I. MOO Tunics on Gowns. Lace tunics are appearing largely rtin evening gowns they are a capital way of renovating a skirt the thicker the lace the more a la mode. A regret table feature in the modes of the mo ment is the wearing of gowns that are suited for evening in the morning, and now satin shoes, with lace-trimmed stockings, are to be seen at many of our fashionable resorts. All stiffening is vanished from skirt linings, except just at the elbow, skirts at the hem. A "Face" Kook. At five o'clock teas and Sunday ev ening suppers it is now the proper thing to have a face book. What is a face book? It is a collection of sheets of drawing paper bound togeth -1 or and covered in coarse linen of any hue one fancies —brilliant blue, rich scarlet or dainty violet. If a clever ,- sketch in black adorn the front, so A much the better. ' v In the face book each guest Is asked to draw a head of some sort. Man, woman, child, animal —it does not matter what it is, or whether the guest can draw at all. If he or she draws badly, so much the better. — New York Tribune. Droimnnkflr't Device. Invention has again made life eas ier for the feminine element. Two classes by a little clever contrivance are glad. Dressmakers, as well as their patrons, rejoice at a whirling platform that is to save both much weariness of spirits and physical strength. The new device is from masculine hands, and is a low revolving plat form, just a step higher than the floor. This stand can bo mov<jd around at . will by the litter when draping or ar • ranging the proper length of skirt on a customer. By this device the litter avoids the too frequent "Please turn around, madam," and Is also enabled to change from one side to the other without crowling around. It's really an ideal device lor dressmakers' use. I'rlncesn Victoria of Germany. She has many things which other royal children have not, and she is adored as falls to the lot of few girls, royal or otherwise. She has for a father the powerful Kaiser, ruler of the German Empire. She has six elder brothers. Her mother is the most amiable of women. Her uncles and cousins are upon nearly every throne in Europe. She is the pet of the Emperor, who is never happy unless she is by his U|£ide. To please this little daughter, whose years number only half a score, the Kaiser has had playthings sent to her from all over Europe. She owns every kind of a mechanical doll, and as she is very fond of music she has been given every musical toy that is made. The little Princess is an excellent musician and plays the piano beauti fully. She has the German's love of music and picks out all the airs of the day by ear. While not, strictly speaking, a beau ty, she is a very pretty little girl and her blond type is much admired in Berlin. The Princess is of a very sweet disposition and is the pet of the castle, for even the servants make much of her. She is fond of all her brothers, hut likes the Crown Prince the beat. Often she is seen by his side in the < handsome turnout which be calls his own. The Princess goes to school and studies with six other little girls, daughters of the ladies of the German court. —Philadelphia Inquirer. Women a. Vnrin.r*. The farmers of Pennsylvania are vleing with one another in their flat tery of Mrs. J. Albert Zepp, Mrs. An drew L. Geiman and Mrs. H. A. Gar rett. These three women have car ried off this year agricultural honors that have fallen hitherto to males alone. The three live near Hanover. Mrs. Zcpp' feat was the raising of a tomato stalk that bore, during the summer, no less than 300 tomatoes. The staik bad four branches, each eight feet In length. It often had 40 tomatoes on it at one time. Mrs. Zepp is distrib uting the seeds of this wonderful plant generously. Even the applica tions of strangers she accedes to, pro ) vided that stamps are enclosed. ♦ Mrs. Geiman has raised a pumpkin that weighs 93 pounds. This tremen dous vegetable is sound, shapely, and of a deep gold color. When Mrs. Geiman, who is short, stands behind it she is almost obscured. History has no record of a pumpkin bigger than this. Mrs. H. A. Garrett, on her hus band's farm, has grown a red beet that weighs ten pounds. The beet is on ex hibition at the Garrett residence, and dozens of skeptical persons call daily to look at it and to see it weighed. The men of Pennsylvania have lit tle this year to boast of beside the wo men. Henry Redcay, of Lansdale, heads the men. He raised this year an egg plant that is seven feet, three and one half in eircumfenence, and two feer, two and one half inches in diameter. Mr. Redcay's friends claim ' that this is the biggest egg plant ever grown in Pennslyvania, while even bis enemies admit that none so big was ever grown within a radius of 50 miles—Philadelphia Record. To Ktep Clei*n Kxpemilve. Few people realize that, as a nation, <t is costing us more every year to "keep clean." We may cut down ex penses In every way but tills one. It never occurs to the gentlewoman or gentleman, however, to consider the possibility of curtailing the "expense of keeping clean." As a nation we are the cleanest. Foreigners are inclined to think we are extremists in this particular. The English consider the horning bath part of the daily routine, but the ne cessity for frequent changes of under wear is not so apparent to them as a nation as to us. The French are extravagant in the matter of clean and beautifully laun dered underclothes, but they draw the line, as a rule, at the daily bath. With each year we as a people are giving more attention to the details of keeping ourselves spotless. At the same time woman Is wearing more lace-trimmed lingerie, fancy shirt waists and gowns, to say nothing of stocks and ties, than ever before. Thus her laundry bills are steadily in creasing, since bedraggled petticoats, rumpled stocks and shirt waists are not to be tolerated. The man who views woman in her airy summer costumes and reflects on how little a year it requires to keep such a dainty, simply-gowned goddess, will And how mistaken his ideas are on the subject of her econo mies if ho undertakes the life task of paying her laundry bills and provid ing the perishable, flimy garments she wears. Her shirt waist, for instance, once so simple in construction, has devel oped into one of the most expensive articles in a woman's wardrobe. Ori ginally it could' be laundered for 10 cents. Gradually it became more com plicated, until this season the lace and embroidered affairs make not only a large hole in a woman's pocketbook as an initial outlay, but constitute a weekly expense of no inconsiderable amount. An embroidered linen waist, per fectly plain in cut, might cost J3O. Ad ditional frills are still more expensive. From 50 cents to $1 will bo required to cover the laundry bill for one of those fancy waists. The smart woman who prides herself upon her immac ulate appearance will pay from two to three dollars each week to the laundry for her shirt waists alone. Instead of ruffles and tuckings and hand embroidery, women to-day are wearing lace-trimmed underwear. In proportion to the fineness of the mus lin and lace the price for laundering went up. But that fact does not lead to economy in the matter of fancy lingerie. This seasonte fad of "tub gowns" has been a bonanza for the steam and hand laundries. For the American girl must be spotless, re gardless of expense. No greater proof of the growing cost of keeping clean can be given than in the success of the steam laun dries to he found in every town In the United States. They have increased in numbers in the ratio of 10 to one. The prices charged by them soon doubles the original cost of the garment, and the treatment it receives at the hands of Inexperienced workers rapidly re duces it to an unwearable condition. Yet the American woman goes serene ly on her way, buying new gowns, pay ing big laundry bills, devoting hours to the bath, economizing, if need be, in every way except on the one item— the "expense of keeping clean." —Chi- cago Record Herald. Ostrich tips are used on handsome hats for children. Flowing sleeves prevail for both street and house wear. Taffeta tabs turn back over the Lib erty neck ruffs in battlemented effect. Guipure laces, especially in black, are noted on the new hats and dre3- Cape-like flares fall over the sleeves of a certain smart blouse for street wear. Roses aro caught under the brims of French picture hats with exquisite effect. A novel stiff hat has a black silk beaver crown and a stitched white silk brim. Authorities say velveteens will be very good style. There are certainly fine qualities. Narrow, over-lapping frills of pinked taffeta face hat brims with splendid effect. Elaborate blouses are daintily beau tified by means of Val. insertions con necting diamond insets of the same dainty lace. Lorgnette chains of irregular coral may be worn by women, or, two or three times around the neck, they serve for little girls. A safety hat pin is one of the sea son's noveltieß. It differs only from the regulation type by the addition of an ornamental cap, which is adjusted to the point of the pin after It has been slipped through the hat. One of the newest designs in fancy hair combs is of blond tortoise shell, inlaid with peacock design in bril liants; another is ornamented with a trellis fork of brilliants and tur quoise, a third is inlaid with gold in strikingly pretty effect. Cape collars of every conceivable style and depth enter into the finish of almost every imported gown in sight while the sleeves, very close at the top, just below tho point of the shoulder, continue the line by swell ing out into varied proportions below the elbow. •Johnny'* Kxplanatlon. Nurse was reading nature stories of thd chickens, ducks and geese. "Johnny, tell me, what's a gander?" asked she with a smile of peace. Little Johnny looked up quickly, all his fancy turning loose, As he answered, smiling proudly, "It's the rooster of the goose." —Judge. "Very Simple. A rather simple looking lad halted before a blacksmith's shop on his way home from school, and eyed the do ings of the proprietor with much in terest. The brawny smith, dissatisfied with the boy's curiosity, held a piece of red hot iron under the youngster's nose, hoping to make him beat a hasty re treat. "If you'll give me half a dollar I'll lick it," said the lad. The smith took from his pocket half a dollar and held it out. The simple looking youngster took the coin, licked it, and slowly walked away whistling.—Chums. Game of Knuckle Rone*. Hold live dice in your hand, throw them ill the air and catch as many as possible on the back of your hand, adding their numbers. Next, a die — the "dab"—is selected and thrown in to the air. Before it 1B caught one of the other dice on the ground must be picked up. The remaining dice are picked up one by ono and laid down in the same manner. The dab must he caught only in the right hand, and must touch nothing but that hand. There are thirteen "stages" in the game, in addition to the opening stage just described. This is known as "be ginnings." The greater part of tho throws are too difficult for boys and girls to perform, so only a few will be here outlined. Ones —The dab is thrown, and the rest of the dice aro picked up one by one, without touch ing any dice but that selected. Twos, threes and fours are similar to ones, except that two, three or four dice at a time are taken up after the dab is thrown. If you miss a stage, which counts five, if rightly done, you must sub tract that much from your score. If your friend is willing—for this is a two-handed game—you may. in twos, threes and fours, push into a conven ient heap the dice you aro about to lake up, but only after the dab is thrown, of course. Short spans.— Spread out your left hand on a table and place a pair of dice by the thumb and finger. Throw tho dab and pick up tho pairs separately. After finish ing these six stages you and your friend can agree on six more, which should grow difficult as they go on. You will have no difficulty in invent ing stages, and tills old English game will train your eye to see things at a glance and your hand to obey quickly what, your brain directs it to do.— Washington Star. Fl.lia. Wlilcll Knlld N.at*. When ships steer southward through tho North Atlantic ocean un til they strike the gulf stream, that wonderful River of the Sea, they find themselves all at once amid glorious yellow vegetation, although they may be several hundred miles from the American coast. On calm days it extends as far as the eye can see, not in close, un broken fields, but often in masses so great that they will cover several acres. For days and days one can steam without once getting out of sight of it. It swings up and down with the mighty swells of the Gulf stream, and It looks most beautiful lying there so peacefully anil_ radiant ly, with the Intense blue water all around It. After a few hours one feels as if he were passing through vast pastures all golden with our national Ameri can golden rod. This weed is often fished up from overside by passengers and crew, for it makes a delightful ornament for tho cabin until it begins to dry, when it falls apart and finally crumbles away. Sometimes, if one gets a particularly large and thick cluster of It, strange living things are found. They are crea tures that rarely if ever are to bo caught anywhere else except in the weed, for they dwell there and in the Sargasso sea only. Among theni are very tiny but wonderfully gorgeous crabs. One of these crabs has a shell that is as shining and rich as the skies at sunset. Another still more curious creature that dwells In the weed is tho mouse fish, also known as the marbled angler. This little fish is so strangely shaped that, when he lies among the weed ii requires sharp and trained eyes to see him, even when one has the clump that contains him in the hand. His colors and his markings are exactly like the tiny berries and sprays of the weed. His fins are strangely fringed nnd ragged, so that they look just like the wiry stems of the cluster. This beautiful and wonderful fish builds himself a nest among the weed as it floats on the surface, and there after he dwells in it and rears his fam ily in It, just as a bird would on land. But unlike a bird, he must follow his nost, for it is not fixed in Its posh ion as a nest on a tree or bush, hut drifts on and -on with the weed. Sometimes great tropical storms toss the Sargas so weeds ntanv miles away from tho Gulf Stream, and then the fish will swim along with his waudnring horn*. If it happens to he caught in a cur rent that sets landward, the nest build er occasionally comes so near our shores that now and then one is caught. Sometimes, too, the weed trav els north with the Gulf Stream itself and then a marbled angler may ar rive finally oft Cape Cod. But the fish cannot bear the cold water there, BO he is only rarely found alive north of Cape Hatteras. The nest is a dainty little thing, made of the glowing golddn weeds and embellished with the tiny shells and other shining things that drift with it. It looks often like a bit of shell jewelry. Fan Fan, The Fairy. Pon-pon was a boy 11 years old, and he was a prince. His father and moth er, who were king and queen, were very kind to him, and he was brought up to have a kind heart toward the poor. Over and over again the king said to him: "Pon-Pon, when I am dead you will be king in my place. I want the people to love and respect you. 1 have always remembered that even the poorest had rights. It is well that you should be proud, but do not be overbearing and tyrannical. One who rules by ty ranny does not rule long." As the prince had no brothers to play with he often called in boys of his own age to indulge in games in the palace grounds. Some of these were sons of ricli men, and some of poor, but he treated all alike. The peo ple heard of this and were glad, and they said to each other: "Ah! When he is king, Pon-Pon will be like bis father, and we shall all re joice to do him honor and fight his battles." On the day that the Prince was 11 years old there was a great celebra tion in honor of the event, but it had a sad ending. One of the cannons being fired as the procession marched along the street burst and the flying pieces hit the king and queen and killed them. Pon-Pon escaped injury, but he was left an orphan and in trouble. Some one else must reign until ho had be come a man, and the people selected a nobleman named Hussim. who was a cousin to the prince. Hussim was a cold, stern man, and not well liked by the people, but no one thought him the villain that he was. He scarcely had been chosen for the high place when he began to plot against Pon-Pon's life. If he could get the boy out of the way then he would be king himself. Hussim pretended to love the prince, and be his greatest friend; thus the lad and most of the people were deceived. After much plotting the bad-hearted man asked the prince to go hunting with him in the forest. They did not go alone and on foot, but there was a large party and they went on horseback. There were many savage wolves in the forest, and this was what Hussim planned: When the hunt had been going on for some time he managed to sepa rate the prince from all the others and ride far into the forest with him. When they were well away from all the rest, he asked Pon-Pon to get down from his horse and look at a wonderful spring among the rocks. There was no spring there. The prince was hardly out of the saddle when he was seized and bound to a tree. Hussim said to him: "I shall now get rid of you and be king myself. I have been planning this for a long time." "But you will not leave me here to the wolves!" cried Pon-Pon, as lie struggled to get free. "Aye, but thut I will. They will come and devour you and no one will know what has become of you. It will be no use for you to shout, as uo one can hoar you." It was a cruel, wicked thing to do, but Hussim who wanted to be king, and was naturally of a cruel disposi tion, rode away and left Pon-Pon last bound. He had not got half a mile away when two or three wolves came sneaking about. When the boy cried out in his l'right and distress the beasts snarled and growled in reply. Pretty soon there wore six wolves, and as they came nearer, they gnashed their teeth and their eyes became like coals of fire. The would have at tacked the boy in a minute, and it would have been all over with him, had not the tramp of horses made their pause. Of a sudden six horses and riders came dashing up and Pon- Pon was amazed to see a little girl among them. "We have found him! Hero ho is! Hero is the lost Prince!" shouted the men as the wolves slunk away. It was the little gill herself who un tied the knots in ;he rope and set the boy free. As he looked at her in won der she laughed at him and said; "Yon never saw me before, and so I will tell you my name. 1 am Fan-Fan, tiie Fairy. I have been watching over you for a long time past, al though you did not know it. I was , euro your cousin Hussim meant you ill. and today, when tne hunt came off. 1 followed von. When 1 saw him tie you to the tree I hurried away and brought these people that they might j know what a had man he is. Now you are free and he must be punished." I should like to tell you that Kan- Kan dwelt in the palace and one day became Pon-Pon's wife and queen, ; but that would not be the truth. She I had work to do elsewhere and soon ! vanished. As for Hussim, the en | raged people took him into the for i est. and tied him to a tree as he had | tied the prince, and as he was never [ seen again, it is believed that the ! wolves ate him up. If they did ho I deserved his fate.—San Francisco j Chronicle. HINn A Cement for Htove*. If a stove Is cracked, a good cement is made for it as follows: Mix wood ashes and salt in equal quantities, make a paste with cold water and fill the cracks when the stove is cold. It soon hardens and will last a long time. To Remove Finicer Mark*. For removing finger and hand marks from fresh varnish surfaces, use a soft piece of chamois skin, sat urated with sweet oil. When there are paint spatters or blotches, touch first with kerosene and rub afterward with sweet oil. To Brighten Silver Spoons. Silver spoons that have become dis colored from contact with cooked eggs may be easily brightened by rub bing with common salt. Coal gas, and the near presence of rubber in any form, will cause silver to tarnish. One of the best receptacles for silverware cutlery is a Canton-flannel knife-case tacked to a closet door. Ultilnr Cloth.■ Properly. An experienced laundress says that the secret of turning out clothes pro perly "blued" consists in having the bluing water cold and the clothes put into it after being rinsed from water of the same temperature. Clothes wrung out of hot water and put into cold bluing water are apt to emerge streaked and of a poor color. In<lipn*ablp. A clinical thermometer for taking temperatures is indispensable in any home. If. when inserted under the tongue, it shows a rise from normal (98 to 98 1-2 degrees) to 100 or so, a feverish condition is revealed that needs attention. "We could not raise a family without our clinical ther mometer," writes a mother of five. — Good Housekeeping. ITom-Mi*de Rook-Shelve*. It Is quite within the amateur car penter's ability to put a'row of book-shelves in between two wall projections, to stain or paint them, fasten a brass rod across the edge of the top shelf, holding a velour curtain in some soft, rich color, and (o place some "modern antiques" and choice volumes to the best advantage. But when the shelf idea begins to work its fascination it opens up un told possibilities. A corner may bo decorated most effectively with three graduated triangular shelves, the top one the largest and the lowest ono quite small. Then, again, a door shelf when "treated" right makes a good point in the room. Brass ornaments, a beaten placquo and a candlestick look particularly well coming, as they do immediately above the deep tones of the portiere. A shelf over a window gives a quaint colonial effect when filed with old blue or ordinary willow ware pottery. These shelves are very easy of ac complishment by the home tinker il she gets the side rests of iron from the hardware store, But she will find that to saw carved wooden supports is a little difficult to manage with simple tools. Cress and Tomato Saiadi —Remove skin from two or three tomatoes, cut into small pieces, stir into this a few blades of chives cut very fine, salt and pepper to taste, mix well with plain French dressing and just before serving stir in six or eight sprigs of water cress. Heap on a salad plate and serve. This requires no garnish, as it is a picture in itself. Meat and Rice Croquettes —Mix ono cup of raw chopped beef (cut from under round) and one-third cup of boiled rice, half a teaspoon of salt, a little pepper and cayenne; cook a few cabbage leaves three minutes in boiling water, then remove; put two tablespoonfuls of the mixture in each leaf and fold leal' to enclose mixture; cook slowly one hour in tomato sauce. Delicate Cream Muffins —Cream three level tablespoonfuls of butter; add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, beat the whites of two eggs; add the un beaten yolks to the butter and sugar and one cup of milk, half a teaspoon of salt, two cupfuls of sifted flour and four level teaspoonfuls of baking pow der; beat well and add the eggs; fill greased muffin pans two-thirds full and bake twenty minutes in a quick oven; substitute one cup of graham, rye or corn meal for one cup of flour and you will have the different muf fins. Ripe Cucumber Catchup—Choose large, nearly ripe cucumbers; pare, re ject seeds, chop very fine and meas ure. Allow one teaspoonful ot' salt for every pint of pulp, sprinkle with same and drain through a colander for six hours. For every quart of cu cumber allow two cups of cider vine gar, four teaspoonfuls of grated horse radish, one tablespoonful each of white mustard seed and minced red pepper (seeds rejected); bring vine gar and flavoring to a boll, skim thoroughly and set aside until per fectly cold. Then add the pulp to the vinegar, stir well, put into pint jars, lay a nasturtium or horseradish leaf over the top and seal. Keep In a dark, cool place. PAINTED HIM CREEN. Amusinc Result of m Painter's Quarrel With an Awning Hanger. The local color in the Jefferson Mar ket Police court was mostly green when the case of the People vs. Max Stotoff and David Fitzpatrick was called. No physiognomies ever beamed more effulgently than did those of the two prisoners arraigned before Ma gistrate Brann. David Fitzpatrick, whose face would have caused a glow of appreciation to burn within the ar tistic soul of the late Aubrey Beards ley, was most artistically daubed with green paint, from the roots of his hair to the tip of his chin. His appearance bore testimony to the fact that Max Stolloff is a painter. The parts of Fitzpatrick's face which the brush of Stolloff had neglected stood out in pale relief, a sand contrast to the ver dure surrounding them. An erstwhile black moustaeh drooped greenly over his mouth. Underneath the paint Fitzpatrick's face was sad. It was plain that he felt the indignity of his position. Stolloff, who literally stood in the reflected glory of Fitzpatrick's face, was prevented from smiling as content edly as he might at sight of his handi work by an aching void, which filled the space formerly occupied by two of his front teeth. In hlB impressionist work on Fitzpatrick he had himself been a bit splashed with green. In the greenness which Irradiated from the two Magistrate Brann looked pale. "It was this way," said Stolloff, In a voice thickened and impeded by swol len lips: 'I was in his way, and he told me, and then I told him I wanted to paint the front of the house, only he wanted to hang the awning, and I moved away to give him room, and I told him he had no right to do so, but he hitvme in the mouth and broke two teeth for me." Here Stolloff opened his mouth and showed the aching void. With the solemnity of Solomon, Ma gistrate Brann asked the injured paint er if the teeth were false, which was Indignantly denied, Stolloff adding, "but I suppose the next ones will be." The magistrate would not go Into that, however, and turning an unused eye upon the toothless man, continued his catechizing: "Then, when he struck you, you turned about and painted him?" "Yes, sir; that's all I can do. That's my trade," answered Stolloff. Magistrate Brann turnttl to Fitzpat rick. There was a long contemplation before the judicial lips opened. "Fitzpatrick. I can tell by your face that you're Irish," he said. The awning hanger had to admit that the magistrate's acumen was not at fault. "But, man, dear," continued tue court in a rich brogue, " 'tis a beastly shame to give you a French goatee." Fitzpatrick again admitted that "them were his sentiments." "You are not as green as you are painted, however," resumed the court. "Tell me how you came to be deco rated." Fitzpatrick declared that he was en gaged in putting up an awning in front: of a Hudson street house when S'tollofr appeared on the scene with paint ami brushes and peremptorily ordered him to desist from hanging his awning, as he (otolloff) had another coat of paint to apply to the building. "The paint was green, your honor," said Fitzpatrick. "Yes," replied Magistrate Brann. " 'tis evident on the face of it." "Well," went on Fitzgerald. "I told him 1 would put up the awning in spite of him, and he swashed me with his paint brush; then I hit him." The magistrate sermoned the chro matic Fitzgerald for behaving like "a kid," and submitted to both prisoners the alternative of paying $lO fine each or of accepting a discharge. The choice was left to Stolloff, who was the complaintant. After a moment's he3i lation and a glance at Fitzpatrick: "I'll call it square," said the painter. —New York Commercial Advertiser. "Iloatli Watche*." The British Journal of the board of agriculture has some interesting par ticulars regarding the so-called "Furni ture Beetles." Two species of the beetle make the curious ticking uoiso which has given rise to their popular name of "Death Watch." This noise is made chiefly during the pairing son son, and is produced Ijy the beetles striking their heads upon the wood on which they are standing, so a3 to at tract their mates, who make a similar noise in reply. It is made during the day as well as at night, but it is not so noticeable as at the latter time. It is said that the larva can also produce the sound, but this Is not definitely known. The larvae make long galler ies into the wood, and when mature pupate in little chambers from which the beetles escape by eating their way out. The Journal recommends that when furniture or woodwork is attacked by these beetles and their larvae, steps be taken at once to destroy them. Fainting with a camel hair brush with corrosive sublimate should be resort ed to. The poison kills the beetles as they make their exit. Fumigating with hydrocyanic acid gas also kills. Where small objects, such as chairs, are invaded, they may be put in some closed cupboard and left in the fumes for some days. It must be remembered that this gas is a deadly poison as well as the cyanide of potassium used in its manufacture. Benzine may also be ap plied to polished furniture, but is best mixed with carbolic acid. Furniture so treated has, of eourse, the polish taken off. and will require repollshing. Justice Grantham, of the English Bench, trieß more murder cases than any of his colleagues. He tried thrctr- Ui one day at Leeds recently.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers