Bomar tc Bellefonte, Pa., March 2, 1894. AT THE TURN OF THE ROAD. Where the rough road turns, and the valley swee! Smiles bright with its balm and bloom, We'll Pras the thorns that have pierced the ee And the nights with their grief and gloom ; And the sky will smile, and the stars will am, And we'll lay us down in the light to dream. We shall lay us down in the bloom and light With a prayer and a tear for rest, As tired children who creep at night To the love of a mother’s breast ; And for all the grief of the stormy past, Restshall be sweeter at last—at last! Sweeter because of the weary way And the lonesome night and long, While the darkness drifts to the perfect day With its splendor light and song— The light that shall bless us and kiss and Jove us, And sprinkle the roses of heaven anove us! —F. L. Stanton in Atlante Constitution. A BOTTLE OF ERASIVE FLUID. A Consuming Desire to get Money and What Came of it— Temptation and Fall. “As I look back upon my minister- ial career,” said a white- haired clergy- man at a social gathering recently, “pnumberless romantic, pathetic, tragic incidents in the lives of those committ- ed to my care come crowding up be- fore me—incidents from which thrill- ing romaaces might be woven that would furnish endless themes to the sensational writer. Perhaps as a pio- neer clergyman to the far West my pastoral. experience bas been richer in dramatic material than that of most members of the cloth, for those who penetrated that region in the early an- nals of it were possessed of bold, ad- venturous natures or belonged to that class ‘having a history,’ who lack the courage to face those acquianted with it, or seek in a change of surroundings a refuge from haunting memories. “] remember as if it were but yester- day the first time that Horace Weth- erel appeared among us. I did not see him enter the church, but suddenly in the midst of my sersnon I felt the con- sciousness of a human presence before me—a single, individual presence as distinct from the masses I addressed —s0 distinct, indeed, as to exclude the consciousness of any other presence in the building. Involuntarily my eye sought the man who had thus strange- ly affected me, and with unhesitating intuition I singled him out. Nature, indeed, had made my task an easy one, for his personality was very striking. He was not an old man, not more than 35 at the utmost. but the closely-cut hair about his well formed head was as white as that of a man of 80. His outline was bold and distinct, the lips well chiseled and firmly compressed, and there was in his features that semi- translucency which one sometimes sees in finely-carved statutes. “But it was the eyes of the man that most impressed me, that riveted my own glance as by some strange fascination. I never before en countered a gaze 0 penetrating, so in- tense, so full of power. From that day forth, struggle as I would, I found myself preparing my sermons for this man ; found myself, when I entered the pulpit, preaching to him, as though he were my only auditor, In his pres- ence, by some subtile influence, I was at my best; when his seat was vacant my words, though the same, seemed to lose all force and fervor, seemed to fall to the earth as does an arrow that comes short of its aim. “I sought him out and found him en- gaged in some employment connected with the mines, toiling early and late, though why I could not divine, for one could never imagine him caring for money for its own sake, and he seemed to have no family ties. When I asked him to visit me at my rooms I observed a sort of embarrassed hesitation in his manner. “*Your rooms,” he repeated, nerv- ously, ‘You are not married ?’ # ‘No’ I answered. “Then, after a moment's pause, dur- ing which there were evidences in the sensitive face of an eternal struggle, he said quietly, ‘I will come.’ “That this man had had some strange experience, some deep heart- sorrow, there was in my mind not a doubt; but he did not offér me his con- fidence, and I never soughtit. I no- ticed that he wore upon the little fin- ger of his left hand a plain gold ring, like a woman's wedding ring. I ob: served that he had ‘a nervous habit of turning it around and around with his finger ; but that he never removed it. This, with his question in the early part of our acquaintance as to whether I was married, and the subsequent agi- tation which he betrayed, was the only basis I possessed upon which to found conjectures, ; “It was one evening in the autumn when my friend came to see me that I saw from his face that something unusual had befallen him. “*[ have been a coward, Mr. Gresh- am,’ he burst forth, throwing himself into the chair which I bad placed for him opposite my own, ‘a base, weak coward. I have fled from my past and it has pursued me. Pursued me,’ he repeated, his voice sinking to a lower key, and trembling with some strong, half-suppressed emotion, ‘like a Neme- | | { “+I told you a moment ago that I was a coward. Prepare yourself to be still further shocked. “ +] am also a thief. Yes,’ he said, pausing to note the eftect of his words upon me, ‘let us call things by their right names—a common thief, al- | though the term that tbe law applies sis. I have wanted a thousand times | to reveal to you my past history ; have longed with “an inexpressible longing for the relief which'comes from confes sion, but the same wretched pusilla- nimity has restrained me. Now it can no longer be concealed. It will be known, it will be discussed,” he said, ! shuddering as ove shudders, when a rough touch is laid upon a wound, ‘by | every man, woman and child in the a knot of miners a man thoroughly ac- quainted with my miserable past. exchanged no greetings, but I couid not be mistaken. I saw the look of recognition in his face. to my crime is that of forgery—and a murderer, The murderer — though God knows that I never designed to be —of the woman I had pledged myself to love and cherish; the woman who had committed her happiness to my keeping. Oh! he said, covering his face with his hands and moaning like |'a creature in pain, ‘why was Iso weak ? ( Why permit myself to fall into the snare laid for me by an emissary of the devil himself? Bat,’ lifting his grief- stricken face to mine, ‘let me finish my story ; fet me have done with it.’ “He was silent for a few moments, the workings of his face alone betray- ing the agitation which he felt; then mastering his emotion by a strong ef- fort he continued more quietly : ¢ ‘I had scarcely reached man’s es- tate when my marriage with a young girl to whom I had been deeply at- tached since my boyhood was hast- ened by the sudden death of her father, leaving her—for he was a foreigner— without relatives, without near friends and absolutely penniless. I, myself, was an orphan, and with the small patrimony bequeathed to me was just beginning life, struggling as a stock broker to gain a foothold in one of our large Eastern cities when this conuec- tion was consummated. I had enter- prise sufficient for the accomplishment of any undertaking, but the strength to sit still when inaction was ¢he part of wisdom, the patient endurance of de- lay, which is one of the prime factors of success, had been absolutely denied me. 1 was continually restricted by the want of capital—tied hadd and foot, 80 to speak—and was exaspera- ted by the knowledge that many bril- liant opportunities for advancement were slipping from me because of the lack of the few thousands which would have enabled me to improve them, * In addition to these outside har- assments a cloud appeared in the hori- zon of my little home-world, threaten- ing to overshadow it and darken all my future life. My wife’s health be- gan to decline. Each evening when I noted the increasing languor of her step, the growing pallor of her cheek, I longed with an unspeakable longing for the means with which to place her amid different surroundings, to put her beyond the reach of carking cares, un- til the acquisition of that means— though heaven knows that I never cared for money for money’s sake—be- came the goal of my ambition. Be- side the “almighty dollar,” limitless as it appeared to my distorted vision, in its power of achievements, all other ob- jects became dwarfed. To obtain it “I rose early and sat late and ate the bread of carefulness.” “(It was on a certain morning when my desire for gain had reached its most feverish height that a man en- tered my office and presented to me for ingpection a bottle of what he called erasive fluid. “It will remove all discolorations,’ he said, beginning to check off its mer- its with the mechanical fluency of his class, ‘and is particularly efficacious in eradicating ink stains. That entry, for example,’ he continued, ‘which you have just made in your ledger can be completely obliterated by a single ap- plication of the fluid, and it is equally effectual 1n removing writing of long standing.” “ ‘But of what use would such a preparation be to me?” I asked some- what peevishly for I was in the state to be impatient of all interruption. “The use to you,” my visitor re- plied, with strong emphasis upon the pronoun, ‘is obvious. Suppose, by way of illustration, that entry which you have just made to be a false one. In other words, suppose you make a mistake ; you have only to apply the fluid and the page of your ledger will bear no trace of it, will be as pure and unsullied as if your pen had never passed over it.” “Bat I don’t make such mistakes,’ I said, doggedly, turning to my desk with an air of dismissal more decided than polite, ‘I don’t "keep my books that way-" “fAh!" replied the imperturbable vendor. ‘Well,’ as he buttoned up his coat, preparatory to his departure,’ the most careful of us sometimes make er- rors, and, as 1 will be again in this neighborhood, I will leave a bottle of the fluid with you and let yon think it over,” and with a bow and a smile, he was gone. * ‘That was Saturday, and the next day the thought of the fluid pursued me with a persistence of which I could not rid myself. Would it really do what its agent said it would? If so, to what multiform uses might it not be applied ? Then followed suggestions as to the na- ture of the varied purposes which it might serve, suggestions which came in ever-increasing numbers as the day ad. vanced, which crowded about me as IL lay iu feverish wakefulness upon my bed like a swarm of worrying insects which I could not drive away. The first thing that I did when I opened my desk next morning was to remove the cork from the bottle. which still lay where its owner had left it, and test its power. I tried it first upon a line of writing fresh from my pen, and next on that upon which the ink had thoroughly dried. In both cases the dark tracery disappeared from view as if by magic, and the writ- | ten page before me was transformed in- | to one as white and unstained as though it had just manufacturer's hand. I think it was ; ‘on Tuesday that the agent returned camp, for I saw to-day in the midst of | to the fluid. We to inquire as to my decision in regard said, trying to assume an air of indil- ference, though something seemed to clutch at my throat as I spoke and choke back the words. “Yes?' he said, with an interrogatory accent, pocketing the price of the mixture and turning to go. Then, pausing with his hand upon the knob and looking back at me, be said : “I thought you would decide to take a bottle.” “That look, can I ever forget it! Can I ever ;emember it without a shud- der of horror. It was the loot of triumph which a fiend might cast on one but just ensnared in the devil's net. “(It is useless to describe the con- flicts which ensued, the scene of which concealed from mortal eye, lay deep within my inner consciousness ; useless to trace the gradations in thought and feeling by which I was led to the com- mission of deeds which I shudder to remember ; deeds from the very thought of which I would have recoiled in hor, ror a month before their perpetration. By means of the erasive fluid I effaced the figures upon the securities which passed through my hands, changing their value from a lower to a higher denomination; but the speculations which the increase of capital enabled me to launch into, and by means of which I had hoped to make good the amounts'with which I bad fraudulent. ly possessed myself did not result as I had so fondly hoped. Failure followed failure in rapid succession. Every- thing that I touched turned to dross, and ruin and exposure stared me in the face. “In my despair I confided my sit uation to my wife, and, counseled by her, resolved to give myself up into the hands of the law. Half maddened with remorse and grief the calm forti- tude with which she heard my confes: sion amazed me: I believe now that that fortitude was born of despair. Be- fore taking leave of her I carried her back to the little village where her girlhood had been passed and confided her to the care of acquaintances, she engaging, as a compensation for this care, to perform for them certain home- ly, household duties. To the last her courage never forsook her, and the memory ot her calmly smiling face as she stood looking after mein the door- way went with me through all the dreary years of my imprisonment—re- mains with me still. “ ¢[ believe in you, Horace,’ she said as again and again I returned for a last goodbye. ‘I believe that you will yet retrieve your past,’ and in token of it she slipped the wedding ring from her finger and placed it upon my own. “For five years I looked out upon the world from the barred windows of a penitentiary. “It was on a morning in May when, bleached and haggard from long con- finement, I was released : was resurrec- ted to life, as it were, from my entomb- ment in a prison grave, “I scarcely heeded anything in my eager haste, or noted the flying land- scape as I looked from the car window. What I saw standing out upon the background of these shifting scenes was the face of the woman I had said good- bye to five years before. The thought that filled my mind, excluding every other thought, was that I should see her, see her on that very day: hear her speak to me ; clasp my arms about her; feel her cheek pressed close to mine. The hope that had sustained me throughout the years of our sepa- ration seemed, now that it was draw- ing near to its fulfillment, to endow me with new vigor and give speed to my steps when, my destination reached, I set out afoot in the direction of the home to which I had cousigned her. The bouse before which I finally halt ed, with its closed shutters, had a strangely quiet look. “ ‘Had the family gone elsewhere to live?’ I asked myself, and thus ques- tioning 1 ascended the steps and tried the knocker, The sound brought a vegro woman from the rear of the establishment, who, standing at the corner of the house shading her eyes with her hand from the afternoon gun —for it was afternoon now—stood look- ing at me.’ “ ‘Do the Grahams no longer occu- py the house?’ I asked her. ‘Have they moved away ?' “ ‘Oh, no,’ she said ‘they will be back 1n a little while. They have on- ly gone to the village to attend the tuneral ot a Mrs. Wetherel, who had been in the employment of the family and who died here a few days ago.” “ ‘How much, ah, how much, as I have sincg reflected, do human beings bear in silence! The words that this woman had spoken, little dreaming of their import to me, had given the death blow to every hope that I had cherished of earthly happiness; vet I said not a word, uttered not one ery of anguish. But the man who entered that enclosure was a young man with an erect carriage, a buoyant step; he who now passed from it was old and teeble, and tottered as he walked. How in my stunuoed, dazed condition I found my way to the village church, standing like a sentinel among the graves of those who had once wor- shipped within its walls will ever continue a mystery to me; but I reached it at last. As I passed through its broad gateway--left open for a purpose which I shuddered to conjecture—the closing strains of a funeral hymn were borne upon my ears, and guided by the sound, I passed to the rear of the building. “ ‘What I saw there remains in my mind like a picture rather than a memory--a picture which time and after event have never dimmed. In the distance the sun, sinking like a golden ball behind the horizon, cast a | glorified effulgence about the figure of come from the | an aged clergyman, standing opposite | me upon a slight elevation formed by | the newly excavated soil, an open book !in his band, his white garments and scarcely less snowy locks stirred by the | “I believe I will take one bottle,” I' evening breeze. mourners. Something in my appear- ance must have told him who I was, for at my approach he motioned with bis hand, and those about him fell back, making a passageway for me. “Down this way scarce knowing what I did, I passed with trembling feet—passed to see that which held all that was dear to me on earth lowered to its last resting place.’ “ ‘What followed I will not, cannot dwell upon. Together we might have braved the world and lived down my past. As I was, I fled from it. I fled from it, but 1t has pursued me—aye, pursued me like an avenging spirit. Shall I endeavor to escape from it again or shall I remain where I am and coafront it—live it down ?’ “Remain where you are,’ I said, go- ing towards him and taking his hand in mine. Then kneeling beside him and putting my arms about him in the tenderness ot my passion I reminded him of the magic fluid which erases from our lives the dark tracery of ein, which, in a single 1nstant, obliterates from the “Book of Remembrance’— God’s greatledger, every entry recorded against our names. “Yes,” I said, re- peating his words for the second time, “remain where you are; begin life anew.” And he did. He has lived it down.—Glilberta S. Whittle. Russia’s Horde of Jews. Russia has more than a third of all the Jews in the world, and she is doing her best to reduce this number. Official statistics are not quite reliable on this subject, but it is assumed by the best-in- formed that Russia must have close on to 3,000,000 of the Hebrew race. The United States and England are shocked by the measures which the Czar is tak- ing against the people, and charge him with reviving religious persecution. The Czar replies to this by pointing out that the United States deliberately closed its doors against emigration from China, whose subjects were represented in America to the extent of only about 100,000 souls, mostly upon the Pacific coast. In this matter, moreover, the Czar moves in harmony with the over- whelming majority of his people, high and low ; and were his people to-mor- row to proclaim a republic, one of the fow laws which it would not repeal would be that which excludes the Jew from Holy Russia. The Russian knows his Jew better than we know him, and is therefore better qualified to legislate on the subject. In England, Jews aremet in every walk of lite—in the army, the diploma- tic service, the cabinet, the House of Lords, and amongst the boon compan- ions of England’s future King. As with us, they have cast off every distin- guishing badge of their race, and it is frequently only by accident that we learn the nature of their religious creed. In Russia, however, it is totally differ- ent. There the Jew is as distinct a type as is with us the negro or Chinaman. You can distinguish him as far as you can see, not merely by the face and form, go graphically drawn by Mr. Pen- nell ir his work The Jew at Home, but in certain peculiarities of dress, to which he clings as pertina- civusly as does the Apache to his ‘blanket or the Mexican to his sombrero. The Jew of Kovno, Warsaw, Kiev, and where-ever else I have run across him in Russia, wears a curious curl that hangs down in front of each ear, some- times to his chin. His cap of black al- paca or cloth sits far back on his head, close tu his ears, with a visor as large as those once fashionable amongst our brakemen and conductors. His coat of black cloth or alpaca is modelled after that in which Dundreary is usually por- trayed, reaching down to his ankles, and assisting to give him the long, lean, hungry look of the Shylock type. On his feet are boots worn outside of his trousers, in one hand an umbrella, in the other a valise ; for the Jew in Russia is usually moving from place to place on business, unless heis so poor as to be forced into menial occupation. Russia has limited the territory in which Jews are allowed to live to a nar- row strip, beginning in the Baltic pro- vinces near Riga and ending at the Black Sea, following, roughiy, the west- ern frontier of empire, along the borders of Prussia, Austria, Hungary, and Rou- mania. These four countries—or rather three, if we regard Austria and Hun- gary as one—know more of the Jews by actual contact than any other people ; for, according to the lastcensus on the subject, there were in Austro, Hungary 1,643,908 ; German Empire, 567,884; Roumania, 400,000. The same consus gave for Great Bri- tain and Ireland only 46,000 Jews ; France, 49,439; Norway, only 34; Spain, 402. In fact, as compared with Russia’s neighbors, the number of Jews in other countries is hardly worth men- tiong.—From ¢The Russian and his Jew,” by Poultney Bigelow, in Har- per’s Magazine for March. Recognized the Apple. It Could Grow Upon Only One Tree and He Knew Where It Was. A man of about 60 years of age went into a store on Main street Wednesday afternoon and stood by the stove warm- ing himself and listening to the con- versation of the men present. Hap- pening to glance at a barrel of apples by the counter, he took up one and bit it. He stopped, looked at the apple, and then stopped reflectively. After taking another taste of the apple he broke out: ¢Say, I'd almost be willing to bet a dollar that I can tell where this apple grew. There is only one tree on earth that has the flavor that apple has, and it grew back ot ithe house where [ first lived when I was married and set up for myself. Say, now, dida’t that apple grow in Bowdoinham? I know fall well it did.” The clerk told him that a maa from that town broaght them in, and the stranger said: “I bave not been down there tor 10 years, yes, 15, but I remember this bitter-sweet apple tree; and the apples taste as they did 20 years ago.” — Lew- iston Journal. ——Fifty companies manufacture el- Before him, ranged | ectric lamps. in a semi-circle about what I knew to | be an open grave, was a little group of ! I ————— -—By using a microphone, you can hear a fly walk. | methods. The First Irish Potatoes, It Was Sir Walter Raleigh Who First Took “Praties” to Ireland. Sir Walter Raleigh, says the Youth's Companion, was an unprincipled adven- turer, and failed as an administrator and colonizer, but he had most commenda- ble taste for planting and gardening; and in these branches of effort his in- fluence remains potent. Three hundred years have passed since he lived in Ire- land, in the county of Cork, on the vast estate which had been bestowed upon him ; but the yellow wallflowers which he brought to Ireland from the Azores still flourish and bloom in the very spot where he planted them. Near by, at Youghal, near Cork, on the shores of the Blackwater estuary, stands the Affanecherry which he plant- ed. Some cedars which he brought to Cork are still growing at a place called Tivoli. Four yew trees, whose branches have grown and interlaced into a sort of summer house, are pointed out as having sheltered Raleigh when he first smoked tobacco in his garden at Youghal. Raleigh tried to make tobacco grow in Great Britian, but the climate was not found suitable to it. He succeeded however, by introducing the habit of smoking it, in making it grow in plenty of other places. More important to the world tha: the spot where Raleigh sat and smoked his Indian weed is another spot in his gar- den at Myrtle Grove, in this same Youg- bal. This spot is still bounded by the town wall of the thirteenth century. It was here that Raleigh first planted a curious tuber brought from America, which throve vastly better than his to- bacco plants did. This tuber, Raleigh insisted, was good to eat, though comwon report for a long time pronounced it poisonous. Some roots from his vines he gave to other landowners in Murster. They cultiva- ted them and spread them abroad from year to year. This plant was the Trish potato. Be- fore many generations it became the sta- pie food of the Irish people—almost the only food of a great many of them. It was the “Irish potato’ which came back to America and became the ground work so to speak, of the American farm- er’s and workingman’s daily breakfast and dinner. Sir Walter’s curious ex- periment in acclimatization became an economic step un the very first conse- quence ; and the spot at Youghal, which was its scene, deserves marking with a monument much more than do the blood of men which has been shed in battle. A Wonderful Pier. Where the American Line Passengers Will Land . in New York. On the Hudson river, atthe foot of Fulton street New York, is situated the new pier of the American line, which is one of the finest in America. It is sit- uated in the immediate vicinity of the ferry termini of all the railway lines which centre in Jersey City and Hobo- ken. It can also be easily reached by the elevated roads and the cable cars. The new pier is 720 feet long , the piers in use by other lines are about 600 feet long. The width of the American line pier is 125 feet ; that of the other piers 70 feet. The pier was specially built to order by the city, and the annual ren- tal is $50,000, the lease running for 10 years. On this superb pier the Ameri- can Line company has erected a huge SaDersrniry at an expense of $300,- Some of the features of this great shed are new. The building is divided into two stories. From the decks of the steamships tha passengers will walk off on an almost horizontal jangway to the second floor, which resembles a large railway waiting room. To anyone who has ever crossed the Atlantic or visited a pier either before sailing or on comple- tion of a voyage, the advantage of land- ing the passengers away from the al- most inextricable tangle of cabs, wagons and freight will be apparent. A commodious passenger elevator at the shore end of the pier will add great- ly to the comfort of passengers Special elevators are arranged for baggage. Comfortable waiting rooms are provided as well as telegraph, cable, and tele. phoné service. The pier is lighted throughout with arc and incandescent lamps. This new pier, in which the comfort of the passenger is carefully considered, will probably be the fore- runner of many such piers, and will be in keeping with the five ocean racers which are now being built at the Cramps, shipyard in Philadelphia for this line.—Scientific American. Tree-Climbing Fish. The Indian Perch and Its Remarkable formance. Per. The climbing perch of India is said, according to good authority, to ramble about the banks of streams and ‘to climb trees growing near the tidewater rivers it inhabits. It goes on these expeditions to secure food-—-a certain small shell-fish of which it is very fond. Its spines, which can be tolded and unfolded at pleasure, cerve as claws and, with side fins and taii, it is enabl- ed to work its way along awkwardly, and slowly. The animal finds that it cannot be a landlubber tor any great length of time, because its gills become dry. On the first indication of danger from this or other cause it hastens back to its native element. Negro Education in the South, : TuseGEE, Ala.—Afler the education- al convention about 150 officers and teachers of the colored schools of the south remained for a meeting to com- pare notes as to their work and Dr. Hubbard received close attention as he told of the McHarry medical college at Nashville, Tenn. It has sent out 234 doctors. 25 pharma- | cists and 20 dentists, all of whom have regular work and are doing ‘well. The physicians report incomes as high as $9,00 a year. The average is from $300 to $1,200. The younger schools in the country and small villages made ex- cellent reports, The reports from Mt. Meia, Calhoun, Georgiana and Marlow, in Baldwin county, were especially in- teresting because of their location where the colored people are in such large ma- jority and for their industrial features. For and About Women. Mrs. William L. Wilson, wife of the well-known Congressman, is very quiet in her tastes and is a close student of political economy. . The smart skirt is of conservative full- ness and outline, fitting the front and sides trimly, and flaring in graceful full. ness just back of the hips. Itis a com- bination of the circle front and sides with three godet plaits in the back, To give the rounded appearance to the plaits and keep them from crushing and creasing, they are interlined with a split sheet of wadding tacked to the lining ; and they are held securely in place by being tacked to 13 inch wide ribbons placed across them on the inside. In some of the newer models a modification of the old time skirt extender is used, a fine steel spring in a casing, which is tacked to the inner edges of the plaits, and the ends are connected by ribbons and tied so as to give contour to the back. The basques that are now seen on so many bodices are in box plaits, and are a step toward Klizabethan fashions. They are lined with some stiff materials, and stand out over the hips like the large fluted collars stand out round the neck. These basques are only worn with evening dresses as yet. Bodices provided with these hip frills are called “Marie Stuart’ in France. They are made either low or high in the neck, and have enormous sleeves, forming several puffs from shoulders to wrists, and have epaulettes round the shoulders resembling a little bolsters. They are: often made of a material ditterent from the skirt. The return to the double skirt isa blessing in disguise when the making- over process is to be considered, but to cut up a new dress in this fashion is a sin and a shame that all women are certain to cry out against. The Incroy- able cravat has likewise given a hint to. the girl who has yards of sasa ribbon tucked away waiting for that time when sashes will be once more in fash- ion. A little gathered lace, a few rows of insertion, the best part of the sash ribbon employed to the best advantage, and there you have the latest fancy for almost nothing. Mis Sophia B, Raeunlich is the busi- ness manager of the Engineering and Mining Journal of New York. She has just been elected a life fellow of the British Imperial Institute. There are only twenty other members and she is the only woman member in the United States. If I were going to advise one who would buy several wool gowns, 1 should say let one be of serge, one of cloth and the other of black satin. Black satin is not wool but it falls into the eategory, and it will cover a multitude of wool duties and extend its usefulness a good deal farther than wool—even to the making of an impromtu evening or travelling dress.—Cloth may be trim- med with fur, lace, jet, velvet, but nev- er with moire silk. Never trim any- thing with moire. It is not a good trimming material. In small pieces, as facings, it is hard and cold and fright fully trying to the complexion. The shop windows filled with airy or- gandies and muslins look like a hot house with the delicate blossoms shelter- ed from the rough weather outside by thick panes of clear glass. Unseasona- ble as 1t seems, to display in January and February the goods to be worn in July is the universal costume. Tiny and large dots appear on these dainty and not high-priced fabrics, in every device, and the hair-line weave of the ground makes the thin material look all the more sheer and exquisite. There are white grounds with dots of navy French blue, heliotrope, lavender and pink. There are rings and duplex rings and dotted stripes and clusters of dots on grounds of white or any of the deli- cate shades, also many fanciful designs in forget-me-not colors of blue, lavender and pink on white grounds, alse floral designs, with what are called shattle designs, between the flowers. All these pattern sell for the reasonable price ot 30 or 35 cents. Sashes or narrow ribbon are to be much worn during this summer. A dress of white organdie, with pale blue flowerets scattered over it, has a sash of blue satin ribbon, about two inches wide, which goes once around the waist and ties in the back in an old-fashioned bow, with small loops and long ends. Mrs. Mattie H. Sniffin, of St. Paul, hassued a New York life insurance company for $236,000. She worked for the company two or three years on com- mission. This shows how valuable a womans services sometimes are. A jaunty conceit isa Eton jacket formed of black satin ribbon and white insertion with epaulettes and jabot of white lace. This, when worn over the plainest black frock, produces an expen- sive effect that is easily accomplished. A separate bodice of Persian-looking stuff with big black satin sleeves and turquois blue, or magenta velvet collar to alternate with the strictly tailor-made one for street wear, furnishes another change that is delightful. Gold or sil- ver trimming can be happily ewployed, and so long as a woman has a black frock as the basis of ber wardrobe, she need never despair of looking well dress- ed on all occasions. A Brack AND WHITE SPRING. — From a winter of black and whites we have indeed come to a black and white spring. Since women have discovered that there is no combination so sharp, startling, threatrical and effective, they are restoring it to the favor from which at one time it tell because of over popu- larity and promiscuous use. A black and white striped silk in the ‘spring cut will be quite modish ; and chic theater bodices and frail tea gowns display the game theme in almost endless variety. Pure black, too, is extremely modish, even for young girls ints whose merry hearts entered never yet the thought of mourning.