ETT EP TR Aas, Bellefonte, Pa., April 8, 1892. WHEN? We'll read that book, we'll sing that song. But when? ‘Oh, when the days are long; When thoughts are free and voices clear; Some happy time within the year. The days troop by with noiseless tread, The song unsung, the book unread. We'll see that friend, and make him feel The weight of friendship, true as steel; Some flowers of sympathy bestow, But time sweeps on with steady flow, Until with quick, repreachful tear, . We lay our'flowers upon his bier. And still we walk the desert sands, And still with trifles fill our hands, While ever just beyound our reach, A fairer purpose shews to each, The deeds we have not done, but willed. Remain to haunt us—unfulfilled. Boston Journal. FOR YELLOW GOLD. When the stage “went light,” they ran out the small buckboard; but when there were more than four pas- sengers, the big mud-wagon was “put on.” This was a buckboard day, for there was nota single passenger. What was more to the point, as the Gold Butte Mining Company regarded it, was that under the driver's seat wasa box with ten thousand in the} newest of new tens and twenties in it. The driver had looked very blue when he drove his four mustangs from the postoffice, when he took on a very flat leather bag, which spoke loudly of the incapacity or disinclination of the Thimble Spring people for letter writ- ing—over to the railroad station,where he was to take on the box. Things were going all wrong at home. That was why his brown face looked so hag- gard ; that was why he held so loosely the “lines” ; that was why he chewed so hard on the bit of “plug” in his mouth. “Such hard scratchin’ I never seed afore,” was what he had said as he had listlessly thrown the mail-bag into the wagon; can’t git no decent job now-a-days. Nothin’ ter be had by prospectin’—tried thet time an’ ag’in ; ef I git anything, it peters out inside of a week. I might make a strike over ter Sand Gulch dut it’s a durned long way off, an’ me’n Sue an’ the kids hez mov- ed s0 often 'at we can’ raise nothin’ ter move on now. Why in Sam Hill did Sue hew ter git that rheumatiz jes’ now, when we’s so hard up, an afore she weaned the baby? It's a—- shame. Why can’t Bill git somethin’ ter do ?—great, big, lunk-headed cuss. EfI bed a brother, poorer'n a cow, d’ye think I'd go an’ live on him, an’ live on him, till thar warn’t nothin, ter eat in the house? Sho, Zach Springer, you'er a blamed fool. Bill hain’t done that. He ain't ter blame fer gittin’ his leg broke that time. Bill's all right, but he’s onlucky. Bin tryin’ fur a month to git a job an’ can’t git in nowhere. He's willin ter work ; he’d stand erotch-deep in the creek, all day long, washin, out tailen’s, ef he could make his salt at it. Tried it fer six weeks, an’ didn’t git enough ter buy a pair of gum boots. Whoa, Buck- skin! He'djamn right inter the station platform ef yer didn’t saw his teeth out.” And then the box was taken on, and | the express agent had something to say. That ‘something’ was not to Zach Springer's liking. He chewed harder than ever on the bit of plug, and sawed the hard mouths of the mus- tangs by an uwunecessary yanking of the reins. It was a positive relief to be able at lastéo whack his lash down upon the sides of the nervous brutes and turn then loose for the forty-mile run to Gold Butte. Why had he need- ed a lecture from a hireling of the ex- press company, and why should that smooth-jawed agent have looked at him with such dark suspicion ? “They think ’cos I got stood up down ter Black Rocks las’ time I had a big load o' gold thatI need to be preached to every time I go out now with full box. The stogpsiouldered, desk- settin’ houndz'! I'd like ter see one 0’ “em handlin’ the ribbons when thar’s a Winchester lookin’ at em with an eye as big as a barl-head.. Can’t tell me they weuldn’t give in! The sweet-soented, calf-skin boated young ladies! Thar &in’t a man among ‘em I” Zach Springer’s indignation was now in more complete possession of him than had been his feeling of blueness a little earlier. What he had delivered himself of just now was not what he would have said had he voiced his true sentiments with reference to the ex- press agent’s lecture. In between the words ran the thought that they” had suspected him of having a hand in the Black Rocks robbery. It had come to him before in what he called a “left hauded” way, and be had had other outbursts of righteous indignation, but none in which the upheaval was so great as that of the present. Had that been the reason the stage company bad cut down his pay to “sixty” a month ? The ebances were that it was ; it was too blamed mean tor a lot ot swine, like these people, to he thought, to come it 80 high-handedly over a poor man who only wanted his own. And wouldn’¢ it serve them just right if —— The white dust of the desert rolled up from the mustang’s hoofs in little puffs and sprays of it, powder fine, fol- lowed the turn of the wheels half way up, there to be caught by the breeze and drifted behind ia a long cloud that followed the buckboard like a haunt- ing spirit. Sometimes, as the light breeze shifted, it came back upon the buckboard and its driver like heavy though(s on the conscience of a guilty man. It would serve them just right! Be. sides that, only think—ten thousand! What would the people down in Mexi- co or Gutemala, where he would fly know or care if somebody up in far-off Nevada had dumped a box off his buckboard and gone back and got it after a few days--maybe a week? It would have to be a dark night wouldn't it? You couldn’t go and get a box like that in the day time and take it any- where, for the whole country would be out looking for the man who had it. Maybe a month; that would be better. It would all blow over by that time. Let's see ; wouldit? Ten thousand was a good deal. Thosestage-stoppers were always striking the box on the wrong day. They never got so much as that at one haul. In two months, then— perhaps two months; but it would have to be well hidden. And ithe thought stuck to him, de- spite all attempts to keep it off, though by the time he had driven the mus- tangs into Red Canon, his indignation at having been suspected by the com- pany had died down. The box at his feet had taken on a new meaning for him. It meant smart gowns for the wife ; it meant a good schooling for the children. Those five little ones had had a hard “rustle” of it to get what few scraps of learning they had thus far managed to clutch; and, as for cluthes, they were dressed like ju- venile scarecrows. Yes all the hard scratching would be over it he dared to de what many another hard-pushed man had done. Resolving the whole matter down to a plain, clear-cut pro- position, it was, afterall, simply a ques- tion of “nerve.” Here was the place to do it. Right here, where the high, seraggly rocks, the patches of sage-brush. It would be as well concealed as though buried in six feet of earth. The buckboard had reached the top of a long down- grade. Zach put on the brake-handle. As if about to take a plunge into ice- cold water he reached down for the box. But wait a bit. He took off his big sombrero and hung it on a project- ing rock. Then flashing out his six- shooter, he sent a bullet through the brim of the hat, which he then replac- ed on his head. Though it had been hot enough when he started out from Thimble Spring, there seemed to be .a chill in the air just now. Would they believe the story that he would have to concoct, even though he showed them the hole in the hat-brim ? What would he care whether they did or not ? They already suspected him. If he had the name, he might as well have the game. He looked at a spot where the sage- brush clustered thickest, and made a mental throw or two in a tentative way, in order to ‘‘get the distance.” Then he laid two nervous bands on the box. He gave a little tug. Lord, how heavy it was! Could it be tossed over there, after all? It might have to be carried. He lifted it upon the seat. “Via Thimble Spring Stage Line.” What was the sense in putting on such a direction as that? It was the only way it could go. The only way. And that way was now clesed, for he was about to—- “God, kain’t they trust you—you, Zach Springer. Kain’t they trust Old Zach ?” he burst out hoarsely. “Yes, but why don’t they do as any other de- cent minin’ comp’ny does—turn their their stuff into the bank at Frisco, ar- ter it's minted ? What do they want on it up thar?” Well, afte: all, that was their busi- ness. But he couldn’t be trusted. What would Bill say? Bill was an honest man. He would blush with shame every time his brother's name was mentioned after that—for, of course he would know. Sue would never sus- pect. Any kind of a story would bam- boozle her. Bill was smart, He could put two and two together as any man in the country: And yet Bill himself was a little reckless sometimes. He bad been acting very queer of late, and had been over to Johnsor’s a good deal drinking and playing cards with the boys. That would not do. Bill must be looked after. He was only a young fellow—a mere boy, even if he had been trying to raise a mustache lately. Yes. Bill was a good deal younger than he. Why, he remember- ed well the day he was born, when they took him in to show him his new baby brother. He used toe carry Bill all around, and he was the first one to stand him on his legs and try to make him walk. He remembered how it used to burt his own head when Bill got & knock by falling out of his high chair. Bill was just as much to him now as ever, and those knocks which and the weaknesses of his nature were giving him now hurt him just as badly —worse, perhaps, than they did Broth- er Bill. What would Bill say ? He laid his hands upon the box again. It would be safe enough be hind the rocks there under the sage- brush—as safe as if “Git up, thar, ye! Git, Buckskin! Git, old Gabe! Ye lazy critters. G’lang!” And down came the long lash on the dust-covered backs of the mus: tangs, and off down the long grade they ran, making the dust fly in the canon as it never flew before. For Zach had grasped the reins in a grip of iron, and both his big cowhide boots planted firmly on the box. “This ’ere is what I call goin’ helly- ty split!” he said, ten minutes later, as they were still flying down the grade. “But I lost some time with a blam- ed-fool notion that orter a ben licked for ever thinkin’ on a minit. Wol, the mustangs got a good rest. Makin’ up fer it now, though. They’ll soon be in a lather. I'll git the half-way house in a quarter of an hour, and then I'll take a good horn. I feel kinder nervous yit. That ’ere box is a durned heavy load on a man’s mind. s’pose the sup’rintendent up to Gold Butte is worryin’ about it, too. Never mind, ol’ feller, you'll see that stuff stowed away in yer safe afcre sun- down. “What's this? A hold-up sure as shootin |” Out from bekind a tall rock a man, with a piece of dark calico over his face and a very large Winchester in hand, had suddenly sprung, and the muzzle of the rifle looked right into Zach’s big, round eyes. The brake scraped the wheels and made the sparks, fly. The mustangscame to a sudden stand. There was no getting by that Winchester. “I reckon you've got the drop on me, stranger,” the driver coolly made re- mark. “Stick up my hands? In Course I will, ef you insist upon it; But I tell yer these ‘ere mustangs is mighty skit- tish, an’ it’s on ther down-grade. So yer needn’s shoot ef they start up, fer it'll be yer own fault. I 8'pose yer -.ar- ter this ’ere box. Throw it out? It's too blamed heavy fer that. Ye'll hev ter give us a lift.” td The man with the gun had said noth- ing; but the subtleties of the holding up process were not soZine but that Zach understood every wave of the strangei’s hand and every shrug of his shoulders, when the waves and shrugs meant anything. Zach had been held up before. He of the calico mask did not step forward at once. In this sug- gestion that he should assist in taking off the box he seemed to suspect some trick. But one of Zach’s hands was held aloft and the other, with the four reins in it, was on the level of his shoulder. The man edged up to the buckbeard, exchanged the weapon which he presented at Zach’s head tor a six-shot revolver. “Thanks, stranger,” said Zach, with forced merriment. “I never like to have one 0’ them air long things p'inted at me, They sthoot too durn straight. Now, here ye are With his foot he shoved the box along till it was near the edge of the wagoa. “Thar itis, help yerself; but ye’ll find it a blame heavy load ter pack, ef yer goin’ far—over forty pound. The robber’s fingers grasped the box nervously. “A green un at the biz,’ thought Zach : “mebbe thar’ll be an openin’ here yit.” The robber pulled and hauled at the box, but it would not budge, for it was caught on a nail in the bottom of the wagon. In his feverish anxiety to se- cure the gold, he lowered the revolver a little and grasped the box with both bands. Swiftly Zach's right hand fell to his hip and out he whipped his bright-barreled pistol. “Got the dead drop, stranger! It's no go?” he shouted. “Put that wea- pon down, you fool!’—for the man was raising his pistol. “You won't? Then take that.” A flash, a report, and back fell the robber without a moan. His fingers clawed the dust for a moment, as if he were grasping for a hold on life. But the hold was not to be had, and he gave it up, and lay there quietly in the dust. The driver shoved his pistol into its holster, and wiped the sweat from his brow. It had been a close shave for the box and a closer shave for him. “Takes a purty keen un to git erway with ol’ Zach, arter all,” he chuckled, springing lightly from the buckboard, while a broad smile lit up his brown face. “This ‘ere means a big raise from ther stage;comp’ny an’a hundreder two from the Gold | Butte folks. I guess they’ll think the ol’ man’s about right arter this. Hooray for hooray! my stock riz! It's way up ter a hundred an’ fifty: Whoop-ee! Haw-haw-haw!” He stooped down over the dead man and lifted the bit of cloth from his face. “Almighty God! It's Bill I'"--San Francisco Arganaut. WorLp’s FAIR NotEs :—The appro- priations made by different States and Territories for their special exhibites now aggregate $3.180,000 ; those of for- eign countries, as far as reported, more than $4,500,000.—1It is proposed to run from New York to Chicago, at the time of the dedication of the exposition buildings, ten special trains, ten min- utes apart, with elaborate decoration and music with each. Plans are also in preparation for imposing ceremonies in New York, including a street pageant, precede and follow this triumphal pro- cession. More than 7600 carloads of building material have been received at the Exposition grounds. The shoe and leather industry will erect a separ- ate building for its exhibit, at a cost of $100,000.—A $100,000 music hall, 160x260 feet, is to be built.——A con- tract has been made for 5000 to 6000 electric arc lamps. About 100,000 in- candescent electric lights will also be used. “What a pity it is his face is all pimples 3 He'd be very fine looking if *twasn’t for that,’ Said pretty Miss Vere, with a smile at the dimples Reflected from under the nobby spring hat— As she looked at herself in the glass softly sighing, That she had forthe young man a tender re- Tiaras the least need of dying— for every one knew 1t. “His beauty is marred by the frightful red blotches all over his face. I wonder if he couldn’t take something to cleanse his blood and drive them away ?”’ He heard what she said about looks. It hurt his feelings, but he couldn’t de- ny she told the truth. He remembered a friend whose face used to be as bad as his, Ithad become smooth and-clear, He went to him and asked how the change had been brought about. “Sim- ply by using Dr. Pieree’s Golden Medi- cal Discovery,” was the reply. Take that, and I'll warrant you to get rid of your pimples.” He did so His face became healthy and clear, And next week he'll be married to pretty Miss Vere. —— Miss Ann Piper, of Glynn coun- ty, Ga., is in the female hermit business She liveslike “Jack all Alones” and has only spoken to three persons during the past sixteen years, Nor has she ever seen a train, though the railroad passes within a couple of miles of her home. Young men don’t waste their time trying to dance to that piper. La GRIPPE SUCCESSFULLY TREATED. —“T have just recovered from a second attack of the grip this year,” says Mr. Jas, O. Jones, publisher of the Leader, Mexia, Texas. “In the latter case I used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and I think with considerable success, only being in bed a. little over two days, against ten days for the first attack. The second attack Tam satisfied would have been equally as bad as the first but for the use of this remedy, as I had to go to bed in about six hours after being ‘struck’ with it, while in the first case I was able to attend to business about two days before getting ‘down.’”” 50 cent bottles for sale by F. P. Green, Drug- gist. -fident presumption. 1 editor, thoughtfully. Parentage in Education, The Responsibility of Dealing With an Unfold- ing Mind. The lawyer and the surgeon must sta- dy their profession ; the merchant n.ust know the laws of commerce; the wme- chanic must learn his trade ; it is only parents who accept duties that they are quite ignorant of, and’ who give life ere they have comprehended the laws that govern it. Does any of our schools and colleges include in their ‘course’ special instruction on the duties of fath- ers and mothers ? And yet the world, at its present stage of progress, ought not to leave its children to chance—to ignorant mother and careless nurses and all the unconsilered cruelties born of ignorance and want of thought. There is something so pitiful in see- ing a young, thoughtless mother with an unfolding soul and body to deal with. What no knowledge is sufficient for, her inexperience acceptsjwith a con- Is it any wonder that without consideration the natural emotions of children are checked, and their sense of right wounded? They are authoratively forbidden to play, though play is the first poetry of jlife. They are told “‘not to play with other children ;” though only children--or very good men and women—are fit to play with children. They are bidden to do things with either threats or bribes, They are told medicine is not bitter. when it is bitter ; or that something will not hurt, when it does hurt. Pa- rents insist on their children’s truthfal- ness, and yet set them constant exam- ples of social and domestic equivocation. They are reproved for crying under pain, or for being angry under a sense of injustice, when every day they see their parents give place to unreasonable anger or impatience with trifling annoy- ances. Intellectually the ignorance ot pa- rents is frequently as fatal to the proper developement of children. Primers are put into little hands, that ought to know only the hoop or the skipping rope ; for no child wants books until it has exhausted the wonders of the house, the streets and the woods. What can a primer teach a child in comparison with a mother who answers patiently the never-ending questions of a curious child? Is she making bread? What a story she may tell of the wheat-fields and the mill! A pinch of salt may make a fairy tale of mines and miners. The log of wood, the bit of coal, the lump of sugar, the tea, the spice, the bunch of raisins—what wondYous things can be told of them! What does a child want with a book until these household sales are exhausted? And the store-windows and the men building houses and the wonders of the sea coast? Truly, the mother is the only primer the child needs until it is at least seven years old ; and yet how often its ques- tions are met with an injnction “not to bother” or a command to “go to nurse.” ] And yet children are the hope of the world. They come to us bearing gifts for posterity, Is it possible, then, for tathers and mothers to be too sensible of the gravity and the importance of their stewardship for the future ? “Landscape in Sepia.” The Conversation that Floored the Brilliant Art Critic. A great deal has been said and written about the woes which the compositor in- flicts upon his helpless victims, und, speaking, I know that they are many varied ; but yet “the gifted author” has occasionally to put up with a great deal of annoyance from higher powers than the poor ‘““‘comp.” as the the fol- lowing experience of an intimate friend of mine will prove. He was the art critic, and he had just sent out an unusually brilliant account of a recent exhibition of paintings to the desk editor,who, not having made much of a study of art, was naturally unfamiliar with the language of the studio, but was preparing to wrestle with his difficult task. He was new at the work, and it was this enigmati- cal sentence: ‘‘A Landscape in Sepia.’ ‘Landscape in Sepia!’ shouted the scribe, addressing the sporting editor, who was busily engaged in describing a spirited set-to between two favorite light weights. “Where the deuce is Sepia?" “Don’t know,” answered the sporting “Never heard of the place. Sepia can’t be in the United States, I must have heard of it, surely. It must be in Syria somewhere “I don’t blieve the place exists at all,” snapped the puzzled genius of the desk. “I think—-" A heavy fall in the adjoining room broke off the conversation here, and a hurried investigation revealed the art critic in strong convulsions on the floor. He had heard the entire conversation, and was conveyed to his lodging place in an ambulance. EE CTT—C A. — The spring of all seasons in the year, is the one for making radical changes in regard to health. During the winter, the system becomes to a cer- tain extent clogged with waste, and the blood loaded with impurities, owing to lack of exercise, close confinement in poorly ventilated shops and homes, and other causes. This is the cause of the dull, sluggish, tired feeling so general at this season and which must be over- come, or the health may be entirely broken down. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has attained the greatest popularity all over the country as the favorite Spring Med- icine. It expels the accumulation of impurities through the bowels, kidneys, liver, lungs and skin. gives to the blood the purity and quahty necessary to good health and overcomes that tired feeling. EL ————————— ——The edition of Walt Whitman's “Selected Poems,” chosen and edited by Arthur Stedman, was in the binders hands at the time of his death. The poet was occupied shortly before that event in giving his last wishes and final approval with respect to it. ——Look out for counterfeits! See that you get the genuine Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup ! Do nct let the dealer sell you some “just as good,” but insist upon getting the genuine with the Bull's Head trade-mark on the wrapper. Proclamation. In the Name and by the Authority of the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania. The beneficent effects consequent up- on a due observance of ‘‘Arbor Day” have been witnessed with interest and pleasure by the citizens of Pennsyl- vania. The planting aad culture of trees and flowers cannot be too highly commended, nor its great importance too early impressed upon the youthful mind. Considered from a sanitary, in- tellectual, wsthetic and financial point of view, it should be encouraged by every citizen who has an abiding inter- | est in the future welfare of the Com- monwealth. Now,therefore, I, Robert E. Pattison, Governor of the said Commonwealth in accordance with custom, which has re- ceived the official sanction of our Gen- eral Assembly, whereby the Governor is requested to appoint annually a day to be designated as Arbor Day in Penn- sylvania, and to recommend by procla mation to the people, on the days na- med, the planting of trees and shrubbery in the public school grounds and along the public highways throught the State, do hereby designate and proclaim Thursday, the 14th day of April, A.D, 1892, and Friday, the 6th day of May, A. D. 1892, to be observed as Arbor Days in Pennsylvania. The selection of either of the above designated days is left to the deseretion of the people in the various sections of the Commonwealth, each locality ob- serving that day which is deemed to be most favorable on account of climatic conditions. I call upon the people to lay aside for a season the habitual activities of the day, and devote sufficient time thereof to plant a forest, fruit or ornamental tree along the public highways and streams, in private and public parks, about the school house, in gardens and on the farms, thus promoting the pleas- ure, profit and prosperity of the people of the State, providing protection against floods and storms. securing health and comfort, increasing tha which is beautiful and pleasing to the eye, comforting to physical life and ele- vating to the mind and heart. “Gifts that grow are best, Hands that bless are blest, Plant ;—Life does the rest; Heaven and earth belps him who plants a tree, And its work its own reward shall be.” Given under my hand and the [sEAL] Great Seal of the State this twenty-sixth day of March, in the year of our Lord one thous- and eight hundred and ninety- two, and of the Commonwealth the one hundred and sixteenth. Rust, E. PATTISON, WM. F, HARRITY, Governor, Secretary of the Commonwealth. —————— A Syrian Wedding. The First That Has Been Witnessed in America. A Syrian wedding, the first of the kind ever witnessed in this country, was celebrated at St. Louis on a recent after- noon, in accordance with the usuages that prevail in Syria. In America it would be called a reception, but it dif- fered from the ordinary receptions in thatit was strictly for Syrians. The groom was Kalel Wasoff and the bride was Adlaid Miken. After being mar- ried by a Catholic priest at St. Mary's church, the couple, in company with about seventy-five of their countrymen, men and women, proceeded to celebrate the event. There were beer, wine and eatables in abundance. A part of the programme was the spraying of perfume from a cologne bottle over the crowd, every newcomer getting a supply of the odors in the face. The ladies present of whom there was quite. a number, in- dulged in a doleful chant in the Syrian language, which lasted a couple of hours It was explained to a reporter as being a method of congratulating the bride in her new state. The reception lasted until late in the afternoon. Many of the participants who came from a Syrian Colony in the neighborhood were un- able to speak the English language. All present seemed to enjoy themselves. ——Mrs. Bramwell Booth wears a big scoop hat, parts her hair in the middle, draws it down back of her ears in the most unbecoming manner, covers her eyes witha pair of very large goggles with heavy rims and then sallies forth to do her work as a star salvationist. She is very successful, and those who hear ner talk say that in spite of her ap- parent efforts to disguise her good looks, she is pretty for all that and wins souls by her looks as well as by her words. STRENGTH AND HeAaTH.—If you are not feellng strong and healthy, try El- ectric Bitters. If “La Grippe” has left you weak and weary, use Electric Bit- ters. This remedy acts directly on Liv- er, Stomach and Kidneys, gently aiding: those organs to perform their fuwctions. If yon are afflicted with sick Headache, you will find speedy and permanet relief by taking Electric Bitters. One trial will convince you that this is the reme- dy you need, Large bottles only &50c at Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Judge Tuley has given a big lift to the promoters of the will of John Crear, who bequeathed $4.300,000 for a bublic library in Chicago and for sun- dry charitable institutions of tha city. But his sustaining the will does not end the fight to upset it. Eight anxious and disappointed cousins will now try to persuade the Supreme Court that their rights are superior to the testator’s wishes or the library needs. INACURATE JOURNALISM. — “You can’t believe everything the news pipers say,” said Mrs. Wayback on her return from a visit to the city. “How is that ?”’ asked a neighbor. “Dll tell you. I read in a society pa- per in the morning that everybody was out of town, and I was nearly jammed to death in the crowd in a bargain store the samo day.”’— New York Press. ——1I was a sufferer from catarrh for fifteen years, with distressing pain over my eyes. I used Ely’s Cream Balm with gratifying results. Am apparently cured.—Z. C. Warren, Rutlang, Vt. The World of Women. | Black kid gloves with a wide stitch | ing of “Knickerbocker yellow,” are something new. The Queen of Greece is the best Royal needlewoman in Europe she cuts out. and makes most of her own undercloth- ing. Mrs. Croly, (Jennie June,) the editress. of the Homemaker magazine, is a slen- der, well-formed woman, with pink. cheeks and snow-white hair. The style of dressing the hair is chang-. ing rapidly, and it will not be long be fore the most of it will be drawn back from the forehead and turned up over a small cushion, with atew fine little tendrills curling down over the face, mostly on the temples, and drawn up. from the nape of the neck. ——Some of the new corselets grow longer on the hips and are sloped away in deep points, which gives a slender ap- pearance to the figure; in others hip. pieces are added and are laid in one box. plait with side plaits on each side ; and others still are cut squarely just below the bust and are buttoned across the waist. Small boys are still wearing the velvet jackets, white sailor collars and. finely tucked shirts. For a driving suit, dark brown short trouers are worn, with a hox coat of tan-faced cloth. The coat will be stitched with brown, four rows of the stitching forming the cuff. Rig pearl buttons are used and there is a deep turn-over collar. Leggings of tan leather are a necesslty, The favorites seems to be thetan cloth jackets, tailor made, overlapped seams, immense pearl buttons and linings of either shot or brocaded silks. Some very swell girls were trying the mannish sack coats with the plain-full backs and they looked very stylish over the trail- ing skirts and topped off by a little gem in spring millinery. After all it is the wearer makes the coat. In cloaks and wraps the three-quarter length reign supreme. Wraps are braided embroidered, covered with jet, adorned with lace and ribbon, in fact, made a3 beautiful as anyone could desire The assortment is unlimited and you, can pick and choose from the natty tail~ or made broadcloth jackets with over- lapped seams to the dressy carriage mant es that are too elaborate for every- day use. She isa hard worker, from pleasure and not necessity, as she has a snug for- tune laid away from past efforts. She is. a great admirer of the histronic art and her only craze is the theatre going. She attends many of the first night perfor- mances. Her daughter, Vida, is a clev- er member of one of Frohman'’s success. ful stock companies, and although lack- ing her mother’s talent for the profession. which she has adopted. Another pretty gown is of gray cloth a small design in black scatter- ed through it. The skirt is plain with a deep turned-back hem. A rather novel touch is given by two slashes in the front a little below the waist, which are fin- ished off by rows of stitching. The waist fits smoothly over the shoulder and bust, but is gathered at the waist. line. Ithasa black velvet collar, and. two bands of black velvet extend from the shoulders toa point at the waist. The sleeve are full puffs. Quaintness is the prevailing fashion, for children’s gowns. The more they imitate their more truly fashionable they are. The “Granny Frock’ is in the height of fa- vor. The simple little dress is of pale apple green pongee silk, made all in one with a deep ruflle across the bottom. A tiny rufile in the neck takes the place of a collar. The sleeves are full with a high puff, which is edged with a ruffle. A soft silk sash of the palest of pink is tied so thatit gives the waist a very short effect. The long ends hangd own in front. The waists of girls’ frocks are of nat- ural length and round, or with a slight point in front, and are buttoned or hook- in the back. High waists are mostly mace with a yoke orto represent a guimpe, hence low waits to wear with rea) guimpes are in greater favor than ever. The material is put on full over a fitted lining, giving the effect of a seamless waist, and showing only under arm seams. Very full trimmings are then added as revers that widen in dee epaulets, gathered on the tops of the sleeves, ora bertha frill around the shoulders below a poke oron a low round waist, or else a tull gathered bib of lace hanging from a high collar band. One of the mcst remarkable women in New York to-day is Mrs. Rhoda Holmes Nicholls, who has a studio on Twentieth street. She is vice president. of the New York Water Color Club, and bas contributed the finest water color sketches to the different domestic and foreign exhibitions, of any woman in the world. She made her name under Camerano, the eminent Italian painter, when in Europe some years ago. Mrs. Nicholls is picturesque looking and has a strik- ing personality. She has sleepy, dreamy abstract, brown eyes and drooping chin; her voice is low, intense and langorous. She is a wonderfully magnetic woman and takes great delight in stealing sketch ers of the passengers 1n the elevated and horse cars, as they journey to and fro from all parts of the city. A spring gown, to call forth the most enthusiastic of superlatives from the woman who delights in pretty gowns and superlatives, is a ereation of pale chocolate-colored crepon and olive-green velvet. There is a sham underskirt of velvet, over which the crepon is laid in folds from the waist. On the left side the cloth 1s cut off quite short and shows the velvet. Three rows of embroidery in olive green and gold trim the over skirt. The bodice is an elaborate affair. The lining is tight fitting. A deep round yoke of the velvet is laid over it. To this the crepon is gathered with a little fulness. A deep band of embroid- ery outlines the yoke and passes over the shoulders. A deep corselette of vel- vet finishing the bodice. It is so wide that the crepon looks merely like a puff between 1t and the yoke. Full sleeves of crepon are gathered into a deep vel- vet cuff on the back of which is a band of embroidery. great-grandmother the. - ———