1L -L. A FROLIC AT THE FORD. . Geography was horrible; the sweat we failed it that f Bespoke a common misery when Billy tig. naloil Pat, Two stubby, grimy fingers uplifting on 'the sly; Thereat a wink significant distorted Pat rick's eye. Then Billy turned to Cummins, and Har vey, and Dopew, To each ir. turu displaying the mystic fin- . ... ... .;: gerK (WOi And lastly condescended, while the other winked in glee, To show the mystic symbol to the least of all to inc. O ecstasy transcending whate'er the V ture stored, ; , j ; ' v i When Billy Imde me join him for a ttM at the ford! '"' ' - ' ' ' '' The hours till noon slunk by as if they knew we -wished them past ;- It seemed -as though they'd uever go they did, of course, at lust And O, how cool the wafer was, and O, how tweet the joy . That filled and thrilled the bosom of each sweaty little boy, When he had hung his trousers on the , nearest m.;dy bouh Ann shut his lips and held his nose and l rfni'A tit "tihinw v' " We ducked and splashed and wrestled, we nonted, raced and tread. And Billy Hupped his foot aloft while standing on his head; lepew had brought up bottom from the center of the pool. When Harvey said ho reckoned it wat time to go to school. "Gee will!-.!" soys Billy, first to quit, "that's something I forgot; An' as I live! my breeches are twisted in a knot!" Each rushed ashore and scurried to where his garments hung, Then sudden imprecations arose from every tongue. While we had wooed the cooling stream, some envious sneak had gone And tied our shirts nnd trousers so we couldn't get 'em on. "We're late," says Billy. "Then," says Pat, "just take your time to dress; We'll fix it so's to wander in at afternoon recess. An' cach'o' y must gather a bunch o' purty flowers An' give 'em t' the teacher er she'll keep y' after hours." . The teacher worked for slender pay, to ' far as money went; ' She prayed and played and pardoned and seemed to be content, But when a boy that loved her contrived to let her know, flic looked ns If her gratitude was going to Overflow. ' I guess that the no matter what. When we six boys marched In, Each one of us a-griuoing from eyebrow down to chin, And slopped in turn before her desk and laid our flowers down, We saw two tears start sudden In the ; middle of her frown. At I, the hist and least of all, went by, with hair askew, , . Sl) ttoo'd and said: "I love you, boys, no matter what you do.", "These flowers," whispered Harvey, "are not so bud a plan." ".She's solid Kohl," said Billy; "she ought t' been a man!" A TRIBUTE OF SONG. II Kit H Is no place on earth where litter helplessness comes out so strong ly, where the core monies la btimtiu use full bo power less before the iwij ottty of the occa sion, ns at a fuueral. It need not be that one's heart shall be Interested. The ob sequies of a stran ger, conducted with nil the pomp and Vanity of church nnd state, with the melancholy rolling drum of the military funeral, or the gorgeousness of the Ma sonic regnllu apron all ure alike Inade quate ami unavailing. But onco In my lifts have I witnessed a ceremony that was as grand nnd Im pressive as the slleut, awful occuslou that was ever given to the dead. I will tell you of a funeral which lin gers In my memory as the grandest, most solemn, and befitting ceremony that was ever given to the dead. It was rumored umny years ugo that A poor widowed woman, lending a hard life of unending labor, was called to part with the one thing dear to her her only child. Mother und daughter had tolled together for fifteen years, and the only lilt of sunshine fulling Into their dark lives was that shed by their living companionship. But the girl had always been sickly. Under the heart broken mother's eyes she had faded nnd wasted ttwny with consump tion, and ut last the day etitue when the wan face fulled to answer with Its ghastly smile the anxious, tear-bllnded eyes of the mother. The poor young creature was dead. For many months the pair had beeu supported by the elder wouiau's sew ing, and It was In the character of em ployer 1 had become acquainted with Mrs. Cramp and her story. By an occa sional visit to the awful heights of nu Knst Side tciicmcut where they lived, by a few book nnd with some comfort ing words, 1 bad won the love of the dying girl. Her grateful thoughts turn ed lu her last hours to the small num ber of frleuds she possessed, and she besought her mother to notify me of the day of her funeral and nsk uie to nt tend. ' i i mil The i timuions reached me upou one of the wildest days preceding Christ . urns. A sleet that was not rain and a rail that wat not snow cr.me pelting . from nil points of Oik compass. A wind that walled lo V ' " n bowled In t&( street told how truly dreadful for outdoor purposes was the weatbei of tin day. I piled the glowing grates: I nre ft closer the curtains and shut out the j lsoui of the December afternoon; I tur'i'ed ou the gas and sat down de voutly thankful that I had cut ail con neetitA! with the witched weather wherjanliistallmeiitof It burst in on me In Uie shape of Parepa Kosa. She was Euuurosyue 'Parepa at that time, and the operatic Idol of the city. Muffled with tippets, flecked with snow, glow iujj with the short encounter she had had with the elements rushing up the M.eps from her carriage, she threw her Pelf Into an easy chair and proclaimed the horrors of the outer world to be be yond description. , .' , And even as we congratulated our Vjves oil the prospect of a delightful '-V together there came the summons Jim- ma to go to the humble funeral of the poor sewing woman's daughter. I turued the little tear-blotted' note over and groaned. "This Is terrible," said I; "It's Just the one errand that could take me out to-day; but I must go." And then I told Parepa the circumstances and speculated on the length of time I should be goue, and suggested means of amusement in my absence. "But I shall go with you," said the great, good-heartd creature. "Your throat, and old Bateman. and your conceit to-night!" I pleaded. "If I get another 'froggy' note in my voice It won't matter much; I'm hoarse as a raven now,", she returned. So she rewound her throat with the long, white comforter, pulled on her worsted . gloves, and 'off In the storm wo went together. We climbed flight after flight of narrow, dark snirs to the top floor, where the widow dvvlt in a miserable little room not more ruan a dozen feet square. The canvas-buck hearse, peculiar to the $25 funerulj stood In the street below, and the aw ful cherry-stained box with Its rufllt of glazed white muslin stood on uncov ered trestles lu the center of the room above. . . , ' There was the mother, speechless in her grief, before that box a group of hard-working, kindly hearted neigh- bors sitting about. It was useless to say the poor woman was prepared foi the Inevitable end It was cold comfort to Bpeuk to her of the daughter's re lease from pain and suffering. The be reft creature, In her utter loneliness, was thinking of herself and the awful fate of the approaching moment when that box and Its precious burden would be taken awny and leave her wholly nloue. So, therefore, with a sympathiz ing grasp of the poor, worn, bony baud, we sat silently down to "attend the funeral." : ; The undertaker's man, with a screw driver In his baud, jumped about In the passage to keep warm. The creaky boots of the minister belonging to the ?'J5 funeral were heard on the stairs There was a catarrhal conversation held outsldo lietween them as to the enormity of the weather, ami, probably, the baa taste of the deceased In select lug such a had time to die was dis cussed. Then the minister came lu with a pious sniff and stood revealed, a reg ular Stlgglns ns to get-up a dry, self sutllclent uinn, Icier than the day und colder than the storm. He deposited his hat nnd black gloves nnd wet umbrella ou the poor little bed In the corner; ho shipped his hand vig orously together; he took himself In well-merited fashion by the eurs and pulled them Into glowing sensation, and after thawing out for a moment plunged Into business. He rattled merrily through some se lected sentences from the Bible. He gave us a prayer that sounded like pens lu a dried bladder, and he cume to ainen with a Jerk that brought uie up like a pateut suatlle. lie pulled ou his old gloves and grubbed his rusty hat, and with his umbrella dripping inky tenrs over the well-scrubbed floor he offered a set form of condolence to the broken-hearted mother. lie told bet of her sin In rebelllug against the de cree of Providence. He assured her that nothl"; could bring the dead back. My. nivclghed against the folly of the world lu general, and this poor woman In particular; nud then he made a hor rible blunder, and showed he -didn't know even the sex of the dead, by say ing: "He cannot come to you, but you must go to him." This wns a settler for Parepa and myself. We looked at the departing minister In blank astonishment. The door swung wide, we saw the screw-driver waving In the air as the undertaker's tnun held converse with the clergyman. A hush fell on every lsidy gathered In the little room. Not one word had been uttered of consola tion, of solemn Import, or befitting the occasion. It was the emptiest, hollow- est, most unsatisfactory moment I ever remember. Then Parepa arose, her cloak falling about her noble figure like mourning drapery. She stood beside that miser able cherry wood box. She looked a moment ou the pinched, wasted, ashy face upturned toward her from wlthiu It. She laid her soft, white hand ou the discolored foreheudof the dead girl, and she lifted up that mutchless voice lu the beautiful melody: "An gelt ever bright and fair, Take in, oh, take her, to your care." The screw-driver paused lu describ ing an airy circle; the wet umbivlU stood pointing dowu the stairs; the tv nieu tvlth astonished faces were fore most In a crowd that Instantly filled the passage. The noble voice swelled to ward heaven, and If ever the choir of paradise paused to listen to earth's music It was when Parepa sang so gloriously beside that poor dead girl. No queen ever went to her grave ac compli tiled by a grander ccreiuouy, To thlM day Parepa's glorious tribute of fcoiu; rlngt with solemn melody lu uiy men cry as the only real, Imprtuslv funeral service I over beard. BABIES IN INCUBATORS. Uov the Youngsters Are Made to IGrow by Science. The Victorian Km Exhibition, now open in London, does not possess au exhibit of greater scientific Interest than that of the infant. Incubator, and, from a popular point of view, judged merely as a sideshow, this invention has proved immensely attractive in fact, it is one of the most paying con cerns at Karl's Court, medical men vy ing with the general public lu their l miration for this new contrivance for saving life. The necessity for such a thing Is shown by the fact that where as lu 1880 ttie number of deaths regis tered In (irent Britain as being duo to premature birth amounted to 1,1)30, the figure rose for last year to 2,534. It Is also well known that a large numb'r of deaths which are attributed to various diseases are due. Indirectly, to prema ture birth. The two most Important considera tions in saving the lives of prematurely born or very weakly infants are, of course, warmth and air, and these fac tors are amply provided for In the neat white metal contrivances which are now to be seen. Somewhat similar in ventions have been In use for some time at the Charity Hospital, Berlin, and the Paris Maternity Hospital and the Post-Graduate Hospital, New York. lhe first "couveuses" used In Paris in 1880 were a great Improvement upon the old-fushioned style of wrapping the Infants in wadding or in a sheepskin with the wool adhering; but they still left much to be desired, inasmuch as they had to be freshly warmed three or four times a day, and consequently re- juireu unceasing and vigilant attend ance. ! ' . . ,, The latest Incubator is tho Invention of Paul Altuiunu, and is now being ex ploited In England for the first time. Its great merit Is that It works auto- tiiatieally, thus dispensing with the ne cessity for Incessant watchfuluess; in deed, the machines themselves ueed no wutcblnir. and the infants have onlv to be moved In order to be fed, a elreum- siauce wmcn mey generally announce lu the eiiBtomary manner, and washed The temperature is maintained . by means of a thermostat, which works automatically. By an Ingenious sys tem of levers communication is at once established between the inside of the Incubator una the boiler oufslde, which Is heated by au oil lamp, gas or elec tricity, so that, should the temperature vary ever so slightly, it Is increased or decreased us occasion may require. Next to the warmth for the little pa tient comes the question of air, anfl this Is provided from the outside through a pipe which conducts It to the Incubator, where It passes through a washing, fil tering and warming process before' passing Inside. Ou the top of the incu-' bator there Is a chimney so constructed mat ii can oiuy rami au outlet tor invj pure air. As a means of ; ji-o luiii,' warmth of tire -necessary dep've nV. ? nusoiiiieiy pure air, tnw wrr-i'm" , 3 ,j perfect, and to totiku all tbuitf -"' j there Is a staff of experienced i-uiue1 Facta About Postaxo Mam; it. ' 111 this day and age we mol-den stamp and nfllx It o our letters orfd give it no further thought, adapting the stamp us a iuatter-of-couio con venience, and nuifiy persons, tf'ould be wondrously surprised if they were to be told that tlielf- grandparents uever saw a postage sfnnip. Henry Shaw, flic father of ".losli Bil lings," purchasd tho first two sAamps ever sold In th V nlted Htatus oh Aug. (I, 1847. He bought ovj' each of the five-cent staiiJi and th;Vu-eeni stamp, these two denominations Ixng the only ones put out at that tlaie. The ten-cent stniiip he gave to Governor Brlggs and kept tho flveceut one for himself. Of the fit stamp ever Issued Wash ington's portrait was on (ho ten-cent and Franklln i on the other. Since that timethe various issues of the Uni ted Statts stamps xvoukf ' furnish a unique portrait gallery, showing the faces of fo.'ty-elght ttwtod Americans. Washington appear on.tweuty-flve Is sues, -blle Hi col rs iictnre is' on ev ery Igi'uft sini-e . : ii, v A-ept the Colum bian aer'vt. I . InlST.'p a law wn Nhased prohibiting the use of tue pct'tralta of living men on tho United Puleystamps.'thug plac ing living men hi the7 tame position that women occupied whether dead or alive, for no woinan't portra l has ever graced a stamp belonging ti the Uni ted States, pj' tn1 or revenue.) Of the two. hundred and nty stamps which have Un issuisi ;.;he values have ranged, from one tnt to five thousand dollars. Five dollars is the highest value among postage, stamps, but newspaier fcvamp reach, the hundred-dollar mark, whita a: revenue stamp may rtprewnt five thousand dol lars. I " i Stamps wir put; on the market In August, 1S4T, but veru so little used that the govmnueunhad to pass a law enforcing fepaym W of postage, which went Into erTectt In 1836. Before this, action was taken i scarcely otie let ter lu a diizeh was fouud with a stnmn utllxed. To-tlay the pAstorfices of the cotintry sell our bl'illonWnmps (eount- lug postal cards, stamped envelopes and stamps nu kiuuni, vauieu at aeveiity-llTe single year. (million doleiia, during a ilin 1- r, Irollcy Curt In (Slam. They ure uj to date lu' Slam. They run electric trams In Bangkok and the king Is one of the largest stiarehoWers. Tor some years the dwelhrrs U Bang kok were coutent with tlie'l'vly horse ns a traetlou-power for, li.Wr trams, but the company promo' ; Vi the elec tric engineer found thVr i, ay (u enter prising Slam, and no-., ai ctrjc tram way fluds lu slleut way V'roligh the - I V It rJuSsj'rom the streets of Bangkok lower tud of the town to nl i nee, a distance of six mffosvi'he slisre return a handsome dlvided, as much as IS per cent, has been aid, but tin average return is 10 or llfper cent. No wonder his Majesty has jiiudsome jew els and takes summer'tf y to the con tinent. Pall Mall Uazefie, J . . ATCHISON GLO?E SIGHTS. i . Every scoundrel ll:ius a Slot of people to stand by him. j ; Kvery man thinks h is something of a weather prophet. A man who is not iwir.'.id can mate a change, but tiiar.-led nian can't , All the average ij;in wonts Is an op port unity to make a fool of himself. The only way to keep people from knowing your age U to move every year: f ' ' Poetry is popnlar fir no other reason than that every pevou has written some. ; ' , ' i i Occasionally yon bisir a inau say he Is tired of "notoriety." Don't you be lieve it. Every young man who gi.f s married Is, according to the women, the best ot the boys in his family. j Money Is so hard tt earn fi Is a won der that people don't stop experiment ing with it af ter tliey get it. Each party t' a marriage likes to have it said of him tliat he was "caufht," lii8feaa f that he) "made a catch." There are wi.-k'. unjuVt kicks made thnt when i mfta kicks with jus- tic It doesn't 'o tbe (kmsidera- tiofi that is due it. Why do . women think that little waists are becoming?..' Everybody kiows that a Utt' waist Is aj deform ity, like a Chiuese woman's foot, lit is not considered that a woman's grief at lier husband' funeral Is what it should be unless the doctor has to b 'called ti clvo her chloroform.. . v Character in. Hats. Noth'e how a man wears his head gear, and you can make a pretty shrewd guess as to his character. H the hfit is perfectly straight and nicely adjusted to Ids head, you are safe In believing that he has a corresponding slnifghtforwardnewi of character.. II a hut slope at the back, Its wearer ha good brain power;. tilted habitually for-we-i'd, It. Indicates preponderance ot the nuiter.lal nature.. The man who pl-rtcos his hat on owe side Is self-asset;-ttve, and has his vice Men who wear pats too large for them are of a philo sophic turn of mind, and wrapped up In their own thoughts. Meu who go to the opposite extreme are mincing, af fected Individuals with, as a rule, au Inordinate love of dress and any amount of self-esteem. The man who throws his hat on his head any how is (i . -n;ChsH, h:i,ppy-go-lucky, Indolent Vli.ii'1 ter. Tie generally has his bands i .hi portals, and you can see any n.iffioer of his genus lounging at the kU'wv't corrte'i-s,, How Work Altera Features. -freryccupatlon more or less leave Its Imprint on the face of the work ers, and In the student, too, we hear ol the "pale cast of thought." But som work positively disfigures the workers, and alters the features so much as to render them unrecognizable In many cases. The white-lead workers are singularly disfigured, but they do not satisfy the Inquiry so much as th glassblowers. The exertion of blowing glass by the bottle makers Is attended with lamentable results to the workers. The task of blowing often results, not merely In distending checks, causing them to become baggy, and when at rest to hang down loosely, but also Id cases the cheeks have been known to give way under the continuous strain, and positively break Into unsightly gnshes, which become life-disfigurements. Explained Hla Success. Henry Miller, the well-known ranch er, was busily engaged In counting i big herd of cattle as they were driven by him, when an acquaintance ap proached him with the greeting: "Hello, Henry!" Miller kept on counting, nor daring to even turn hl head for fear of losing his count. "Hello, Henry," repeated hla ac quaintance, thinking he had not been heard. Still Miller kept on with his count "Say, Miller, you needn't be so Btuci up because yon are worth a few dol lara," remarked hla friend, angrily. "1 knew you when you were peddllni sausages on the street." The rancher had Just completed hit count, and, turning to hla acquaint ance, said: "Yes, by tarn, und If I don't have got any more sense as you I be ellln sausages yet." San Francisco Post. Candid. Lady (Interviewing housemaid) did you leave your last place? -Wbj Housemaid Because the master klst ed me, mum. Lady And you didn't like it, ehT Housemald-Oh, I dldn t mind It mum, but the mistress didn't like It! Clever Swindling Scheme. Belgium swindlers have beeu past'ni thin transparent paper over the post age stamps they put ou letters. Tin paier took the postmarks, leaving th stumps beneath uncancelled. Coat of Point. Shabby Individual (to painter up lad der) Hi! you're droppiug your palm all over mc! TaliKer (coolly)-Well, you want i new coat of some sort, badly! It is well cuough to have faith In hu nuailrv. but It la much mnm imiv,.i.,.i ' ' " "'"'l iuui I U "t humanity should bare faith Is ,Mt H8afe4H? MADE THE BURGLARS FLEE. AS trophies of her recent desper ate encounter with a burglar, Miss Ellen Zorn, of New Buffalo, Mich., treasure a sandbag and a set of false whiskers. The manwider got away, but Miss Zorn has plfotographed on her mind a good picture of the fel low, and hopes to see the original ere loug. She is the daughter of John Zorn, a well-to-do nnd respected German citi zen who resides a short distance out side of New Buflalbi Miss Zorn Is 24 years old, of slight build nnd full of courage. She was sleeping alone In the lower part ot the house, when she was awakened by a noise upstairs. She quickly arose, aud on opening the door of the room from whence the noise seemed to come ran plump into the arms of a big, black-bearded man. The fellow aimed a blow at her with a sand bag, but she dodged and closed with hiuu Her first grab, woman-like, per haps, was for his beard, which came away In her hand. The man struck at her repeatedly, but she escaped serious lujury. Meantime she had seized his throat In one hand and the sandbag with the other, choking him so he could hardly breathe. Then he dropied the sandbag, which she seized and pro ceeded to use vigorously on the unwel come visitor. Upon this he Jumped from a window and escaped. No Opening for Women. Mrs. Emily Crawford, the well known Paris correspondent of the Lon don Dally News, says that there ia no opening at all for women Journalists In Paris. "The manners of the country," she says, "are entirely against It. The French press Is nt present In the hands of a rough, pushing, scrambling set of men. who guard their own rights most Jealously against any Intrusion of wo men. If a girl tried to force her way luto a Paris newspaper office she would meet with scant courtesy aud would be looked upon ns an Interloper who deserved no mercy." This la the Way. The woman who Is wondering how she shall "do" her hair to be In the latest mode can look at tills and be sat isfied. It Is a style just brought out In London, and while It requires a deft hand it Is really very easy to accom plish, and the nov el way in which the tw hits are ar ranged are at once pleasing and be coming. This year there has been an effort to make women wear their THB KEW TWIST. hair on top of their heads, but it has not beeu exactly successful. It la im possible to adjust a bat at a correct angle with an elaborate high coiffure, aud In these busy days a woman who la embroidering by her fireside one min ute, scampering down to the grocery next, receiving callers one hour and out on the golf field the hour after has uo time to dress her hair every hour of the day to suit conditions she wants a style which Is at once pretty and which pormlts of a hat If necessary. New Skirts. There are several varieties of new skirts one kind is plain In shape, but much fuller In the back than those which have been worn. Trimming Is put on either at the hem or over the hips. Tailor gowns have barrel-hoop rows of silk braid from the waistband to a little below the hips, similar rows appearing at the hem. Designs of many kinds, key border patterns, V's and such are formed with Inch-wide silk braid on many of the winter skirts. Wear Masculine Garb. Mnie. Dleulnfoy, the famous traveler and archaeologist, is one of the two or three women to whom the French Gov ernment has granted permission to wear masculine garb. She Is always as correctly dressed as a Ixndon swell, and she and her husband patronize the same tailor. Secret of Hcauty. Probably one of the great secrets of how to be beautiful lies In thoroughly realizing what typo nature Intended you to be, and then straiulng every ucrve to be as perfect as possible In that particular line. It takes all kinds of people to make up a world and there la no more certain way of courting fall- MISS ELI. EN ZOI1N. re thain trviivtrto1 wran yourself down . or strekch yourself up to something utterly autagonrstfe to your nature. The Duh-h-doll ntylo of woman, with a tip-tiltod nose auvf tfafe cheeks, may be perfectly conscious- that hers Is not the highest form of beauty; but woe betfele , her if she try to make it so by the os trich-like, proceeding f clothing her self In Grecian drapery and wearlug classical lillet in her hair. Has Twelve DresBiiinkem. ' It is well known that the German Empress is an ideal housekeeper, a well as an Ideal wife and mother, Her dread of waste goes so far that the suits of her elder children are cut down to- fit the younger boys, aud her own court dresses are altered again and again-,, so. as not to be recognized when they are- worn at any court functions. Yet It i also reported that an army of twelve dressmakers Is always at work for the Empress, and that it Is tn ercased' to over thirty whenever the Empress is about to start on a journey. New gowns would, after all, be tm ex pensive, since the great Berlin artist In dresses who makes the court costumes for her majesty charges only about $7D for making a gown of state. . Ugly on the Wheel. As a rule American women are pre pared to blindly follow French styles, but most of them hope the day Is Sir distant when they are likely to see their daughters and themselves ar rayed In the unsightly plaited bicycle bloomers to be seen dally on the Paris boulevards. They accentuate all the ungraceful lines and the prettiest wo men look ugly in them. The rldera hi Paris bend forward at a sharper angle than they -do here and -this alone renders-them, ungraceful'. It Is a matter of wonder that French women are c unnttractlve on the wheel, as femlnbie France has always stood for chamw and' style. The Smelling Knltu Expression. The constant use of smelling aalta to aald by physicians to ruin the beauty of women addicted to the habit For the Nursery. The newest convenience for tha baby's boudoir is a big-bowled, long handled spoon of yellow wood. The bowl is a painting of a scene from the land of farles or nursery ditties. The classic cow performing her aerial feat, Simple Simon, Little Boy Blue, Little Nan Ettleoat and other familiar per sonages ornament the bowl, whose curling edges make a frame for the gay little figures. All aloug the handle of the spoon are placed brass hooka, and when It Is fastened to the wall by a larger and more solid hook placed at the back it makes nn ornamental aim) very useful little rack for the children's clothes. PetticoaU of Plaid. Each year more care Is bestowed upon the petticoat of silk. This sea son the most fetching thing In petti coats Is the one of plaid silk. The Aiops are showing most attractive and elaborately made garments of this or der. One shown In a leading Broad way dry goods house the other day waa of green and black plaid, the bot tomhavingadeepflouncedone In knlfe pleatlng cut into points and set up over anotherpleated flounce of black taffeta. Silk petticoats can be hnd now In ai the fashionable plaids and their cost Is In keeping with their elegance. To Remove Tan anil Frecklet, Soap will not remove tan nor fveckles, says the Ladies' Home Jour nal. Bathe the face in warm water and dry very carefully with a soft towel. Do not use soap on the face un less absolutely necessary. Never use fnee powder of any sort- It spoils the skin, by closing the pores. If y0nr clilld suffers from sunburn, moisten the face at night with cucumber Juice Out a cucumber lengthwise and rub' It on the face, allowlmr tha ini. .. - e ----- i, ijni:i.ii until It dries off; or use a mild boJiiUot. 01 oa king soda. Bernhardt' Hair. Sarah Bernhardt'a hair Is untvrijty of a dark brown and Is far fritu luxu1- ant. It Ik, however, stiff aail ci-inkjj and now that rt is bleached Ih revldleh- 7 ?OS gol.l is picturesque and pa-tty; thh golden aureole, which frames.' Iv great actress' face, Is exceedingly lu? coming, and she did well to n-fuae to accept the Indifferent color conferred on her by nature. Keep Accounts. Keeping household accounts is an af fair, If not a necessity, s ill of tbt greatest wisdom, says an exchauij. In comparison with the small amount of time and labor which the d' log so em ploys the satisfaction of knuwln t the end accounts which w'.il sho :.Lc once where expenses can be h-Mi nsd u entitled to respectful consideration. ; y orai pat yon. V