EEE CI A Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 2, 1892. WAITING FOR THE ANGELS. MARGARET E. SANGSTER, IN HARPERS BAZAR. Waiting through days of fever, Waiting throngh nights of pain, For the waft of wings at the portal, For the sound of songs immortal, And the breaking of life’s long chain: There is little to do for our dear one— Only to watch and pray-- As the tide is outward drifting, As the gates of heaven are lifting, And its gleam is on her way. The tasks that so often taxed her, The children she held so dear, The strain of the coming and going, The stross of the mending and sewing, The burden of many a year. Trouble her no longer, She is past the fret and care. Oa her brow is the angel’s token, The look of a peace unbroken, She was never before so fair. You see, she is waiting the angels, And we—we are standing apari. For us there are loss and sorrow ; For her is the endless morrow, And the reaping time of the heart. AN EVERYDAY AFFAIR. “Would you like your window opened, miss He said with hardihood, To the pretiy girl who sat in front And che declared she would. So o'er the seat he bent with joy And seized that window frame, And tugged and tugged, and tugged, and tugged, Until his wrist was lame. His lips grew white, his face grew red, His spine he knew was split, But still that wicked window frame Moved not a little bit. He gave one last despairing shriek, And swooned upon the floor. While the brakeman who had nailed it down Fell backward with a roar. —Brandon Banner. A PULLMAN CAR WOOING. Scene: Eastern-bound Pullman car at the Oakland mole. Time, 3:30 p.m. Enter elderly gen- tleman, carrying small valise and large hamper. Following him two ladies, evidently mother and daughter. Daughter in dark blue traveling cos- tume, with large bunch of violets pinned to front of her jacket, is a pretty, slen- der girl, of about nineteen. Both la- dened with flowers, books, and numer- ous small parcels, which they deposit in section nearest middle of car. The following conversation ensues: “Nan dear, I am really worried over your taking this trip alone. Had you not better wait a day or so, to see if we can hunt some one up to accompa- ny you?” “Ob, no indeed, papa. It was un- fortunate that Mr. Wilson was taken ill 80 suddenly this morning, so that Mrs. Wilson could not go with me this afternoon, but you see I'll have to start to-day to reach ©maha in time for Clara’s wedding, especially as I'm to be bridesmaid. ‘You and mamma must not worry, for I shall get along all might alone.” In the meantime other passengers come in and find their respective sec- tions. The engineitoots warningly. A few more kisses and hurried instruc tions, and papa and mamma are gone. The train moves off slowly at first, then with increased speed carries her further from the two worried souls she had just left. : Nan felt a bit frightened at the pros- pect of this, her firstilong journey alone, and kept her face turned toward the fast flying but unnoticed landscape, tor the blue eyes behind the long veil were blurred with tears. : | Her thoughts flew back to her par- ents, now on their avay to their home in San Francisco. She'know how much they sould miss her—the only child— though she was going to stay only a few weeks with her Omaha friends. She thought, too, of some one else who —well, some one who was also left in San Francisco. Finally, turning to inspect her fel- low-travellers, she thought the few men and two fussy old ladies looked very uninteresting. Thrown carelessly in the section opposite was a valise and a man’s ulster, but the owner was not vigible. She then turned her attention to the books, candy and flowers packed up in front of her. She read, smiled over, and tucked away in her handbag the cards and tiny sealed notes hidden in the candy boxes or attached to the bouquets. Time passed, and with a restless lit- tle yawn. Nan glanced at her watch and found it after. The porter just then announced that a stop will be made now at Sacramento for dinner. Nan thought of the bother.of un- packing the neatly packed hamper for Just one meal, dieliked the idea of go- ing out at the station alone, then de- cided to dine on candy, as she was not very hungry. At the moment a familiar form came up the aisle, and in a second a tall, handsome young man was standing near with oatstretched hand. A gleam of amusement was in his dark eyes as he quietly said. “How do you do, Nan?” A delicate pink colored her cheeks as ehe shook hands and answered him with a surprised and rather cool. “Why, Jack, where did you come from ?”’ “From the smoking-room where I’ve | been for the last three hours, ever since Icame in and found youn so wrapped up in the scenery you did not see me,” he replied, moving some books away and sitting beside her in the most mat- ter-of-course way. “Where.are you going, Jack ?” “To Omaha, Nan.” *What for 2” asked she, suspicious y. “Partly busivess—partly pleasure, Business, to take care of you; pleas ure, to be with you,” he answered, con- cisely. “Now, Jack, you know that is very foolish, afier—'" | ‘Last night when you refused me again. Yes, I know ; but you eee I can’t help being foolish. Was bora to, I guess,” eaid Jack, resignedly. 1 almost at Sacramento, Dead silence followed this for abcut two minutes. She looked steadily ont cf the window, while he gazed absent: ly at the bald head of a man a few seats in front. Then hz broke the silence by lean- ing toward her, and saying, in a very soft and persuasive tone : ‘Nan, won't you reconsider what you said last night 2” Looking around to see if any one could hear, ehe answered : “No, Jack —please don’t go over that again, for it won't do one bit of good.” He looked disappointed; then pick- ing up her jacket said : “Well, we are Come, let us go out to dinner.” Nan rose quickly, glad that she did not have to dine on candy, after all; and while belping her with her coat Jack casually remarked : “You have lots of flowers.” “Yes, and these lovely violets—they came this morning with no card at- tached ; but I think I can thank you for them.” looking up brightly at him. A tender look came into his eyes as he said, “Yes, I sent them, and I'm much obliged to you for wearing them.” “Oh,” said Nan, rather coolly, “I had no preference. They matched my dress so well—that is why I wore them.” “Yes, I see,” assented he as coolly. “Those cream roses would not look well with it all, for instance” Poor little violets—that last remark caused their dethronement, for the girl, with a flush, hastily and angrily de- tached them, saying, “Come to think of it, the roses would be far more effec- tive,” and pinned a few of the long- stemmed beauties in their place. Just as quickly Jack replaced the few violets he had worn in his coat ‘with a rosebud that she had dropped, saying, “Mine are withered, 00.” Nan looked annoyed, but said noth- ing, and in five minutes they were hur- riedly eating dinner at the station res- taurant. . Afterward Jack amused and enter- tained her till the. early bedtime, and she slept soundly that night, feeling safe with a friend so near. Carefully looking from behind her curtains the next morning, Nan saw that the opposite section had been changed from “two beds to two seats’ again, but Jack was not visible. Half an hour found her dressed, waiting for him to appear, as she intended asking him to breakfast out of the well stocked hamper. Presently he came in, and after a very slight hesitation, smilingly accep- ted her invitation. He helped her un- pack the hamper and eet the table in her section, and in a perfect gale of fun they began their morning meal sitting opposite. “This is fun, isn’t it?’ says Nan, spearing for a sardine with a corkscrew, | for Jack, as company, was honored. with the only fork. “Immense!” he assented, so emphat- ically that she laughed gleefully. i Emboldened by this, Jack in the act of carrying ‘a piece of cold chicken! to his mouth, leaned over and lower- ing his voice and fork at the same time said coaxingly, “Let's breakfast to- gether always—shall we, Nan |” ; She smiled in spite of herself at his tone and manner, even while a dainty frown slightly marred her pretty fore-’ head, and she answered briefly and emphatically: “Couldn’t think of such a thing Den’t be silly Jack.” “Oh, you cruel little girl !"’ said Jack, dramatically, as he straightened up god proceeded to eat the morals on his fork. : Their merry little meal over, the rest of the day passed in the usual rout- ine of a Pullman car. Jack was all devotion from first to last. Reading, talking and eating, with hasty little promenades when there was any oppor- tunity, was the order of the day. Nan acknowledged to herself, after bidding him'good night, that Jack was a very pleasant companion—but she did not want te marry him ; no, indeed. Jack Hollis had known and loved Nan Preston since he was a boy of nineteen and she a little girl of four- teen, He had proposed and been de- clined several times, but knowing that she did not dislike him and believing that “everything comes to the man who waits,” he was waiting, and in the meantime wooing to the best of his ability. He was very much afraid she would meet some other man during her visit who would fall in love with her and win her ; hence his deep laid echeme to travel to Omaha with her. As for Nan, after her first surprise at seeing him on board, she was so used to his never failing devotion that she took his coming with her as a matter of course. It was just like Jack, she thought. The second morning Nan arose with a severe headache. With that and a wretched night's sleep, she was worn out and cross—undeniably so. She snubbed poor Jack, who was all sym- pathy ; refused the cup of tea he brought her when they changed cars at Ogden, and when the journey began again lay back on the pillows he fixed in the seat for her, and would have nothing to say to him. All day she suffered intensely, feign- ing sleep most of the time to avoid be- ing tussed over by the sympathetic old ladies. How Jack longed to take the golden brown head in bis arms, and stroke the throbbing temuyles! Toward evening, when the rest of the passengers were out at dinner, he asked her with a passionate tremor in his voice, to give him the right to do so. She was trying to swallow the tea he had again brought in to her. Push. ing it away angrily : “Jack, you bother me to death. Don’t ever mention that subject to me again, for I will not marry you. Go away and do not speak to me at all.” Then the aching head dropped wearily back on the pillow. Jack paled, took the half emptied cup, and walked silently out of the car. That was the last she saw of him that night, She had her berth made up early, and ; utterly exhausted, soon fell into a refreshing sleep, from which she awoke in the night with her headache gone. : Her first thought was of Jack, and her eyes opened wide with shame as she remembered her rudeness to the man who had always been so kind to her. She recalled the pained, set lock as he had turned away the evening be- fore, and resolved te ask his pardon the first thing in the morning, when, of course, he would forgive her, and they would be good friends again. Morning found Nan herself again, sweet and pretty as ever; but no Jack to be seen. He had not come in to take breaktast with her, as she expec- ted, so she decided he must have eaten atthe station which had been passed early, before she was up. After alonely little breakfast by her. self, she settled down comtortably with a book to read and wait for him to come and make up. The hours passed however, and still no Jack. His traps were still opposite, so he must still be on the train, proba- bly in the smoking room, where the other men spent most of their time. She began to grow very indignant at his neglect. “To be sure, I told him never to speak to me again, but he knew I Wid not mean it,” eolilequized Nan, then tossed her head and vowed she didn’t care what he did. At lunch time she saw him disap- pear in the eating room without se much as a look even in her direction. Shortly after the train moved he saun- tered carelessly into his section. Meet- ing her wondering eyes, he gravely bowed, then taking a book he was to all intents soon absorbed in its contents. Her heart seemed to sink a few in- ches as she fully realized that he had taken her hasty words literally and did not intend speaking to her. But pride came to her rescue, and she was ap- parently as much interested in her work as he was in hie. Theatternoon rolled on, and still they read, never glancing at each other. As the train drew up at the dinner station he threw down hig book, and without a word to the girl across the aisle, went out talking and laughing with one of the men, Nan, who had not left the car that day, timidly asked the old ladies if she could go out to dinner with them, and was promptly taken under their wing. After dinner Jack stayed in the smok- ing room playing cards. Then, asthe shadows darkened so that she could not see to read, Nan’s spirits fell to lowest ebb. Turning to the window, but seeing nothing of the fast-darkening landscape, she gazed steadily out with fast filling eyes. She realized and confessed then to herself i much she had missed Jack all ay. On the train flew, into the darkness. The car lamps were lit and berths were being made up all around her. More | and more lonely and low-spirited she grew. To-morrow morning would bring them to Omaha, where her friends would meet her. She would go one way, Jack another, and he would never speak to her again. The last thought was too much tor her, and by this time she was crying softly but bit- terly in the corner, with her face still turned to the window. Ah, Jack, deliberately staying away all day from willful little Nan was a diplomatic stroke of yours! Suddenly some one leaned over her and said softly: “Why, Nan, home- sick already ?" Startled, she turned quickly, and with a joyful little catch of her breath dashed her handkerchief over her eyes and answered shyly, “No, Jack only lone- some, and I—I'm sorry I was so rude yesterday.” He sat down, screening her from any prying eyes, and said very low, Nan darling, were you crying because I’ve been such an unmanly beast to-day ?” The pretty head drooped lower—but no answer. Jack glanced around ; no one was looking, Taking her hand, he said : “Nan once more I ask you to be my wife, If you say no I shall never trouble you again, but shall take the first train home from Omaha to- morrow, a disappointed man. Which is it, dear, yes or no.” Still no answer. “Say yes, dearest,” pleaded Jack, with his lips dangerously near the flufty bang. An almost imperceptible nod was all the answer he got, but it seemed to satisfy him. Gently raising her hand he etole a kiss, just in time to escape ! the porter’s inquisitive eyes as he came up, blandly asking the young lady if she was ready to have her berth made up. Blushing furiously, the young lady said she was ready; so pressing her hand warmly, Jack whispered, “Good night, Jove,” and left her, well satisfied with the result of his journey.— Over land Monthly. SUAS ——— The presidents of the great trunk lines of the East have put together their wise heads and have concluded not to reduce the fares on fast trains to Chicago during the progress of the World’s Fair. On slow trains a reduc- tion of 20 per cent will be - made. Sev- eral men well up in railroad circles are quoted as saying that even at regular rates they have as much business as they can carry, and the increased traffic during the short period the exposition is to be open will hardly recompense them for adding more rolling stock. The hope that one-half fare would be in vogue next year, on which hope very many persons based their determination toattend, is consequently blasted and the attendance at the great national ex- bibition will be considerable diminished by this-move on the part of the railroads. —— Scratches on furniture may te removed by rubbing with a woolen rag dipped in boiled linseed oil. The varnishing may than be done with shellac dissolved ir alchohol. ——The town of Tide, Wash. has been rechristened Leavenworth, Successful Though Blind Blind Men Who Make Their Own Way in the World and Earn Hardsome Incomes. Most true it is that no movement for the improvement of the unfortunate can in recent years be credited with greater or more splendid resalts than the efforts made along various lines for the educa- tion and uplifting of the blind. A quarter of a century ago there were but two or three avenues of employment open to tne sightless; now there are Weed, Greeley and Raymond, and in | 1847 removed to Milwaukee, where he | built the journal over which he presided | from a modest weekly to one ot tbe best | paying dailies in the Northwest. Though now seventy-five years of age he is still uw hard and tireless worker. | For many years it has been his custom | to daily dictate several columns of edi- | torial matter to a stenographer. The leading journals of the country are read | to him by the aid of an audiphone, and | in this way he keeps fully informed on fully a score, and new ones are being constantly added to the list. In nearly every largecity careful in- struction is now given to the blind, and they profit by it to a very marked degree. Experience has sug- gested many improvements ir the meth- ods employed by teachers of the blind, and, though in training himself for the | task of self-support he has to ecenfront and overcome double the difficulties that await the person who can see, to- | day the name of the blind man who is able not only to support himself, but to secure what could justly be termed a luxurious living, is legion. The blind man of the present time asks no favors, | but, presenting himself as competent in | certain directions, proveshimself to be | not only the equal bat inmany instances the superior of the mass of his fellow workmen. The writer some time-since set about | the compilation of a list of those who have wrongzht with such effectiveness that their success would have been counted exceptional even had they been gifted with the sense of sight. The re- sult of this investigation is at once strik- ing and unusually gratifying. At the head of the list by common consent stands the name of Lewis B. Carll, Jersey City. He is now forty- nine years of age and was born blind. He received his preliminary education at the Institute for the Blind in this city, where he remained for seven years, evincing such aptitude and promise that it was decided to give him a thorough classical education. He was fitted for college at Fairfield Academy, in Flush- ing, L. I., and in 1866 entered Colum- bia. Four years later he was graduated second in his class. While in college he showed an aptitude forhigher mathe- matics that amounted to genius, and upon graduation he resolved to become a teacher of and writer on the subject. There was then no English work of re- cent date on the calculus of variations and Mr. Carll set to work to supply the deficiency. For several years be stud- ied with patienceand care the litera- ture of the subjectin English, French, and German, and when he bad master- ed it began the more laborious work of composition. This occupied three years of constant labor. The result, a volume of 600 hundred pages, was published in 1881 under the title of “A Treatise on the Calculus of Variations.’ Its sound scholarship and wonderful Jucidity and accuracy gained prompt and glad recognition from mathematicians both here and abroad and gave its author an international reputation. It has be- come the standard text book and has been translated into several foreign languages. In recent years Mr. Carll’s time has been mainly occupied in teaching pri- vate pupils, the number of which is now very large, and he has also frequently lectured at Columbia College, where many mathematicians of rare attain- ments have been numbered among his scholars. In his movements he is fear- less and independent, and frequently crosses from Jersey city on the crowded ferryboats and goes about the city unaid- edand unattended. Besides holding first rank as a master of higher mathematics, Mr, Carli is a splendid classic scholar, a superior theoretical chemist and an ex- cellent musician. Superintendent Wil- liam B. Wait, of the New York Insti- tution for the Blind, than whom there is no one more competent to pronounce judgement, regards Mr. Carll as the most remarkable blind man now living in this or any other country. THE BLIND BOAT BUILDER. John B. Herreshoff, of Bristol, R. I,, would, however, be awarded this dis- tinction by many, who admire him for the splendid work he has accomplished in the face of great obstacles. Though blind since his fifteenth year, he was the founder and is the present head of oneof the best known shipbuilding firms in the United States. Not since boyhood has he been able to see the graceful outlines of ships and schooners and yachts which plough the blue wa- ters in sight of which he was born; but carries perfect pictures of them in his memory, and it is upon this gallery that he draws in. devising the plans which has “made his name a familiar one in all parts of the world. When a description of a piece of machinery is read to him he can at once point out its merits and defects, and so fine and true is his sense of feeling that by merely running his fingers over the lines of a design he can gain as accurate an idea of it as though he saw it, Mr. Herreshoft’s father was a ship- builder before him, and the son early displayed a bent for the same calling. He has been in businiss on his own ac- count for something over twenty years, and during that time, with the aid of his younger brother Nathaniel had de- eigned and constructed many of the swiftest torpedo boats and steam and sailing yachts now afloat, To his gen- ius as a mechanic he adds executive ability of the highest order. He looks carefully after the financial affairs of his firm and personally superintends the several" departments of a plant em- ploying hundreds of men. A visitor ignorant of his misfortune, seeing Mr. Herreshoff seated in his office dictating letters and receiving reports or strolling unguided about his yards giving direc- tions to his foremen, would never sus- pect that he was blind. His blindness is the result of hereditary weekness, and some of his brothers and sisters are simi- larly afflicted. . A SUCCESSFUL EDITOR. William E, Cramer, though blind, has been for forty-five years the editor and principal proprietor of the Evening Wisconsin a daily published in Milwau- kee. A coasting accident in his child- hood rendered him blind and partially deaf, but did not prevent him from se- curing a thorough and adequate educa- tion and entering with enthusiasm upon a successful editorial career. In 1843 he began work on a newspaper in Al- bany, where he became the friend of current events and changes in public | opinion. Hs has been a great traveller | { and with his wife, who is his constant | | companion, has visited all parts of the | | United States and Canada; journeyed | | to Mexico and Central America, and | made several trips to Harope. He was | i one ot the foreigners iocked up in be-! sieged Paris during the Franco- | Prussian war and compelled to subsist for weeks upon mule meat. [ Mr. Cramer is a man of classical edu- ication. He was graduated from Un- | ion College with high honor, and before | | he went into newspaper work studied | law ard was admitted to the Bar. BOUND TO SUCCEED. Walter L. Campbell, of Youngstown, O. has been totally blind since he was | five years old, but as lawyer, journalist, | and political reformer has achieved sig- | | nal success. He was born in Salem, O., | fifty years ago, and his blindness result- ‘ed from an accident which befell him | while at play. He was educated at the | Columbus and Philadelphia institutions for the blind, and as a music teacher in his native town earned the money with which to take a collegiate course. His career at Western Reserve College was a brilliant one, and he was graduated at the head of his class. Later he stud- ied law and passed through the Harvard Law School. From 1869 till 1871 he was United States Commissioner for the Territory of Wyoming. He then re. turned to the East, and from 1874 till 1882 was editor of the Youngstown, O., Register. Until the typewriter came into use, Mr. Campbell wrote all his articles with his own hand, using a grooved board to prevent the lines from running together, Mr. Campbell is a man of great na- tural ability, and made the best editor Youngstown has ever had. In 1884 was nominated for reform candidate for Mayor of Youngstown, and after a bit- ter and exciting contest was elected. His fearlessness and energy made him a terror to evil doers and toward the closé of his term the police courts had little to do. Judge William H. West, of Belle- fontaine, Ohio, is another very remarka- ble blind man. A man of superb men- tal endowments, he early secured and has since held a leading place at the Bar of his State. He long served with honor on the Bench, and some twenty years ago was nominated for Governor by the Republicans of Ohio. While prosecuting a brilliant and aggressive canvass he was suddenly stricken with blindness. This unlooked for and terri- ble affliction largely contributed to his defeat at the polls, but he did not loose heart undera blow that would have stunned a man of weaker fibre, and has since continued to successfully conduct a large and lucrative law practice. BLIND, BUT A GOOD BANKER. S. S. Richly, president of the Capital City Bank, of Columbus, completes the trio of Ohio’s remarkable blind men. He has been totally blind for the past twelve years, having been shot through the eyes one day in the summer of 1880 while resisting an outlaw’s ‘attempt to rob his bank. His assailant, thinking he had killed him shot himself through the heart .and died instantly. Richly finally recovered, but his sight was gone forever. Like Judge West, he did not lose heart. but has ever since continued at the head of the Capital City Bank, and with the aid of an aman- uensis daily disposes of a large volume of business. He is a shrewd and suc- cessful business man, and, hampered as he is, is counted one of the most success- ful bankers in Ohio. His bank is look- ed upon as being as sound as the Feder- al Treasury. = - : i Christopher Buckley, though blind for eighteen years, is, or was until very, recently, the most powerful democratic politician on the Pacific Coast. He is a native of Ireland, spent his boyhood in New York city and later was a stre:t ‘car driver and saloon keeper in San Francisco. Soon after his settlement in| San Francisco he became a factor in city | politics, and though in 1874 he lost his sight his influence continued to grow, and has often made himself felt in State and national politics. = He managed. Justice Field's campaign for the Presidental nomination in 1884, and the late-George Hearst owned his election to the United ‘States Senate in the main to the skill and shrewdness of the blind politician. Alfred M. Horton has been for some years the leading wholesale grain and feed merchant of Middletown, N. Y He is now sixty-two years cold and has been blind since he was fourteen. Des- pite his blindness he was an expert and successful farmer in Chemug country, and in this way acquired a handsome competence. He has been engaged in his present buslness since 1883, and now supplies the greater part of the retail trade of Orange and Sullivan counties He does all of his own buying and by the sense of feeling can detect if a con- signment of grain or feed differs in any way from what the invoice calls for. He is also a skillful and successful buyer of horses and cattle, and after running an animal over with his hands can make a suprisingly close estimate of its weight and value. Mr. Horton keeps only a mental re- cord of his business transactions and acts as his own collector. His savings are principally invested in real estate. He manages his property to much better advantage than the average landlord, and is 8» expert in the use of tools that he performs all needed repairs upon his buildings without assistance. He takes care of his own horses and can hiteh up a team as rapidly as any man in his em ploy. Mr. Horton is never compelled to resort to a guide in his goings and comings in and about Middletown, and he often goes to New York city mak- ing his way unassisted across the ferry to his brother’s office in Sixth avenue and to other points in the city where his business calls him. CAN'T SEE BUT RUNS A FARM. Mr. |E | little further on. The World of Women, Woman How various in her mood she is How ready to beguile; She wounds with her cutting tongue, And heals us with her smile. Plaid sleeves with revers to match are very fashionable just now, and may be worn with either green or blue cloth or even black. Mrs. Robert Treat Paine, Mrs. Au- i gustus Hemenway, Mrs. Louk Agassiz and Mrs. O. W. Peabody are among the Boston ladies who recently signed a pro test against docking horses’ tails. Where the skirt ruffle or sleeve of a gown have grown shabby replace them with velvet. Cut an old basque into a round waist and wear it with a pointed belt cr corselet of velvet of a shade dark- | er or contrasting color. The idea of the “Yale Home,” or hospital for students, which is soon to be completed at the university, is said to have originated with Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, whose son died last summer from typhoid fever contracted in New Haven. Someone has described Olive Thorne Miller, our authority on bird lore, in private, as a ‘‘large, motherly figure; the sort that wears a shawl ; you know there aren’t many of those women any more.” It 1i3 not generally known that Mrs. Miller is a pronounced Theos- ophist. About 40 per cent. of the Vassar graduates are said to marry, while a majority of the others become teachers. Five of the alumne are now taking post-graduate coursesat Yale, two at the University of Chicago, one at Ann Ar- bor, in the medical department, and one at Leipsic, A tavorite combination for evening or house gowns is very light rose color and black. One of the prettiest tea gowns has a Watteau back of black mousseline de soie, and a full Empire front of pale pink crepe, confine by a broad black velvet sash, the ends of which reach almost to the edge of the skirt. A pretty sofa or chair roll seen the other day was made of three fine hcm- stitched handkerchiefs, put together in the lace insertion, the pattern of the lace being picked out in heliotrore wash silk. The gathered ends were first lace trimmed, forming when gathered a frill- ed rosette, tied with heliotrope ribbons, the whole wasdrawn over a roll first covered with heliotrope silesia. A model afternoon gown for a young girl is made of velvet, cut low in the neck and running over the shoulders, but without sleeves, worn over 8 high silk guimpe with full gathered sleeves. Such a gown is ser- viceable in a wardrobe, as by changing the guimpe and sash a great variety is had. Black velvet over ascarlet guimpe with scarlet sash is charming. Equal- ly effective are white or plaid in place of the scarlet. A stylish gown worn at a fashionable afternoon gathering recently was made of golden brown camel’s-hair cloth, with seamless back and short Eton-jack- et front. The very large sleeves were of shot velvet shading from green to amber brown. The revers of the jacket and the girdle were also of the velvet. A three strand braiding of the velvet braid- ed softly and loosely (like a lightly plaited chatelaine hair braid on a school girl), encircled the cloth skirt at the ex- treme edge. A very jaunty jacket that, while fit- ting the figure just as closely as does the ton one, is yet a little longer, is known as the ¢“Patrol.”” It has each seam braided and a high, rolling collar, while the fronts of it, fastening with ‘‘frogs” allow just an edge of a silk shirt to be visible, Double skirts are with us, although they are not generally received with enthusiasm. However, some leaders of fashion are adopting them. Skirts are no longer drawn tight, in the trying fashion that they have been worn, across the front of the figure. These fuller, looser skirts are certain to prepare the way for the over-dresses that are not yet accepted, but are certain to be a ‘With the taller skirts are beginning to be used, although as yet surreptitiously, little bustle cushions filled with hair. Indeed, those wise in matters fashionable declare that the hoopskirt will be with us within the next eighteen months, In factan even- ing dress from Worth recently brought over by a lady who has been sojourning in Paris, which will soon be seen at a fashionable function, is quite full enough as to the skirt to be worn over a farth- ingale. It is of amethyst velvet, and is confined at the waist by a cincture of iridescent jeweled passementerie. The foot of the skirt is finished with a simple frill, and the bodice is cut with a V back and front. The new coiffure for young ladies is copied from the classic simplicity of the Clytic busts, and is formed by waving the front hair in long regular waves on each side of the parting leaving a few short hairs to break out carelessly from the rest and fall on the forehead... The hair is then coiled softly and smoothly- at the back, with a few wavy loose locks in the neck. Another pretty fan- cy is that of dressing the hair in a long loose coil from the crown of the head nearly to the neck, the heavier part of the mass being twisted in the centre and lighter curled strands being massed at the top. A fringe of curls falls or the neck. Not for any years have so many and such elaborate decorations been used as part of the coiffure--flowers ribbons, and all manner of fillets, pins, diamond and pearl charms, amber and gold ornaments. The girl with the cameo face wears a single rose, drooping just back of her left ear ; the girl with the round and piquant face wears a rib- bon of gold with pert little upstanding bows, or a jeweled eagle’s feather adorns her tresses in a fashion borrowed. like most of our ornaments, from our savage. sisters. In this though. as in all fashions, it is well to remember that every one cannot adept one style, and that every woman should study her own face well before adopting any style of wearing her hair. ——The list of musical prodigies in Boston at present includes a young (Qontinued on page siz.) Cherokee Indian girl.