Deocalic Aatdpuan. Bellefonte, Pa., June 2, 1893 IF MOTHER WOULD LISTEN. If mother would listen to me dears eke would freshen the faded gown, She would sometimes take an hour’s rest, And sometimes a trip to town. And it shouldn’t be all for the children, The fun and the cheer and the play ; With the patient droop on the tired mouth, And the “Mother has had her day!” True, mother has had her day, dears, When you were hor babies three, And she stepped about the farm and the house As busy as ever a bee. When she rocked you all tosleep, dears, Ana sent you all to school, And wore herself out and did without, And lived by the golden rule. And so your turn has come, dears, Her hair is growing white, And her eyes are gaining the far away look That peers beyond the night, One of these days in the morning Mother will not be here; She will fade away into silence, The mother so true and dear. Then what will you do in the daylight, And what in the gloaming dim ; And father, tired, lonesome, then, » Pray, what will you do for him ? If you want to keep your mother, You must make her rest to-day 3: Must give her a share in the frolic, And draw her into the play. And, if mother would listen to me, dears, She'd buy her a gown of silk, With buttons of royal velvet, And ruffles as white as milk, And she’d let you do the trotting, While she sat still in her chair; That mother should have it through It strikes me isn’t fair. —Margaret E. Sangster in the “Interior.” CTR TL hard all A KENTUCKY WILD FLOWER. BY EVA WILDER MCGLASSON, No one knew her just at first. They were all hanging about, waiting for the train. It was nearly due, and interest in it had taken on a spirited character. Men were rolling the red freight truck from behind the small peaked station, and the usual loungers had sauntered to the edge of the platform with an ex- pectant air. Most of the men had on faded blue or brown garments; their broad straw hats, bound with narrow black tape, gave the wearers’ heads a strangely small appearance. A drummer or two mingled in the crowd, and the owner of the principal store in the town stood in speech with one of them. “Going up the road, Selden ?”’ asked the traveling man, with a cordial into- nation. Selden shook his head. He was coming on toward middle age, a quiet man with whimsical gray eyes. “No,” he said ; “I just came up from the store with Hanna, His sister's ex- pected on this train. ‘Lives fifty miles up theroad. A fourth or fifth cousin of mine; anda pretty nice girl—eh, Hanna ?” Hanna smiled a diffident acquies- cence, He was slim and young. As clerk in Selden’s store his opportuni- ties for social triumphs had been many. He was conceded to be “mighty much of a gentleman,” and his paleness was regarded as an indisputable proof of fine mental qualities. “rene takes pretty well,” he said, gently, in a voice which was a trifle thin and meagre, like his bodily pro- portions. It was just as he said this that the little throng first caught sight of the small figure stumbling up the hill road —a figure so queer that every one di- rected toward it a distinct stare of curiosity. The railway ran along the edge of a cliff, below which the town lay, slant- ing a long arm towards the shining tracks, Early summer greencd the sides of the hollow from which the house tops and mill stacks rose. The smell of freshly sprouting things came sweet. Everything was bowered in the intense greeness of May ; but nothing anywhere was quite so green as the gown which the stumbling figure wore. Some one on the platform gave an exclamation. “Why it’s Lyde!” he said, with a note of surprise, “Fellers, it's Lyde Helders !”’ It was not strange that they had not recognized her. They were used to geeing her in a short gown of dull blue homespun, her checked sun bonnet hanging from her shoulders, a bushy head of light hair blowing about her face. The mass of locks, commonly as fluffy 28 ripe wheat, was now tightly knobbed at the back. On the temples it shone with a soapy sleekness. In- stead of the blue gown, scarcely of ankle length, the toiling figure wore an emerald dress of an antique fashion, the low neck and long shoulders cord- ed with black satin. It was pinned over in front to make it small enough for Lyde’e slightness, but the skirts length apparently could not be so adapted. She was holding it up awk- wardly on each side, yet it trailed in the dust, impeding the little roughly shod feet. Nothing suggested Lyde but. the beautiful tawny pink of her cheeks, and the wild shyness of her brown eyes as she lifted them upon the crowd. “I'm clean give out,” she cried. “I wouldn’t of run so, only I lowed I heard the train blow for the crossin’.” An old woman with a carpet bag on her arm held forth a turkey wing fan. “Law, Lyde, cool yourse'f off. You're all het up. And look how ye’ve whipped the dust inter thet er gownd.”” She fixed a retrospective eye on the obsolete fullness of the skirt, a dawning remembrance in her face. “Pears to me— Why, say, Lyde! I mind thet gownd now. Your maw wore it the day she married Helders. I baked her weddin’ cake, so I did. Law! to think she’s ben dead ten years, and me hearty as a bear! Say, Lyde, didn’t your step-mam quarrel with you'ns for w’arin’ thet gownd?” “No, she never,” said the girl, with unexpected severity “I'd never of hed the heart to git it outn’ the chist ‘cept for Maisie. She—she wanted me to look rale fixy to-day, ’cause—'"" She broke off as if the ending of her sentence had ceased to be of interest to her in comparison with the idea it suggested. There was a furtive smiling in the faces of the others. No one presumed to laugh outright. ZY 3 She was a ridiculous figure indeed; but she was Lyde, the girl who had run among them as a mot rerless child, | riding perilously ap and down on the} Jog cars, walking the broom-sticks like a cat, and rowing her own dugout on the breast of a tide with. the skill of any river-dog among the men. Some one nudged his neighbor. “She’s come up to see Hanna's sis: ter. Didn’t ye know? Ya-as. Hau- na's ben goin’ up-to Helder's house right smart lately. He knowsa pretty girl when he sees one, ef he does look like a skinned poplar saplin’! Lyde’s step-mam told my women thet things was 'bout settled. I reckon Lyde's piecin’ her quilts!” He chuckled. “Lord a’mighty! It's like a painter lappin’ milk. Lyde never keered fer nare thing but climbin’ and wadin’— wild ez crab grass.” The drummer had also been looking. “Queer outfit,” he remarked to Selden. “But pretty. A native, I suppose 2” Selden looked him coolly in the eye. “Yes,” he said, ‘a native, as you say. There are any number of us about here, I'm rather proud of being one myself.” ; | He glanced toward Hanna. That young man wore a perturbed look. A little purplish color mottled his small cheek-bones. He was staring away from the girl in green, his. eyes set on the tiny church steeple below. “She’s on the block?” called some one, as the tunnel target swung fast around. In a moment the train, with a shrill scream, rounded the curve. Lyde stood out of the press, a for- lorniy expectant look in her face. She had not been asked to come. She had even, in a dim way, doubted the wis- dom of coming. But her young step- mother had said: “You go on. don't keer how fine and fixy Hanna's sister is, she ain’t no better-lookin’ than you. Like as not she'll feel slighted if you ain’t thar to meet her.” But in the air and walk of the wom- an coming down the platform between Selden and hisclerk there was no hint of the delicate sensibility which young, Mrs. Helders had conjectured. She was walking fast and loud. Her smart blue serge skirt was lifted to show a russet shoe. She was not very young; her face had a jaded look, its thir cheeks flaccid and colorless. But the Maid Marian mince of her tan boots, the airy nods of her head, en- shrouded in a white veil, even the pat- ronizing coquetry of her manner to Selden, impressed Lyde with an awful sense of worldly completeness. “The scenery is perfect,” Hanna's sister was saying. “And the people are such queer loves of things. Oh, John! do look at this funny creature in green. This girl here— Why, where are you looking ?—right here.” Lyde had stepped forward, her eyes beaming with cordiality and admira- tion. “She’s going to speak to us,” said Hanna's sister. Hanna himself had dropped a step bebind. “Of course she’s going to speak to us,” said Selden. “How .do you do, Lyde? Irene, you must know Mies Helders. She aud John and I are old friends. Aud,” be added, “Lyde knows all the pretty places round here. Per haps she will show thew to you.” Miss Hanna smiled rather stiffly. “But I’m so afraid of snakes and things,” she cried, childishly, “I shall not dare to go about much unless you are along to take care of me!” Her bluish eyes rested confidingly on Soldes as the three began to go down ill. “Ain’t you coming, Lyde?’ called Selden. No,” said Lyde; “l'm goin’ the other way.” In the sitting room of the ramshackle house at which Hanna boarded, his sister turned upon him. “John Hanna,” she began, n a tone at which he winced, “who 1s that girl?’ She jerked her head toward the brow of the rise as if Lyde’s pa- thetie form still stood where they had’ left it, with a sheer of limestone at its feet and a leafy bank behind it. Hanna essayed a small resentment. He had always been in awe of this sis- ter of his, whose social ambitions seem- ed to him to shadow forth a high in- telligence. “She's a daughter of Helders the sawyer.” “She is! And what did Amos Sel den mean by saying you and her are good friends ? That's what I want to know. Look here. Are you paying attentions to her?” Her brother's faint brows wrinkled. “I go up to eee her sometimes, She's a right sweet zirl. And—she don’t al- ways look likeshe did to-day. I reck- on she was kind of fixed up on your account.” Irene, leaned back in the splint chair, tapped the rag carpet with her heel, There was haughty amusement in her air. The very meanness of the poor furniture reassured her. In her own town she was sometimes aware that she did not impress people with her own idea of herself. Their manner seemed to imply that she took herself too importantly. But in this hamlet of the knobs she had a pleasing convic- tion that no one would withstand her pretensione. “I'm glad I came down,” she re- marked. “The idea of you making up to a hill girl! 1'd like you to remem- ber who you are. We had two uncles that was preachers. I'm going to give Selden a piece of my mind for not tell- ing me what was going on. I’m mor- tified to death. If he don’t pay me the attention he ought to, it'll be on account of your doings.” “1 had to havesome one to talk to,” | said Hanna. with a sulky brow. : “Well, you got me now,” his sister reminded him. “Are you going back to the store? Tell Selden to come and see me this evening, I got a message for him.” ant as possible. A ride over | £0. Selden received this invitation in si- | that girl to go tothe dance with him?” lence. He was looking over a bill of lading, and as he filed it away he said : “We must make Irene’s visit as pleas. ) to Wayne- ville would be something. + We'll get up a party—half a dozen or so. You'll ‘agk Lyde, of course?” Hanna took a basket of eggs from a woman who had just come in. “I ‘don’t know as she'd care for it,” he remarked. ‘She's gone over the road so often.” ’ “wan Selden lifted his brows. The mat- ter was indeed trifling enough to be easily dismissed from & busy mind, In a week or two, however, it befell that he was reminded of it. ; He had gone down to the boat-land- to inquire about some freight which had not come. The weekly steamer from the South was just making the bend of the river, and as he watched it shear the water into a flying cloud of woolly white, he noticed a skiff pushing into the bank below him. A girl was rowing. When she sprang on shore he saw that it was Lyde, clad as of common, in a dull blue gown. She had a dinner bucket on her arm, and her bonnet hung by a string from her neck. Selden gave a little start as she came near enough for him to see how a few days had changed her. Her eyes no longer had a wild, free glance like that of a mountain creature, They survey- ed Selden incuriously, and he, having known her always, felt a pang at the hard set of the soft mouth. “Lyde,” he said, greeting her, “why haven’t you been to the dances lately ? We've missed you. Has it been too warm ?77 bo “No,” said Lyde, “but I hedn’t no one to go with. He ’ain’t been up our way sence hissister come.” Shespoke without dramatic. bitterness, stating the fact simply, and making no secret of her lover's neglect. “You like her, don't you ?” she queried, in a moment. “I hear tell as you're settin’ up to her ?”’ She looked very much of a child as she stared ‘up ‘at him with musing brown eyes, which seemed to be trying to figure him in a loverlike attitude. Selden colored. He could scarcely explain to what extent his position as Miss Hanna's admirer was forced on him by that young lady’s arrange meut. “It’s all nonsense,” he growl: ed, “your staying away from every: thing. Look here, Lyde. I don't care a rap for these things. I quit caring for ’em long ago; but let’s fix up a scheme. You—a—like Hanna pretty weil, don’t you ?” Lyde nodded wishfully. “He isn’t worth it,” langhed Selden. “But see here, Lyde, I'll help you bring him to what the parson calls a realiz- ing sense of himself. I know he thinks a heap of you. But that sister of his —Now listen. You go home and get ready for the dance to-nightat Wayne's I'll take you. I'll be your bean for a while. We'll make him jealous— eh?” Lyde's glance brightened. A ripple of laughter skimmed over her face like a little breeze on seeding grass. “Of you ?”’ she said, without a trace of sar- casm—"‘‘jealous of you ?” Selden felt taken aback. It was as if he had lifted a small storm-beaten bird, and the thing had suddenly bit ten his finger. “Don’t laugh at the bridge which carries you over,” he said, gravely. “I'll come for you at early candle-lighting.” She went on toward the mill with her father's dinner, and Selden had a curiously stinging remembrance of the mirthfulness in her eyes and the joy- ous scorn in her lips. He wondered if it were possible that many besides Lyde set his merits so in the eye of scora as to compare him un- favorably = with Hanna. “A poor stick,” he said to himself—“a poor stick of a fellow!” Lyde’s step-mother, a fat young wom- an with an unctuous, roseate glow in her placid cheek, listened with ap- proval as the girl told of Selden’s pro- position. “You go on,” she advised, patting the back of the baby on her knee. “Ef twas me, though, I'd snap my fingers at John Hanna.” Lyde gave a quick sob. “Tain't him,” she said ; “it’s her; it’s Irene.” The dance was well forward when Lyde and her escort arrived. A long way off they caught the thin resonance of a fiddle and the heavy thud of feet. It was 2 beautiful night. Against the dusk yellow of the west the highlands ranged black and soft. In a thicket of trees shead the light of the house to which they were going burned dim, a mere fluff of gold-duat against the dark leatage. Hanna was standing against the door post, a blue neck cloth bunched below his chin. Irene was also look- ing on. A quadrille was in progress, and her'smile held an intimation of condescending interest. She regarded Selden with a look of surprise. “And Miss Helders !” she said. “Yes,” said Selden, standing black and square sgainst the dipping red of the candles on the mantle—‘beanty and the-— Oh, here’s a place in this set, Liyde ! This is ours.” Lyde’s laugh rang out gayly. She had caught the infection of the hour. The light, music, and movement excit- ed her, and Hanna's face, pale and re sentful against the white door-post, dashed her cup with sweetness. She danced with joyous abandon, her yel- low hair flying. The stiff flounce of hes muslin gkirte rattled as she mov- ed. “Lyde’s a picter, ain't she ?” re- marked a big bearded fellow to Hanna. “Selden’s gotigood taste, et it is sortuh slow-actin’!”’ Irene touched her brother's arm. | ¥This is a little dull,” she said. “Let's ” Havna’'s lips looked sulky. “I aint in any hurry,” he deliberated. But his sister, gathering her pink lawn skirts up, gave him a glance to which he vielded. “Do you suppese he could of asked questioned Irene. “How ‘dc! I know 7?" replied her brother, testily, as he kicked a stone from the path. : It was by no means pleasant to gee Lyde apparently unaffected by ‘bis neglect. He divined that Selden’s kindness to the girl was in way of a reproof to himself. The reproof oper- ated as Selden had forseen ; but he had not forseen that Hanna's small dogged pride would stezsl the young man against even the pangs of jeal- ousy. Ireve herself found the situation rather discomforting. The thorn was in her own shoe ; for Selden no longer stopped at the boarding house of an evening to smoke his cigar on the door-step, and as thedays passed, Irene seldom saw him at all except in com- pany with Lyde. Sometimes Irene saw them go by on horseback, Lyde’s bright hair blowing, her thin long skirt swelling across the sturdy hill horse’s rough flank. During a week of revival meetings Irene freqently noticed the two at church. As she studied Lyde's face Hanna's sister was aware that in some strange sort it was not the face of the girl who had worn the green gown on’ that fatal May morning. Lyde had an anxious look. She started when some one slammed the door. She sat a little away from Selden’s side, and now and again gave his grave facea little fur- tive glance. But whether the rich paleness of Lyde’s cheek were the result of Han- pa’s continued coldness, or merely the workings of a conscience aroused by certain lurid pictures which the parson was graphically painting, Irene could not determine. A distinct resolve, however, printed itself in her small fading face as she observed Selden and noted the dignity of his figure. “Look here,’ she said, sharply, to Ler brother. “I was a good deal pre- judiced againgst Miss Helders just at first. ‘Such a dress. But since I've seen more of her—I'm a pretty good judge of character, and I never want to stand in any one's way if I can help it. The fact is, John, I see you're pretty bad off about her. And I must say Ithink she’s as beautiful a girl as T aver laid eyes on. I’ve made up my mind that if you want to marry her I won’t say a word.” ; Hanna made a sound decidedly like a short disdainfal laugh. He had a worn look, which gave his face a strong resemblance to Irene’s. “I don’t care what you or any one else says or thinks,” he said, shortly. “I'm going to do as I please, I've made her suffer just all I'm going to. Did you notice how pale she looked to-night ? But she hasn’t felt any worse than I have. It's just killed me to see her with Selden. She's going to the boat party with him to-morrow night. It'll be thelast time she'll go any place with him !"” Irene patted hisarm. There was a vigor in his tone which she respected. “You make it all up with her to-mor- row night,” she said, sympathetically. It was just on the edge of dark when the young folk who were asked to the boat party gathered at the foot of the mill shoot. “Quit a tippin’ this skift I’ some one cried, shrilly. A man’s voice rang out in gay re monstrance : “I'll quit quick enough, if T ean git to see whar them oars is! Hold the lantern up, you fellers! I can’t find whar I’m settin’ this oar at.” Selden was paddling his skiff round the edge of the log-car, an end of which emerged from the black water like the muzzle of some great creature breath- ing itself, The lantern in the stern painted the river in pulsing carmine. fn its rays hesaw Lyde on the long float, her face turned to catch the words of a women hard by. “Oh—why Miss Helders!” Selden heard the woman say. ‘My brother wants to speak to you to-night. He's got something important—Oh, there's your boat! Well, we're going to stop down below. John will see you there. He hasn't got here yet.” As Selden pulled into the stream in train of the other red flecked skifls, Lyde made ar exclamation of surprise. “What a stroke you're pullin’! she laughed. “I'm eplashed all over. They won't be a speck of starch in this calico agin we git down yender.” Selden laughed a little nervously as he steadied himself. “What's that Irene was saying to you?’ he asked. “Something about Hanna, wasn’t it 2 He's something to gay, has he?" A skiff shot between them and the fringy black bank. In the lantern rays they saw Hanna and his sister. “We're beating you!” cried Irene gayly. : “You are indeed,” said Selden, rest- ing his oar. “You're beating me.” He looked at Lyde, her pretty profile cut deep and white into the dark ground of the night. “1 reckon this is the last time,” he said. “After to-night I've got to give ‘way. I've rather liked taking Han- na's place, Lyde. But you — you haven't found it altogether pleasant, have yon?” “No,” said Lyde, “I hevn’t.” “You are honest commented Selden, with a tinge of bitterness, “But I've seen of late that the matter was—was getting unbearable to you. Yet for myself I've been more than once on the point of torgetting that I filled an- other man’s place-—that it was all a joke.? “I hevn't"”, said Lyde; “I've never forgot.” Their skiff was nosing the bank. The others had landed, aud their moving figures, grotesquely smote with ruddy light, could be seen half way up the slope. Selden, as he helped Lyde over the | marshy space which the river had left | in its fall, held her hand in a clasp of | farewell. “I am going back,” he said, curtly. “I’ve got a lot of accounts to post, and —-here’s Hanna, looking this way! 1'll go before he comes. You know,” and he made out to laugh a little—*"it isn’t pleasant for the usurper to be ‘around when the king arrives.” He added, lightly : “The peacemaker always gets the worst lick. I can’tcomplain of my tate. But, Lyde, you'd ought to think of me kindly once in a while, for your happiness has cost me dear!” Lyde snatched her haud away, Her head was rigidly poised, and iu the gloom he saw her eyes flash. “Don’t youn,” she breathed, in a chok- ing voice—-“don’t you dare pass sech words to me! I uneyer ast you to do what you done. ‘1 wisht you bedn’t. But now it's over, you might be man enough not to make fun o’me——not to strike me down with your light talk ?” “Lyde—-" Oh, why didn’t you let me be? I'd a forgot him in a month without ro help! I'd never ’a’ known what it is—what it is—to live on the kind looks of them thet despise you! You aimed to be good to me! But it’s like you'd cut my arm off ‘cause they was a little sliver in my finger!” Hanna was coming toward them, picking his way over a heap of drift which marked the staying of the flood. He caught the broken fall of Lyde’s voice, and as he paused, bewildered, he caught also an exclamation in another tone, which seemed to hold elements of surprise, and relief, and tenderness. “Why—is that vou down there, Lyde ?”” he called out. ‘Let me help you over these snags.” The shadows perplexed him. “Lyde!”’ he said again. But it was not she who answered. “Thank you, Hanna,” said Selden, after an indefinite pause, his voice ring- ing through the gleam-tiitted darkness ; “I will take care of Lyde !"’ — Harper's Weekly. Tribute to Farragut. Russian Neval Officials at the Grave of the Dead Hero in New York. New York, May 21.—Vice-Admiral Kaznakoff, commanding the Russian fleet in North River, together with sev- eral officers, gave to the annual Farra- gut memorial exercises to day an im- pressiveness and significance which will linger long in the minds of the naval veterans and their friends who gathered about the American hero's grave at Woodlawn Cemetery, The Russian Ad- oie had known Farragut and admired im. ; Walking to the grave, which was covered with a mass of beautiful flowers, Vice. Admiral Kaznakoff looked upon it and then turned to the assemblage and said in a deep earnesi voice: “I speak for mysell and my countrymen to assure you of their gratitude and happi- ness in joining with you in this cere- mony and to say that during the war we watched you and your doings con- stantly. ‘We were as proud of the deeds of the man lying here asif he were of our own country. Therefcre we are glad to lay this wreath on the tomb of your her.” Four Russian seamen stepped forward | and placed the handsome floral tribute on the green mound. Then Admiral Kaznakoff, bending over the grave and with hand extended, continued, “Sleep on in glory in your resting place, Admiral Farragut. You have shown us how to fight and what to do. You have add:d many glorious pages to the annals of your country’s history.” Great heat causes melancholia. ——Japanese children are taught to write with both hands. —— Ambassador Bayard will sail for Europe on June 3. Grape froit is almost ns good as qui- nine for malarial troubles. Men on an average weigh 20 pounds more than women. —— Philadelphia had the first fire in- girance company in ‘America. Wolves annually devour Russian domestic animals worth $6,000,000. Since 1840, 37 vessels of which a part of the name was “City of” have been wrecked or lost. ETE AT —— Barbers usually gamble with the money earned by shaving dead men. Tt brings luck, they say. ——The light of the fire ly or “light- ning bug” is produced by a genuine animal phosphorescence, One of the benefits to be derived from fencing is said to be that it is a sure re- medy for turning in of the toes. - The condor, when rising from the earth, always describes circles in the air and can rise in no other way. —— Two hundred dogs are annually doomed to death in an English universi- ty for physiological experiments. ~The fourth verse of the twentieth chapter of Revelations contains more words than any other verse in the New Testament. ——Josephine—*“Why does Miss Swagger talk so loudly ?” think it must be to match hercostume.’’ —New York Herald. TE. —— Harriet Beecher Stoweis living her child-hocd over again cutting out paper dolls, singing the old time songs and hymns and nursery ballads. Her health seems to grow better as her mind loses itself. CT ——————————— — The distance to the moon can be quite accurately measured, but it would be folly to project a railroad over the route. It would be speech—Ilacking in terminal facilities. Amy—-T! SOE SIN For and About Women. Lilacs ure the Parisian rage for the. spring in natural and artificial flow- ers. Alice M. Cheney'began business as an express messenger in Boston four years ago. She now how three offices and five ‘eams in daily use. y Ornamental pockets are on the out-. side of a dressy street suit are creeping. in and should be of the contrasting ma-. terial rather than the dress goods. White will be. very generally worn during the coming summer. Pretty sitnple dresses of white linen lawn, with hemstitched tucks and hems, will se quite the thing for young ladies. For polishing furniture, waxed or stained floors or picture frames, the fol- lowing preparation is good : Melt bees- wax, turpentine and sweet oil. Rub [this on with a soft cloth or piece of chamois. Short corsets are absolutely necessary with the prevailing style of dress. They are also more comfortable and more graceful than the long ones. Stiff cor sets high in the back and long over tha hips make the waist thick. A simple and stylish traveling cos- tume is of Harris tweed, made with a Russian blouse, a flaring Empire skirt, very full sleeves and a belt embroidered in mohair braid. The same braid orna- ments the foot of the skirt. : Very wide collars, made of flat bands. of passementerie with deep Van-Dyke points, are worn around the necks of low cut dresses, the ends coming straight down over the shoulders, and finished with bead tassels over the bust. The newest cuffs are prone: joo¢ pretty. . They are worn outsilc, tia sleeves, and areshown in lace, liner «nid kid. ‘With outing gowns the kid «uf are chosen to match a lace corse! i: ni deep collar at the neck of the san terial. Yili Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett is soon to leave. Washington. for a year’s so- journ abroad. Much of her time will be spert in London, where she is al< most as well known in society as’ in New York, but ia the autumn she wil} make a tour of Egypt and the Holy Land. 2 Quaint and pretty are the Marie An. toinette bags which little maids at wed- dings carry filled with flowers. The bag hangs from the arm by white velvet ribbons, through which runs a trail of flowers, and are filled with lilies of the valley. Older maids are usually ready to sacrifice picturesqueness for the sake ot something to carry in their hands. 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 afternoon wear are of silk and velvet, close-fitting at the back, rounded off in front to show the waist and adorn- ed with jet. The most dressy zouave jacket is that made entirely of passe- menterie with imitation jawels or black jets inserted between the tiny silken cords tracing out the pattern. The sailor hat promises to be as popu- lar as ever. Already these bats are worn in dark blue and golden brown and other shades of amour braids, Sometimes the crown of a dark blue sailor hat is bright red, or a band of blue is inserted in the brim of a dark brown straw. In addition to the plain band of ribbon, which is always the most pop= ular trimming, the new sailor hats ara quite often trimmed, with rosettes ox quills, or with wings placed on each side and projecting toward the front. Whita wings are used on dark blue sailors and crimson wings on brown straws. Nothing could be prettier and cooler and simpler than the licen gowns which promise to be so popular this summer Fashion-mongers have evidently relied on & hot and dry season in ordaining that this too long neglected material should be used for washing costumes, and we can only hope that they have not wrongly prophesied, so to say. The eolorsin which these linens are being produced are most fascinating, espec- inlly if they are used for children’s frocks, but it is said that none will be more popular than the plain brown hol- iand which we have so long despised. In umbrellas, the latest novelties are. covered with shot silk to match any gowns, and these are finished with handles either jeweled or in Dresden china of the color of the covering. A dark ruby silk umbrella has a knob on the end of the natural cherry stick of dark ruby-colored enamel, with rhine- stones sunk in the surface. A blue shot umbrella has a lapis lazull handle set in gold bands. Dark gray umbrellas have handles of clouded gray and white onyx. Thereis no end to the various combinations ; in fact, the umbrella of to-day is really a telling addition to tha out of-door costume. Remember in making coffee—- That the same flavor will not suit every taste. That everyone can be suited to a nice ty by properly blending two or more kinds. That equal parts of Mocha, Java and Rio will be relished by a good many people. Tht the enjoyment of a beverage and slavish devotion thereto sre quite differs ent things. That the flavor is improved if the liquid is turned from the dregs as soon as the proper strength has been ob. tained. That where the percolation method is used the coffee should be ground very fine or the strength will not be ex- tracted. : That if the ground coffee is. put into the water and boiled it should be rather coarse, otherwise it will invariably be muddy. That a good coffee will always com- mand a fair price, but that all high priced coffees are not necessarily of high quality. That a level teaspoonful of the ground coffee to each cup is the standing als | lowance, from which deviation can be like a woman's: made in either direction according to the strength desired.