Etvi) IE it it it & m it ICTTffi M 1 fc m MISS ' Running wildly, and trying filiomiy " I T was on this wise that that pa I thetlc, elusive, bewildering llttl 1 personality first came Into ou childless lives. We were comfortably established one hot afternoon on the piazza of the cot tage, to which we had fled but yester day from Chicago August. My wife rocked lazily, her basket of embroidery on tier lap, while I swayed slowly In the hammock, with a vague notion of reading, at some pleasantly Indefinite moment of the future, from the maga line In my hand. The prospect of a month's freedom from the office where I had left mat ters In good shape Imparted an optl mlstlc tinge to my mood. I began to expiate aloud upon our good luck In having discovered this pretty Michi gan lake, where we knew no one and need not be bothered by callers drop ping In "Where we can't even hear the chil dren In the next flat," Bess put In. "Yes, I acquiesced, "the wide ex panse of territory between us and that cottage Just beyond the point forms a sufficiently large light-shaft to deaden sounds of " , It was at this moment that we heard a wall of childish agony that brought us both to our feet. "No, no, no no oh!" On the grass plot between us and the lake a tiny girl, perhaps throe years old, was running wildly and crying plt eously. We caught a vision of a little face of terror, before she flung herself upon the ground, burying hor face In her arm, shrieking and kicking:. Bess not so fleet of foot as she was fifteen years ago was nevertheless ahead of me, and bending over the lit tle writhing figure, murmuring endear ments. The child sat upright, with flushed face, staring at us In surprise; In hor grief and terror she had not seen us, "What Is the matter, you little precious thing?" asked my wife ten derly. She wore a dainty pink frock, her hair was a mass of kinky yellow, her eyes were bluish grey, and all else vUlble of her can best be described as peachy. Bess had gathered her up and was acting as though she actually was the fruit that she suggested. "What made you cry, Baby?" I In quired. The tot looked at me an Instant, thon surprise, to which the terror had given place, changed In Its turn to an en chanting smile. "I Mlsh Janumlt Latllt," she said, as If that Bettled the whole matter. I looked at Boss In bowlldorment. "She's telling you her name, stupid! the little darling!" To the child, "What did you say your name Is, Pot?" "I Mlsh Janumlt Latllt," she re peated. "Janumlt Latllt what a name! And for such a llttlo blossom! , Hut why did you cry so, darling Janumlt?" At Bess's question tho baby's smile vanished, the look of fear and anguish returned, and clasping Boss's neck the child cried out, "Don't let her git mo don't let her Hp Janumlt! No, no, no!" "Who wants to get you, Baby?' J asked. uiie looked at me, her little counte nance distorted with four. "Janumlt's 'tep-muvver," she said. "Don't lot her flp Janumlt! No, no!" My wife's eyes grew wide. She rose from the grass, clasping tho llttlo pinky creature close, and looked around de fensively. No pursuer was In sight, and we returned to the piazza, little Janumlt submitting willingly to be borne away and cooed over by my wife. Then Bess looked at me, her eyes still wide, and demanded: "Hubert Evans, do you believe any woman could whip this little angelic thing?" Resenting her accusatory attitude that made me a perfectly Innocent party, not even a spectator partlreps crlmtnls, I began a witty reply to the effect that, considering the sex of a stepmother, It was dlfllcult to foresee the exaot channel In which her activity ii it The Art IF a little time and thought are given to the fixing up of things that have beirun to look dnwdv anil oiled you cannot Imagine how it will ropoy you. The process of dyeing has become so easy that almost any woman can do It successfully at home, unless the garment be extremely Intricate in Its style and elaborate as to trim mings. However, the small things of a girl's wardrobe can bo handled at home very successfully. Take for In stance, your chiffon veils that are soil ed and faded. These veilings should first be washed In a warm suds and dried. Any druggist carries a full line of reliable dyes and a ten-cent pack age will dye a pound of goods. The dye should then be prepared and the veils dipped to the desired shade and Ironed dry. Another thing that can be success fully handled at home are the coque feather boas which fade so quickly In the summer and have become soiled frem the dust Wash these first as ; you would the veils by making a suds and dipping the boa up and down until all tm dirt has disappeared. Now dry it. and then dip It In the dye and take JANUMI might discharge Itself. But the child began to cry again plteously, the word "whip" evidently having suggested the cruel treatment to which she had been subjected. "Don't let her flp me no, no! Janu mlt wunned way, way off!" Sho strug gled out of Bess's encircling arms and flung herself face downward upon the floor, screaming upon her little arm, aB when we first saw her, on the grass. Of all pitiful variations of baby woe I had never heard the like before; It seemed as though the little creature, In her short life, might have run the entire gamut of Infantile suffering. Bess's face was white and her Hps formed a horizontal line that I know well as she gave me one look. Then she swooped down upon the agitated pink mass and gathered the little suf ferer with ineffable tenderness. , "You little flower, you shall not be 'ripped' here! My little precious one, don't cry any more now, darling there, there, the-ere!" The .baby looked up Into her face with big eyes o wonder. It was plain that such treatment puzzled her evi dently enough, caresses and terms -ot passionate endearment were new to hor experience. "I Mlsh Janumlt Latllt," she said. with a smile that might have fractured adamant. 'Yes, darling; yes, sweet," said Boss, soothingly. "Where do you live, Janu mlt, dear?" Way, way off, ovy there," she point ed to the opposite shore of the lake. "How do you suppose she could got here?" I murmured Incredulously. The child hoard me. "Janumlt wunned away, way off in 'e boat. 'Tepmuvver tan't git me now!" The little face be gan to pucker up Into its look of agony. Hess darted a glanoe of reproach at me. "Don t ask such questions, Robert! Do you want to make hor cry herself lck?". My offences are often of an occult nature, although my wife con detect them every time. But I made no pro test the matter In hand was too tragic as I watched Bess exerting every ef fort to soothe the little, moaning crea- ure. At last we wore half distracted. All the soothing and caressing seemed ut to make matters worse. "For oaven's sake, Robert, do something!" commanded Bess, at her wit's end. I hastily made a collection of articles that seemed to me sufficiently gaudy nd curious pr breakable and valuable to attract a young child's fancy. We finally got her attention, and after a time she forgot her troubles In tho ex amination of a red leather needle book. 1 "The sorrows of childhood," I re marked, somewhat tritely, "are quickly healed." Bess was bent upon keeping the sor rows of this speclmon of childhood per manently healed. "We must not lot her cry again!" she said sternly, then, In a rapturous tone "Now, precious, you are going to have the nicest time and be so happy!" It is perhaps need less to say that the flrBt remark was addressed to me, the second to the baby. She now constructed a throne of pillows In the hammock, and, when the child was ensconed thereon, all the val uables In our possession were piled up on her lap, the overflow being placed upon a chnlr within easy reach. The little peachy creaturo fell to playing contentedly with the skeins of brilliant embroldory-sllks, pouring out over them a Hood of the most delectable baby-prattle that ' I over heard, We looked at each other. "What are you going to do, Robert?" "Do? I don't see anything to do now the child lias stopped crying " "As If that wore tho end!" she crlod scornfully. "Do you think that I shall let that little, blessed baby go hack to an Inhuman " Blie pausod, glancing apprehensively toward tho hammock. Janumlt was talking to herself and subjecting the silks to such an ordeal that I, recalling an occasion when I once Inadvertently produced a slight confusion in the work-basket," bognn to fonr for her. But Bess beamed upon her. "She shall scruzzle the silks all up, If she wants to, the darling!" sho cooed. "Would you llko to stay here, sweetheart, all tho time, and have all the pretty things to piny with? Would you, Janumlt?" Tho child looked Into Boss's eyes with tho steudy stare of childhood. When the question was repeated, she said, with that entrancing smile, "Yesh, tny wlv' oo all 'e time!" Then she wont hastily back to the bllHs of "sorur.zllng" tip the silks. Presently we heard her talking to herself: "Want to 'tay wlv 'e nlsch lagy an' 'e mans and play wlv' 'e pltty tings, Janu- of Cleaning and Dyeing Ji ii It out In the open air and keep shak ing It until It Is quite dry. This will require fifteen or twenty, minutes, but If you do not shake It dry the feathorg will hang heavy and loso their fluffy appearance. Perhaps you hail a light foulard with white or pale colored background and a spot or figure running through It This dress can be successfully dyed the color of the dot or figure. The figure will still show, of course, but will only be Just a different tone from the solid background. Dresses of this goods that are no longer fit for gen eral wear can be dyed and used for trimming another new dress. Cash mere dresses for the houso, the skirts trimmed with bins bands of foulard silk, with kimono sleeves edged with the foulard, and a soft crushed belt of the same, are extremely pretty and would Involve only the expenditure of a little money to buy eight yards of cashmere. Any soiled foulard .that Is beyond mending would answer for the trimming If tho owner would Just clean and dye It But the point to remember Is this that all goods must be thoroughly washed until they are T L ATLITBy ; Enipeigh Merwyn mlt? Want Marzhry let to, Jariumlt, want to Janumlt 'tay? Yesh, I gucsh so!" I "Where Is 'Marzhry,'' darling?" A strange look came Into the blue gray depths. "Marzhry all goned away," she said. "Who Is 'Marzhry'?" I asked. "Marzhry's 'e uvver Itty girl, way off in 'e cottage." She waved a silk-entangled little fist vaguely. "Ish is Marzhry's ltty dwess." She patted her pink knee. "Janumlt not got any pltty ltty dwess 'tepmuvver tooked 'em 'way." Tho dreadful terror began to show on the little face, but my wife hastily created a diversion with my new field-glass. I was beginning to realize the mean ing of the look on my wife's face--a determination on which any such triv ial consideration as tho legal rights over a child would go to smash. I con cluded that It was time for me to set on foot some systematic inquiry tend- ng to the discovery of the child s prop er and lawful guardians. So I ventured to ask, "Where is your papa, llttlo Jan umlt?" " J hastily made a "Papa not love Janumlt now; 'tep muvver not lot Papa love Janumlt," said tho pathetic little thing. Bess gave me a terrible look. "Rob ert, you shall not ask sufh horrid ques tions." But I felt myself sufficiently like a brute, and hastened to cover my unfortunate - remark by the offer of my knife and pocketbook. , i Little Janumlt abandoned her ham mock throne and began to piny about on tho piazza, trotting from hammock to chair and back again, re-arranging her treasures which now included our Jowelry to suit her ever-changing fancy. I talked, seriously to my wife now In an undertone, urging upoi her the necosslty of learning something more dotlnlte about the child, and she finally allowed me to ask some questions she herself always coming in upon me with some new offering, In time to prevent a recurrence of tho weeping which too prolonged consideration -of her step mother never failed to elicit from Jan u nil t. Between us we managed to get from tho child, In her Intervals of play with her engrossing playthings, a tale of cruelty that would have roused, a less susceptible pair than my wife and my self, j Homo of tho details seemed too horrible for belief, and I felt confident that something must bo attributed to childish Imagination. But making due allowance here, It was plain that the child's stepmother must be a fiend a creature designed by nature nnd mold ed by environment to sit for the por trait of the stepmother pur excellence. My wife's eyes grew wider and wider; nnd wlillo I am a ninn little .given to emotional display, I found once that my nalLs had cut the palm of my clenched hand. The climax came when Hess, who had the child on her lap, noticed a hand kerchief drawn tightly around her arm. Just above the wrist, partly covered by her sleeve, and plimod In bungling fashion.' free from grime and dirt, nnd dried, before they are put Into the dye. For your better dresses of pale col ored goods, It will probably pay you to take them to a professional. Crepo do chine Is very apt to fade In the process of cleaning, and often they fade Just from wearing nnd hanging mussed In the closet. These dresses should be taken to a dyeing establish ment and dyed their original shade. A pale blue dress that has lost Its color takes on a dirty appearance and noth ing will restore It but dipping It. Pale pink shades are apt to fade and take on a yellow tinge that Is most try ing to the complexion. Very few matertnls tnke black well. Many women going In mourning try to have the dresses they have on hand dyed black In order to make some use of them. This Is soldom successful. Even In the finest quality of broadcloth a dyed dress Is apt to come home with a grey or green(sh tinge. Indeed, I think that you can have things dyed more successfully any other color th i black. I know this from experience, Ribbons dye very easily at home, and all the soiled ribbons left over from Mil , "What Is this,, dearest?",, ... , "Ish my hanchnaflss." The baby lift ed big eyes of pathos. "I got her-r-t!" "You sweet little thing!" BeBs lifted the hurt wrist tenderly, preparatory to removing the awkward bandage, but the child screamed with pain. "No, no, no! don't touch It I got hur-r-t, I got ljur-r-t!" She struggled down to the floor In terror. When Bess had convinced her that we would'1 not interfere with the little Injured arm, and had coaxed her back to her lap, I asked, "How did you get hurt, little Janumlt?" She stared Into my eyes for a few seconds, in silence, as though reluctant, In her baby soul, to reveal the cruel truth. Then, with great, solemn eyes, she said In that Irresistible baby patois "I got hur-r-t yessady-day, tepmuvver hit Janumlt wlv' a knife, a bid knife." My wife began to shower passionate kisses over her face and neck and hair. I got up and walked hastily across the piazza and back. Bess Is far from strong, and what we had been llsteh- j lng to with the little victim before collcciioti of articles " us was enough to upset strdnger nerves than hers. I was not surprised to find her sobbing and crying into the yellow mass of hair. Little Janumlt manifested the same surprise as before at the caresses lav Ished upon her. And now when the "nlsch lagy" began to weep, the child gazed In consternation. Then the flood of her own grief broke forth anew. The grief had been tearless before, but now she sobbed and sobbed, and abundant tears disfigured the pretty little countenance. I looked on help lessly at the two. Presently Bho began to comfort Bess. "Don' cwy, lagy, don' cwy!" she begged, kissing her and clasping her nock. This touching development brought Bess to herself, Sho put an end to her own sobbing and devoted herself to calming the child. This, however, was not an easy matter this time. We have learned since then that the blessed lit tle soul cannot endure to see anyone else crying the sight of another's tears affects her more profoundly than the cruel experiences of "Mlsh JanumU l-atllt" herself. In desperation I produced my watch. I do nut, as a rulo, cherish the Idea of beholding my watch In tho clutch of Immaturity, devoted to robust uses for which It wns not designed. But I made this sacrifice willingly, and after we got hor attention, I rejoiced to see the success of my measure. Great was our relief when the sobs and tears finally ceased, entirely, and the baby, tired out, leaned her yellow head against Bess's breast, the "pltty tick-tick" clasped in her plump hand. Presently the long lashes began to waver and fall; and now we beheld that ever-beautiful phenomenon' of child hood, when the seemingly tireless ac tivity of the little individuality gradu ally yields to the peace of oncoming sleep. "I so sleepy," she murmured. Then the blue-grey deeps were ob the summer season can be dipped a dark shade and worn as belts, hair ribbon, etc. This Is pre-eminently a season where one tone Is being carried out In gowns, and this means that all laces which go to trim i dress must be dyed that color. Lavender dresses are trimmed with laces dyed the same shade; brown laces are seen made up In entire gulmpes to be worn with the new shades of brown broad cloth suits. To carry out this idea you must first boy the goods. Then buy the amount of lace you want In pure white or ecru. Take a sample of the goods and the lace to any reliable dyeing establishment and they will dye It the desired shade. Hats are made of this dyed lace and much of It Is used in trimming the fashionable Japanese sleeves. Let the womnn at home who wants to try her hand at this work get a ten-cent package of dye at any drug store and begin on something that Is not particularly valuable. Make the dye and test Its color with a pleco of old rag that Is clean. Go slow at first and with each time you, will find that your success has grown and that in this way you can keep your little ac cessories In a nice fresh condition. scured by the white coverings deeply fringed with black sleep reigned I shall not attempt to describe my emotions as I gazed at little Janumlt asleep in my wife's embrace. Thus far we had not felt the lack of children Youth and middle-age have many di versions, but a childless old age I had thought of that before. My deep-seated aversion to action on the impulse of strong emotion, my prudence, my apprehension of proba ble practical difficulties In the way of taking this child well, if there had not been within me something very strong combating all those considera tions, I knew the Import of that look in Bess's eyes as she hugged the child to her breast I have never regretted that I concealed my feelings partially, at least putting forward the practical, prudent side; t am a generous man, and am willing to let my wife have the satisfaction of having taken the Initiative In the adoption of little Janu mlt. I waited until Bhe began as I knew she would "Robert, you may be hard hearted If you like, but I shall never allow this child to fall into the hands of that inhuman " She set her teeth. "And what is more, I shall keep her myself." "I know how you feel,' my dear," I said indulgently, "I only desire to cau tion you against allowing your feelings to run away with you. A woman Is all feeling " "Feeling!" Indignantly. "And what Is a man under such circumstances, I wish to know?" "A man at least attempts to govern feeling by reason," I said mildly. "Now It occurs to me at once to wonder If there might not be some exaggeration In the statements of this child " "Robert Evans, this is no place, for you to drag In that hateful pessimism of yours and air your knowledge of human depravity! The Idea that such a baby could speak anything but the truth; I am ashamed of you!" Squelched here, I began again. "But, my dear Elizabeth,' there are matters that ought to be considered. There is heredity, for instance now what do we know of this child's antecedents?1 "Heredity!" Look and tone united to wither, me. "What do I care for hered ity? Humanity is enough for me es pecially such an adorable specimen of it as this." "She is Certainly a fine child," I conceded; "apparently without draw backs, physical or mental. Everything seems to be normal, with the possible exception of'her fantastic name." "I like her name It Is so quaint, It seems to suit her, somehow, the little dear!" Now she veered round and took me unexpectedly. "Robert, you don't moan a word that you say" her in tuition is sometlmos startling "you are Just talking to hear yourself talk you want this child Just as much as I do! We've been growing frightfully selfish a child In our home will be our salvation. And this precious little blossom If providence didn't bring her to us, what did, I should like to know!" Unable to answer this, I mused a mo ment. Then I resumed less hypocriti cally. "Granting the perfect eligibility of the child for adoption and our desire to avail ourselves of the apparently providential opportunity, you must re flect, my dear, that there may be legal obstacles." "What legal obstacles?" She braced herself to meet them on the spot. "Well, the child Is not ours, you see." "Oh," indignantly, "It belongs to the stepmother, no doubt!" "There Is the father to be reckoned with. He may not wish to resign his offspring, and he would In that case have the laws on his side." "Oil, then, the laws of this civilized land would take a helpless little child and hand It, over to be beaten and abused! Very well, then I will break the laws all of them, If necessary and do the country a service, too!" . Her Idea, evidently, was that break ing a law constituted Its repeal and erasure from the statute books. "But my woman's instinct tells me that there Is some way to evade such laws and you will have to find It, Robert!" That Is the usual way her woman's Instinct scents something, but I must hunt around and get It located when she needs to use It. "Do iyou think that any Jury would tear this child from my arms nnd give It to a brutal. Inhuman wretch?" Bess's acquaintance with proceedings at law is slight, and her ideas on the subject present' an interesting vague ness. I would give a dollar for the mental picture that engaged her at that moment herself a heroic figure, defy ing the law and Its minions, melting by her eloquence the hearts of the Jury it ii Care of The man or woman who can find a panacea for the evil of grey hair- will make a fortune. Thousands ol women put this question to me every year. Thousands of dollars' worth of dye Is sold to women who, once they begin the habit, become helpless slaves to It. Any dye strong enough to color the hair w'lll eventually change It from its natural color to he metallic tints that enter Into the manufacture of the dye. For Instance, a girl who had dark brown hair, through illness came Into the possession of several promi nent grey hairs1 among the brown. She persistently applied a well-known dye to these locks and eventually they turned a bronze green. Dry hair seems more apt to turn grey than oily hair, and the woman who has such hair accompanied by a dry, scaly dandruff on the scalp should use massage with vaseline or olive oil. Generally speaking, however, grey hairs are due to some organic condition, general debility and nerv ous disorders. The woman who wishes to prevent her hair from turning grey should look well to her health and I come to snatch the child from her grasp. She pointed dramatically now t6 the little bandaged arm, that we had not dared to touch. "Do you suppose," she breathed, "that the little thing had to bind that up herself?" I arose and walked up and down to banish a mental picture of my own of a little shrinking Innocent and an in human creature wearing the outward semblance of a woman! I do not kngw what my face said, but when I stood again before Bess and the sleeping child, my hat In my hand, my wife gave me a long look of perfect sym pathy. "You may rest assured," I said de cidedly, "that I shall investigate thl matter. I know little of the laws of this State, but I venture to say that the statute books contain some pro vision against cruelty to children. You would better keep the; child Inside out of slght-l-while I go up to the hotel and make some Inquiries. Then I will go at once to the village and consult the proper authorities." As I descended the steps, the sound of voices came from the direction of the lake. A young man and woman were hurrying along looking In every direction. , "Now don't worry, Mllly," I heard the man say. "She'll turn up all right pretty soon she never gets hurt, you know that! Probably they have taken her In some cottage." At this they both looked toward our cottage, and the man said in a voice of relief, "There she, is right there on that porch! I see her pink dress." They came rapidly toward us. I looked at Bess, and she looked at me, and hugged little Janumlt closer. The man stood at the foot of the steps. , He removed his hat and stood there, smiling. "I hope, Madam,' he said, "that you have not been an noyed too much. My wife and I went to the city this morning, and left our little girl with a friend. We have Just come back to find that she slipped away and that they've been looking for her for an hour." I He was a good looking young fellow of about thirty, with nothing in his appearance to make it lmposslblefor him to he the father of such a beautl ful child as Janumlt. But what excuse can there be for a man, who, whatever his own disappointment may be In his second marriage, can allow his own child to be grossly maltreated! I faced him. "You are Mr. Latllt, I presume," I said Icily. He looked at me bewildered for an instant, then a broad grin began to take possession of his countenance. A little note iof laughter came from the young woman behind him. I stood, a sort of defensive outwork against them, while Bess had risen, a statuesque figure, clasping the child still closer. Indeed, under the growing pressure the child opened her eyes upon the scene. Instantly, when she saw the newcomers, she began to struggle, and kicking herself out of Bess's arms, she fled not to the remotest corner of the piazza, but straight into the arms of the young woman. The latter began straightway to behave much as my wife had done previously, acting under the evident delusion that the child was literally as well as metaphorically peach. The young woman's hair was yellowish-brown, her eyes were blue- gray, and she- was very good to look upon. She did not carry a knife. "My name," said the man, still smil ing, "is Dent. Did she tell you that her name was Latllt?" "Marjorle, you naughty llttlo rogue what have you been doing?" The young woman shook the child, but not in a fashion accurately to be described as stepmotherly. "Did you tell the lady that your name was Janumlt Latllt?" "I Jus a-playllng, Mamma!" The Bmall lmposter let forth, one of those Insinuating and engaging smiles with which she Is accustomed to make the path of life easy for herself. Then she recollected something. "Papa, did oo bwlng my dolly-fwing?" she demanded a dozen times. Bess had made some progress In the process of pulling herself together. "Do you mean that her name Is hot " she began. The young woman laughed pleasant ly. "Her name Is Marjorle, but she Is always playing that she is 'Mlsh Janu mlt Latllt.' Where she ever got that ridiculous name we don't know." "But she told us all about " Bess stopped. "How could such a baby keep It up so long?" 'Oh, she plays It for hours, If I will only talk with her. Did you call her 'Janumlt'?" "Why, yes, of course." "Well, that explains It she thought you were 'Jus' a-playllng,' too." Hair, Eyes and Nose ii ii avoid fretting. It Is against my prin ciples to furnish any of my correspon dents with formulas for dyes which contain minerals; however, I am giving here an herb tea lotion which may be used without any bad results, and it may arrest the change in color. Take two ounces of green tea and two ounces of garden sage of the latest crop. Stale lifeless sage will not do. Put these two Ingredients In an Iron pot, pour over them three quarts of boiling water rainwater If you can get It Cover with a tight-fitting lid. Simmer very slowly until the liquid Is reduced one-third. Remove the pot from the fire and let the liquid stand in it for 24 hours, then strain and bottle. Wet the hair with this lotion every night and sleep with a cover over your pil low, as the lotion will stain. Do not use an enameled or tin pot the Iron pot Is absolutely essential. The number of women who write to me that they would like to change the color of their eyes is simply as tounding. This cannot be done. The appearance of the eyes can be changed by encouraging the growth of the lashes and the brows. Massage with After a quick glance at Bess, the young woman resumed. "Sometimes I am a little worried for fear Marjorle will grow up untruthful." She spoke with an assumption of young-motherly anxiety, but she was playing for time our attitude was peculiar, but we were yet the persons to', whom she was Indebted for taking In her little run away. "But my husband thinks that It is Just Imagination." "Imagination, pure and simple," said the young man promptly. "The adven tures of Miss Janumlt Latllt would make your hair stand on end!" Bess would no longer serve as a model for a sculptor with a commission for a figure to be called Defiance, and I had so far recovered myself as to place chairs for our visitors. The young woman, with a growing appreciation of what the situation might be, asked, a mischievous gleam In her eyes, "What has she been tell ing you? Lately, Janumlt has had a cruel stepmother." My wife's face grew red. The young people were politely striving to keep their amusement down. I reflected on the wisdom of honesty and candor. "Well, we might as well own that we wore a little wrought up-by the child's story. To tell the truth, I thought It rather preposterous." I did not look at Bess, but she did look at me. "But my wife is very tender of heart, and I don't mind telling you that she had decided to adopt the child." Bess now spoke with dignity. "I shall not attempt to conceal from you, Mrs. Dent, that my husband had Just started out, when you came, to consult the authorities and find out the' laws of this State for the protection of chil dren." Then we all gave up, and vented our varied emotions in the same way. In the course of explanations, freely Interspersed with laughter, Bess indi cated the bandaged arm. The mother seized It ruthlessly and, removing the "hanchnafiss," displayed a plump and flawless, member. "She gets hur-rt constantly," she explained, so as to bandage the wound. She bandages my fingers and arms as long as I let her, and then she gets' 'hur-rt' herself In every conceivable place. She In going to be a nurse, I think." "If she Isn't a confidence lady, or a doaler In gold bricks," said the father. "Want to go home, wight now!" said the child imperiously. "Want to see my dolly-fwing!" "But you said you would stay with us, darling," said Bess, with reproach that was not all feigned. The young father surveyed the col lection of valuables that covered the piazza and chuckled softly, as he rose and swung his offspring to his shoulder. "Where is Miss Janumlt Latllt?" I demanded. "Goned way off! Way up in "e'ky, on 'o choo-choo cars!" with a last mag nificent sweep of fancy. Then she rode away triumphantly on the broad shoulder of "Mr. Latllt," to the cottage Just beyond the point, where "Marzhry, the uvver ltty girl," lived. (Copyright, 1907, by S. S. McClure Co.) 'She rode away triumphantly a little vaseline will do this. The eye brows should be brushed and trained to a good arch. If the brows are too thick In spots these hairs should be removed with a tweezer. Dull , and lifeless eyes are generally due to ill health. In fact many facial effects can be traced directly to a bad condition of the digestive organs. This Is particularly true of that common defect a red nose. The woman who Is suffering from this ailment should first treat her digestive organs and make sure by the advice of her physician that her food is assimilated. Mal-assimilatlon of food will cause a red nose. The only external remedy which can be urfed for on anl., and discolored nose Is this: One drachm of muriate of ammonia; one-half drachm of tannic acid; two ounces of glycerine, ana tnree ounces of rose- water. The muriate and the acid should be dissolved in the glycerine anl then the roBewater should be added. Take a piece of absorbent cotton and saturate with this lotion and bind en the nose at night