tightened on his knife, but a sound caught his ear and he looked up. Amazed, he saw the small car which had brought Mrs. Allan to her rendezvous, and in it the supercilious chauffeur. “Mrs. Allan wants to see you,” he said. “You're to come with me.” Daniel rose slowly. His hands shook and his knees were weak; hope |? rushed into him in an overwhelming flood and he dropped his knife and his withes and, going dazed toward the car, put an uncertain foot upon the step. He had never ridden and now he was to travel in an automobile, His excitement did not confuse him utterly. ; “Did she get all right?” he asked. 5 “She’s better, but she was very sick.” “I have something I must take along,” he stammered. “I can run to my house.” “Get in,” said the chauffeur as though he were afraid of being too good-natured. “I'll take you up.” The basket-makers gathered to- gether, talking loudly. When Daniel had gone up and down and away after the manner of Elijah in his chariot of fire, they climbed the hill and went through his house, and Scholl spat upon the beautiful work of the old fireplace. . Into the house on the broad street of Linchester thirty miles away had been put much of the earning of furnace and forge and farms, and to it the mansion in the valley was as a lodge in a wilderness to a palace. It had been unoccupied for years but the few months since Mrs. Allan’s re- turn had sufficed to give it an air of continuous habitation. Put down at the front door, Daniel stood overpowered by the loftiness of the pillars and the magnificence of the trees. He held his crucifix as though it were a talisman and its touch gave him courage. He stood with straight shoulders, facing the maid. “You came to see Mrs. Allan?” “Yes, ma'am.” In the central hall he grew pale. It was not the vast size, or the breath of the staircase which went halfway up one side, then, from the opposite . end of a broad gallery, up the other, which startled him, nor was it the array of ancient and priceless furni- ture. Marvelous as they seemed, here was something still more marvelous. Hanging beside the clock on the man- tel was the replica of his treasure Moreover, the ironwork of the fire- place was familiar—here were the delicate conventional arabesques in a larger design, here in the cavernous depths was the old man under the feathery tree! The maid looked back over her shoulder. ’ “This way, please,” she said again. She stumbled in her effort to advance and at the same time to keep her eye on this tall, roughly dressed youth whose confusion did not seem to be that of stupidity. “You're to come upstairs.” Daniel followed up the stairway, his hand touching, then drawing away from, the polished mahogany, as though he might do it harm. He crossed the gallery and ascended the stairway on the other side, where he found himself in a square hall. “Here,” said the maid sharply, an- noyed at herself for being so curious about this country boy, handsome as he was. When she saw that he car- ried a crucifix, she was terrified. . She was a Dunker and she always dusted as rapidly as possible the shelf in the hall. Dear knows what queer ill these Popish relics might work! In one of the bedrooms at the front, Daniel saw first the huge bed, which, however, did not seem huge in this great room; then Mrs. Allan’s little figure on a couch before the window. The maid pushed up a chair on the other side of the couch and there Dan- iel sat down and laid his crucifix up- on his knee. “You're better?” wardly. “Yes,” answered Mrs. Allan. wasn’t the snake bite that was so bad, but our tourniquet. The expedition was a wild one but I was homesick.” Her eyes left Daniel’s face and drop- ped to his knee. “I hardly ever see a snake,” said Daniel. “It worried me because per- haps I oughtn’t to a let you go.” He blushed, realizing that his speech was incorrect. “It wasn’t your fault,” said Mrs. Allan. “You saved my life.” She put out her hand and took the crucifix. “What have you here?” When Daniel did not answer she looked up. He sat back, covering his face—now that he had a chance, he was afraid to tell his wild dreams. “What is the matter?” she asked at last. He looked up and away from her. “] didn’t have anybody but my mother,” he said. “We always lived up there. She was sort of afraid of people. She learned me to read and write from the Bible, and she learn- ed me to make baskets. But I want- ed to make other things out of clay an iron. I can feel it in my fingers. We had this cross hanging in our house and we had a fireplace. The other day I scraped off some dirt on the fireplace and I seen a name, Dan- iel La Roche. Daniel is my name. I guess it wis my great-gran’daddy or my great-yreat-gran’daddy that made those things. I could make things if I had someone to learn me. To-day I come here and you have this fireplace and this cross.” : Mrs. Allan turned the crucifix in her hands. “Daniel La Roche was the mmolder in my grandfather’s day,” she said, amazed. “His pieces are treasured in museums. He made the ornament- al ironwork in this house and I sup- pose that at the same time he made some for himself.” Still turning the crucifix round and round, her fingers taking pleasure in it, Mrs. Allan looked at him steadily. “What do you mean to do in the world 2” “I want to make things like that,” Daniel answered hoarsely. “My great-great-gran’daddy must’ a’ Jearned. I thought you might tell nie how; that was why I brought this.” Mrs. Allan remembered the porcine face of Scholl, the eyes of his daugh- ter. She had no one left her, but she must not too swiftly or recklessly feed her hungry heart. “What sort of people are those with whom you work?” “I'm only working with them till Pve paid a debt,” said Daniel frown- ng. “What debt?” “My mother’s burying.” Mrs. Allan lay looking into the green woods. When she turned back she regarded Daniel sternly. “Will you work with all your might if I give you a chance to learn?” she asked, steadying her voice. Into Daniel's face came the look which his great-great-grandfather had given the man who let him experi- ment with molten ironand molds of sand. From his amazement and rap- ture Mrs, Allan turned her face away, as from something intolerable. He ex- amined his hands—the skin was shrunken and sore from long hand- ling of wet osiers, but it would grow smooth. He tried to speak, but fail- ed; while out of his heart flowed lone- liness and wretchedness and into it love and peace and hope. There was good in his heritage and it was all his; there was evil, but beside his as- piration and a profound, new-born af- fection it was powerless, He lifted his hands to his burning eyes and tried in vain to press back the tears. “Qh, I'll learn or Ill die!” he said weeping.—By Elsie Singmaster.— in The Woman’s Home Companian. he asked awk- Fathers’ Day at Penn State May 1. Announcement of the sixth annual Fathers’ day to be held on Saturday, May 1, at The Pennsylvania State College, has been made by John S. Musser, Harrisburg, president of the Association of Parents of Penn State. On that day the fathers of the stud- ents will gather at the college to par- ticipate in the special events arrang- ed by their sons and daughters. The fifth annual meeting of the parents association will be held on Saturday morning. A student committee is making arrangements for the occa- sion. —A miniature shotgun has been designed for bank messengers that fires a regulation sixteen- gauge shot- gun shell. It is carried in a shoulder 1 holster. ' PENNSYLVANIA HUNTERS. “It HAD GOOD GAME SEASON. The following information sent out by the State Game Commission will pe of interest to hunters generally: HUNTING LICENSES ISSUED. The number of hunter's licenses is- sued during the 1925 season was con- siderably higher than during the two years previous. This was particular- ly true in the hard coal region where thousands of men were out of em- ployment. Many of them spent their time hunting, with an enormous drain on our game supply in that part of the State. As a matter of compari- son, licenses issued since 1919 are ac follows: Licenses Resident Non-resident *As of February 1, 1926. AMOUNT OF GAME KILLED. Figures on the 1925 kill of large game have been rechecked and cor- respond very closely with prelimin- ary figuers given out sometime ago. Records on the kill of small game are not yet complete. The percentage of reports from individual hunters so far received is far below the number anticipated to date. The law re- quires that these reports be filed on . or before June 1, whether any game was killed or not. The kill of large game, including wild turkeys, for the past three years was as follows: Kind 1923 1924 1925 BIR ..ouiiicsenivisa ilo 23 10 6 Legal bucks ..........0000 6452 T7718 T7287 Spike bucks ........... 1001 833 (1) Two points to one side . 1322 1571 1784 Three points on one side 1766 2144 2223 4 or more points to 1 side2363 3230 3280 Legal deer during special SEASON evn vies snares 8 126 1028 BEATS, sss verson asin risves 500 929 470 Wild Turkeys ....ceeseess 6049 2331 3241 1 Protected Elk are not showing a satisfactory increase, while deer are increasing very rapidly. Many sections now boast more deer than when white settlers first came. Under the new law more than a thousand spike bucks were saved for next season, when they will have antlers with two or three points to a side. Saving the spike bucks, and unfavorable weather conditions, decidedly reduced the kill. With favorable hunting conditions the 1926 deer season will undoubted- ly be the best ever recorded in Penn- sylvania. Several hundred cub bears were saved by the new law protecting cubs. This, together with the absence of tracking snows, and peculiar food conditions, reduced the 1925 kill of bears. Sportsmen generally seem to be well pleased with the new deer and bear laws. While the hatching and rearing sea- son was more favorable for turkeys in 1925 than the year previous, and a much larger kill of turkeys was antic- ipated, hunting conditions for tur- keys were somewhat abnormal. How- ever, many sportsmen report a scarc- ity of wild turkeys, and are urging that the turkey season be closed en- tirely, or reduced to a week or ten days, to save the turkeys from ex- termination in a lot of good turkey territory. By tabulating reports sent in by hunters during the last three years. figures on the average kill per hunter have been obtained. From a number of trial tabulations we anticipate the small game kill for 1925 will average approximately as indicated. This, however, is only a tentative figure, and the correct average will be pos- sible only when all the reports are received and figures tabulated. As a matter of comparison we give the following: Licenses Reports Issued Received 464,132 47,000 475,861 29,591 499,644 89,780 20,000 25,000 Average number per hunter Rabbits Squirrels Grouse 9 1-3 11-3 3-4 2-3 21-2 1 1-3 2 1 -3 21-4 1-2 -4 11:2 2-3 In 1925 more hunting accidents were reported than the year previous regardless of efforts made to secure observance of common sense safety rules. The fatal accidents were next to the hightest of any year since 1913, while the non-fatal accidents report- ed were larger than ever recorded. A separate tabulation giving the acci- dents for 1924 and 1926 is attached, from which it will be noted that of the 52 fatal accidents, 52 per cent. were self-inflicted, and 48 per cent. inflicted by others. Of the 229 non- fatal accidents, 38 per cent. were self-inflicted, and 62 per cent. by others. Contrary to a general belief, shot- guns were responsible for four-fifths of the accidents, rifle and revolver ac- cidents making up the balance. Our records on 1925 hunting acci- dents are more complete than any previous year, which may account for a somewhat larger number of non-fa- tal accidents being recorded. How- ever, it is evident that the press and sportsmen’s organizations of Penn- sylvania must make a still more con- certed drive to help educate hunters against carelessness with firearms. A large majority of the yearly hunt- ing accidents are avoidable, and the Board is anxious to secure every pos- sible assistance in curbing this ap- palling loss of human life. Unless the fields and forests are reasonably safe for everybody, they are unsafe for anyone. Fatal Non-fatal accidents accidents Total Season of 1924 No. No. No. Total accidents ..... 38 131 169 Self-inflicted ...... 20 60 80 Inflicted by others ...18 1 89 Ages of victims, self-inflicted: Under 18 years of age..4 16 20 Over 18 years of age..16 44 60 Ages of persons causing injury to others: Under 18 years of age..7 11 18 Over 18 years of age...11 60 1 Where accidents occurred: In open fields +...... 26 94 120 In forests .......... 9 33 42 In conveyances ...... 3 3 7 Season of 1025 Total accidents «.... 52 229 281 Self-inflicted .....c00 27 86 113 Inflicted by others ..25 143 168 Ages of victims, self-inflicted: Under 18 years of age. 7 a1 Over 18 years of age.. 62 82 Ages of persons causing injudy to others: Under 18 years of age.16 25 a 12 Over 18 years of age....9 118 Where accidents occurred: In open fields ...... 23 122 145 In forests ..........: 26 106 132 In conveyances ...... “3 1 4 Message Undelivered, Couple Sues for $1,801 Beaumont, Texas.—Mr. and Mrs. 8. BE. Mulford joined in a suit against the Western Union Telegraph com- pany to collect $1,801, of which $1,800 represents exemplary damages be- cause of the defendant's asserted fail- ure to deliver a birthday message from Mulford to his wife, The message, it Is asserted, was filed at Waxahachie, Texas, on July 20, 1925. It was charged in the peti- tion that upon his arrival home a few days afterward he found wife “cool, dejected, thoughtful and brooding, contrary to her usual sun- ny, cheerful, friendly affection- ate nature and disposition,” and that she had dark suspicions and doubts Yad crept into her mind as to wheth- er the failure to receive the message wes due to neglect and lack of thoughtfulness on the part of her husband, which, in turn, indicated to her a waning affection on his part, all of which caused her deep mental snguish. re A seaild Alcohol Given as Cause of Leaves Turning Red New York.—Alcohol, which long has been blamed for coloring the human ! nose with a roseate tint, is now put forth by sober scientists as the rea- son why leaves turn red in the au- tumn. S. G. Hibben, expert of the West- inghouse Lamp company, who has been delving into the effects of light on plants, sald that the old theory that foliage changed color and dropped off because of winter's chill touch was erroneous. He has discov- ered that chemical reactions in the leaves of plants at certain periods in their life cycle cause them to reject sunlight. regardless of the weather. With the shutting out of the sun- light growth is retarded, food is stored in the roots and trunk and fer- mentation finally begins to take place in the leaves. In the process of fer- ‘nop tation nleohol is produced in the Ineves, chenging the color, Originated Turkey Trot Going back to the early Eighteenth century to show that every innova tion in dancing has met with vielent opposition, a writer in Liberty Maga- sine says that it was in 1912 that Ma- bel Hite, an actress, and Mike Donlin, a ball . player turned vaudevilian, who was Mabel's husband, brought to Broadway the first turkey trot New York had ever seen. Right there de cently ordered terpsichore expired.’ Raven in Literature Ravens hold a high place in folk lore and in the real literature of many countries. From the beginning they have been thought uncanny, although according to the English story it wa: the magpie and not the raven whiek was the only bird to refuse to accom: pany Noah into the ark. How it, o rather they, for there must have been a pair of them, survived the flood tra: dition dves not tell. - Modern Dyestuffs Modern dyestuffs can be just as fast and give just as beautiful colors as. any used in past times, says the United States Department of Agriculture. It is sentiment chiefly that makes us cling to the idea that the natural dyes obtained from plants and animals are best. Many of them are lovely colors, it is true, and the time that has passed since the cloth was dipped in the dye pot has in many’ cases mellowed the tones and made them even loveller. Many of the so-called artificial dyes used now are exactly the same from the chemical standpoint as those from berries and bark and other natural sources. In some cases the new dyes are better than the old. The modern manufacturer of dyestuffs knows ex- actly what is in them, and for that rea- gon is surer of results. Dog Lives in the Present The great difference between dog and man is that the dog has hardly any power of looking into the future. Man spends most of his time thinking of what is going to happen tomorrow, next week, or next year, and prepar- ing for it. To a dog the present is the only thing that counts, 7t is true that a dog will bury a bone to be dug up later on, but in do- ing so he does not say to himself, “I am not hungry now; I may be hungry tomorrow. Therefore, I will make provision.” The act is merely In- stinctive, and to be compared with the storing of nuts by the squirrel or the dormouse. Weaving Genius Until the close of the Eighteenth century all fabrics carrying colored designs were woven entirely by hand. About 1801 Joseph Marie Jacquard in- vented an attachment which is placed at the top of a loom and automat- ically selects strands of yarn required to form the patterns and draws them up to make the surface of the cloth and at the same time leaves the other strand to form the back of the fabric. The attachment has ever since been called the jacquard. The invention was first put into commercial use in 1809 in France. his i FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. AT EASTER TIME, i The little flowers came up through the i ground | At Easter time, at Easter time. ' They raised their heads and looked around At happy Easter time, And every pretty bud did say, “Good people, bless this holy day, For Christ is risen, the angels say, At happy Easter time.” x —Laura E. Richards in Good Housekeep- ing. Loveliest season of the year! So, of course, one must have lovely frocks for the after-Easter parties and dances and good-looking sports cos- tumes for spring-time out-of-doors. Fashion is very generous in the var- iety offered in the new modes. There are flared, bouffant and softly gath- ered styles for afternoon and even- ing, while the straight-line silhouette, plaited or slashed, gives graceful i width to sports models. { The basque dress in its more youth- ful versions features the higher | waistline, while the new girdle frock | emphasizes the hipline. Then there’s | the princess dress, ignoring a waist- { line but conforming to the lines of the , figure and flaring out attractively at . the hem. i Necklines and collars are another i interesting point of fashion this sea- "son. The V is favored and frequently the back as well as the front follows ! this outline. The shoulder-to-should- | er rounded neckline is also very fash- !ionable. The high collar, the tie-col- lar and the convertible neckline with collar that may be worn high or open rare all featured for daytime and sports dresses, so it is simply the choice of the most becoming. And a word about the fashionable fabrics for spring. Silk crepes con- . tinue in deserved popularity, for their very suppleness adapts them to the soft flares and fulness of fashion. Taffeta, too, is much in vogue, and everywhere prints appear like spring blossoms. Kasha and other soft whol weaves also answer the new demands of the mode; while tweed, jersey and | balbriggan share the honors for sports wear. Those who shop in Paris now that April’s there are seeing the two-piece mode run away with the styles, its | most conspicuous conquest being the evening gown. But there are many French frocks that manage in one clever way or another to give this , impression without actually being di- | visible by two. Other features ex- ploited by the Easter showing are plaited aprons, straight or shaped panels, draped girdles, bows tied at the front or a collar tied at back. Fulness is considered by Paris to be an indispensable factor in smart dress, and frocks for bordered silks have resorted to various methods of obtaining it, and the simplest of these is the gathered way. By their capes, the shortness of their: skirts and the length of their sleeves one first recognizes the French costumes—and later learns to lave them for their easy fulness hid- 1-in plaits or broadcasted in flares, for their ingratiating softness, the in- dividuality of their collars, and last- ly or very lately for their gilets oz , bosom fronts. With them the Paris . ienne wears the straight-line coat a: frequently as the flared type, and re cently she has appeared with a new wrap, the circular cape. It encircles the shoulders smoothly and some : times cuts itself short in front. Thos: who look to Paris for the right thing in a classical spring suit find it witl a short jacket and a tailored sort o smartness. Paint always seems such a perman ent finish that it is very important t have its color and texture pleasing Colors influence our thoughts and ac tions more than we realize and the : are directly responsible for makin the home either a pleasant or an ur pleasant place. Most people have ce; tain colors which they prefer and or or more of the home-maker’s favorit colors is generally seen on the wal of her various rooms. The primary colors in their pu unadulterated state are not a sa choice for any wall; but these colo or their complements if grayed a very appropriate. Certain colors produce certain e fects. It is well to remember whi colors should be used to create a fe ing of warmth and which should employed to give the effect of cor ness. Rooms facing north or east 1 quire the warm, cheerful shades, wh those facing south or west ne the cool tones. Reds, pinks, orang browns and yellows, intense or gre ed, are warm colors; while blues, pi ples and greens comprise the cool ¢ ors. In rooms of uncertain expost neutral tones may be used succe fully. Tints may be most satisfactor used over old or new plastered we that have been previously paper They are an inexpensive finish : and can be very easily applied. more unusual colors can be obtal by mixing two packages of the r pared colors. However, so larg variety of shades is obtainable t it is seldom necessary to do this, : by using the neutral, ready-prepa tints, the home decorator can be f ly sure that her color scheme will a success. The long seams in narrow slee can easily be pressed on the handl a large wooden mixing-spoon. piece of cloth should be wrag around the handle for padding. On a cardboard hung near ; washing-machine paste clipp | gathered of various methods of moving grease, mildew, gum, _ete.; also ways of setting colors. | when the remedy is wanted it is 2 i at hand. Many women find it very difl | when wearing rubber gloves to . their fingernails from going thr ' the rubber. By putting a little ton in each finger-tip the rubber much ‘longer.—From The Deline —Subscribe for the “Watchmse