Bellefonte, Pa., April 28, 1893 THE FACE AT THE WINDOW, The face at the-window once bright and fair. Was anxious and pale, and furrowed with care; The wife of the drunkard looks out through tears. As the footsteps unsteady and slow she hears. But on past her.door goes the home seeking CIow: “Oh why does he tarry ?” she murmers aloud ; - She listens again, ‘tis the throb of her heart That soundsin: the darkness, and bids her start, “Oh, would he but come ! ‘tis dark and late. I'd welcome with joy e’en his unsteady gait I— How long the hours linger, the night's dark olds. Shut out from.ny-sight what it most woula be- hold ‘The moon rose out of the darkened sky, And seemed to say, ‘“‘let ns go, you an 1, And bring him back from the evils haunts, From the jibes of men and the scoffers taunts!” And the poor wife said, “I can bear the pain,” For the thought of having him home again, And long she sought through lane and street, With heavy heart and wesry feet w She fond him at-dast where the “wine flows red,"— j Ob, the wages of sin”—there she found him dead ! —Richimeond Enterprise. rn —————— ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS. BY MARY KYLE DALLAS. When Saturday wag over and Mr. and Mrs. Vranklin were alone by themselves in the clean kitchen, sitting beside the stove, Mrs. Vranklin arose, went into her bedroom and brought out a bundle of clothes. “I want you: to look at these things, Jeremiah 2" she said, mildly. “What are they ?” said he. She spread them out on the floor. “That is my best dress,” she said. “Those are amy best shoes. That is the only bonnet I’ve got in the world but my calico-sun-bonunet, and : iat is my Sunday shawl.” She uttered the words quietly "and ~waited. “Well,” said Mr. Vranklio, still smoking. “Well 2” she answered. ‘He said nothing. She gathered up the garments.with a look of disdain tographs of several members of the family hung by red cords from the ‘wall, dotted muslin curtains with neat- lv.fluted ruffles covered the green pa- per blinds. A dish of wax fruit, cov- ered by a glass shade, ornamented the centre table, and the horsehair furni- ture had been so littlejused in two gen- erations that it looked almost new. The vases on the mantel were old-‘ash- ioned blue ware, for which a china ‘worshiper would have paid a great price. They had been brought from Canton by a sailor grand uncle, long since dead, though he lived to see nine- ty-oine years. Between the windows was a “column” looking glass in which Mr. Vranklin’s grandmother had seen her girlish face in an immense white silk poke-bonnet, still preserved in a “bandbox" up garret. A little moonlight stole through the lower panes of the room and made all things quite plain to the owner's ac- customed eyes. He tried to think in a hurry, and, being a slow man, grew very much confused. ‘Eva Maria should have fifty dollars, but she had said she had a right to a hundred. It he gave her the bill in his pocket, she would spend it. It was Saturday evening, he conld not get it changed that night—no, not until Mon- day. If he locked it up, she would ‘know and take it out, perhaps, and do as she pleased with it. She had de- clared ber “right” to it. Eva Maria, bumblest of the humble, meekest of the meek, had spoken so. Could it be ? “This comes of these here strong minded meetin’s,” said Mr. Vranklin. ‘T'his was not logical, for Mrs, Vrank- lin bad not attended one. “Women used to be bidable. They are kicking over the traces now. No- body—" soliloquized Mr. Vranklin, growing more and more ungrammatic- al.with his wrath—"‘nobody ain’t goin’ to ride over me, ‘specially a wife of mine. I must hide the money until I can.change it. She might look into my pockets. She said she had a right toiit, and she looked determined,” At this moment he heard a move- ment in the kitchen. He believed it to be his wile about to come in search of him, and tried to think taster. and piled them on a chair. “You're a:rich man,” she said. ‘Rich for a farmer. You are sixty and I fifty years old. Our boys are married. I haven't had any money to spend for five years. I'm a sight to behold. If.I-were a servant I should get wages and not have to beg. No, I on’t beg, Jeremiah. Since you don't offer it yourself, 1'm going to tell you that.I want money. I wanta hundred dollars to buy some new clothes to feel decent and comfortable in. I'm desti- tute, I'm ‘really destitute. Why, I'm out of flannel! My calico gowns are ‘patched at the elbow. My shoe heels are twisted. I can’t go to church any- ‘more, for 1’ve ‘turned my black ‘silk twice and the back breadths upside down. I've washed ‘my bonnet rib. bone. Well, I’ve done all I could rather than ask forwhat vou didnt offer, and there’s no need. You're well-to-do. I want to be decent and take a little comfort while I can. I muet. There, now! IVs my right 1"! She had spoken her mind, and Mr. Wranoklin had felt thata climax had arrived. He had “laid by” a large sum. He was growingold and had no need to pinch, but the awful demand for a hundred dollars all in a lump was #00 much for him. He bad become used to&va Maria's quiet way of mending lier old clothes and asking for no money, and it had never occurred to him that .she would geome "own on him like this at some time. He stared silently and pufed across the stove the smoke of the cheap to- bacco he burnt in a common corn.cob pipe. The old rag carpet was clean, The old .chairs were mended with car. pet bottoms. Itwas all tidy, but noth- ing was new. Nothing pretty ‘but the scarlet geraniums ¢n their big pots oa the window sill. He bad given his wife very little in their thirty years of married life; for all the furditare was hie mother’s and.she hail helped him make his fortune, selling buiter and eggs and pot-eheese and flower roots, feeding the hens cheaply and well, weeding vegetables. and even ridingithe mowing machine, now and then— though not very lately. Conscience told him that he.ougit to pull from his vest pocket the crisp hundred dol. lar-note he bad received that morning for some hay, at the landing, and say: “Here, Eva Maria, why didn’t you speak before?” But when greed takes possession of the heart of man, it holds on like a leech. All he said, after the silence had remszined unbroken for some minutes, was : “Well, Eva Maria, I'll think it over.” To some women there is no agony like asking a husbaud for money, While some are always erying : “Give! Give!” never content, never reasonable, others will go with ragged shoes uatil the masculine eyes discov- er the fact, They want a love-gift, not alms. Generally they have to ask at last, The happy wide teels ne such tribu- ations. “All that is mine 18 thine,” has been said to her by word and deed too often, but where doubt of love lies the heart grows proud. Eva Maria had nerved herself at last in the micery of her shabbiness to make the speech above recorded, but it seemed a fearful thing to do. She lit. tle guessed that she had frightened Jeremiah almost out of his senses. “A hundred dollars,” he said to him. self. “She must know what I've got about me. She must mean to have it. Fifty now, I'd give. Buta hundred I'll get the money changed and give her fifty. He opened the door of the passage, crossed it and went into the parlor. It was a cold, neat place, kept sacred for great occasions. It had a grate in it, but it was doubtful if a fire would be. lighted there that winter. It had been inconvenient to take it down that sam- mer, 80 fringed pink paper had been arranged between the polished bars and the rug drawn acroes the hearth. Pho- The vases! Should he hide the note there? No; there were still some as- ters in the garden, and Eva Maria might.fill the vases with bouquets. as she sometimes did on Sunday alter- noons, setting them for. the nonce on the kitchen mantel, No, the vases would not do. The ingrain carpet was tacked down tight, the=—Surely there was a step in the passage! The grate ! There, under the (ringed paper, it might lie safely all night. He drew his pocket-book from his bosom and stuffed it between two loose bricks at the back of the grate. The pink fringes of the paper concealed it. All was safe. He creaked across the passage into the kitchen with a con- sciousness of great meanness in bis heart. Mrs. Vranklin, having execu ted her terrible intention, bad taken flight to her bedroom, where she sat in the cold with a little shawl over her shoulders, trembling. He said some- thing aioud about seeing Jones about those pige, and fled the house, and the two held no more conversation until breakfast time. THen Mr. Vraoklin, with unusual piety, ‘went to church, while his wife staid at home to cook dinver, no oue else being at hand to do it. Just as the beef was so far done that she could open the oven doors, there came a knock upon the door, and open- ing it she saw upon the porch her cons in Brown and ‘the minister. Church was out, and Cousin Brown had brought the reverend gentleman to his friends to dine. Mrs. Vranklin received both hospitably, and hastened to usher them into the parlor. The yellow art. emisias shone bravely in the big blue vases. Mr. Vranklin had been wise not to hide his money there, but it was cold—very cold. j “IIL light a fire,” said the good wom: an, “It won’t take a minute. It’s the first fire of the season, or I'd have the grate fixed.” She tucked the paper down into the grate, the easiest way to be rid of it, piled on wood and placed the scuttle ready. As she struck the match, she gave a little cry, and repressed it in- stantly. The flames blazed up merri- ly and roared behind the blower. When Mr. Vranklin returned, the blower was- down, and the two men were warming their feet at a compact mass of red coal. He looked at his Eva Maria. Her cold. composed, New England face with ite high nose and close shut mouth, be- trayed no emotion. “She don’t know what she has done,” &e said to himself ; but he did. The ghost.of that hundred dollars stared at him from the embers. He could not talk, he could not compose himself, Cousin Brown opinioned he was not well. The minister remarked “that in the midst of life we are in death,” and seemed to prophesy his funeral. It was not a gay dinner, but then it was Sunday. That night, Mrs. Vrauklin missed her spouse from his bed. She went to look for him and found him poking in the ashes of the dead fire with the tongs. He looked up with a very red face. “I don’t think these here coals kin be good,” he said, confusedly. “Did you get up in the night to look a! them 7’ ghe asked. He made no answer, and returned to | bed. | Next morning his wife again at tacked him. “Have you thought that matter over,” | she asked. Indeed he had, and it had occurred j to him that Providence had prepared a | special Judgment for him, in destroy- ing that money, He felt that his wife | had spoken the truth. She jad a right | to decent clothes, She who had served him so well for so many yeare. “lve thought it over, Eva Maria,” he said, and arose and went to his desk, a queer, old-fashioned one built in the | house-wall. When he returned, he ; brought with him a blank check. © “Get what you like, my dear,” he a —— ‘up justas you please.” BORE said, “and get it nice. Fill the check He bad not called her “my dear,” for years. She smiled up at him very gently, tears were near her eyes. However, she used the check to dress herself comfortably. It was the first time for many years that she had indulged in the luxury of shopping freely. At night he met her at the depot, loaded with parcels, tired but smiling. He had not seen her so bright for many a day. After tea that night they sat together beside the stove as before, and she looked at him in a peculiar way. “You didn’t seem to feel cheerful Sunday afterncon, Jeremiah,” she re- marked. “What ailed you ?”’ “I don’t want to tell you,” he answered, “But I'll tell you,” she said. “You thought I burned the pocket book you hid in the grate. I didn’t.” She put her band into her work-bas- ket and drew it out intact with the money in it. “I was just in time,” she said. “But I understood at once when I saw ig sticking between the bricks. If you hadn't given me the checks, I should have spent the money. There's a con- fession for you, Jeremiah 1’ He looked at her, half angry, half astonished, She arose and came to him and put her hands on his should- ers. “But I should never have enjoyed wearing them,” she said. “I should have hated them, I think. These that I bought to-day with your tree gift, I shall love while there's a rag of them lett,” The man looked at her with a feel ing that a strange revelation ot femin- ine human nature had been made to him, but all he said was : “Why, Eva Maria, I want to know! and he drew her down upon his knee and kissed her. ‘Cause ef Corns. Why the American Men Are so Generally Afflict- ed With Them. “Corns are bad,’ said the philosophic bootblack. “Yours seem to hurt you some. Strange what lots of people have corns. ‘Over 90 per cent. of the men who come to get a shine have corns. How do I know it ? How do I know you have a corn ? By finding it of course. Gently ? Allright, I won't hurt you, guv’nor. As I was saying, 90 out of every hundred have corns. People say ii’s tight boots, but I don’t believe it. Those who have the worst corns wear boots that are too large for them. What gives them corns, then ? Well, I'll tell you. It's wearing boots all day long. “Seldom do you see Europeans both- ered with corns, especially Englishmen. Nearly every American has them. The former never wear their boots all day. They have walking boots to the office. Once there they put on a thin house boot. When they go home about five o'clock in the evianing the first thing they do is to put on their slippers. The result is that the feet are always cool, the pressure never constant, and no muscle tried beyond its power. Far otherwise the American. He goes down to work at eight o’clock in the morning and is hurrying and scurry in the same boots untill six o’clock. Then he hur- ries home to dinner, hurries through dinner, and, still wearing the same boots, goes to bis lodge or elsewhere and returns at midnight, his feet having been cramped up for fourteen hours out of the twenty-four in the one pair of boots. Theresult is corns and bun- ions. ”’— Chicago Mail. Be — Perpetual Motion. The Great Problem Solved at Last bg a Punzsu- tawney Man, J, F. Carroll, a turner in the employ of Houck & Marl, claims to have discoy - ered the principal of perpetual motion and has constructed a machine which illustrates it to perfection. Several gen- tlemen who have seen it work declare that ic is an unqualified, suceess, and that machinery of all kinds can be run with it at a nominal cost. Alex Grove, another employe of Houck & Harl, is a partner in the invention, and is now in Washington, where he has filed a cave- at, and tbe invention is now protected and secured to 1ts owner. Mr. Grove went there first to secure a patent on an improved chisel, but failing in that was instructed to remain there until Mr, Carroll had constracted a perpatual mo- tion machine. Ordinarily this would seem to involve a long residence in Washington, but Mr. Carroll has his machine perfect, and intends giving public exhibitions of it. The little model which he has constructed will litt a pound weight, which proves con- clusively that a large machine would have tremendous power. The question of perpetual motion, a machine so constructed as to run per- petually and furnish power sufficient to be useful in the manufacturing arts, has perplexed and ruined many a brain, and many are they who have claimed to solve the problem. Now, should an obscure citizen of Punxutawney discov- er the great mechanical principle in- volved in this question it would en- shrine him and the euphonious name “Punxatawney’ in a halo of everylast- | ing glory. — Punzutawney Spirit, The Lead Pencil. Few people are “aware of the diffi- cuities that were surmounted in the manufacture of the common lead pen- cil. Ta the first place the graphite of | which it is made is rarely found suffi- ciently homogeneous to allow pencil lead to be cut from it, so 1t is al ways ground to powder and then pressed in- to blocks. The great difficulty was to press the blocks until the graphite was bard enough to use, and for many years every effort in this was defeated “by the crumbly nature of the material. Final. : ly a device was employed that exhaust. ed the air, after which the blocks were again pressed and when ‘this was done | the material was found to be as hard as | when taken from the quarry. But, thousands upon thousands of dollars J were spent in experiments before the | result was reached. Noal’s Flood. The shore lines of all the oceans give unmistakable evidence that the waters of the ocean have in recent geologic times, been greatly augmented. The coast surveys of the United States proves this to be true beyond a question. By this survey it is found that from Nova Scotia to Florida, and thence en- tirely around the Gulf of Mexico, the old shore lines of the continent are far out to sea. Along this shore-line, thousands of mile in extent, the ancient beach is now covered by the ocean wa- ters from 180 to 250 feet deep. Then further out is found the shore line or what was then the shallow waters, whick are now from 500 to 600 feet un- der water and beyond this the lead sud- denly drops to a depth of 1,200 to 10,000 feet. For the first hundred miles out from New Jersey the ocean deepens only three feet to the mile or only 300 feet in 100 miles, 18 miles farther out the wa- ter is 6,000 feet, and 250 miles out it is 13,2000 feet deep. The same is true of the British Isles. The waters gradually deepen till the old coast line is reached and then a sudden plunge to abysmai depths. Similar con- ditions are found in the German oceans, the Norwegian waters, along the whole coast of Northern Europe, Northern Asia and Eastern Asia from Java to the Gulf of Aden. On our western coast from the Col- um hia river to the Bering straits we find u widesea beach covered by shallow waters and the steep banks of the old sea shore far out in the ocean. These sea beaches averages 100 miles in width, and on them are found, in every part of the world, vast forests of timber now ly- ing 200 or 300 feet below the surface of the waters. The Atlantic continent has been sur- veyed, and although now entirely cover- ed by the Atlantic ocean, except the Azore islands, it is known that this At. lantic continent was once above the waters of the ocean because its deep ra- vines, mountains, gulches and water courses, as now known to exist, could not have otherwise formed. Geologists have tried to account for this universal rising of the waters by claiming that the lands have sunk into them, but this is an impossibility. All evidences point to the fact that these waters bave been suddenly deepened, all at about the same time, and it cannot be that al! lands have thus gone down into the waters. The conclusion must be inevitable that waters have risen over the lands. The rising of waters in all the oceans from 800 to 600 feet could not have come from cloud formations such as we now have, but must have come from the fall of walers from the upper deep, from great belts outside of the atmosphere such as we now see surrounding Jupi- ter, Saturn, Uranus, Mercury and Ve- nus, belts that hide from view the great lights but let in the diffused twilight. Prof. Vail, whose life was given to the study of geology, says; “One-third of North America, a great part of northern Europe, very nearly all of Siberia, much of China and other parts of Asia were apparently, at the same time, submerg- ed beneath fresh waters ’’ Such could only occur from a great flood, the fail- ing of ine great deep from above, the breaking up of the belts which sur- rounded the earth. Dana, the great geologist, speaking of recent geologic time, says that animal life was subject to a great plunge-bath and the most complete extermination of species of which there is record. Many evidences of a similar nature are found in the North polar regions, While a sudden great fall of waters ex- terminated ocean animal life by a sud- den change of salt to fresh waters, as evidenced by the great pits filled with the remains of such sea animals, the same catisirophe was working havoc among the inhabitants of more north- ern climates. To-day are found the skeletons of the hairy mammoth imbedded in pure clear ice more than 200 feet beneath the glacier and 50 feet above the surface of the earth, the whole carcass preserved bair, skin ard eyes, the flesh being de- The Uncertainties of Memo: y. Everybody knows the man who can’t remember names. The number of peo- ple who can’t remember dates is legion. Pbrenologists say certain lobes of the brain are devoted by nature to certain purposes. In other words, and crudely, the function of memory is exercised by or through a particular section of the brain ent.rely disunct from and in- dependently of other sections. Thera are a good many practical examples and well established cases which seem to bear out this theory. But when we get down to the miner subdivisions of these | . . . | particular brain funciions the idea be- | Take this | comes somewhat complex. single thing of memory —is there a subdivision for dates, for names, for mislaid spectacles or umbrellas, for places, for faces, and so on? know those who can remember certain things and not other things. Some- times the lapse is about the names of in- animate objects. The late Ralph Waldo Emerson couldn’t remember the names of the simplest and commonest articles of daily use without an effort. If he wanted somebody to pass the salt he couldn’t remember at once what to call it, but would indicate it by signs. He wasembarrassed when suddenly call- ed upon to designate an umbrella, cane, or any other object of like simple na- ture. Yet Emerson was a man of vast resources of memory. 1 heard of a man the other day who | when asking for his hat was unable to name it, conveying his meaning by the roundabout method of “that thing I wear on my head when I go out.” I unhappily understand too well the trick the memory can play when it comes to names of persons. It is frequently im- possible for me at once to recall the name of any particular individual, es- pecially if suddenly confronted with him on the street or elsewhere. It makes no difference how well I may know him. Yet I might not have seen him for a quarter of a century and be able to call his name at once, It isa case of uncertainty--the name may be on my tongue—then go from me in an instant. It falls like a needle in the straw—flashing as iv goes, to be recover- ed later by minute examination. You have not forgotten, in other words, it is the uncertainty of producing your thought at any particular moment. —— Tickets for the Big Fair. New York is supplying Chicago with the admission tickets for the World's Fair. One million of ther are already on band in Chicago for sale, and the contract with the American Bank Note Company, which is doing the work, calls for the striking off of 5,000,000 more. The tickets, which are in four differ- ent designs, are about four inches long by two and one half inches wide, the paper used being of remarkably fine taxturcof a light grayish color. The tickets of the various series differ from each other in the color of their backs, the colors used being brown, red, green aud blue, the lathe-work designs on the right side of the face, and the heads in the left hand corner. On one series is the ideal head of an Indian warrior, a Columbus’s head is on another, Washington's on the third, and the head of Lincoln on the fourth Opposite these handsome vignettes in the richt-hand corner of the ticket, is engrived : “World's Columbian Kx- post jen, Chicago. Admit bearer Ist May to 80ub October, 1893." At the bottom of the ticket are the signatures, “A. F. Seeberger, Treas- urer,”’ and ““H, N. Higinbotham, Pres- ident,” while on the fuce of the ticket, in the centre, is a seal varying in the colors of brown, red, blue and] green, according to the series. The back of each design is the same. Across the tace for three foarths of an inch is the legend, “World’s Columbian Ex position, Chicago,” filling in seven- teen lines. On the reverse of the tick- et is a semi-circular scroll-work, very handsome in design, within the rings of which is engraved in microscopical lettering: “18.-World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago—93 voured by wolves and bears as the glacier ice thaws and exposes the car- cass. The contents of the stomach are almost as natural as they wera one hour after being eaten, showing that they luxuriated in forests of cone-bearing trees, pines, ete., up to the very hour of their sudden death. Their history was written then and reveals to us that they were overwhelmed by a sudden down- fall of snow. Cuvier declared that these great animals were frozen solid imme- diately after death. Covered hy 200 feet of ice these skel- etons would be preserved for a million years and all this is incontestible evi- nence that while the great flood was falling on the egatorinl portions of the globe the polar regions were being en- gulfed by mountains of snow. The earth surrounded by deep belts of vapor would make of ita perpetual greenhouse and the breaking up of these belts and their downfall in a great flood would bring sudden cold in the northern latitudes accompanied by immense SNOWS, Previous to the Edenic age teils ug the earth, or a great portion of it, was covered by glacier ice. Then came the moon-comet adding its nebula, carbon, lime and water to the earth, its close proximity to the earth, like the great red spotot Jupiter, evaporating the waters that were previously on the earth, melting the glacier ice forming the belts and causing that universal greenbouse Edenic age, then the succes- sive collapse of the belts, bringing the oft repeated great downpours the last of which was Noah’s flood, when the skiss were cleared, the rainbow appeared and the last possible destruction by water had come. W. T. FosTER. geology Elizabeth Phelps Ward has out a new book that is receiving a good deal of favorable comment. The title is “Donald Darcy” and the story is sprightly and true to lite. Persons who make a point of keeping posted on all the new books should get this, for it will prove very interesting reading. ——‘‘Kate' what's become of the por- ous plaster I left in that desk ?”’ “Porous plaster | Why I thought it was one of those new postage stamps, es ee April Weather Proverbs. Thunder in April is the end of hoar frost. After a wet April follows a dry June, Whatever March Avril brings along. April and May are the keys of the year. A cold April the barns will fill. A dry April not the farmer's will ; rain in April is that he wills, Snow in April is manure, Snow in March devours. April cold and wet fills barn and barrel. At St. George (24) the meadow turns into hay. April snow breeds grass, Moist April, clear June. When on St. George (24) rye has grown eo high as to hile a crow there- in, a good harvest may be expected, Wien April makes much noise We wili have pleaty of rye and hay ; When April blows its horn, Then it stands good with hay, ry and corn. A cold and moist April fills the cel- lar and fattens the corn. April showers bring May flowers, April barrows three days Irom March and they are ill. does not want e ——A man calls nis wife by the beau- tiful title, “Virtue, ‘because she is her ownreward. She does all the house work and gets no wages, The title might appropriately be applied to a great many women. Mr. Whittier's llterary executor has collected a large quantity of inter- esting correspondence of the poet, and the two volumes of the biography will probably be published in the autumn, HE a SS —— It is estimated that during the last five years the turpentine gatherers of Georgia have destroyed $200,000,000 worth of pine timber. ——A flea is provided with a genuine lancet, the knife inclosed ina case in the head of the insect, the case opening and I put it on a letter to ma.” sideways, like that of a razor, We all | The World of Wome Te Traveling wraps of gloria with hoods are among the private orders for the seq. Son, Flat folds of material headed by mil. linar’s pipings, are among the prettiest of skirt trimmings. Earrings are as absolutely “out” gs | the nosering among the ultra elegant, Tiny screws are the only sort worn at all, and these only by ‘women who do not pretend to keep up with the vogue. The women of the Minnesota State Board have raised the needed money to purchase Tjeldie's fine statuary group of Hiawatha vearing Minnehaha in his | arms, and it will be placed in front of | the State building at the World's Fair, if Mrs. J. Crosby Brown, who hus a | fine country homzon Orange Mountain, | has for the past nine years given happy | afternoons 1n her grounds to poor moth- ers from New York. The mothers come in groups of eight, each bringing her own or some other child with her, and are brought up from the station in i carriages. There 1s a house on the | grounds where they receive refreshments three times during tha day. Some of the women wio are reached by this gentle beneficence have not seen the country for twenty years. Miss Mary Arderson, now Madame de Navarro, lives in absolute privacy in a smell house near Tunbridge Wells, The erstwhile actress shows no desire to return to the stage. She spends her time studying Spanish under her hus.- band’s tuition, and her evening to mu- sic, to which both are devoted, Ma- dame de Navarro in private life has no- thing of the actress about her. She is as simple and natural as a child. She had a choice of public life and success. and a private life of peace and privacy. ‘She has chosen the latter, and is ra. diantly happy. Nearly 400 applications for patent- were made last year by women. Fores most among the inventions are those appertaining to the adornment of the in- ventors or their homes. But besides these there are new sky designs, fire-es- capes, cameras, balloons and not a few conveniences for the opposite sex in the line of improved braces, buttonhole flower holders, trouser splash preventers, ete. Not only do the women seem able to originate the ideas, but also to ex- ploit their patents and introduce them. Several lar. e commercial enterprises in England are carried on by women. and in this country a lady very successfully defended her patent dress protector in open court, conducted the case herself and came off with flying colors. Speaking of tartan silk waists sug. gests the grent diversity of designs shown now in silk bodices which have. become one of the necessary luxuries of good dressing. Striped and figured silks are used us well as the changeable. taffettas and wash fabrics ot silk. There is the Josephine waist, which is gathers ed all about the neck, down the shoul- ders and again at the bottom. Nur- row velvet ribbon is sewn on in ‘the form of a yoke before the waist is made up, and narrow velvet edges the folded belt and is looped in the rosette in the back. Drooping shoulder ruffles and bretelles, which are sloped to a point at the belt, are made of the silk, doubled and cut on the bias, or else the selvedge of the material is used for the edge of the bertha and frills. The Garibaldi is perhaps the must pleasing design, because it is more un- usual than the others. A Garibaldi waist of gray blue silk, with an old rose figure, has a gathered front of plain old rose silk. The waist is gathered to a collar formed of narrow strips of satin ribbon and folds of the material. The ribbon edges the point of the waist, which is not fastened anywhere, but opens over the innsr waist of rose silk, all the ladies with grown up daughters know just how a Garibaldi waist is made, for the fashion has lost nothing in its Rip Van Winkle sleep of a quar- ter of a century- It is gathered to the collar, and again at the belt. The sleeves are full and gathered to a band not more than two inches wide and fin- ished with a ruflle hike the old bishop sleeve. All the pretty plaited shirts and blouses will blossom out with the June roses, and fanciful negligee, pic- turesques comfort sounds the keynote of the summer mode for mountain and seashore. A few bound slaves of fash- ion will appear always in boned and furbelowed gowns, but the average wo- man, and her name is legion, considers thesik ehirt waist full dress for summer days. The unusual opportunities for the de- velopement of trimming conceits seem to give the modistes special delight. In the latest importations lace flounces and ruflles are almost epidemic; black lace, ecru lace, white lace, in flounces of all widths, and ruffles with searcely more width than will suffice to gather them. All the light silks show examples of this trimming. The flounces are headed in varivus ways also are they draped. The deep festooning, which carries the lace up from a width of two inches to a point ten inches high, is supple. mented by all sorts of festoon-like drap- ing, in addition to the straight tlounces and rufles. On one gown a wide flounce of white lace is set on so that it is straight at the bottom and waved in wide, shallow waves at the top, headed by a rufle of satin ribbon. Black lace is striking as used on the light silks and headed with folds of colored velvet. ‘Oh, isn’t that an exquisite dress I’ “A little fussy don’t you think 7” «No indeed ; I think it's just perfect." These snatches of an animated discus- sion are repeated because they point to a costuma admirably illustrating the { lace craze. A silk, buff 1n hue, with { narrow «moire, and yet narrower satin | stripes of varicolor, say pink, blue, olive | and gold, has three graduated flounces | of dotted net with scalloped edge. The double puff:sleeve has a deep flounce of ' the same, and the lace ruffle simulates a jacket on the front of the corsage, and passing under the arms, makes a basque in the back. The flounces instead of being headed by velvet folds, as is so usual, are set on in pointed waves, with a heading formed by three rows of baby ribbon, yellow, pink and blue, the rib. bons tying in tiny bows on each peiat. Such outline sketching scarcely conveys the effect, which is that ot a lace over- dress caught here and there by bows and shower knots of colored ribbons. Truly it is a bit fussy, and as truly it is exquisite in coloring and in daintiness.