ellefonte, Pa., May 12, 1893 THE CIRCUS. The spring is comin’ round ag’in, and soon on every tree 3 You’ll hear th’ blue birds singin’, just as hap- py as kin be : : The frogs are pipin’ in th’ lane, and on the big board fence They've pasted up scfue lithographs about the circus tents— Of elephants a-dancin’ with a funny whive- faced clown, . And you'd better b’leeve I'm goin’ When The Circus Comes Te Town. Thar’s lots of golden chariots witk gueens and princes on ‘em, : Who've got tired of rulin’ kingdems, and had ruther be with Barnum. A cage of tawny lions where a princess sits in ti y ‘Nd Bios lion with a whip, ‘butthe critter never bites : Fur if he even whimpers she-can still him with a frown— ‘Nd you bet I'll see them lions When Town. I ain’t no hand for musie, but when that cir- cus band Steilzes up with Annie Rooney, I tell you what, it’s grand ! With the elephants a-waltzin’ and the horses keepin’ time ; While clean up on the highest pole a span- gled cuss will climb And send a chill right up your back to see him dive way down— Nd you kin bet that [ won't miss it When The Cirgus Comes To Town. Thar’s half a dozen camels ‘nd big elephants enough To clean this here hull town out, if they got to playin’ rough. ‘Nd kangaroos 'nd zebrass, necked giraffe, ‘Nd a cage er funny monkeys, ‘nuff to make the parson laugh. I’m er savin’ up some money, and ez sure as 'nd a big long- my name's Brown I'll spend a half a dollar When The Circus Comes To Town — Arthur Gerritt, in the Fittshurg Dispatch. ‘ Pe —— FORGIVEN, All the people in the house—a great beehive of workmen-—gituated in the Rue Delambre, where Tony Robec had occupied a room for six moaths, took him for a widower lately bereaved, for his little son with whom he lived alone, a small child dressed as nicely as though he had a mother, was hardly six years old. However, neither the father nor the son wore any crape eith- er on their caps or sleeves. Every day, early in the morning, To- ny Robec, who worked as a typesetter ina printingshop in the Latin quar. ter, went off with his little Adrien, still half asleep, on his shoulder, and would leave him ata school in the peigbor- hood, where, after his day’s work was done, he would call for him, and lead- ing the little fellow by the hand would stop at the butcher's and milkman’s and take home in the child’s school- basket, just as a woman would have done, what was necessary for their din- ner, and then would shut himself up in his room till the next day. The tender hearted gossips of the house pitied the poor father, who was still a fine looking man scarcely 40 years old, but with such a sad, pale face, bis beard already streaked with gray and his earnest eyes looking like those of a lion in repose, and they said as they looked atter him : “That man ought to marry again. He is a good fellow and never drinks. He could-easily find a nice girl to take care of him and his son. Have you noticed how clean he keeps the little boy ? Never a hole ora spot on his clothes. He is an orderly man. You can see it at once, and it seems he earns 10 francs a day.” They would have liked to have made his acquaintance. Generally it is not difficult to make friends with one's neighbors in these "popular houses, where they live half the time with their doors open. But Tony had a reserved air, a polite way of bowing to them on the stairway which intimidated them. Every Sunday the father and son, clean as two new pennies, went for a walk. They had met them in the mu- seums in the Jardin des Plantes. They had also seen them before dinner time in a little cafe of the quarter, where Tony treated himeelf to his sole luxury in the week a glass ot absinthe, which he drank slowly, while Adrien, seated by his side on a leather covered bench, looked at the illustrated papers. “No, mesdames,” said the concierge of the house, who was sentimental, to her friends, “that widower will never marry again. A Sunday or two ago [ met him in one of the paths of the Montparnasse cemetery. His wife no doubt is buried there. "It made me sad to see him with his motherless child, He must have adored his lost one, It it rare, but there are some like that, * he is inconsolable.” Alas? yes. Tony Robec had loved his wife deeply and could not be con- soled for her loss, only he was not a widower. His history was a very simple and nota very happy one. He was a con- scientious workman, but only moder- ately clever at his trade, and it was not before a long time that he had succeed- ed in setting type well and in earning his livelihood in a small way, and that was the reason why he never thought of marrying until he was over 30 years of age. He should have chosen a se- rious minded girl, acquainted with pov- erty as he had been himself. But love laughs at reason, and Tony lost his ! heart to a young flower girl 19 years old, who, although she was virtuous, had a very frivolous character thinking only of dress ard - knowing how to make herself look like a princess with her lovely face, a.lew bits of ribbon and some bright colored stuff. He had put by a small amount of money, sufficient to furnish a wee | apartment quite well, and besides the ! usual necessary furniture he bought a | wardrobe with a looking glass in it for 80 francs in the Faubourg Saint An- toine in order that his sweetheart could see herself in it full length, and then he they were blissfully bappy. How they did love each other, to be sure! They have two rooms in the fifth story in a house on the Boulevard Port Royal, with a small balcony and a view over all Paris. Every evening when he left his printing house, situa- ted on the left bank of the Seine, Tony Robee, with his overcoat hiding his workman’s blouse, looking quite like a gentleman, would go to the corner of the bridge of Saint Peres to wait for his little wife, who would come from the Rue Saint Honore, where her work- shop wae, and arm 1a arm close togeth- er, they would hurry to eat their mer- ry evening meal. But their Sundays, above all, were delightful. They were so happy at home they did not go out. Ob, their breakfasts in summer, with the win- dows open looking out over the great city and the blue sky, how good they were! While he was sipping his cof: fee and smoking his cigarette Cleman- tine would go to water the flower pots on the balcony. “She is too clever,” he would say to himself, and then would get up from his chair softly and surprise her hy kissing her on the back of the neck. “Will you never have done, you silly fellow 2” she would say laughingly. And then in due time a child was born, their little Felix, whon they put out to nurse at Margency, where they would go to see him every two weeks. Bat he died when he was a year old of convulsions, However, they were soon consoled by Adrien’s birth, whom the mother wished to keep with her, and 80 she left her workshop and took in work at home, earning only about half as much, but managing all the same to dress herself prettily, and would play the lady in the Luxembourg gar- dens, rolling her baby before her in a little straw carriage. But, although Tony toiled four times harder than ever, working besides in a newspaper office at night, he could not earn enough for their expenses and fell into debt. Then when the child be- came strong enough to wean and was left during the day at a children’s re- fuge, the mother, who was often unoc- cupied, fell into the dangerous habit of gadding about the streets alone. You can imagine the difference be- tween the poor man, grown old before his time with care and worn out with bard work, and this frivolous girl, only 23 and pretty a8 picture by Greuze, One evening, on coming home with his little boy for whom he had stopped as he passed by the refuge, Tony Robec found the letter on ‘the mantelpiece from which, as he cpened the envelope Clemantine’s wedding ring fell out. Iu this letter the heartless creature bade him and her con goodby and ask- ed their forgiveness at the same time. The romantic jurymen of the present day, who always acquit outraged hus- bands who kill their wives and their lovers under the pretext of ‘passionate crimes,” would find our Tony very ridiculous and even a little despicable it they knew that he felt more sorrow than anger. Ile wept a great deal, and when little Adrien aid to him : “Where is mamma ? Is mamma not coming home soon ?”’ he kissed the little fellow passionately and replied, “I do not know.” Clemantine had gone away at the beginning of May—ah, me, for how much is the odor of lilacs responsible some times !—and Tooy, when the July rent day came, sold nearly all bis furniture and paid bis debts and went to live in the Rue Delambre, wishing to be as far away as possible from his former home. And there he lived quietly and honorably with his little boy, and his neighbors took him for a widower. Toward the end of September he re- ceived a letter from his wite—four in- coherent and despairing pages, where: on the ink was all blotted with tears. Her lover, a medical student, had gone away for his vacation to his fami- ly far down in the south, and he did not write to her or give her any sign of life. She, the traitress, was aban- doved, betrayed in her turn, and she repented and begged and implored to be forgiven, This made poor Tony suffer terribly. But do not get excited, ferocious jurymen, who have, all of you, a heart like the Moor’s of Venice, and give back if you please, your es- teem to the poor fellow, for he was proud and did not answer his culpable wife's epistle. He kLeard no further news of Clem- artine till on Christmas day. Now, for many years he had had the touching custom ot going on that day with his wife to carry an homble bou- quet—a few halt dozen violets, with a little rose bud in their midst—to their firstborn’s, their little Felix’s tomb, who had died when he was out at nursing, and for whom, wishing to have his grave near to them, they had bought a right of burial for five years at Montparnasse, the concession of which bad been already renewed. For the first time Tony Robec had to make his pilgrimage alone with his little boy Adrien, and as he passed through the little gate to the cemetery under a funereal winter's sky—and now, cruel Othellos of the jury, you will again despise this weak hearted husband when I tell you that he suf- fered more than ever as he remember- ed his absent wife, the fugitive. “Where is she now ?” thought he. “What has become of her ?”’ But on reaching Felix's tomb, which he had had some trouble in finding, be stopped surprised. There was laid on his tombstone two or three playthings, such as the poor- est people bity—a wooden trumpet, a polichivelle and a wooden dog—which | bad just been placed there. for they were qaite new and had evidently been ' bought that very day at some cheap street stall, married his Clemantine, and at first | “Oh, playt aings,” Adrien exclaimed | as he saw tlse poor offerings. But bis father, having perceived a piece of paper pinned toone of the toys stooped wad picked it up it upand read there these words, written in a hand- writing he kuew well, “For Adrien, fromm his little brother Felix, who is now in heaven with the Christ child.” Suddenly Tony first felt his son press up against him and heard him mar- mar in a frightened voice, “Mamma!” and Tony saw a few eteps off kneeling under a clump of cypress trees a wo. man clad in a beggar’s dress and shawl and, oh ! so pale and with such sunken eyes, who stretched her clasped and supplicating hands toward him. Between ourselves, sanguinary gen- tlemen of the jury, I do not believe that Tony Robec thought then of him who taaght us both by word and by example to “forgive offenses,” for this workman was really religious. But his plebeian heart was ignorant of self love and rancor. He trembled less from anger at the memory of the out. rage be had suffered than from pity at seeing the woman he had so tenderly loved in such a miserable state, and he pushed his little son gentle toward her. “Adrien” he said “go and kiss your mother.” She seized her child in a passionate embrace, covered his face with kisses, as she sobbed with happiness, then turning a beseeching look toward her husband. “How good you are !”” she murmur- ed. But he was already near to her and said half choking, almost harshly ; “Do not speak—and—iake arm.” It is not far from the cemetery to the Rue Delambre, and they walked there quickly Tony felt Clemantine’s arm tremble on his. The child trotted along beside them, thinking already only of his toys. The concierge of the house Tony in- habited stood at the door, “Madame,” he said, “this is my wife who has been for six months in the country with her mother, who was very ill, and who has come home again.” And as they went up stairs he was obliged to support, almost to carry the wretched woman, who had burst into sobs and was nearly fainting from emotion and from joy. When he reached the humble room Tony made his wife sit down in the only arm chair be possessed and plac ed her son in her arms again. Then be went to the bureau, opened a draw- er, from which he took out a small paper box in which he had kept Clem. antine’s wedding ring and went and replaced it on her finger, and then for the first time, without a word of anger or reproach about the past, with the great generosity of simple hearts, he kissed her silently, reverently on the forehead, so that she might be sure he had forgiven her.— Francois Coppee in Philadelphia Press. What the 315,000 Visitors Saw at the Opening of the World's Fair. my Representatives of all nations elbowed one another in the broad avenues of the great. White City. Swarthy Turks from the shores of the Bosphorous walked side by side with their tradition- al enemies, the fierce Cossacks of the Don ; sooty Nubians jostled yellow Linsears ; subjects of the Shah hobnobed with denizens of the land of the white elephant ; the Esquimaux—children of the frozen north —sauntered through the long reach of roadway. gazing curious- ly at the Japanese, whose home is near the equator. It was a congress of na- tions, Of course Great Britain and Con- tinental Europe were the most strongly represented. ~~ There were Germans, Frenchmen, Russians, Austrains, Spain, which claims the chief glory of the Col- umbian era in the right of Ferdinand and Isabella, who sent the great ad- wiral forth on his quest, divided the honors with Italy, which claims his birth place. Above the heads of the throng floated the flags of all nations : and floating above them all the standard of the great republic, the stars and strips, snapped in the breeze a symbol of liberty and asylum to the oppressed of the whole earth. The gates were at no time choked and the throng passed into the grounds with less trouble than is often experienced at a theatre or other place of entertainment. The government building at Jackson park isan ornate and imposing struc- ture, covering a ground area 350 by 420 feet of iron and glass surmounted by a majestic dome and bearing a strong re- semblance to the National museum. Every section is a school of instruction. The mint has presses in operation, strik- ing medals of copper, bronze and white metal. Within heavily wired glass cases are the original proofs of all the coins, paper currency, certificates bonds and other evidences of indebtedness covering the period from the year of the Declaration of Independence to the last bond or note issued from the United States treasury. Under the auspices of the treasury department are a life-snv- [ing service, fully equipped with appara - tus and men, and a lighthouse construct. ed after the latest and most approved plans. There is a model ward of the marine hospital service, and which will be put to practical use in caring for victims of sickness or casualties. MANUFACTURES. The manufactures building looms up before the visitor the leviathan of World's fair structures. Forty acres of floor space are here devoted to the most representative products of the world's skilled labor. On the floor of the build. ing are collected thirty-four large groups or subdivisions. These are divided into two hundred or more of the leading in- dustries. Encircling the vast structure on all four sides, are spaces devoted to offices, restaurants, concessions, and various appliances for public comfort,’ The entire ground floor, with the excep- tion of the space devoted to the piano exhibit in the liberal arts department, is given up to manufactures. There is a]. 80 a small portion of the galleries de- voted to manufactures, but the greater iipart of the gallery ‘space is allotted to | the liberal arts exhibit. Four great na- tions—Germany, France, Great Britain and the United States—ure grouped in the centre of the main floor. The Aus- trians ure, appropriately enough, next neighbors to the Germans. Beyond Austria is Japan. South of the French section is Belgium and sull further south is Russia, and small spaces allot- ted to Norway and China. South of Great Britain are the exhibits of the colonies. AGRICULTURE. No field of invention has been more productive during the last fifty years than that relating to the cultivation ot the soil. Rus-ia, the wheat field of Europe, has the largest space, her ex- hibit occupying nearly 10,000 feet, most of which is devoted to wheat. Austra- lia and Canada are next in size, their exhibits taking up nearly 7,000 feet each. Germany is well represented, and Brazil has transferred her entire na- tional exhibit from last year’s exposition at Rio de Janeiro to the floor of agricul- tural hall. France displays a model farm on a small scale ; Japan’s special- ty is tea; China shows tea with a large display of rice. The south half of the main floor has been devoted to the United States. The brewers have mon- opolized the entire west gallory, while agricultural implements and machinery are fcund in the annex. MINES AND MINING. Of all the buildings opened that of the mines and mining exhibit is proba- bly the most complete. Tho ‘display is interesting and embraces ores and associated minerals, industrial ‘minerals, metals, quarrying, mining and reducing machinery and appliances. In the foreign department are ‘many notable exhibits, Mexico has for the most part a collection of minerals and metals got- ten up by the different -states of that country, the whole being displayed in cases of bronze. Cape Colony and Brazil have exhibits of gems, and the Colony shows a diamond from the rough to the finish. Germany shows large iron and steel trasses, girders and other material cut into small pieces which are polished and used in making exhibition towers. A collection of min. erals and ores, loaned by different acad- emies and museums throughout that country, is also shown. Great Brit:in’s feature is a statue of “Liberty Enlighten- ing the World,” made of salt. France shows asphalt and cements of which materials her pavilion is constructed. Honduras presents an opalescent grotto and shows the taking out, polishing and finishing of opals. North Carolina uses in her pavilion mica studded with garnets and other other jewels found in that state. Mis- souri has built an onyx wall, while Kentucky encloses her show in a pavil- ion of cannel coal. To the right of the wain entrance at the south is found the Montana section. This is notable for the statue of “Justice’” in silver, model- ed after an actress well known in New York. The work stands on a plinth of solid gold and is valued at $300,000. The main feature of the gallery is the display of the Standard Oil company. MACHINERY. The noiseless motion of smooth run- ning machinery and its miles of shafung has an irresistible fascination alike for mechanic and student The famous expansion Corliss engine stands near the south end of the building. It furnishes power equal to 3,000 horses and keeps the mass of machinery in motion with no apparent effort. England, France, Germany, Austria, Russia, Spain, Swed- en, Belgium and New South Wales oc- cupy three-fourths of the main floor see- tion, while the United States sets forth ber exhibit in the other quarter and in the annex. Germany's show is magni- ficent and embraces every feature of machinery, from a simple lathe to the mammoth Krupp gun. France has a splendid exhibit. The American section is a wonder and a delight to all visitors. Printing and perfecting presses grace the head of the department, Here is issued daily a newspaper, of which each Chicago daily contributes a page. All manner of en. gines are shown, and never before was seen such a display of high-speed en- gines, and all power used in generating electricity heavy and high engines used in factories. Tubular safety boilers are used and coal for fuel has been replaced by crude petroleum, which in being forced under the boilers by steam, is atomized, making the best heat known: The exhibit in machinery hall is far ahead of the Centennial, while Paris cannot be compared to it. Germany, which was practically barred from Paris, is here, and by orders of Emper- or William, 1s given a display second to none in the great structure. England's show here is as large as at Paris. TRANSPORTATION, All colors save white have been ex- cluded in the decoration of all the World’s fair buildings save one. That exception is the transportation building. On its exterior and interior every color has been called into requisition. The chief attraction, however, is not the building itself, but the exhibits, illustra- ting every step in the evolution of mod- ern transportation facilities. from the rude cart up to the locomotive and the ocean greyhound. Frown the original “plank stringer” tramway, laid in En- gland in 1630, the visitor passes by the developments of “way leaves” used in 1738, the iron scanthings of 1760, the first cast iron rails made in 1786,and the first tramway in the United States, built in 1809. At this point in the journey the visitor jeaches the era of = steam. From this begins a series ot old loco- motives, leading up to the monster En- glish engine which occupies a position of honor as the biggest yet built. Next in importance to the railway section is the street car exhibit, which includes the development of the cable car system, from the original car built in San Fran- cisco to the modern plants of New York and Chicago. Every kind of road vehi- cle, from the pneumatic tire bicycle to the heaviest truck, is present, and even the flying machines and airships are re- presented. Ocean navigation is repre. | the same. Other prominent foreign ex- bibitors are Belgium, Great Britain and France. The exhibition, in honor of the opening of the fair, was an im- mense display of rhododendrons and azaleas. This will continue until May 9, when there will be & show of orchids 48 Americans have never seen before. In June there will be gerani- ums, flowering annuals, ornamental leaf plants and exotics. July will bring gloxeinins, calla, ornamental grasses, acquetics and exotics, while in August ornamental plants and roses will have sway. These special exhibitions will con inue each month while the ex posi- ‘tion lasts. ELECTRICITY. It is impossible to deny thus the long way from completion. centre stands the Edison tower. incandescent lights. Tt is 100 feet high. York has grouped its exhibit around the Edison column to a depth of 100 feet. The Bell Telephone company has a handsome house just inside the south main door, the Westinghouse and other prominent companies being ranged along the main aisle. The government exhibits of forei smaller nations being relegated to the gallery. Germany has probably the most room and occupies a prominent position in the northeast corner. Kn- gland has a large allotment of space directly opposite. France lies in a long, narrow plot between these two counties, while Russia and Canada have smaller displays. New South Wales, Italy, Monaco, Spain and Austrian have space in the gallery. ART. In the art building France is accord- ed 300,000 square feet of wall space. Italy, Spain, Great Britain, Russia and other foreign countries have been likeral- ly accorded space. Kven Mexico has preempted some 1,500 square feet. In the American section the most eminent of American “artists and sculptors are well and creditably represented. The English exhibit ‘includes over one thousand productions | in painting sculpture, etching and drawing, black and white and water colors. Nearly all the academiciansand the regular contrib- butors to the English galleries are repre- sented, and some of the choicest exhi- bits bear the siznatures of Sir Frederick Leighton, Sir John Gilbert, Sir John Millairs Poynter, Watts and Erckheim- er. The G:rman section comprises the most valued treasures of the galleries of the Prince Regent of Bavaria, the Ger- man National gallery and the Imperial academy. Belgium is represented by some five hundred frames. = The land of Rembrandt contributes a complete and representative collection of Dutch art, which 1s of especial interest in view of the controversy now raging as to wheth- er there are any colorists in the world that can equal those ot Holland. Miss Van Houton, of cocoa fame, has some very clever things on the walls. The gem of the section comes from Joseph Israels. It is this famous canvas “Alone in the World” which has been drawn from the private collection of Commissioner Mesdag, upon which a value of $2,000,000 bas been placed. The French exhibit includes 500 paint- ings, 200 drawings and water cclors and 200 subjects in sculpture. FORESTRY At the southern end of the exposition grounds stands a structure bailt of wood —all wood, and nothing but wood. Like Sulomon’s temple it is joined to- gether with wooden pins instead of nails, and mortices have taken the place of screws. The sides of the building are of wooden slabs in the rough, and the roofis thatched with bark. The colonnade consists of a series of columns each composed of three tree trunks twenty-five feet long. All the tree trunks have the natural bark remaining. This is the forestry building, The ex- | shows 342 different varieties of woods. hibits embrace everything pertaining to wood and its products. Natural woods are shown by foreign nation, and the state and territories of the United States. Connected with the dspartment is a typical logging camp, contributed by the State of Michigan, Another annex is a saw mill in full operation. Among the foreign countries represented are Japan, Honduras, Pera, Hayti, Spain, Germany, Ecuador, Columbia, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, Russia, Italy, France, Siam, In ia New South Wales, and Paraguay. The exhibits of the two latter countries are the most won- derful cf all. South Wales displays a pavilion constructed of the most rare and costly woods, inside of which are pyramids of monster logs, dressed down to show the fibre of the tree. Paraguay Medical products of the forest are also completely covered. Ohio alone shows 500 specimens of harbs, roots and barks, FISHERIES. Properly speaking their are two fish ex- kibits—The one in the fisheries building and the main exhibit of the United States Fish commission in the govern- ment building. The great aquaria are marvels. They have a water capacity of 150,000 gallons, of which one-third is ocean water for the marinefish. This water condensed four-fifths, is brought daily in tank cars from the Atlantic ocean and lake water is added to make the proper dilution. The collection of ocean or alt water fish is a complete one, and the finny tribe of the inland lakes and stream is represented in all its branches. Fishermen to day found much to interest them in the “anglers’ pavilion. Here are spucimens of outfits that can be bought for a five dollar bill, and others that would require the in- vestment of fifty times that amount. There are exhibits showing the ocean fisheries of New England. Eleven for- eign countries have coutributed to the exhibit and eleven states of the union represented, little Rhode Island taking the lead with 2,500 feet of space. Maine and Pennsylvania are well represented. WOMAN'S BUILDING. sented by models and charts. HORTICULTURE. From Australia, from Japan, from South America, trom every European country, and from every quarter of the North American continent have come the wealth of fruits and flowers peculiar to each locality. Japan has about one- © of the whole world In the woman’s building are found the most successful things the women have done in all ages. The model kitchen also is a marked feature, with its approved mod- ern appliances, and duily lectures upon work in the electricity building isstill a In the | This | is a giant column, thickly studded with | The General Electric company of New gn countries are ranged | in the north halt of the building, the | TET ere eres For and About Women. No woman under five feet six can wear a jacket or mantle coming below the knee without looking Lopelessly dwarfed. : Dressing the hair bigh always makes a woman look older, but lowering it to the back of the head brings her five or ten years, according to different author- ities, nearer to girlhood. Black kid gloves have buttons and’ stitching of purple, and the newest are- in purple kid, stitched with white on black. Black Suede is fashionable wish, . white stitching, and all light tans aad | grays have black. The gloves that are self-colored hava the stitching in two shades, each row ending in a little trop. The black chevrette Suedes gre axcel-. lent. { Mrs. Ellen H. Foster, the welt-znown. ‘advocate of temperance, who is 20W in ' England, received a hint from some of the members of the British Woman's | Temperance Association that hen pres- ence was not wanted at their gonven- tion. The go-ahead American temper- {ance unions have inspired a fear of mixed tipples in the minds of the more | conservative British matrons. Donna Maria Y. Pilar a direct: de- scendent of Christopber Columbus-;-and | who is now visiting in Chicago with her | father, mother and brother, is about 18,. wears an American looking straw hat over a pair of uncommonly pratty bright eves, and altogether manages to make an extremely agreeable impression in a quiet way, it must be a quiet (?) as she cannot speak a word of Englis = The late Lucy Larcom was born in 1826, the daughter of a sea captain. Ten years she worked in the cotton mills of Lowell, and from her exper- ience there gained much literary mate-- rial. When 20 years old she went to Illinois and was for thres years a pupil in the Monticello Seminary. Return- ing to Massachusetts she taught and wrote, publishing “several volumes of her poems and stovies and editing sever. al collections of poems. : All aspiring young poetesses. should: read, mark. learn. and inwardly digest the story of Mrs. Carney. She wrote only four lines of verse, but they have been quoted probably by every one wko speaks the English.language. The lines. were: ‘“Littledrops of water, little grains. of sand make the mighty ocean and the. lovely land.” Mus. Carney isan Ameri- can and is about 70 years old. She wrote the verse nearly fifty years. ago when she was a schoolmistress, The fluctuations of fashion have not affected the popularity of the zouave in the very least. It will ‘be more worn than ever this summer. The zouave coats are chiefly cut square, made of cloth and very little trimmed. Zouave jackets for ufternoon wear are of silk and of velvet, close-fitting at the back, rounded off in frontito show the waist and adorned with jet. The most dressy zuoave jacket is that made entirely of passementerie with imitation jewels in- serted between the tiny silken cords. tracing out the pattern. Miss Sara A. Burstall, of Girton College, England, is now in this country inspecting the pub- lic school systems of different cities. She is one of the five “traveling scholars” appointed by the Gilchrist Trustees of England to inspect American schools. The Gilchrist Educational Trust is com. posed of many prominent Englishmen, who are endeavoring to promote the cause of secondary education for women by a comparison of the methods of other - countries. The State lends its support only to elementary education. a graduate Cuffs are very much more worn this season than ever before. They are either a straight band fastened by a linked button, or a turned over cuff. There are a great many percale sets, in pale lavender and white, pink and white, or delicate blue and white. They are worn to harmonize with the gown of changeable wool, which may be made in tailor fashion. These colored sets are used chiefly for traveling, and are worn with dainty little butterfly cravats at the throat, or with scarfs of colored silk tied in the close prince’s knot affected this season in men’s dress, Theres are also chemisettes of wash silks in cream- white, in tiny hair lines in color, which are intended to be worn at the throat inside the “role” and ‘step’ collar of traveling dresses. The most approved skirts are narrower at the top and a trifle wider at the bot- tem than heretofore. Ladies who do their own dressmaking and have pat- terns that have done them good service need only turn in about four inches at the top of the pattern and run a line about four inches wider at the bottom in order to use the same models to good effect. Leave all rigid and stiff facings out of the skirts ; use nothing stiffer than linen canvas and only about a ten- inch facing of this. Put the facing on very carefully, basting it in with the material uppermost. This allows the necessary curve in the shape : whereas, if the facing is placed uppermost in bast- ing, when the skirt is turned, the facin is too full ands will wrinkle and roll, utterly spoiling the effect of the skirt. There is ne difficulty in basting in facing if one goes about it in the right way. Probubly the ironing board is the best to put it over. Have the bottom of the skirt toward the left hand, and keep with the thumb and fingers the edges of toe facing and the skirt exactly even, baste in short close stitches so that by no possibility can the facing get out of shape ; then, by stroking from left to right with the hands, folds may be made in the facing that will indicate where the plaits should be made proper- ly to fit the shape of the skirt. Baste this also before turning, baste on the braid and stitch it on the mach- ine. The skirt may now be turned wrongside out, and the little plaits al. ready creased are clearly defined. One great mistake in making dress skirts is that the facings and linings are too full, and wrinkle and draw until all symmetry and smoothness are destroy- ed. Almcst all of the best dresses have little ruchings of silk at the inner edge of the facing: There may be two or more, according to fancy, and some- times they are stitched on a strip of mat. the science of cooking. “From almost every state and territory in the Union third of a section and Germany about (Continued on Page Siz.) : erial or they may be sewed tb the fac- ing. The former, however, is much more convenient,