Ye Deworraic atcha ‘Bellefonte, Pa., July i4, 1893. E— THE WAY WE WALKED. 1 met a woman on life's way, A woman fair to see ; Or caught up with her, I should tay, Or she caught up with ‘ie, The way is long when one’s alone,” I said, “and dangerous, too ; Tl help you by each stumbling stone, If 1 may walk with you?’ I saw her hang her head and blush, And I could plainly see The fire that caused the fevered flush ; I whispered. “Walk with me. Thou art of all the very maid A braye heart wants to woo, And I'il 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 sanny face I've seen,” I said ; “when life is through I'll own the best of it has been The way I walked with you.” And on we went; we watched the day Into darkness merge ; My fair companion paused to say, “Here's where our paths diverge.” I answered: ‘Yes, and one more mile s fading from our view, And all the while lit by your smile This way 1've walked with you. +&] do not say my love, my life, Will allibe given to grief » ; When you are gone ; the ceaseless strife Will bring me much relief. i When death’s cold hand the curtain draws, When life’s long journey’s through, Twill not have all been bad, because I came part way with you.” —Cy. Warman, in New York Sun. STAMFORD’S SOPRANO. BY HOWARD PYLE. Tom Stamford had just returned from college. He was ambitious in the direction ot journalistic life, and the immediate opening that presented was to ‘do general hack-work for the Liberator. The Liberator was a week- ly journal modelled somewhat after the style of the Spectator, and Stamford’s uncle Elihu, who was that sort of a rich man who takes an occasional pot- shell at a new venture, was a consid- erable stockholder in the paper. This gave Stamford sonte claim ‘upon it; he wrote a good deal for it, and not all that he wrote was rejected.’ In spite of the positiveness and sono- rousness- of its ‘name, the Liberator was at that time leading a rather pal- lid existence. ‘But it was uvew, it was spending money, and it. was very hope- ful of meeting the impact of solid ex- perience and of surviving that encoun- ter without going altogether to pieces. It was just then in what one might call the “cherry stain’ state of exist- ence, for the panels of the office were of stained cherry, the office rail was of stained cherry, the new and shining desks were of stained, the revolving bent-wood seat ou which the editor sat was of stained cherry, and the torture- seat upon which his contributors sat to hear the fate of their contributions was also of stained cherry. A paper with money and great expectations is very apt to start in this state of exist ence, os ; ‘The Liberator was at that time in the opposition, and was very positive in its position. It used to advise the administration and the Upper and Lower Houses of Congress with an air of impartiality and restraint that .con- veyed ‘the idea to the reader of'a tre- mendous but suppressed motive power " behind, which; if the editor only once dared to let it go, would smash, at least seriously cripple,’ the Execuutive de- partment of the United States. Stamford at that time was a very young man. He also looked upon the Liberator through a rosy atmosphere of hope and of youth. He felt that it was destined to have a great future, and that by means of it he himselt might algo rise to a great future. So he used to write: his bits and scraps of literary odds. and. ends, and a good many of these were published. . He as: sumed an air of literary experience at that time, and used to speak of what he wrote as: ‘stuff.’ - “I ran down home last Sunday, and: staid a couple of days to write up a lot of stuff for the Lib,” or “I wrote a thousand words ot stuff last night for the Lib about Salvi: ni.” {(Salvini was just then the rage in Boston.) . = | One day when Stamford went, into the office to inquire the fate of some one of his manuscripts he found Mr. Cadger, the editor, ini a more. expan: sive mood than usual. The editor be- gan saying, “I don't believe we are go ing to be able to use all this paper of yours, Mr. Stamford, You've gone unnecessarily” into’ detail, Maybe if you'd eut it down to eight or ten hun- dred words we might be able to do something with it.” He tossed it out upon the desk as he spoke, and Stam- ford picked it up, trying to look as though he did not care. Then Mr, Cadger' resumed and lit the cold and dead'end of 'a cigar that Jay amongst the papers on his desk ; then tilting in hig “chair and cocking his feet up on the desk, he yielded himself .to a. gen- eral expansive impnlge to talk, “The fact is,” said he, shifting his cigar from | one side of his mouth to theother, and winking away the smoke, that drifted into his eyes—*‘the fact is that you make the same mistake that all writ. ers, ‘particularly’ ‘novitiate ‘writers, make. The ‘trouble with you all is that you'go'out’ of your way to try to find something unusual and uncom: mon to write about, something. that no- body knows anything about... Now the reader as a rule, wants to read what he knows about, and not what he does | not know about. For instance, the. first thing that your reader turns to in a newspaper is the account of the char- ity-ball' which’ he or she attended the night before.” Your reader wants to read that because he or she knows all about it, and such a one will pass over the account of the volcanic eruption in the Feejee, Islands, such as we. pub. lished last, week, and the loss of tea or - -—y back of Cape Cod, and they have no kind of interest to. the general reader. Now if I were a writer like you, Mr. Stamford, I wouldn't go so far away from home; I'd just work right here in Boston at something all the Boston people know about, and then, if you didn’t hit it off in the right fashion, you'd find that all the Boston people would read about it.” So spoke Mr. Cadger, with a most success of himseif; -he had always | stumbled over his own theories, and crackad his shins against the hard facts of life... Stamford knew that this was the cage, and could not help thinking | of it, but he listened to the other very respectfully, for he was an editor, and it is well to be good to- editors. ‘Yes, I think I see what you mean,” said he: “I don’t know but what there's a great deal of truth in 1t.”” And then, as a sudden’ idea struck him, he said, “I | tell you what I’m going to do, Mr. Cadger : I'm going down to West New- ton. There’s going to be a county fair down there, and I'll go down and write it up. That's something every- body knows about. Do you think you" could use any such stuff in the Libera: tor 2" : “0b, I don’t know about that.” said. Mr. Cadger, instantly scenting editor ial danger, and as instantly withdraw- ing iuto his shell of editorial caution : “jt altogether depends upon: bow it is done, Then he began fingering among the papers of his desk, and Stamford saw that it was time to go.’ So Stamford went down to West Newton to see the county fair-and to try his art at realism. The accommo- dation train in which he went down to West Newton, “after a great deal of backing and filling, finally stopped at the temporary platform at the fair grounds. - Stamford followed the stream that emptied out of the cars and poured along the dusty road toward the great rambling board buildings fluttering with flags and streamers, Somewhere a band in the distance brayed with a far-away voice, and the swings and merry-go-rounds squeaked and squealed. There were grotesque brutish. noises coming from the ‘Agri. cultural Building, and auniversal aro- ma of damp deal boards, of saw “dust, and-of trampled grass pervading the warm spring day. Stamford made his way to a little frame shanty labelled, rather graadiloquently, “Office of the Superintendent.” Within was an at mosphere ‘of cigar smoke. A lot of men were sitting around intently and serionely idle. They looked at Stam- ford with a” rather bovine stolidness, and with a good 'deal of diffidence he introduced himeelt to ‘them as the cor- respordent of the Boston Liberator. He had thought that they would have shown him some attention, but they did not. Indeed. itseemed to him that they felt him to be in the way, and they did not know exactly what to do with him. They gave him a ticket to the grand stand to see the races in the afternoon; and then he was left to take care’ of himeelt, He left the office feel ing very lonely and deserted. _ A little ‘while later, in the Main Building, he met a stout motherly -la- dy who was in general charge of the exliibit there. She was a Mrs. West, and her son’ had been to Harvard. Stamford remembered him indistinctly, ‘and it served as a bond of acquaint ance to connect him individually with hig, surroundings. He wae very glad of compantonship in the strangeness of his surroundings, so he walked about and talked to Mrs, West whenever he found her disengaged, looking with aimless interest at the array of quilts and fancy-work and bread and pre- serves, and loaves of .cake cut in ‘half to show how light they were inside. In one end of the great barnlike place there was & little space railed off’ like a pen, and somewhat raised from the floor. Here 'an organ company bad an organ upon exhibition. There ‘were seats arranged around for those who chose to listen to the occasional music that was played. The instru ment was a sort of eemi-pipe organ—a vocalion, was called—and the man ‘who played upon it was a teacher in the high-sehool and the organisc.at Ho- ly Trinity’ Chapel. Mrs. West listened to bim ‘with’ evident pleasure, ‘and then | she told Stamtord that Mary Estee was oing to sing by and by. : 2 “And oy Mary Estee 2" asked Stanifosd.” "oo Et “Mary ‘Estee? Oh, she’s our so- prano—she sings at Holy Trinity Chapel. She is Professor . Krim- baugh’s favorite scholar. By-the-way, have you been to the Art Gallery yet? 1 want you to see the chrysanthemums that Tak Dudley painted. . She's studying in Boston this season.” | Stamtord, wondering. who Professor Krimbaugh was, said that that he had not been to the Art Gallery yet, but that he would go and see Miss Dudley's’ chrysanthetnums.’ | Before ‘he went Mrs, West ‘stopped him ‘to say : “You must be sure and come back at eleven’ o'clock and Hear Mary Estee sing. At eleven o'clock, remember,” © = °° ba Stamford” did come back at eleven o'clock. He heard the grunting and growling of the vocalion as he ap- proached from the distance, und he knew that Mr. White, the. orgasist, was performing upon. it... There was quite a little crowd gathered to, listen. Stamford took his seat upon one of the wooden benches in front of the raised pen wherein the voealion was enclosed, and by-and-by, after Mr. White had playéd for a while, the West Newhain soprano ascended the dais amid a rat- tling' discharge of applause. She way ‘dressed with a rather elaborate’ imita- tion of & real ‘concert Soprano, and there was something ‘suggestively pa. thetic in the caricature. ‘She sang a very ambitious ikl encared, , and, and then’sang “Kathleen Mavourneen.” | Stamford knew really nothing about music, but he had heard'singers sing, and he: recognized at once that Miss Estee bad really 'an exquisite voice, filteen thousand, lives, to read the ae- count of that charity ball. » Now here: you have taken all the trouble to write / with’ an almost professional ring about Np sods Wy Load LEIA it; 190y > : tin «| After ‘the performance was over, he singer. He had not recognized how young and how pretty she was until he spoke to her. She could pot have been over nineteen years old. She was excessively cold and reserved in her manner, and though Stamford was very well aware that the manner was assumed to cover her diffidence and her uncertainty of herself, he was over- awed byit in spite of himself. Still he talked with her for a while, with only oracular- air. He had never made a | partial success. “Indeed, Miss Estee,” said he, for the twentieth time, ‘you have a magnificent: voice, a superb voice;” and then he added, “you ought to go abroad and study.” { “Pye studied two years,” said Miss Estee, “under Professor Krimbaugh.” “Oh!” said Stamford. He was si- lent for a moment or two, and then he beganagain: “I don’t kmow anything of Professor Krimbaugh, but he can’t give you what you could get abroad. Of course you'd have better chances in studying abroad, you know, than you have here. You can get better train- ing there even than you could get in Boston. Yes! You ought to go abroad ; that’s what wou ought to do. Artis in its infancyin this country, compared to what itis abroad. You might go to England. You know they teach music as well in England now as they do anywhere else. - In fact they have turned out some very great simg- ers'in England.” He felt that he was talking of something that he did @ot know anything about, but what he said sounded well. Miss Estee stood for 2 moment with- out making any reply. There was a very awkward break of silence. Then she saw a friend approaching, and her face ht up with a pleased light of rec- ogunition. She left him standing where he was, to join the young woman, which she did with a rather exuberant air of cordiality, and Stamford did not get another chance to talk with her. Stamford did not make anything out of the county fair, and his trip resulted in nothing, [fe did not know how to begin writing about it, and even. were he to begin, he knew he would not know what to say. But he thought a great deal about Miss Mary Estee, and the more he thought about her the more sure he felt that she had a mag- nificently superb voice. Why should ghe not go abroad and dewelop her voice, as he had suggested? Perhaps she might develop into a greater sing- er, What a splendid thing it would be if he could get his uncle Hlihu and the girls interested in her—if they should send her abroad, and she should develop into a famous prima donna! He continued to build castles in the air about her at odd moments of his time. He fancied her to be an operat- ic queen, and himeelf intimate with her. He fancied her crowned with roses and the world at her feet. As for him—he would have made her all this. She would have been no longer cold ; she would be gratefal, and he would be her friend. When Sunday came he went out to take dinner at his nncle Elihu’s. Mr. Elibu Biglow was very rich. He lived just outside of Boston, in one of thicse beautiful suburbs that are neith- er of the city nor of the country, but have all the, delights and beauties of both. Stamford nearly always went tended service at St.’ Michael's, and then took a family dinner at his uncle's. The family consisted of Mr. Biglow himself, Miss Susan, acd Miss Clara. Mr." Biglow was a shy, silent little, wan, always ill at ease, very quiet and retiring in his manner. ‘Stamford of- ten wondered how he had come to be rich, but then he had never seen him with ~ hig’ sixth (“business”) sense aroused.” Miss Susan was lke her father, very silent and shy. She did not often venture anything beyond a timid commonplace, and she would sit with hands folded in her lap listening attentively to what Clara said. Miss Clara.was bright and “smart” ‘enough for all three; indeed, she was bright to over-keenness, and perhaps for that rea- son ‘was not so popular as'she might have been ; for people, as a rule, do not like to be made pin-cushions for witty sayings. = | Gr Anil Clara laughed at Stamford when he told about his prima donna. She had played the Sunday school organ at St. ‘Michael's and led the choir in singing. “Why, Tom,” said she, “your swan’s a gooee, and nothing more. There's nat a country town nowadays that does not have its soprano. genius, too, and most of them study music. Thi girl you're speaking of— I'll venture 10 say, if you only knew it, ‘that, she’s gone through a course of vocal training, just as they all do, un- teacher of vocalization.” Stamford = remembering Professor ‘assertion. ‘But her voice hasn’t, been properly brought out,” hesaid. , And then Miss Clara laughed again. But though Miss Clara laughed, Stam- ford bad, after all; said enough to lin terest the Biglows in Miss Estee. By tea-time they were all talking seriously | about her, with only an occasional joke from Miss Clara, and before Stamford’ had lett them the two young ladies had’ agreed to go down to West Newton the following Sunday to hear Miss Estee sing.” They went, and they came back only lees enthusiastic than Stamford had been. Then Uncle Elihu himself became interested. | A great deal of negotiation and correspondence followed, and then the girl came down to Boston. SH BROT: Fubav Her father came with her:! He was cashier of the. West Newham: Bank, where he had a salary very much smaller than his family. He was a lorless little ‘man, dressed in dull oy He had alarge noseand a thia face; and he made yon somehow ‘think of a mouse. Ii seemed to Stanford that the little man toadied to his uncle Elihu, He ‘was’ Sra Spotted in the’ ‘girl Lereelf; she did not look nearly so ‘well now -that she was brought down ta Boston, . In West Newham, where she b:longed, her localism did not ap: up this village of half breed. Jodiane got Mrs, West to'intrcduce him to’ the pear nearly so local. Nevertheless, down 10 Woodbridge on Sunday, at’ studied music diligently, and she They all have. (der the instruction of some provincial Krimbaugh. did not deny Miss Clara's Miss Estree certainly had a fine voice. The Biglow girls took charge ot her, and one day they took her into town. She sang before that eminent musician Dr. Mortimer, with all the poise and ‘assurance of inexperience and igno- rance. Dr. Mortimer liked her voice very much indeed. ‘He was an ex- tremely quiet man and did not say much, bnt what he did say was of the best and most encouraging. During Miss Estee’s stay in Boston, Stamford saw a great deal of her. The Biglow girls, who bad her in charge, were both interested in her and amused with her. When she asked for a little more “chicking” at dinner, Miss Clara almost winked at Stamford. Bat it was only occasionally that Miss Estee made such lapses in Stamford’s pres- ence. She was very bright and quick- witted, and she did not ofiea betray herself before him. She very well knew that she bristled with localisms and idioms, and whenever a stranger was present she hedged herself around with a silence that was almost resent- ful, and from which she looked out eharply and keenly whenever she sus pected herself of having erred in some- thing she bad said or done. She must have talked with the Biglow girls more freely and unreservedly as she got better acquainted with ‘them. Miss Clara used to repeat scraps of her con- versation with a precision and accuracy himself. “It's: a shame,” said he, helplessly, “to make such fun of a poor girl ; she can’t help her peculiarities.” “Dear me,” said Clara Biglow, “I don’t mean to make any naughty fun of her. I like her very much ; indeed I do; but I can’t help being amused when she ‘wants to know!’ or when she says to me ‘do tell I' During the time that Miss Estee was sang repeatedly at St. Michael's. At the conclusion of the first service at which she sang a number of the more prominent people of the rich and more than respectable congregation came up to thank her for her lovely voice. Stamford stood near her, holding her wraps ; he felt almost an air of pro- prietorship that was very delightful. The girl received her ovation with ‘an air of reserve and coldness under which the enthusiasm wilted, in spite of its initial warmth. In the beginning of December Miss Estee went to‘Europe with a friend of the Biglows, and letters of introduction from . Dr. Mortimer to some of the leading musical lights in London, and a check for a good round sum from Mr. Biglow. For a time'the Biglows heard every little while from Miss Esiee. The letters they received were written in a precise, almost school-girlish hand, and her sentences were joined together with a great many “ands” and “so’s.’ ‘Clara used to read them to Stamford of a Sunday with a nasal intonation and a slurring of the “r’s” into “ah’s,” very much like Miss Estee’s own style of talking. So for a little while the ac- ‘quaintance and the correspondence were kept up. Then the letters be came more intermittent. Then came a letter saying that Miss Estee would have no more need of Uucle Elihu’s monetary assistance, and that she had a position that would easily pay for her support and her tuition. Then came another letter ; then a long interval of silence. Then came another letter, enclosing a check, returning the money that Mr, Elihu Biglow had advanced her ; then a silence that was not again broken. : ; But Stamford heard of her once or twice, more or less indirectly. A friend ot the Biglows, a Mrs. Walker, had met her in London. The young lady had been asked to sing at an evening company ; Mrs. Walker had talked with her afterwards, and the girl had said that she was about going to the Continent. ‘‘She is very success- ful,” said Mrs. Walker, “and she is very different from what I remember ber here, So much more—what shall I say ?—fine. Yes, fine—and polished,” That was about the last time. that Stamford heard of his protegee. Then she drifted out of his life altogether, and became only a remembrance.’ ' Eight or nine years passed, and Stamford grew from. his green unripe state to the mellowness of manhood. The Liberator faded out from its cherry-stain state of existence into that of painted deal and rough-cast plaster, and thence faded out and. was gone from the world of letters. Stanford succeeded in his profession, and became the assistant editor upon the New Era, and it was a part of the whirligig of fate that Mr. Cadger should now bring contributions | to him, ‘Ah, Mr. Stamford,” said the ex-editor, “I knew you had the talent when you used to write for me in ‘the Liberator, and I used tosay that boy is: bound to sue- was kind to him. : It was aboat this time that a singer developed very suddenly’ somewhere labroad. The first that the American. world knew of her was that she was singing in London, and that all the world ~ was’ talking about her. Her ‘name was Marie d’Esti, and some fa miliarity in the sound ‘made Stamford think ‘ot his' own soprano, and laugh at his old ambitions, and ‘wonder what |' became of her. Then D'Hsti’s mana- ger brought her over to this country in a revival of Italian opera, and she was ‘presented in‘ New York with” phehom- enal success. One Saturday afternoon 8 lot of exchanges was brought into ‘the office of the New Fra, among ‘others” some “illustrated weeklies. Stamford was ‘passing by the ‘table where ‘they lay, when the front-page illugtration of one of the papers caught his eye, and he stopped to. look at it. It was an engraving, a portrait of Marie d'Esti, paintéd “by Jasper. There was ; something: very familiar about the face that struck Stamford at once, and be looked at. it for. a long time, with his head first on one side and ‘then’ on ‘the other.’ Suddenly recognition eame almost like ‘a ‘flash. “By George !"! said he, fairly speaking | aloud; “by George! It is! Yes, it that made Stamford laugh in spite of in Boston before she went abroad she: ceed.” And Stamford laughed and | ‘me very much if you’ll let me have a 1 “Well, here is some.” ! i must be. By Jove!” Then he folded up the paper and stuck it in his pocket. He still kept up bis praetice of tak- ing his Sunday dinrer at his uncle went out to Woodbridge he carried the illustrated newspaper with him. “Look here, girls,” said he, after they had come home from church together, and he took the newspaper out® of his overcoat pocket and. opened it. ! » . 1 you recognize it?" i They did recognize her very quickly. | Miss Clara emphasized the recognition | with an almost ‘breathless “Well, .I | never!” She looked very long and steadily at the newspaper portrait. “I never thought of it being her,” said | she. “Why, of course, that’s just ex- | .actly who it 181” and then she said | again after a while, “Well, T never!’ | That winter Marie d'Esti came to! Boston to sing, and of course Stamford | and the Biglows went to hear her upon her opening night. They , hardly | recognized her at first, but with the aid | of the opera-glasses the identity was | unmistakable. Her voice had been very extensively advertised, but it was | all the advertisement claimed it to, be | —it was wonderful, It was not espec- | ially powerful, but it was supple and | flexible in the extreme, her runs and | trills being given with no apparent ef- fort, and with all the ease and fluency | of a singing-bird. ’ “Well, she has certainly learned how | to sing,”” whispered Stamford.” Who would bave thought that the county fair at West Newton would have pro- duced this ?” “l tell you what T'd like t» do,” whispered Miss Clara in response, “I would like to goto the stage eatrance and see her come out. I can hardly believe, even yet, it really is she.” Se, after the performance was over, they went around and stood on the cold sidewalk at the stage entrance. A coupe—a dashing, brilliant affair— was waiting for the singer. By-and-by she came out, muffled in a loose white wrap and a suit of rich fur. She was under the escort of a gentleman of a distinctly foreign appearance, wearing mustaches waxed to points and a singularly man-of-the-world air. She was about passing the little group un- der the cluster of lights atthe curb, when she looked up and saw them. Recognition came with a flash. She stopped for an instant, Then she snatched her hand from her escort's arm and came quickly to them. “Ob,” she cried, “I am so glad—so very glad to see you! I was going to write to tell you I was in Boston, but I can’t tell you how busy I am. My secretary is sick, ‘and "I almost never write letters myself. But do come. and see me, won’t you? I'm stopping at the Hotel Metropole.” Then she turned suddenly to her escort, who all this time was standing aside with an infinitely gentlemanly air cf fine re- serve, holding some of the singer's wraps upon his arm. “Count,” said she, “these are the ladies of whom I have so often spoken to you. Miss Biglow, Miss Ciara Biglow, Mr. Big: low, let me introduce you to my hus- band, Count Stinitz. Count Stinitz, Mr. Stamford.” Her husband bowed in a general and affable way, and in an exceedingly gen- tlemanly fashion, to the Boston people, and then she took his arm again, “Remember,” said the singer, with a smile that was very beautiful, “I shall expect to see you at the Hotel Metro- pole to-morrow. Good night.” And then she was gone. { The four stood for a while.in the dark and’ silent street, dirty with the snow that had been trodden underfoot. Nothing could have exceeded the spon- taneousness and cordiality of the sing- er's greeting ; it was beyond measure warm and hearty, and she evidently meant that she wanted to see them. Nevertheless, there was about her an indescribable air of urbanity, almost | of condescension—nat in the least snob- ‘bish, not in the least assumed, but very plainly a manner that had grown upon her with the splendid growth of her fortune. They had none of them known before what a great personage a great singer was. =. ? “Well,” said Miss Clara, breaking the silence with a deep breath, *‘upon. my word!” aod Stamford burst out laughing. > ! “She did not write because her sec- retary ‘was sick,” said Miss Clara again, just as she was stepping into the carriage, “I feel as though we had. all lived in a barn-yard and had hatched out a swan I" and Stamford laughed again.— Harper's Weekly. Man Wants But Little; Etc, From the New York Weekly. '* Tramp. “Please, mum, would you be so kind &s to let me have a needle and thread ?”’ ! ’ Mrs. Suburb. “Well, y-e:s, I' can let you have that.” ~ “Thankee, mum. Now you'd oblige ‘bit of cloth for a patch.” “Thankee, mum, butit’s a different color from my travelin’ suit. Perhaps’ ‘mum you could spare me some of your | ‘husband's old clothes that: this patch will mateb,”’ fy yo “Well, I declare | I'll give you an old suit, however. ''Here it is.,’ ~ . “Thankee, mum. : I see it's'a little large, mum, but if you’ll kindly furnish me with a square meal, mebby I can fill it out.’”.’ Gh : HAT ES ———Are you on to the new walk— the new gait—of the fashionable girl. The paragrapher of the summer girl does not Rppesr to have caught it, but it is here. - 1t'beats the Grecian bend or anything the girls have yet -abopted as their own. It can best be described as aswagger. The head is moved from side to side, the shoulders and the whole body. sways, giving exactly the motion a person apparently has who is standing gideways in a boat when the waves are rough. Tt is a foreign notion introduc- ed last season abroad and the few fash- ,upon a lining and finished with a ‘ruche, There'is’a ruff of box-plaited satin ribbon of organdie dresses and an- other of shaded velvet and white lace for more elaborate toilets. The “collar” may be only this-—a neck, or it'may be an extensive cape, fluffing to’ the waist in extravagances of gauze and chiffon, The wildest extreme has been reached when a single length of black lace ser- ves as a background for strings of mock gems hanging from, the Marie Louise collar around the throat; of a girl scarce. ly out of her teens, f For and About Woman. Taut and trig the belted jacket. Perpendicular trimmings for the short Elihu’s, and the next day when he Woman. ? A woman conceals what she does not know. Head drapes of chiffon for an evening stroll. White satin is in vogue for evening “Here's a picture of Marie'd’ Esti, | Do dresses. Grenadine the popular fabric for light weight gowns. : Weather, wind and a woman's mind . change like tke moon, White lace veils are worn with sailor hats, about which they are carelessly knotted with ends hanging down in the. back. : The latest fad in an incongruous combination of material is holland and black satin, a plain coat of holland hav- ing deep revers and a lining throughout of the satin. The newest and smartest way to wear flowers is to have one large La France rose cut with a long stem and foliage and pinned in at the left side, the fol- iage reaching to the waist. , One of the numerous young newspa- per women who are demonstrating to a previously skeptical public that beauty and brains may inhabit the same earth- ly tenement of clay is Miss Mary Adel- aide Belloc. Among the dainty novelties are Maria Antoinette capes of lace, either black or white, that are to be worn with summer toilets. These have long scarf ends that fasten at the belt and fall to the skirt hem. For traveling the blue and ox-blood gloves will be worn, and sailor suits having men’s vests of figured duck are the most popular. = For dressy wear the Leghorn hat continues in favor, but for all jaunts the ever-popular sailor seems to completely answer the purpose. A little cream of tartar water, lemo- nade, powered borax in your bath ; corn pone, corn muffins, corn dodgers and corn cakes along with graham bread giuten bread, whole wheat bread and brown bread will do more for the com- proving ade all the creams in the mar- et. ! ‘The Montana Republicans have se- lected 2 woman lawyer as council in their offort to secure the control of the Legislature, and for this they have em- ployed the legal services’ of Miss Ella Knowles, who was the Populists candi- date for Attorney General at the recent election and who came within 1,000 votes of being elected. : Eton, Russian and zouave jacket ef- fects are still a marked feature of new waists that open over shirred, plaited or folded vests, the fronts very full and are girdled. Lapped fronts opening over silk or chiffon inserted plastrons remain in great favor, and the corslet bodice, with guimpe of lace, net or oth- er delicate fabrics, will be in high vogue for months to come. A. very pretty dress was striped dimity a white foundation, with hair-lines of black, moss green and pale blue. The skirt was trimmed with two nar- row ruffles of black lace, set on in ‘deep. waves, one headed by a ruching of pale blue satin ribbon, the other by one, of green, to match the stripes in the dress. The waist bad a similar adornment fgo- ing over the shoulders and forming a yoke effect, both back and front. Large sleeves drawn ‘into little narrow cuffs completed a costume that was undoubt- edly made by a French modiste at a mcdiste’s price, but which. could easily be duplicated at home for one-third the money. : The downward tendency of the sleeve .does not lessen the quantity of material required to construct these deformed at- tachments of the regular gown, and it is still necessary to consider the sleeve before any other part of the gown. Ex- pansion continues to be the fashion of the day, with the difference that it is around the elbows, and has the effect of breadth rather than height. shoulders should not be raised at all ex- cept for evening gowns. ° Half short sleeves are popular. for summer wear, and in thin material there is more ruffle finish for the top in place of the more common puff" A long, full puff, ex- tending below the elbow and finished at the top with a close-fitting cap, is one of the new designs. ' Collars are indispensable in the well- finished costumes, so they say, these leaders whose infinite attention and fde- tail has earned them the distinction of being genuises in dress. They are fashioned of lace, of tulle, plain or “embroidered, of grendadine with gay. stripes of. satin, of gauze, of mousseline de soie, ¢f silk and rain- bow tissues. Most are black, to be worn with any gown, but many are designed especially for one costume and these are the most elegant. . ‘White lace is worn with silk dresses at garden parties, dan- ces, and outdoor fetes. A quaint and daring fancy is'a huge neck ruffof black’ collarettes of alternate black and white, Another one of these , most Jopilas garnitures is the ‘umbrella’ collarette,’ so ealled from its’ regular points’ ‘down the back and over the bust. It is usual - ly made of changeable silk, fribared ) ul ” One of the simplest and prettiest mod- els yet/seen ‘is'an appurtenance'to a lilag .crepon dress. It is of . deep; heliotrope gauze heavily plaited and -edgad with a purple lace so deeply colored that it shone almost black, “Tt fastened behind with:a Florian’ knot. wo long “ends of deep purple satin ribbon with the coquettish cognomen of “follow me’. hung to the hem of the skirt. ionable women who are {rying it on may think it beautiful; but itisn’t. © It of purple velvet, is technically called the waggle.” 8 ' The handkerchief bag at the side was hanging by purple’ trings. The and white lace, from which are’hung “hen