Demon atc Bellefonte, Pa., May 6, 1892. HOW SHALL I PRAY. Father, how ean I thus be bold to pray That Thou shalt grant me that, or spare me this? How should my ignorance not go astray, How should my foolish lips not speak amiss, And = for woe when fain they would ask liss ? How shall I dare to prompt Thee, the All e ‘ To show kindness? Thou art ever kind. What is my feeble craving in Thine eyes Which view the centuries v:st before, behind, And sweep unnumbered worlds like viewless wind ? ’ Thy goodness ordereth what thing shall be, Thy wisdom knoweth even my inmost want; Why should I raise a needless prayer to Thee, Or importune Omnipotence to grant My wishes, dim, short-sighted, ignorant? And yet I come—for Thou hast bidden and sai But not to weary Thee, or specify A wish, but rather with this prayer instead, “Q Lord, Thou knowest—give it or deny ; Fill up the cup of joy or pass me by. “Jast as Thou wilt is just What I would will; Give me but this, the heart to be content, And if my wish is thwarted, to lie still, Waiting till puzzle and till pain are spent, And the sweet thing made plain which the Lord meant.” : —Susan Coolidge. THE “SHIELD'S’ GIRL REPORTER. BY FRANK BAILEY MILLARD. There were five of us, and the world was ours, It isa rare sight to see, and one that does the heart good— that of a party of slaving newspaper men off duty for a week, and turned loose where there is air to breathe and something green to rest the eye upon. Pranks of yearling calves in the lane, capers of colts on the grass, are but the meaningless antics of animal life, Bat our antics meant something. They meant a sweeping away of ball and chain, a throwing down of dull grim walls, and no night police, fires, or suicides for seven great glorious days. We were at Sisson, which, as every- body ought to know, is in northern California, near the end of the great Sierra chain. Bunzie, who always used the word ‘excavate’ instead of “dig” in his copy, and had to be re- strained from poesy by the city editor whan there was a lannery conflagra- tion to be written up, was on hisstom- ach before snow-capped Shasta, which, he insisted, was the proper attitude to assume before so “wonderful a mani- festation of the powers of the Deity.” But Gordon, the Late Mr. Johnson, and myself merely lounged around. The Late Mr. Johnson was not in his coffin. The title had been given him by the city editor for persistent procras- tination in showing up when he had an important assignment. There, I had forgotten “Ott ;”" but “Ott,” whose full name was Ottinghouse, hardly counted. He was merely an echo of the Late Mr. Johnson, for whose easy bohemian ways he had a profound ad- miration, copying them as closely as he could. Then, too, “Ott” was not a newspaper man. But he was fresh from the university, ;and he meant to be one. The Late Mr. Johnson was telling the story. He was always telling stories, and “Ott” was absorbing a vast stock of them for future recital. This time the story was on a theme that Johnson seldom touched, for he hated shop, and this was shop. I don’t be- lieve that any of us except “Ott” heard the first part of that tale. The pine scents came to us so freshly, the smoke drift moved so lazily before our eyes over on the side of the wood-clad buttes, near whose base we had come, and the little creek was telling a tale so much more charming than dry old Johnson's, that we let “Ott” have the preface all to himself. But, according to Bunzie’s notions—he had caught a word now and then—the story did not fit into the pictare. He wanted it closed up. The neatest way to do this, as he believed, was to blurt out! “Oh, hang your long introductions, Jobnson! Your yarns a.e just like your copy. A man can always find a good line for a starter on the middle page of it. That's what Feoslow says. Now Fenslow was Johnsons city editor, but no allusion to him would cut short the story. Johnson kept on, and finally came to the place where the story really began. It was about “that singular anomaly,” as Gilbert calls her, “the lady journalist.” “She came to Fenslow inthe begin- ning of that awful rainy winter three years ago,” said the Late Mr, Johnson. “Her name was Savage—Gertrude Savage.” “I remember her,” said Bunzie, “I was working on the Tribune then, and the Shield wasn’tin it that year. “Too much economy then. That was the trouble,” said Gordon, between puffs ; “but Fenslow did well with the - city news, though he did hash up the evening “papers for all worth.” We were now deep in the shop again, as you see, and the pine scents and the smoke drift were lost upon us. Not even the grandeur of Shasta could avail against shop. “For a girl she was a rattling good reporter,” Johhson went on. “I never saw a better, She was not of those who ran around with a fore-and-aft cap on and try to be mannish while they gath- er in the stuff for the paper. Fact is, she was modesty itself. She walked up to Fenslow’s desk very timidly when she made her first appearance. I was his assistant then, and so, of course, I heard all that was said. “ ‘There isn’t enough work for the regular reporters; let alone extras.’ said Fenslow, after she had made applica- tion for a job in tones that would have won over a grizzly, Not a whine, not a whimper, and yet nothing brassy in her whole talk. ‘But I'll see what 1 can do for you. Miss Savage. If you are from Boston and have worked on the Precipitator, you ought to be able to suit us.” “Thanks” she said, and smiled. I i know encugh not to bring a scrap book they were or I could show you some of my arti- cles written for the Precipitator. May I go to work to-morrow ?”’ “Let's see. Yes; you can take that women’s temperance meeting in Briggs Hall at 11 a. m. Itis on in the after- noon too. Keep it all in five hundred words, please.’ Ela “She pulled out a small note book, and with a dainty pencil put down the memorandum, in rather a shy way, as I thought. But that is what I liked about her—nothing mannish, not the least. Though it’s deuced rare among girl reporters.” “Why don’t you say women report- ers ?’ put in Bunzie, on whose fine ear ‘girl’ grated. “Because this one was nothing but a girl, and a slip of a girl at that. And then you never heard of a woman re- porter, did you? They're all girls. Don’t try to ring in your poeiry on the profesh, Bunzie. Devote tha: to Shasta. ‘As you all know,” went on the Late Mr: Johuson, “California journalism has many quips and quirks that are not known to our brothers of the East. Sometimes it's very hard for a news- p: per man from there to make it go with us, and it's surely a deuced sight harder for a girl. There was one thing that favored Gertrude, however. She was not in the office a week before every man there fell in love with her. That's a big thing for a girl reporter, because it means no end of pointers on what to do and where to get the news in the easiest way. So she got along swimmingly. “A morning newspaper office is the place where you see the scales fall off the shams of life. This is instanced by the pursuit of the newspaper man by the conceit-stuffed fellow who wants his virtues made known by your types and paper, and who thinks those types and paper were made for the express purpose of lifting him upon a pedestal. But there was no sham about the de- votion of the Shield staff to Gertrude Savage. You couldn’t blame them. Her black eyes were so darkly lashed, and her cheeks were so peachily flesh- ed—so round—and her brown hair fell so carelessly and so lightly upon her brow, that—"’ “Who's getting poetical now ?"’ came Bunzie's centre shot: “As I was saying,” went on the Late Mr. Johnson, as if Bunzie's interrup- tion was no more than the dropping of a pine cone from the branches above us—*‘‘as I was saying, they couldn’t help adoring her. In a way, she be- came one of the boys, laughing and talking with them as if they were all her old chums, and yet demure enough all the time, and the very soul of a lady. Nothing that ever struck the local room, not even Fenslow’s savage lecture after the outbreak against the coin-borrowing rule, ever did the men so much good as the coming of the girl reporter, We had only had one or two of them before, and they were no earthly good—cheeky things from Hill's Seminary, who drove the copy- reader to the ragged edge of despair by their essay style of writing up. Ger- trude knew the ropes too well to put anything but pure newspaper English into her stuff, and when she handed in her wad of copy there was precious little work in it for the desk man. “The way she sized up the fellows that tried to ring in ads on her when she was out getting news, and the way she tumbled the hopes of self import- ant ones who were itching to be inter- viewed, won Fenslow over almost as readily as did her clean copy. He gave her all the work she wanted, and I think she hit the business office pretty hard on pay-days, for, besides her regu- lar assignments, she got in yards and vards of space. Fenslow said it used to make his arm tired measuring it all. This went along for several months, and then campaign rot crowded out so much of the other local that she had to hang her hopes of a good sack on Sun- day supplement specials. For, as you know, there are a good many kinds of work you can’t give to a girl reporter, and hustling about among ward poli- ticians and round among the clubs be- fore the fall elections is one of them. “I didn’t kuow for a long time after she came to us that there was a mys- tery about the girl ; but there was. Not that she could be put down with the people for whom the glorious climate of California works a change of name, as they say it does in habits, Noth- ing of the sort. But that she had, for some reason or other, run away from New York, I managed to learn in the course of time. I found out through —No, I'll not tell how I found out.” As we knew the Late Mr. Johnson had a way about him that would have drawn confidences from the furniture in the office, we did not doubt that he had obtained his information from the girl herself. So we merely asked what the mystery was. “Why she had been engaged to a newspaper man back there, and he had thrown off on her. Ieven learned his name. It was Byron Palethorpe. D— him!” It is queer how those mountain echoes take up words—even the slight- est sounds. I am sure I heard come back in triplicate a bunch of “damn hims!” Now that I think of it, I be- lieve I saw the lips of the other listen- ers move at the same time, and there may have been—but T am not positive on that point—a fourth echo. “It seems that he had found her an orphan, with a light purse and no one to look out for her. So he had helped her to get work on a morning paper, and she had got to thinking so much of him that it broke her all up when she found that he was getting very reckless as to whiskey. She tried to reform him, but he did not reform so easily. Then they had a quarrel, and ghe broke the engagement, and left New York.” “Then he diduo’t exactly throw oft on her,” ventured Bunzie. But he went no further when he saw our dark frowns. “Well, to tell the truth, I don’t know exactly how it was,” continued Johnson; “but, at any rate, she was on the Shield staff, and there was a great big anchor back in New York. For I saw readily enough that the man who had won her heart still had it in ‘his keeping.” “All of which is very much mixed, as Johnson’s stories generally are.” That shot from Gordon. “Not so much mixed as your ac- count of the De Puey-Simpson runaway match,” fired back Johnson, “when you married the girl to the wrong man.” “Let him go on,” I cried, shying a a clod at Gordon. “She repented and wrote to him. Two or three letters came to her in re- turn, vowing that the cause of their trouble had been removed—he had sworn never to look upon the fiery fluid again, and was coming out before long to marry her, and totake her back to New York. “That fall, before the election, the girl reporter didn’t make aay great headway with her bank account. As I have said, there wasn’t much for a girl to do on the staff just then, and, as you know, you can’t depend on Sunday sup stuff for a living. But she got along. Her friends of the local room would bave helped her through any- thing if she’d have let them, but she was mightily independent. “I didn’t think to tell you about Johnny Maddern. He was the hard- est smitten of the whole staff, and would have gone through fire for her. Often when she had a night as- ‘signment he wonld cut short his own work to go to a hall or elsewhere, and see her safely to the office, and some- how he generally managed to see her home, too, after she had handed in her report. Well, Johnny was a good boy, and so blindly in love that he couldn’t see the lay of the land, or, rather, of her heart, and I didn’t feel like spoiling his dream by telling him of the Palethorpe fellow back in New York. “One night when the wind was howling like mad, and it was raining copy files and blue pencils. I met the girl on Market street. She was all bundled up in her rubber gossamer, and her white face showed through the darkness like a wraith’s, and I am sure that all the specks of water on her cheeks were not raindrops. It took me aback for a time—that white face —and I don’t know whether or not I nodded as I passed: I am sure she did not see me, for she gave no sign of recognition. When I had walked half a block further, I turned about and ran back to her. “What's the trouble now ?”’ I asked, as I walked by her side, putting as little as possible of my usual bearish tone into the query. She said noth- ing for a while. Something seemed to be choking her. I thought she grew whiter as she said at last, in her low sweet voice, but with none of its old cheeriness or confidence of tone : “You have been kind to me, Mr. Johnson, but Ido not know why I should further burden you with my troubles, Still, if you feel enough in- terest in’ me to know, I will tell you. He's here.” I think she must have felt me start, for she was lightly clinging to my arm as we walked along the street. That was the trouble with the whole crew of us—we all thought too much of that girl. Not too much, either, for, devil take me, if she wasn’t worthy of all our adoration and a good deal more ! “You mean Palethorpe?” I put in. “He has been to see you?’ “No; but I have seen him, and—he was very much intoxicated. I did not dare to make myself known to him while he was in such a state, And yet I would like to know where he is now. Perhaps I could help him. “Then indignation, strong and deep, laid hold upon me. Why, inthe name of all her worshippers, couldn't she leave that fool Palethorpe to work his own ruin ? I felt very much like blurt- ing out the question. But then she was 80 deadly in earnest. I know she would have asked me to go and hunt him up if she dared, but I was not equal to that. Silence lay between us all the way to her door, but I thought she seemed more at ease when she said her ‘good-night,’ and I knew 1n my heart thatin my rough, blundering way I had helped her. Sympathy goes a long way in such cases, you know, though my sympathy wouldn’t carry me so far as to place her in Pale- thorpe’s arms, even 1f he had been as sober asa mule in a tread mill. “Next day the girl reporter was among us as usual, but she was no longer one of the boys. As I viewed her, she looked to be more of a woman than before, and—yes, the gang of us woyshipped her more than ever. Johnny Maddern added flame to the fire by proposing to her. Though she let him down as easily as she could, I know that this was another pain for her sensitive heart. From that time she seemed to hold aloof from us. Perhaps she realized the fact that such a one as she might work mischief among a lot of men in the way that Johnny was suffering; but there may have been another thought in her mind —that she should keep in the dark- ness with her trouble, and struggle there with herself alone. In those deys I am.sure she passed very closely to the fires that try the souls of wom- en, and of which a great brute of a man can know nothing. Still he did not come to her, and sent no word, though she knew that he was still in the city. It was mighty rough on her to sit at ber desk, grind out her copy, and keep herself within herself; and yet, so tar as her real trouble went, she gave no sigh, The boys thoughs she was wait. ing for the Maddern affair to cool down, and then she would come back, and be the merry girl she had been before. But I, who knew that it was deeper than that, was only praying that Pale- thorpe would hark back to where he belonged, for then she might feel some peace of mind. “Well, winter came on in earnest, and the weather reports, which are very wet affairs at that time of the year, showed more inches of rain than we had had for many a season. There was an ail-fired lot of work to do, and it kept us flying about like so many ants around an overturned stone. One night, when the office was bare of men, there came in a telephone message that there had been a suicide out at North Beach. Then the night editor want. ed some oane rushed out to hunt up something about a St. Louis scandal with a local side to it. And, to cap it all, in came a report of a shooting af- fair on Stockton street. “It made Fenslow tear his hair when he saw there was no one to send out. He rang up the Press Club, but there wasn’t a Shicld reporter there, Then he sent out to a meeting that Maddern was covering, with an order to hustle into the office at once, for it was eleven o'clock, and there was no time to lose. But Maddern had heard of another meeting, nobody knew where, and had gone off to get that. Fifteen minutes past, and nobody come. Fenslow was getting badly rattled. His assistant would not be back until midnight, and there was no telling where tosend for him. He telegraphed tor the man on night police, and found that he had gone after the suicide, But who was there to cover the shooting? That was the awful question of the moment, and it made Fenslow dance up and down while he struggled with it. Then in came the girl reporter. “Fenslow swore. Ifshe were only a man, he growled. That's the deuce of keeping women about the place like this; you can’t do anything with them when vou want help the worst. “The girl noticed Fenslow’s agita- tion, and asked what the matter was. “Why, there’s been a shooting up on the hill, and perhaps there's a big story in it. I suppose the 77ib has had four reporters digging on it for half an hour, and here I haven't a man within call.” “Where is the place ?” “He told her, and cursed a little un- der his breath about a woman's curi- osity. The girl sprang up from her chair. “I'll go,” she said, buttoning up her gossamer, for it was raining again. “You, Miss Savage ?"’ “His eyes were full of admiration for her pluck ; but then she was a wom- an, and women had no business in such places, “Yes, I'll go.” “And she pinned her badge on her breast—a badge that was always re- spected wherever it wasshown, though she had had occasion to use it butrare- ly. Gathering up some sheets of paper, she was off before Fenslow could make any remoustrance, “She went to the house. on Stockton Street, and it so chanced that she was the first reporter on the spot. A man had been badly shot by a young woin- an in a quarrel: He was all but dead. He gaye the name of James Dorman. I don’t remember the story, but the girl got it all down some way or other, though they say she kept her eyes off the dying man much as she could, and seemed to be terribly broken up. She sent word to Fenslow of her success, and said she would be back at the of- fice in an hour. “I was standing by Fenslow’s desk when she came in, He asked her, as city editors always do, some points about the story, thinking she had not yet written it up. “She told himin a dozen words near- ly all he wanted to know—all except one point. “What's the man’s name?’ he asked. . “It was—he's dead, you know. It was—you'll find it in the copy.” And she laid on his desk what she had written. “Fenslow looked up in surprise, but he saw that her face was white as snow, and he guessed thatthe name meant something to her. She started away quickly, and as she turned, I heard a half choked sob. Then I saw her reel, and grasp at the handle of the door. She managed to open it, though it was with an effort, and as soon as she let go, she fell all in a heap in the hailway outside. Maddern, who had just come in, was at her side ina min- ute, gasping, choking and wringing his hands—behaving, in fact, like the young fool he was. “Well, we soon brought her to, and Maddern took her home in a cab. “Looks like a good story,” remark- ed Fenslow, as he ran his eye over the girl's firmly written copy. Byron Pale- thorpe—Byron Palethorpe. It strikes me I'ye seen that name somewhere be- fore. “Then I knew what had hanpened, and I cursed long and deep wi in my- gelf. TI cursed Fenslow for ever letting her go out on such an assignment, and I cursed myself for not hurrying back from the hotel where I had been inter- viewing a tat old duffer about the con- dition of the Riverside orange crop. I felt vaguely that we would never see our girl reporter again. “And we never did.”"—Harper’s Weekly. ——In almost every neighborhood throughout the west there is some one or more persons whose lives have been saved by Chamberlain’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy, or who have been cured of chronic diarrhea by it. Such persons take especial pleasure in recommending the remedy to others. The praise that follows its introduction and use makes it very popular. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Frank P. Green. ——Three Pennsylvania cities will get public buildings this year. Altoona with 80,000 inhabitants, will get a $150,000 building ; McKeesport, with a population of 20,000, will get a building costing $100,000, and Washington, with about 15,000 population, will have a $50,000 building. —— I suffered for more than ten years with that dreadful disease, catarrh, and used every available medicine which was recommended to me. I cannot thank you enough fur the relief which Ely’s Cream Balm has afforded me,— ' Emanue) Meyers, Winfield, L. I., N. Y, “LAUGH A LITTLE BIT.” Here’s a motto, just your fit : “Laugh a httle bit.’ When you think you're trouble hit, “Laugh a little bit.”* il Look Misfortune in the face, Brave the beldam’s rude grimace; Ten to one "twill yield its place If you have the grit and wit Just to laugh little bit. Keep your face with sunshine lit ;— “Laugh a little bit.” Gloomy shadows off will flit If you have the wit and grit Just to laugh a little bit. Cherish this as sacred writ; “Laugh a little bit.” Keep it with you, sample it; ‘ Laugh a little bit.” Little ills will sure betide you, Fortune may not sit beside you, Men may mock and Fame deride you, But you'll mind them not a whit If you laugh a little bit. ~-J. Edmund V. Cooke, in May St. Nicholas. A Sem, Why Should I Belong tothe W. C. T. U? BY ESTHER T. HOUSH. It is a question busy women ask each other and ask themselves. “We have all the duties there is time and strength to perform. Shall we neglect our homes : nd children for the W.C. T.U. ?” saysome ofour best women when they are asked to become members of the Union. There are two distinct reasons why every intelligent Christain woman should, because of her relation to the home, belong to the W. G.P.U. Ist. Home is the centre and source of life, and woman is the home keeper. Whatever concerns the home, therefore, is of vital importance to her. 2nd. The enemies of home are her enemies and she is called upon to defend both it and herself against them. In- temperance iz acknowledged to be the geatest enemy of the home, the leader of vicesin whose wake many deadly foes follow. “But why is woman called to combat the evil? Why cannot men regulate the affairs of the world und leave us to the management of the homes ?”’ Partly because they cannot; partly because they will not. The world is simply a collection of homes. Possibly for every ten happy and well-or- dered households, where man is indus- trious and temperate, there are five where man is improvident and intemperate. The women of these homes are helpless, the children grow up in tainted atmosphere, and so go out to curse the world by their own sinful lives, and by their influence counteract much of the good otherwise existing. It is very plain. The mother-love that shields her own child must also shield her neighbor's child. She is prompted to do this by her own self-preservation and that of her home, and by that love —Christ-like—which, for the sake of the lost, seeks to save them. “But, intemperance has always been combated by good men and women. Why is theW. C. T. U. a better organi- zation than any other ?” Because it is organized mother-love, and “in union there is strength. Nearly two hundred thousand Christian women in the United States have banded to- gether and say: “We are the home- keepers ; the children are ours; the sa- loon is our enemy, and ¢he saloon must go i “How has all this about 7" The Crusade was the first personal work of womea for temperance. True, societies existed, and much work was been brought done in reclaiming drinking men. The Crusade women virtually said : “The drunkard must not be made. We will pray the saloon-keeper not to sell in- toxicating drinks. We will save our husbands and sons and brothers. The spirit of the Lord was upon them and great good was.accomplished. Into the temperance work a strong spiritual ele- ment was introduced and the women were shown the power of organized ef- fort. The W.C. T. U. was the out- growth of the Crusade. So ready were women for this work that twelve states responded to the call for the first Na- tional Convention held at Cleveland in 1874. The blessing of the. Lord has been constant, and the earnestness and devotion of the women without a par- allel. The National W. C. T, U. is now or- ganized in every state and territory, with nearly 10,000 local Unions. Much of this success is due the untiring labors of the National President, Miss Frences E Willard, but much also to the faith- ful women who make up the rank and file of the army. By means of these Unions, the homes of the women themselves are directly influenced, children are better taught public opinion is educated a large amount of temperance literature is cir- culated, and the power of the liquor trafic is being undermined. What the home-keepers of the coun- try decide rust be done, will be done. They have said temperance is a part of religion, and its blessed truths are being taught in Sunday-schools, and children are early learning to take and keep the pledge ; they said temperance is a part of education, and numerous states have made its teaching compulsory; they have said temperance is the foundation of the true home, and health and the training of children are emphasized as primal duties. All true work for humanity is for Christ. The mothers of Judea brought their children for his blessing, and it fell upon them also. When the mothers of to-day bring thc home to Christ, his blessing shall abide within it, and the “heel of the serpent’’—the serpent of the saloon—so long bruising the heart of woman, shall itself be bruised and banished from our beloved lend. Pledge we then our faith and love, pledge it still anew, To our coantry,do our homes, to our God, be Not iors comes lay our armor down, Bear the burden till the cross shall be a crown ! ——When you buy your spring med- icine you should get the best, and that is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It thoroughly purifies the blood. * ——More butter per head is used in England thar any other country. here they use thirteen pounds per head per annum ; in Germany eight pounds, Hol- land six pounds, France four pounds, Italy one pound. ——The largest library in the world is that at Paris, France. The World of Women. Jet trimming of tiny beads. Grenadines replacing black lace. Spangles sprinkled on everything. Figured alpacas witk spots and lines. Bewitching chrysanthemum pom- pons. ! “Storm blue” and ‘London smoke poplins.” A bewildering variety of bell-staped skirts. Black tulle brocaded into pompadour bouquets. Glimpses of dainty black and gray silk stockings. = Mrs. Hearst, the widow of Senator Hearst, of California, carries a life in- surance of $400,000. _ If the hair is very greasy, try washingr it in warm water in which a pinch of borax has been dissolved. Fashionable caterers are serving ice cream in tiny pineapple molds, facsim- iles in miniature of the luscious fruit, Cuffs of al! kinds and shapes are. be- ing used upon the tailor made gown, The mousquetaire is the most popular, Late model in tleeves all display the loose cape like effect, under is which placed a coat sleeve. This is generally of a different fabric. Dr. Mary P. Jacobi, in New York, and Dr. Mary Hoxen, in Washington, are each reputed to earn $40,000 a year at their profession. j Mrs. Julia A. Carney, of Galesburg, Ill, is not widely known in the world of letters, and yet she is the author of’ that interesting little poetical moceau beginning “Little drops of water, Little. grains of sand,’ ete. Stiff-looking wooden benches are be- ing offered in the art stores that are- very much like the old-fashioned wash bench of the farm house. They are of plain wood and are to be decorated and cushioned for appartment use. ‘While for stout women#z bertha is. a mistake, nothing lovelier was ever de- signed for a willowy figure. Frequent- ly a yoke of lace is finished with a ber- tha. These yokes are always very nar- row, in order to edge with as deep a. ruffle as possible. Miss Lalla Harrison, of Leesburg, Va., has been selected, as the most beautiful woman in that state, to repre-- sent it as one of the ideals of the thirteen original States at the World's Fair. It. is feared that the honor which has been. conferred upon her will not meet the approval of her unsuccessful competi- tors for the choice. WOMEN’S RIGHTS. The “rights of women,’ what are they ? The right to labor and to pray ; The right to watch while others sleep; The right o’er others’ woes to weep ; The right to succor or reverse; The right to weep while others curse ; The right to love whom others scorn ; The right to comfort all that mourn ; The right to shed a joy on earth ; The right to feel the soul’s high worth ; The right to lead the soul to God Along the path the saints have trod— The path of meekness and of love, The path of patience under wrong, The path in which the weak grow strong. : Although some conservatives still cling to the white muslin skirt, they every day become fewer, and for prom- enade, visiting and shopping, the silk skirt holds first place. This may seem an economy, as it saves washing, but this is not so. In fact itis one of the most costly itews of the present outfit. At least two of these skirts are a neces- sity, and the simplest home made one cannot be completed for a smaller sum than $5, and one can indulge their fancy in material and trimming until a neat little income is disposed of. For sum- mer wear a Twenty third street house has introduced inexpensive and dainty skirts made of pretty ginghams, which are very desirable for the summer tour- ist. An ideal street gown for such weath- eras we are now enjoying is a navy blue serge, made as “plain as a pipe stem.” The bodice, to be entirely cor- rect, will have long narrow coat-tail, and the skirt need not of necessity sweep the ground, though a little dip is more graceful with the long coat-tails. Mod- erately high shoulders and a tiny edge of black silk passementerie for skirt and bodice, with a row of small silk buttons up the front of the waist and back of the sleeves. With this wear collars and cuffsin linen, a snug turban triramed with black ribbon and quils, the jaunty veil and heavy tun kid gloves with black stitching and you can be sure if" you are certain of your dressmaker that the quiet style of your get up far ex- cends the rustle and jangle of the frou frou girl with her heavily ladened chat- elain and bobbing jets. The newest cut for the popular Rus- sion gowns, says Harper's Bazar, copies. literally the waist worn by peasant wo- men in Russia. The waist and sleeves are cut in one piece, without seams on the shoulders. This design is liked for crepons of bright blue and gray shades trimmed with tan leather and . white lace, and is also used for rough striped woolers tied around the waist by a rope: like cord with tassles. The crepon is doubled from the top, and a large oval piece is cut out across the top to form the neck opening, and is gathered as a half low neck. The material dropping to the selvage forms half-long Russian sleaves, and a curved seam taken below on each side shapes the waist, the whole being done very much in the way old- fashioned saques chemises were cut. The waist opens. in the back. The trimming is a band of leather galloon around the low neck, ana two rows of this galloon are set lengthwise half way down the front on each side, and are laced together with silk lacing-strings tipped with gilt. The full open sleeves fall only to the elbow, and are simply hemmed. This blouse is then worn over a fittzd white silk lining, covered at the top with guipure to represent a yoke, or a guimpe, with close sleeves of the lace reaching to the wrists. Loops of gold cord pass over the tiny leather buttons down the back. The skirt in umbrella shape, has six narrow gored breadths, and is trimmed down each side with rows of the leather laced to- gether. A row of the galloon above a band of dark brown or blue velvet trims the foot of the skirt. The belt is of the leather.