ad a FR SS TE ODOT 20ND VE. Bellefonte, Pa., June 9, 1893 © THE WAY WE WALKED. I met a woman on life's way, A woman fair to see, Or eaught up with her, I should say, Or she caught up with me. , “The way is long when one’s alone,’ I said, “‘and dangerous, too; I'll help you by each stumbling stone, If I may walk with you. I saw her hang her head and blush, Ana I could plainly see The fire that caused the fevered flush ; I whispered, “Walk with me, Thou art of all the very maid A brave heart wants to woo, And I'll remember long,” I said, “The way I walk with you.” Then on we went ; her laughing eyes And sunny smiles were sweet ; Above us blue and burnished skies, And roses neath our feet. “I'm glad your sunny face I’ve zeen,” I said, “When life is through I'll own the best of it hasbeen The way I walked with you.” And on we went ; we watched the day Into the darkness merge; My fair companion paused to say, “Here's where our Bains diverge.” I answered : “Yes, and one more mile Is fading from our view, ; And all the while lit by your smile This way I've walked with you, “I do not say my love, my life, Will all be given to grief : When you are gone ; the ceaseless strife Will bring me much relief. When death's cold hand the curtain draws, ‘When life's long journey’s through, Twill not have all been sad, because I came part way with you.” . Cy WARMAN. Eee SRE FIT TT TE. A RESOLUTE SWEETHEART. BY MATTIE DYER BRITTS. “Good morning, Hetty !” Hetty stood in her cool, clean dairy, up to her dimpled elbows in a bowl of fresh sweet butter which she was working into dainty prints, each stamp- ed with a rose, when the cheery voice made her turn round. A very comely woman to look upon was Hetty Brand, in spite of her eight- and thirty years, as shestood with the linen apron tied about her waist, and the sleeves turned back, and so thought the stalwart farmer who addressed her. She knew who her visitor was even before she locked, and quietly tanswer- ed: “Good-morning, Nathan. Why dida’t you go to the house ?” “I did. ’Lindy told me I'd find you out here.” “Well, bere I am. But I don’t re- ceive visitors in my dairy.” “Don’t ye ?”’ returned Nathan, good- naturedly. “Well, I won’t bother ye long, Hetty. I only called on a little business, this time.” “Then go and sit down on the side porch, and I'll come as soon as I mould this last print.” “All right! Any way to suit ye, of course,” said Nathan; and, with a whimsical twinkle in his blue eyes, he took himself off. Hetty, the faintest pucker of impati- ence showing on her forehead, took time to finish her print and set the whole crockful into the clean stone trough, where the bright water froma living spring rippled through the dairy and kept everything cool and sweet in the hottest weather. “I'll warrant Nathan Strong has got 2 fool's notion into his head again?” she soliloquized, as she put down her sleeves. “If he has, bell go home with another one, that's what I have to say.” Pausing at the kitchen-door to bid ‘Lindy go to the dairy and wash up the butter-things, she walked on to- ward the shady porch where Nathan waited for her. “Will you go into the house ?"’ she asked. “No, thank ye, Hetty. If you don’t mind, we'll jest stay out here. The smell o’ the vines is so sweet, I rather fancy sittin’ under em.” “Very well, then.” Ietty seated herself in a chair near the door, and asked pleasantly: “All well at your house, Nathan ?”’ “About as usual,” was the reply. “Aunt Rhoda is a little crippled with rheumatiz, but that’s not uncommon, I reckon she’s most too old to keep house and do so much work.” “Then you ought to hire help,” said Hetty, a frown crossing her face as she thought: “He needn't fancy I'll keep his house for him !” “I would, if she’d have it,” answer- ed Nathan, who saw and understood the frown. Then he quietly went on : “Well, I said I came over on a little business to-day. Are ye thinkin’ of runnin’ the whole farm on your own hook, now Jacob is gone?” “Why, I don’t know. I have hard- ly decided yet, Nathan.” “What would you sav to renting a field or two if it paid pretty well 2” “I hardly know that, either. I might do it, I suppose.” “I would like to have the field join- ing my land, to sow in spring wheat. Grain or money rent as suits you best.” “You can have it, I guess. Perhaps the rent in grain would be wisest, as we may not raise as much as when my brother was here.” “That's all, then,” said Nathan, ris ing. “I’m obliged to ye, Hetty. We'll make it all square when the time comes.’”” He hesitated an instant, then added: “Don’t you find it pretty lonesome tryin’ to get on without Jacob ?"’ “If I do, I guess I can stand it!’ answered Hetty, tartly. “Jacob Brand was a fool, to do as he did at the time. of life; but that’s no reason I should be one, too.” Hetty colored, seeing she had rather committed herself by her last words. But Nathan only smiled and coolly asked : “A fool for gelting married, or for | going out to Colorado?” “Both,” answered Hetty, promptly. “Both, 10 be sure!” | “Well, I'think, myself, that it was | a pity he sold his half the farm, and | poked off out there.” “I don’t care for the land,” said Het: ’ ty, quickly. “My half is enough for ‘me.’ Ny on “Then it's the' marryin® you object to? Well, I don’t agree with ye there, Hetty: I'm nigh.as old as Jacob—I'lL be forty-two next Christmas—but I'd ‘marry. in short jorder, if you, would have'me: @ & AR HWE § Hetty Jumped 8p, her evap aching: “There, Nathan Strong, [ knew you couldn’t go home without making a dunce of yourself!” " “Ig it the sign of a dunce, to like a woman from the time she was a mite of a school-girl, and never look at any other for ber sake, Hetty ?”’ “No, but—"{ =~ Nathan interrupted her : : “Hear me out tnis time, Hetty, and I'll not worry you again. Not soon, anyhow—1 do mean to have you in the end.” : inal of “I wish you may get me then!” Nathan laughed and said : “So do I! Come, child, it is lonely for you now, isn’t it 2’ 10111 ; “[fit is, I tell you I am able to stand it.” ; . “It worries a woman to run a farm by herself, Hetty. i “I’ve got a good hired man.” “Yes, Eben, Sharp is a first rate worker. But that isn’t all.” { “Very well ; when I need other help I'll call on you!” snapped Hetty. “You know I'd give you a hand any day, whether you marry me or not.,’ “I pever will marry you, Nathan Strong! Nor any other man, either!” “There's some comfort in that! re- turned Nathan, with his droll smile. “Then I hope you'll enjoy it! I don’t want any man tied to my apron- string, when I can get along just as well without him, Now put that in your pipe and smoke it.” “I don’t smoke, my dear. Remem ber hearing you remark once that you was dead against smokin’, so I never learned. But I'll keep what you say in mind—until you change yours.” “That day won't come! Think I'm going to be a fool at my age. just be- cause Jacch was at his 2” “No, I don’t think you could be one at any age. Now I'll go. Will you shake hands, Hetty : She gave him her hand; he shook it with a wistful Icok, and went away. “The silly creature!” said Hetty, when he had gone. “To think he will keep on liking me in spite of—oh, everything! But I won't 1 a dunce ! I'm not lonesome! I don’t need any- body’s help or company I" And, by way of proving her words, Hetty sat down and took a good cry all to herself. To tell the truth, she was dreadfully lonely since her brother’s departure. and often at a loss how to direct af- fairs. If Eben Sharp had not been as good as gold, the farm would soon have shown its need of an experienced manager. In dairy, garden, or poultry-yard, Hetty was an expert; but with the heavier work she had never had to con- cern herself, and now it came rather hard. : “But the idea of marrying to have somebody to manage the place!” she said indignantly. “Not much! If I ever did marry, it wouldn't be for that. I'm very well as I am at present, thank you!” But somehow, it seemed to Hetty, so sure as anything got into a muddle, so sure Nathan Strong was on hand to straighten it out. And whether to be most grateful to him or angry at him, she did not know. One day. while Eben was absent, a sudden storm came up, and the wind blew terribly. When the gust was over, Hetty went out to see if any damage had been done. She found a fence ‘partly blown down, and some choice young stock at liberty to go where they pleased. “This won't do!” said she. ‘Eben won't be at home these two hours; even ‘Lindy is gone, so what's to be done ?” The only thing seemed to be to at- tempt putting up the fence with her own hands, and she went bravely to work- But the rails were heavy and cut her palms, and thev would not stay as she put them. She was so worried that she did not notice a man coming up on horseback, until a familiar voice said at her elbow : “Hetty, strikes me that ain't just the business for yon. Let me have a try at it” And, the next minute, Nathan Strong was off his horse and quietly straight- ening the fence as if it were mere play. Hetty’s cheeks burned, but she could only stand helplessly looking on and explain to him how it happened. “ "Tisn't worth a ‘thank you,’ he answered, when she thanked him for his assistance. “You know I'm glad to serve you any day, Hetty. We men may uot be very ornamental sort o chaps, but we come handy once in awhile—don’t we?” he added, in a quizzical way, as he mcunted his horse again. ¥ He rode off, leaving Hetty to return to the house very much provoked, and not being sure whether it was at the wind, the cattle, or Nathan. For awhile, after that, all went smoothly. She saw Nathan looking at ber in church on Sunday, but he kept his word and let her alone, never com- ing to the farm if he could help it. Hetty missed him more than she would own, and the evenings were long and lonely ; but she bore her solitude bravely. She had a very fine herd of young cattle, from which she meant to real- ize a handsome sum after awhile. Hearing of a nice calf for sale on a place about two miles off, she hitched up her steady old horse Bob and went over to look at it. Eben had gone to town ; but she di- rected him to return by the Mills Farm so that, if she bought the calf, he could drive it home. The animal proved to be a beauty, co she did buy it. Then she waited a reasonable time, but Eben wait for my man. Just bring the calf out; I have a rope, and I'll drive it. myself.” a KB “Well, now, Mis’ Brand—I don’t see just how you're goin’ tomanage it,” rephied, Fares Milt toner i . “I do—that’s better. You bring it | out, and tie the rope and hand it to me through the nei the buggy.” a ek \l, I can doit, Mis’ Hetty; but a calf’s a frisky critter to drive, an’ I low ye'll haye a sight o’trouble, even if it don’t skeer your horse.” " ®Mr. Mills, old’ Bob wouldn't scare at a traction ‘engine; and I'm not afraid of a calf like that.” Wal, if a’ woman will, she will, I'{: s’pose,” said Mr. Mills, as he. brought the animal out. “But if you get your neck broke, ‘Mis’ Hetty, don’t blame me,” ! “I won't. Good-day.” And Hetty drove off, leading the calf behind the buggy. Old Bob looked round now and then, as 1f he did not altogether fancy his company ; but he behaved pretty well —as long as the calf did. For a half mile it trotted along con- tentedly ; but then it began to frisk about and make little sidelong runs, al- most jerking the rope from Hetty's grasp. She gave the cord a turn -around her wrist and held on tighter, scolding first the calf and then old Bob, having all she could do to. manage the air. ? The more she tried to make the pro- voking little beast go quietly, the more it wouldn’t. Her wrist vras pulled al: most out of joint, and the situation grew worse every minute. “Who would have thought I'd have such a time?’ she panted. “Do be still, you torment! Oh, it Eben would only come! I can’t stand this’ much longer !”’ : She thought she heard a horse com- ing up the hill, and turned to see if it’ were Eben at last. Just then the wick- ed calf bounded sideways, jerking the rope to its fullest length, and the bug- gy, running upon a large rock, sudden- ly upset, and calf, horse, buggy, and Hetty went down in a heap together, the rope still fast to Hetty’s wrist. Her arm was well-nigh pulled from its socket by the frantic struggles of the calf to escape, and she screamed in spite of her self-control. An answer- ing shout was heard, and a horse dashed up; the rider sprang from his saddle, snatched his knife from his pocket, and cut the rope. As the freed creature darted away, the newcomer caught the reins and quieted old Bob with a kind hand and a firm touch, and lifted Miss Brand from the ruins, exclaiming in tones of consternation : “For pity's sake, Hetty, what does all this mean?’ “It means that I am a bigzer fool than I thought I was, Take care of Bob, please.” And down sat Hetty on the rock that had caused her shipwreck and began to ery. ! Nathan led Bob to a level spot, saw that the harness was intact, and let her cry for a moment ; then he returned to her ard said kindly : “Come, Hetty—the horse and buggy are all right, and there's nothing to cry for. You are not hurt, are you ?’* “No; but I am mad. Where's that little fool 2” “What! the calf?” asked Nathan, trying not to laugh. ‘Gone back where it came from, I reckon. It isn’t in eight. Let medrive you home, Het- ty, and then I'll find it for you.” “I can drive myself, thank you. Na: than, you always seem to. be some- where near-by when I get into trou- ble.” Nathan turned like a flash. “Good gracious, child! that is just what I want to be—always! Hetty, don’t you see you can’t get along with- out me? Don’t try any more. Let me take care of you always—do, dear —do, Hetty.” “But—to give up so,” she faltered. “I—TI can’t, Nathan.” : “Yes, you can. You don't give up anything, my dear. And I'll be so good to you; you shall gain a great deal. Come. Hetty.” He had hold of both her hands by this time. “Are vou so determined to have me Nathan?” “Yes. eagerly. “Weil, I—I give it up, then.” “Why, bless you, my dear, you shall never be sorry! I've waited a long time for you, Hetty ; but you're worth waiting for,” And, before Mr. Nathan put her back into her buggy, be took his right to one hearty kiss which left Hetty’s cheeks as red as roses. Just so determined !”’ he said The papers are full of accounts of the Princess Kulali, her picture, her his- tory, just what relation she bears to the hittle king of Spain; how she looks, what she did, what her attendants did, what President. Cleveland did, what Mrs. Cleveland did, how she took it, colums and pages ofit; and down in one little corner of the paper a two line notice ‘contains the information that “Miss Rose Cleveland, sister of the president returned home on the steamer Etruria from a trip abroad.”’—and yet we pose as republicans. ——A Sunday school teacher in Lawrence, Kansas, asked her class of boys what a boy should do to go to heaven. No one answered until a little Irish boy at the bottom of the class held up his hand. “Well, sir, what must a boy do. to 20 to heaven ?”’ said the teacher. “He must die,” answered Patgy. —— HEx-Governor Ames will present to the town of Easton, Mass, a new high school building which will cost about $60,000 when completed. Besides the recitation, ante and dressing rooms, it will have a chemical and mechanical laboratory. “Who is'that young lady who seems did not appear. She feared he might be detaired in town until dark, so she said to Mr. Mills: : “I don’t believe it is worth while to to know everything about everybody who is anybody?” “Oh, she’s in the telephcne ' ex- change.”’—Detroit Free Press. | boom. The hotel’ Wonders of The Fair. Exhibits That Are T) vitmphs of Art, and Appeay to the Love of Beauty and of Color. People outside of Chicago are begin- ning to realize that the. great World's Columbian Exposition is open, and busi- ness at the ticket offices 18" beginning to The b proprietors, too, are realizing the, fact, and their hostelries, which were vacant of lodgers during the first fortnight of the fair, are fast fillingup with cut-of town people. Since the opening day almost. 750,000 people have. paid for admission to the‘ White City,” and the'atténdance appears to be on a steady increase. . . : No exhibit 'atithe World’s Fair seems ‘to grow so fast in popular interest as the exhibit cf live fish in the aquarium in the Fisheries Building. All day visitors crowd into the aisles "around these ex- hibits, until at times these aisles might be likened to big sardine boxes packed with human fish. Among the exhibits which have late- ly been installed are those from the State Fisheries Commissions of Penn- sylvania and Wisconsin. The former exhibit represents a mountain grotto scene, with a real brook falling over a cascade into a pool below. At the end of the waterfall isa weir showing the method of catching mountain trout. Both the outside and inside of the bath are covered with bark and material from the mountain side, and beautiful little aquaria filled with native fish, are set in this imitation mountain side at regular intervals. : Inside the effect is even more attrac- tive. In a second and smaller grotto un- der the rushing mountain stream are ar- ranged comfortable-looking settees, while in every nook and crevice real mountain flowers peep out, producing the effect of a sylvan scene. Wisconsin, while not attempting so much in the way of scenery and sur- roundings, is installing an exhibit which will be complete in’ the representation of the varied fishing interest of the State. In the exact centre of the Mines Building is a tall needle of anthracite coal from the Mammoth vein of Penn- sylvania. It is a part of the State exhi- bit. Fifty-four feet high it stands, and in the mass are 95 tons. The foundation goes through the floor. The mass is 10 feet square. The cap was put on and the needle completed yesterday. It cost $10, 000 to get up the pyramid. The bottom layer is from the bottom of the coal vein, the second layers is from the second layer in the coal vein, and so on to the top. There are six carloads of it in all. AN ISLAND OF FLOWERS As the season advances no place with- in the Exposition grounds offers as var- ied attractions to the general public as the Wooded Island. It is located as nearly the centre of the ground as pos- sible, and commands a view of the prin- cipal buildings. The island is about 15 acres in extent and is oblong in shape, narrowing slightly toward the northern end. The south end will be planted entire- ly in rhododendrons, azaleas and the choicest varieties of evergreen; Bel- gium, Germany, France and England contributing to this display. Farther along will be beds in borders of colum- bines, bell flowers, lobelias and holly- hocks, the whole forming a rare combi- nation of rich coloring. One of the most interesting exhibits will be a collection of ornamental shrubs with bright-colored leaves, unique be- cause of its completeness. In this col- lection will be 4000 plants, comprising 600 varieties. Germany will have an exhibit of itsown, in which will be found the favorite flowers of that coun- try, such as asters, daisies, roses and evergreen shrubs. Japan has set itsseal upon the island —a beautiful temple standing in the midst ot a garden of Japanese design, in which will flourish in early days bright-colored peonies against an ever- green background, and later the royal chrysanthemum. But the crowning glory of the place will be the rose garden, where 50,000 plants of over 2000 varieties will stand in graceful grouping. There will be numerous beds with rose hedges, but the lines of demarcation in the beds will be made with honeysuckle vines run on wires along the ground. The hedges will be of climbing roses, and outside the whole will be the borders of sweet peas. ‘When the June rose shall have passed away 20,000 gladiolus will take their place, so that at no time will there be any appearance of shabbiness The on- ly wild flower on the island is the little wild phlox, which, as a matter of senti- ment, was left the solitary plant to the manner born to be found in the whole collection. Great oak trees cast their shadows everywhere, while graceful willows bor- der the edge of the lagoon. AN ENGINE OF SILK. Cotton, silk and wool enter largely into the textile exhibit in the American section of the Manufactures Building, and it now is complete. The most elaborate of all the displays is made by a silk thread firm. It is an engine and car nade of spools. Eight thousand spools of silk are used. Each piece is ten feet long. The wheels are made of large spools and the spokes of smaller ones. The panels of the car are worked out in different colors. The engine is the most wonderful piece of work. Every detail has been worked out ina marvelous way, even to the counterweights on the side of the drive-wheels. From the smoke stack flies backward a lot of silk floss, very black at first and ending in thin steam, The bell is made of gold- colored silk and the reversing lever is made of tin spools put end to end. The only material not made of spools is the headlight, which is a reflector with an electric light. “JUSTICE.” Montana’s famous solid silver statue of ‘Justice’ that was unveiled in the Mines and Mining building last week is the statue for which Ada Rehan, the actress, sat as a model, The unveiling of the statue was the event of the day at the White City and the great build- ing in which the statue stands was | thronged with people eager to sce the magnificent work of art. Th2 opening address was ‘made by Major Maginnis, of Montana, who spoke in glowing terms to the brilliant future before that state, of her citizens and &f her wonderful natural resources. When he had finish- They are all of black. '! forward a little from the crowd and tak- ing up a small silken cord gave it a gen- tle pull and the stars and stripes, which had enfolded the silver image of jus- tice, fellaway and exposed the statue for the first time to the public gaze. The crowd gave veat to wild cheers while the band played * America.” The ! total weight of he statue is 1,9000 . pounds and it rests on a pedestal of sol- id gold taken from the Spotted Horse mines,” which are situated in-Montana. In height the statue stands eight’ feet | and three inches. . With the pedestal it | is twelve feet high. | “TOWER OF LIGHT.”’ In the Electricity building, is built of cut glass and is 80 feet in height. Inside the tower are 20 incandescent lamps. | The effect produced is marvelous and | can only be realized and appreciated when seen. The colonnade around the base, one of the most superb production | in artistic glass ware will be shown. It rivals the finest productions of the lead- ing European manufactories. = Cut glass | globes and dishes, delicate gossamer glass formations, forms and fancies of every kind, will be illuminated with rays of the incandescent lamp and light reflected from polished mirrors. The distribution of the electrical conductors to attain the various effects and changes necessitates careful study, and the com- bination of kaleidoscopic effect of beau- ties is almost infinite. These will form no unimportant portion of the exhibit. The lights are operated by a switchboard concealed in the interior of the shaft. Luther Stieringer is the author of the design. The chime of nine bells in the Mach- inery Hall will be played each day from 9 to 9:20 A. M. and 6 to TP. M. Habit of Thought. Habit reigns as supreme in the region of thought as in that of action. We often see persons whose lines of thought run mainly in the same groove, be it art, or science, or politics, .the accumu- lation of wealth, or the desire of fame. Their thoughts become as truly fixed habits as anything which they are ac- castomed to do with their hands. There are some people whose minds drift hith- er and thither with every passing wind of circumstance ; for so long a time has such been their practice that it has be- come a mental habit. Others have ac- quired the habit of self-control, not only in their active deeds, but also in their silent thoughts. By frequent practice they have attained the power of concen- trating their minds upon one subject for a time, and of turning it to another when they deem it advisable. Again, if we could examine the ideas which men hold, we shonld perhaps be surprised to find how many of them are due to habit rather than logic. In child- hood man took for granted whatever he heard expressed by those to whom he looked up with respect. Whenever he heard any of their ideas criticised by others he resented it, and clung firmly to them. These opinions have come to be settled habits of mind with him. He regards them as certainties, and looks with suspicion upon those who do not share them. Yet, if challenged to de- fend them, he is utterly at a loss. They are his only by adoption ; he has never earned the right to call them truly his own by the hard mental work of inves- tigation. This is the history of many of our most cherished notions, the foundation on which thousands stand in politics, in science, in the problems of the day, in social observance, in ethics, in theology. This practice of thicking from habit, if universal, would put an end to all pro- gress. Happily, there are always some men and women who are resisting this tendency—the leaders of public opinion, the pioneers in the march of intellectual progress. Their effort should be, how- ever, less to impress their own views upon other minds than to help every man to form his own ideas in an intelli- gent way.— Phila. Ledger. This Was Quick Work. New York, May 31.—The dispatch announcing that Isinglass had won the Derby race reached the United Press office in this city before the third horse had passed the finishing post. The dispatch came by the Western Union company’s cable, and was re- ceived at twenty-two .'ninutes and forty-five seconds past 10 o'clock. Cholera at Marseilles. WasHINGTON, May 20.—The sur- geon general of the marine hospital service, has received a cablegram from Surgeon Irwin of that bureau at Mar- seilles, France, stating that cholera ex- ists in that city in a limited form. Sur- geon White, the Marine hospital ex- pert at Hamburg, confirms the reported death from cholera there yesterday. Hard to Get At. A “summer boarder” once said toa small boy dressed in a broad straw hat, ‘Hello, little boy. What is your name ?”’ “Same as pa’s,” said the boy. “What's your pa’s name ?”’ “Same as mine.” “T mean what do they call you when they call you to breakfast.” “They don’t never call me to break- fast.” “Why don’t they ?” “Caase I alluz git there the first one.” — Youth's Companion. Mrs. Youngquack—*You are go persevering and hopeful, dear; you re- mind me of patience sitting on a monu- ment.” Dr. Youngquack--¢I feel blue enough to remind you of the monuments sitting on my patients.” Congress may meet in October. The President thinks it can do more work mn cold weather. This, however, is only true in part. Look at last Nov- ember, when it even snowed, and see how little the G. O. P. accomplished.— Phila Times. ——There are 577 diflereut editions of | the Bible in the public library of Stutt- gart, printed in over 100 different langu- usages. a ——— ———The total number of American newspapers has grown from 6319 to 20,- ed Mrs. Richards, of Montana, stepped 006 during the past 25 years. For and About Women. Lilacs are the Parisian rage for the spring in natural and artificial flow- ers. : The lace frills on the shoulders area very essential feature of every kind of dressy indoor garments. The late Amelia 18. Edwards was a woman of letters. She was entitled to wear Ph. D., L. H. D. and LL. D. after her name. Skirts are much more trimmed than at the commancement of the season with flounces, ruches and bias-bands, simulating tucks. Miss Herreshoff, daughter of the blind designer of yachts, knows almost as much about nautical architecture as her father, whose eyes she often is. A hat of the class you call “Useful,” as being infinitely wearable, is of black straw cocked like Napoleon's. Rosettes of pink, green and black satin’ were struck upon it with twigs of foliage. Miss Mary Conant, living near Rochester, N. Y., has managed her fath- er’s farm ever since his death, some four years ago, and made it pay well. She has received $400 in a season from two acres of asparagus. Her farm is devoted to apple, quince, berries, grapes and pear culture. A red jacket that attracted much at- tention had curiously full skirts gather- ed from the hips and headed by a band of blaek silk which came from the side seams and was loosely knotted in front, the long ends-being finiched with a tag of gold. 1t had very full sleeves, too with frilled cuffs of black bengaline. In New York state the females out- number the males by 4,000, and in Pennsylvania the males are 100 to 95 females. In the western states the average is 100 males to 65 females. Why not alter Greeley’s well known advice and say, “Go west young woman go west, and add keep away from New York. The sailor bat has a broad brim this summer or sometimes a straight one turned up all round. Black or tan or whiteare its colors, trimmed with skad- ed ribbons. But the leghorns are prettier crossed and recrossed with narrow folds of black velvet, while in front rise con- vincing sprays of pink roses. Convine- ing of what? Why, to be sure, of their right to be in view, A high novelty in parasols is made of knife-plaited tulle on a perfectly flat Japanese frame with a number of ribs. At the outeredge is a bordering of tiny feather-tips, violets or any fine fiowers. A knot of the feathers or flowers to match is tied upon the handle. - Anyone with deft fingers could cover a Japanese frame with the plaited tulle, which would shape itself so easily to the en- tout-cas. Tiny jackets ot pale green, blue and yellow cloth have the lace epaulets in- stead of sleeves. Yellow Renaissance lace makes a pretty jacket with a jabot front. Jackets and shirt waists have the front drapery gathered at the arm-hole and knotted at the bust, with ends that are lined and shaped like the velvet and silk ‘cars’ used by milliners. The device is not & pretty one, and isa bad substitute for the loosely-knotted free ends. Blue jeans make the prettiest possible petticoats. Such are trimmed with wash braid. They supply the stiffness that some skirts cannot, and they are hot open to the objection of untidiness that the white skirt is. Yet we have bad to go through a long training of silk and fancy skirts to teach us this. They will not soil as promptly as the white ones will, and they will wash as the cloth and silk petticoats will not. They are as pretty to look at as either, and newer than any. Of course, wash silk may be used, but why use wash silk when silk of unwashable colors is so much prettier if you are going to have silk petti- coats ? One of the popular combinations for table decoration is white and green. "A A pretty centre piece is a square of pale green silk, bordered with natural fern leaves, upon which is placed a cut-glass bowl of a pale-green tint. This bowl is nearly filled with water and upon the surface of this water float small white flowers and one or two small porcelain swans. A lily and a white hyacinth are placed in the bowl, having sufficiently long stems for the blooms to droop over the edge of the bowl. Upon the white tablecloth are placed pale-green silk doi- lies embroidered in white silk floss and edged with fine white lace as under- mats for the service and leading dishes. The tablecloth is bordered with natural fern leaves. Ostrich plumes or tips are well liked by every woman, but nothing is more distressing than one out of carl. If you are going to try to curl them yourself have ready some corncobs and common salt Let the fire in the cook stove burn down till you have a good bed of coals, lay the cobs on, sprinkle them with sult, and shakes the feathers in the smoke. Add cobs and salt from time to time, and be sure to shake the plumes well, turning every part to the smoke. The harder you shake the better they will look. Be careful not to burn’ them. The livelier the coals without blaze the better. I once saw a milliner wash a white plume and recruit it in this way, and it looked like a new one. She wash- ed it in suds, rinsed it in clear water, shook it vigorously until about dry, and then shook it over the smoke. A charming chic dress was made with a very full, suff skirt of thick black sa- tin, having three narrow flounces at the foot and three similar volants encircling the figure about twelve inches from the waist, with extremely good effect. The corsage was ot finely-pleated chiffon striped from neck to waist with delicate white Maltese lace insertion over white satin, The sleeves were huge affairs of black satin with deep lace cuffs, and the bonnet was tiny, tightly-fitting coif of jet, with a big “fun’’ of point d’esprit in the front, supported by two slender white wings that radiated right and left from the head, and gave a Mercury-like appearance to the coiffare. This dainty bonnet was tied under the chin with narrow white satin strings, while a very fine black net veil with a few sparkling jet eircles on it was a most becoming ad- dition to the whole costume.