es Bellefonte, Pa., June 1, 1894. RAIN AND ROBIN. A robin in the morning, In the morning early, Sang a song of warning— “There'll be rain! There'll be rain!” Very, very clear! a From the orchsa me the gentle horning, “There'll be rain! But the hasty farmer Cut his hay down— Did not heed the charmer From the orchard— And the mower’s clatter Ceased at noontide, For with drip and spatter Down came the rain. Then the prophet robin, Hidden in the erab-tree, Railed upon the farmer: “J told you so! I told you so I” As the rain grew stionger, And his heart grew prouder, Notes so full and slow Coming blither{ londer— “I told you so! I told you so ! told you so!” ; — Duncan Campbell Scott, in St. Nicholas. ER STC, EE ——— THE BROWN WOMAN. At a distance of about 30 miles from Harper's Ferry is situated one of the oldest and quaintest towns in Virginia. Not only do its historic associations, at- tract the traveler, but the picturesque charm of its old time homes induces him to linger there, hunting curios or plucking thyme and myrtle from the garden of some ancient dame. Of all these homes, none 80 invites the cu- rious passerby as that of Miss Polly Waller, ' A stone wall, ivy grown and discolored, encloses the spaciotis gar- den in the centre of which stands this lady’s house. What delights are re- vealed to those who can roam at will in this garden on a sunny day! The inner side of the stone wall is a back- ground against which one sees a row of twisted white lilac bushes, the blos- soms of which in spring fill the whole neighborhood with their delicious sweetness. A carefully trimmed and regularly grown border of box incloses the flower beds and outlines the well trodden gravel walks, along the sides ot which grow roseniary and calacan- thus, yellow jasmine and syringa, cit- ron, aloes and damask roses, One evening in the month of Sep- tember several ladies were gathered about a card tablein Miss Polly’s front parlor. ‘The evening being cool and windy, the huge fireplace was piled high with blazing logs. So enticing did the fire prove that very soon all the ladies threw down thefr cards and grouped themselves close to the hearth. The high wind outside caused an over- hanging maple bough to lash itself against the window pane. This excit- ed the ‘nerves of some of the ladies, and this with the social and expansive element which a fire has always the power to awaken, turned the conversa- tion upon the weird and fantastic. “I can tell you a genuine ghost story and, what's more, every word of it is true,” said Miss Blunt, a lady who, though still unwedded, could own to years and experience sufficient to ex- pect that her word be accepted. “Tellus! Tell us!” clamored half a dozen female voices. “Well,” began Miss Blunt, who was a frail, nervous little woman, with wide open, startled eyes, which one could easily believe had acquired their present expression from frequent ob- « servations of ghosts, Before continu- ing she drew nearer to the fire, clasped one knee about with both hands and continued : “Some years ago I went to New York on a visit to a relative. This cousin was descended on the pa- ternal side from an old Dutch family, which in days long gone by had built a great house in Bleecker street and there for three generations had lived in the enjoyment of wealth and high social position. At last, however, evil days came, the house in Bleecker street passed into strange hands, and the old family became scattered. “This cousin had somewhat regained the wealth and ‘position which his family had lost. By a strange freak he rebought the old house in Bleecker street, preferring it to an up town resi- dence. After he had refitted it, it made a charming home. It was after he and his family had been living there for some months that I went to visit them. When looking out of the windows, it seemed queer to be in this part of New York, but when I gave myself up to the comfort and beauty of the rooms it was as delightful as any ‘house I even saw—at least I thought so, though the family itself did not seem quite certain concerning it. ul “My cousin, I could see, was charmed with the success of his scheme and had the satisfied air of a man who has played a bold game and wou. The wife and daughter did not appear to partake ‘of his content. They were restless at times, and I was inclined to think them wanting in gratitude. “One day I was sitting in my room, untying some embroidery silks, when upon looking up I saw standing be- fore me a little old woman, all dressed in brown, with a white handkerchief crossed upon her breast. Her face was that of a foreigner, and. her eyes had that pathetic, appealing look in them which goes straight to the heart. Finding this strange woman in my room unannounced, I felt some surprise and questioned her sharply. She gave me no reply, but stood there, looking me through, as it were, with those pa- thetic eyes. Thinking her some for- eign sewing woman who was possibly embarrassed at her inability to use the English language, I told her to accom: pany me down stairs, where some one no doubt could be found who would understand what she wished. “We started together out of the room, [I preceded, but kept her in sight. Upon the stairs she seemed to disappear suddenly. I called to her, I ran back to see if I had been mistak- en and if she lingered sill in my room. I did not see her anywhere. hen. I { into one of the other rooms, and that I had better descend and send some one to seek her. I wentdown into the li- brary, where my cousin’s wife and daughters were occupied with their em- broideries. I told them about the lit- tle woman, up stairs and requested that they look after her.. When I had finished my story, my cousin's wife shivered & little and remarked in a strained voice, ‘That is strange.’ She] rose from ber chair. ‘You said she had very pathetic eyes?’ she asked. “Yes, the most pathetic I ever saw,” T replied. The girls looked down at their work, but said nothing. Their mother left the room, bat soon re- turned saying, ‘It was nothing.’ After this we settled down te our work, and the morning, though perceptibly chilled by my little episode, passed quickly b J Ta this point in the varration all the ladies drew closer together, and forming a circle about the parrater urged her to proceed. “Some nights after this,” continued Miss Blunt, “I awoke suddenly from my sleep, and there, standing by my bed, almost bending over me, 1 saw clearly by the street light, which fell directly into my room, this same little woman, all dressed in brown, with the white handkerchief crossed upon her breast, and looking earnestly at me as she had done some days before. I sprang up quickly and called to her as I hastened to light the gas, but she was not to be seen, nor was there any sign of any one having entered my room. Itis not necessary to say that I bolted my door securely, wrapped myself in the blankets and eat up the rest of the night. This time I conclud- ed that my cousin’s wife had some de- mented relative or friend confined in the house, and that she had escaped accidentally and made these excursions into my room. I determined to speak to my cousin in the morning and ob- tain the truth from him, and thus pro tect myself against further alarm and fright. When I descended the next morning, I was so fortunate as to meet wy cousin alone in the lower ball. ‘Come into the library and let me speak with you,’ [ said. He led me into the room, saying, laughingly, ‘Have you, 100, seen the ghost?" ‘In- deed I have,’ 1 replied, and thea told him of what had happened to me. He seemed annoyed. ‘It’s very strange,’ he said. ‘No one is confined bere in the house. Soon after we came this game little brown woman appeared to my wife. When she told me of it I laughed at her. ln afew days, how- ever, the thing repeated itself. Both of the girls have seen her. I myself bave not yet been honored. Seriously, though, I begin to fear that there is a mystery. Sometime must be done. My wife and daughters wished to give up the house a month ago, but I felt that there must be some mistake, and I determined to remain and prove to them that either it was their over- wrought imaginations or something which would in time explain itself naturally.” “At breakfast my cousin related my experience to the family. We discuss- ed the matter seriously. That same day my cousin’s wife heard low cries of distress in one of the vacant bedrooms. Summoned by her, we went into the room immediately, but found no one. On the night of that day I was again awakened from my sleep by the ap- pearance at my bedside of this same little, woman as silent and pathetic as ever. “On the following day the cries of distress were again heard in the vacant bedroom, but no clew to them could be discovered... Of course the whole household was aroused and excited, and there was little rest for any of us. Had it not been for the ardent feeling of my cousin concerning the old family house nothing could have held us there a day longer. Appreciating his pride in the matter, we determined to wait awhile, and with the assistance of skilled detectives see if the mystery could be solved. “A week passed. Detectives came and went, but they discovered nothing. In the meantime, however, the little brown woman appeared twice to me in my room and as often to my cousin’s wife. ‘When we called or rang for some one, she disappeared as suddenly and as mysteriously as she had come. “I can give you no idea of the sensa- tion she produced upon those who saw ber. Above everything we saw at the time and recalled afterward those athetic eyes of hers, looking beseech- 10gly into ours. Whoever she was, she was a woman of deep sorrow, and in some way, we all felt, she represent- ed some terrible tragedy or undying grief, “One evening at the end of a week Mr. Graves, a young detective, called and acked to see the family, He was shown into the library, and drawing a package of papers from his pocket begged leave to lay before us some in- formation which he had obtained. Somewhere in New York, it seems, is kept a record of all the old houses in the city. This enterprising young de- tective, baffled by his investigations at the bouse, was convinced from what be had learned that the affair partook of the supernatural ; cousequently he had gone into these records and hunt- ed out that of this old family in Bleecker street. What he told us con- tained the only explanation of the little brown woman which we have ever had and as my cousin gave up the house immediately none of us has ever seen her since.” : “What was it ?”’ asked in a whisper the group of women, ‘After this house had passed from my cousins family,” continued Miss Blunt, “it was occupied for some years, it | seems, by a ir, Grovoche, a French wine merchant. He lived alone in Bleecker street with his servants and was supposed to have amassed a large fortune. When some years had gone by in this way, hesuddenly disappear- ed, and for many years no explanation could be discovered. His mother, a peasant woman from the Gironde, | finding him. She spent the remaining years of her life in the search, and the - devotion and energy with which she pursued her purpose made her at one time a familiar figure to the police of New York. and especially to the peo- ple in Bleecker street, where she was frequently to be seen. The poor wom- an died without obtaining any clew to the fate of her son, and soon the whole matter was lost sight of by those who had taken an interest in her. A few years atter her death a man died in New Jersey who left a confession to the effect that the house of M. Grovo- che in Bleecker street had been entered by him one night with the intent to rob ; that M. Grovoche had discovered him concealed in his bedroom and had attacked him ; that forthwith he re- turned the attack and murdered M. Grovoche by a thrast in the side with a dagger. He knew the house very well, for in planning the robbery "he had been familireizing himself for some months with it. He dragged the dead body below toa cellar, which contained a drainage well, into which he dropped it. He then made his escape noiselessly, leaving the treas- ures of the house untouched. When search was made for the body, which was said to be buried in the well, it was readily discovered and identified as that of M. Grovoche by a silver chain and crucifix which still hung about the skeleton’s neck. From that time until my cousin bought and refitted the house it had remained vacant, and an air of mystery had clung about it. I have no doubt, unless it has been pull- ed down to make way for stores or warehouses, it is vacant today and pointed at as a place where a crime was enacted.” As Miss Blunt finished her story a very handsome and stately lady enter- ed the room. She threw off her wraps and drew near the attentive group. As she did so a blond young girl rose from her seat and-said to her in a husky voice ; “Mother, will you tell these ladies what yousaw in your room yester- day 7” } “Qh, yes,” exclaimed the lady. “Something so strange, [I must tell you. Yesterday morning as I was dressing, when I had just lifted my face from its bath and was about to give it its usual rubbing, I saw stand- ing before me the funniest little old woman, all clad in brown, with a white handkerchief crossed upon her breast and with the most pathetic eyes I ever beheld. They will haunt me to my dying day. Just as I spoketo her, de- manding an explanation of this sudden intrusion, she disappeared, and my daughter there was awakened by my running about the room calling; ‘Where is she ? Where is she ?’ ”’ Miss Blunt gave a scream of terror, accompanied by the cry, “She has followed me here !” Every one turned toward her in fright. With her face buried in ber hands she fell forward, sobbing convul- sively.—N. B. Winston in Romance. A Kabyle Marriage. The Ceremony is Complicated and Winds up With an Exciting Incident, The wedding ceremony among the Kabyles is interesting because of its comparative resemblance to the customs of the old Greeks and Romans and even to those which still prevail in sequestered parts of France. Hereit is the girl's father who exacts a wedding portion, a sum of about £8, for which the bride- groom has generally to rely upon the advances of his friends. Often, too, the young man has not a house for his bride, in which case his friends set to work and build one, no very difficult matter. On the wedding day the bride is led through the villages in the neighbor- |" hood, mounted on a mule and escorted by friends and relations, who shout and fire guns again and again. The various householders hasten forth to offer her a sieveful of beans, nuts or dried figs. Cf these she takes a handful, which she kisses and then replaces in the sieve. All the offerings are collected in sacks by the old women of the procession as con- tributions to the young people's larder. At the bridegroom’s house the girl's hands are washed with liquid butter. Then they give her some fresh eggs, which she breaks on the mule’s head and inside the unhappy animal’s ears, thereby, it is believed,cou .teracting any evil designs against her and her hus- band’s happiness. Before entering the house she drinks milk, fresh and sour, and also water, and scatters over her shoulder a handful of barley, wheat and salt for the good of the family. The husband then approaches her and fires a pistol above her head to signify that thenceforward he has the power of life and death over her. Not infre- quently he makes the symbol even more emphatic by firing into her headdress and setting her aflame. This done, lit- tle remains except for the youth to lift the lady in his arms and carry her bodily into bis house. ——Of thirty-six women who un- der the leadership of Miss Aunetie Daisy made a run into Cherokee Strip when it was opened last September, twenty-two have proven steadfast in spite of the difficulties of the undertak- ing, and are busily engaged in making a home without help or hinderance {from meo. They are hauling the tim: ber themselves tor a house of fifteen rooms, which they will occupy, and are prepared to do their own plough- ing, planting, etc., in the well-watered timber section of 480 acres which they hold. They already have three teams, cows, chickens and other stock, and veatly dressed in short skirts that come just below the knee and are met by heavy woolen leggins that cover the legs from knee to ankle, they look well able to hold their own and carry out their independent plan. —~——An electric door mat has been invented which rings the bell as soon as any one steps on it. ——Spring lambs and spring beds are concluded that she had disappeared came to this country in the hope of in demand. The Lesser Antilles. { 1 Through the Serpent's Mouth Into the Spanish | Main.—Tobago as Crusoe’s Island.—A Few Facts About the Leeward Islands the Wind- ward Islands, the Virgins, the Caribbees and the Rest of Them. : — To begin with, I have an especial fa- | vor to ask, viz: That you will geta | map of the west Indies and keep it be- fore you while reading these leiters, as otherwise their principal value would be lost. ‘Neither you nor I nor no- body knows,’ as the children’s game ungrammatically runs—at least nobody realizes until his attention has been called to it and pinned down upon it— the vast extent of land and sea that stretches off the eastern coast of the hyppen which conneets the two Ameri- cas. We have a dim idea in our heads that Cuba, Jamaica, Hayti and the Barbadoes are considerable islands ; but we have almost no knouwiedge of the hundreds of others that comprise the enormous archipelago which Columbus, knowing nothing of the magnitude of his find, named the ‘“ West Indies,” be-, cause he hoped that through them he nad discovered a new route to India Search in that cobweb corner of the brain where you keep packed away, among other dry facts gleaned long ago from school geographies, bring to light and dust off a memory of the following figures: The surface of the West Tndia Islands, all told comprises at least 100,- 000 square miles. Set in the shape of a rude are, they stretch from Florida and Yucatan in North America to Venezu- ela in South America, forming a con- tinuous barrier which shuts off the mighty Atlantic, with its 84,804,000 miles of water and average depth of 2134 fathoms, from the smaller basins of the Carribean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico—the former with its 1,675,000 cubic miles of water and mean depth of 1267 fathoms ; the latter with 628,000 cubic miles and depth of 772 fathoms. GEOGRAPHICAL GROUPS. You dimly recall, too, how they are variously spoken of as the Columbian Archipelago, the Greater Antilles, the Lesser Antilles, the Lucayos Islands, the Virgin Islands, the Bahamas, the Bermudas, the Windward Islands, the Leeward Islands—until your head is in a whirl. And now the map comes in to untangle the maze. Beginning at the northern end of the system, with the map in view, you see that the Bahamas, or Lucayos Islands (which to us seem of least interest, perhaps, because near- est home), straggle half-way up the coast of Florida and are separated from that peninsula by the Florida Strait and the Great Bahama Bank. They, alone, number more than 500 —all claimed by Great Britain—and their collective pop- ulation is estimated at 27,000. The Greater Antilles, comprising only the four big islands—Cuba, Porto Rico Spsojss.) Jamaica (British) and the in- ependent Republic of Haiti, or San Domingo, with all the smaller islands along their coast, occupy an area of about 83,000 square miles and havea area of about 83.000 square miles and combined population of nearly 3,000,- 000. THE LESSERA NTILLES. The Lesser Antilles--disposed in the form of a crescent with the convex side facing the east—are divided into two chains, the eastern, commonly called the Caribbee Islands, trending around Porto Rico to the Gulf of Praia, which separates Trinidad from Venezuela, and the other stretching along the northern coast of South America as far as Lake Maracaibo, in a direction nearly parallel with the Greater Antilles. The early navigators called these the ‘‘Leeward Islands,” and the eastern chain the “Windward,” but nowadays, on all modern charts except the Spanish, the “Leeward Islands” are those lying north of the fifteenth degree of north latitude, and all those south of that parallel are marked the ‘Wind- ward.” ’ OUTLYING ISLANDS. Besides these three great groups, there are hundreds of smaller islands lying slong the cost of Central and South America, and a vast nuraber of rocky islets, unnamed and uncounted, scat- tered all over the Archipelago, Scientists believe them to be the remains of a mountain range which at some remote period connected North and South America, like the continuous chain of the Andes, Sierra Madres and Rockies on the other side of the hemisphere ; and Ignatius Donnelly, you remember, raters to them as proofs of the former ex- istence of Atlantic, the mid-ocean con- tinent whose sudden collapse, as told by Plato and Solon, gave rise to the tradi- tion of the flood, in which Noah figured as the earliest navigator. The group of Virgin Islands, where the lovely legend of St. Ursula and her legion of attend- ants is brought to mind, number up- wards of 50, besides the dozen or so that are named and divided between the Danish, Spanish and British Govern- ments. LEEWARD AND WINDWARD. The early Spanish navigators were strictly logical in their classification of the West Indies according to exposure to the prevailing trade winds. In the records of their discoveries, and for a couple of centuries afterwards, the en- tire group of Lesser Antilles, from St. Thomas to Trinidad, were marked as Windward Islands, while ouly the four largest Antilles were known as the Lee- ward. The present classification is purely artificial, having been ordered for administrative purposes. Now the “Leeward” group includes all Virgins and away up to Dominica ; while St. Vincent, Grenada and the little Grena- dines ure officially included among the “Windward.” Barbadoes = which lies more to the windward thar any of the others, is not counted in this group, be- cause it has a Governor of its own and a distinct administrativesystem. Toba- | go and Trinidad, also, (both British pos- sessions and united in colonial govern- ment,) are now excluded from their Windward neighbors. The old Spanish system of nomenclature sppears to have heen equally simple, for whenever new land was discovered, or a city founded, ' the calendar was piously consulted and named for the saint whose ‘day’ it chanzed to be ; and so the modern trav- eler in these waters, however anti- Catholic his religious views may be, re- poate a perpetual litany to the taint as e sails. The general name, “Antilles,” was bestowed under a misapprehension, because Columbus, when he found them, was supposad to have reached Antilla, a fabled country farto the westward of the Azores (was it Plato’s *Atlantis ?) which had a vague and uncertain place on the charts of those early’ geographies. Years after the great poi had fin- isbed his voyaging in this world, Peter Martyr wrote a book about ‘Antille,” which be said Columbus had touched upon ; and for half a century thereafier Cuba and Haiti were known as such be- fore a single link in the Caribbean chain was discovered. THROUGH THE SERPENT’S MOUTH. As to our routes, not caring to un- necessarily risk the gales of the open Atlantic in a yacht we came up to Para in the regular steamer ; and from that Amazonian city sailed past the great delta of the Orinoco River, through the celebrated ‘Dragon’s Mouth” into the Gulf of Paria, and thence through .the “‘Serpent’s Mouth’’ into the Caribbean Sea. Having visited the Island of Trin- idad and its wonderful aspbalt lake so little while ago, we did notland this ; time, but contented ourselves with cruising around its shores. Nowhere in the world can pleasanter voyaging be found than here, after the foul stripe of bottlegreen water with which the Orinoco stains the Atlantic for many wiles is past and the placid land-locked Paria Gulf is entered. The scenery, through bold and picturesque always, eminently restful—the mountains dark green, with verdure from base to top except where flushed 1n places with crimson canopies of the ‘bois immor- telle.” Between the mountains, fertile valleys unfold, and the conspicuous sea now dashes noiselessly against the cav- erned limestone chffs, and now ripples softly around the feet of cocoanut paims that fringe the bay. IN THE DRAGON'S MOUTH. At Boca de Monos (monkey’s mouth) —one of the three narrow entrances to the Paria Gulf—the Venezuelan Moun- tains of Cumana loom up so near that they seem to bar the channel by an im- passable wall. So much do these heights resemble the crowding islands all around that it is difficult to believe that they are part of the mainland. The scene in the Dragon’s Mouth is equally striking—towering mountain, cliffs clothed to the water’s edge with wild, dark forests, and silent islands bordered with palms and mangroves, paradise of plover, boobies and tropic birds, asleep in the sunshine; and, as if the passage were not narrow enough, a tiny islet, tufted with cacti and dra with convolvuli, occupies the center of it. But weslipped safely past, out into that region of romance and beauty, the Spanish Main, where the crowding is- lands are clustered hills, standing out in intense clearness of green and purple and blue ; where the skies are absc- lutely cloudless by day, and by night il- lumined by unfamiliar constellations and three times as many stars as are ever seen at home ; where the Southern Cross is the mariner’s guide in lieu of the North Star, and the “golden” moon of the tropics seems to swing nearer the earth than elsewhere. TINY TOBAGO. Our first stop was at Tobago, one of the Windward Islands, only 18 miles northeast of Trinidad. The tiny domain, which France ceded to Great Britain in 1764, is only 82 miles long by 10 or 12 broad, its area being officially stated at 78 818 acres. Columbus christened it Assumption when he found it in 1498. but the name was change by the first Europeans who came this way, on ac- count of the inordinate use of the na- tives of an indiganous weed, which they called tobago--the same which we now call tobacco. It has been spoken of in romance and history as ‘tLe Melancholy Isle,” because of its gloomy-looking mountains, abrupt precipives and dense forests. ' Conical hilis and spurs are all over it, connected by a central ridge, 200, feet high, lke a huge backbone with branching ribs. Deep narrow ra- vines extending from the ridge broaden toward the sea into alluvial valleys be- tween towering precipices, mostly still coverec, with primeval forests. Sailing around’its borders, you can hardly find a break in the serried ranks of magnifi- cent trees, except where here and there tiny patches have been cleared for culti- vation. Scarborough, its chief town which contains some 1200 inbabitants,is pleasantly situated on Rockley Bay ; but for reasons unknown passengers from the Royal mail steamers are al- ways landed at Plymouth, an insignifi- cant little hamlet on the leeward shore, six miles away. Just back of Scarbor- ough and directly overlooking 1t isa conical hill, 430 feet high crowned by the now aismantled Fort King George. Below it another hill-spur slopes gently toward the water, ending in a steep bank, fringed with thickets of wild bam- boo, behind which are grouped some gray-gabled houses. Toward the left are canefields stretching away over the bil- lowing foothills far back to the forests, their pale gold against the darker green ‘wonderfully brightening the sombre landscape. HIGH HILLS AND HOT AIR. You can see everything of interest in Scarborough within a short balf hour, and I recommend you to plan your excur- sion in the early morning or late in the ‘afternoon, for the hills are steep and many, and the temperature eternally skylarking between 80 and 95 degrees. The Government House is prettily sit- uated on an elevation some distance back of the village ; and, notwithstand- ing its scanty population, there are no fewer than 18 churches—nine Episcopal | six Wesleyan and three Moravian. The | whole island. contains less than 10,000 people—mostly a highly ‘colored’ mix- ture of African and Carib, with hardly a white citizen among them, But they are remarkably industrious, peaceable and pious set, compared with the ma- jority of the West India blacks ; proba- bly owing to their preponderance of Carib blood ; and it is said that at least one third of them bas some degree of education, gained in the several excel- lent schools of the island. Taken all together, England bas many a worse de- pendency than this, A great deal of sugar, molasses and rum is produced, which, with coffee, cocoanut, indigo and pimento, bring up the exports to the re- spectable average of $400,000 per an- num. The island is ruled by a resident Lieutenant Governor, who acts as vice to the Governor of Barbadoes, assisted by a Council and a local Legislature of 16 elected members. —- Fannie B. Ward. For and About Women, Miss Julie R. Jenney, a daughter of Colonel E. 8S. Jenney, one of the best- known lawyers of Central New York, has been admitted to the bar at the gen- eral term, in Syracuse. Miss Jenney was a member of a class of 12 students, all young men except herself, who was examined at the same time. Theexam- iners say that she was splendidly suc- cessful, and prediets for her a brilliant career. Sashes appear in two or three forms. the inost convenient shape for everyday wear is broad, tying at one side in front thus the bow does not interfere with the set of the coat. For evening wear graceful sashes are made by a double band of ribbon passed around the waist, fastening at back beneath two rosettes, with long ends reaching to the hem of the skirt. The stout woman should wear her sash in the form of a point in the front, and setting it just an inch be- low the waist. There it may be drawn through a buckle and fastened at the back with a short bow, a small bone on either side being of value. This is a season when shirt studs are at a premium. Those of white enamel, studded with emerald stars, are the late- est. Gold studs flecked with black ena- mel, are also a novelty. Pale blue and pink enamel studs are being much worn with stiff white chemisettes. Frequent- ly the studs match in design and color the cuff buttons. The link buttons are used almost entirely. The most beauti- ful pair the season has displayed are ‘oval in shape, of turquoise blue enamel, studded with tiny diamonds. The sailor hat has appeared again, but this season the correct model has a highecrown and a rim not nearly so wide as those noticed in former years. The all black ones with a veil of gauze to match, are considered very smart. English walking hats are seen and are generally put up in stiff, prim fashion, boasting large buckels, close eoques’ plumes and firm clusters of small flow- ers resembling rosettes. Ladies wishing a smooth skin made without harm can obtain it by purchas- ing 10 cents worth of tincture of ben- zoin. Dissolve it in a pint of wine and use on the face at night. The face should first be washed with pure and fine soap, and then rinsed off in clear cold water. The banzoin can be dis- solved in water, but wine is preferable. For a rough or sunburn skin, uss two ounces of distilled water, one of glyce- rine, one of alcohol, and half an ounce of tincture of benzoin. Without the water, and with the addition of two ounces of prepared chalk, free from bis- muth, it makes a fine cosmetic for whit- ening the face, and is not injurious, like the expensive ‘‘balms’’ or ‘blooms’ so bighly advertised. Boil a small piece of green benzoin in spirits of wine untilit becomes a rich tincture. Fifteen drops of this poured into a glass of water will produce a liquid that looks like milk, and emits a most agreeable perfume. This wash, while an excellent remedy for spots, pimples and eruptions, renders the skin clear and brilliant and the cheeks a rosy color. The very small girls who are too young to be miniature pictures of their mammas are wearing the dearest little dresses that the shops have seen for ma- ny a day. Of course the gowns are all pure white. One favorite design is made of sheer muslin with a short empire waist and a full plain skirt. Tiny tucks are the sole decoration of the skirts. Short balioon puffs form the sleeves. They are unlin- ed and the baby arm is visible beneath. A deep collar of fine embroidery or lace falls over the front of the waist and the shoulders. Just above the waist line the muslin is shirred with a band, through which aribbon- is run. This may be of any delicate color, though pure white is preferred. : Miss Dawson has been chcsen by the Methodists of Hastings, England, asa delegate to the Wesleyan Conference. It is thought that she will not be allow- ed to take her seat because of her sex. Sleeves, they say, were never bigger in Paris than at present. They show no signs of getting smaller here. Cool ecru linens came into such favor last summer that they promise to he very generally worn again in coat and jacket suits of various kinds: Young women of wealth who seek something new are buying these linens in import- ed suits made after a rather fanciful fashion, when one considers the simple fabric. Thus they havea round waist of brown linen, with jacket fronts open- ing on a full blouse front of ecru gui- pure lace laid on white satin, A high collar of the guipure and a black satin or moire ribbon completes the waist. Gigot sleeves of moderate size have small cuffs of guipure edged with a nar- row band of black satin ribbon. The short skirt, escaping the ground all around, is trimmed with several narrow folds like pipings of black satin ribbon set around it at wide intervals. A sail- or hat trimmed with white rosettes and light pearl colored gloves, accompanied such a gown worn by that stylish young matron, Mrs. George Gould, when driving about in a hansom on a round of shopping on a May morning lately that was warm enough for a June day. {| A pretty dinner gown is made in the | Empire styie of black silk, with cream- colored lace punels on either side, a | deep belt of cream lace across the bust { and a full front and sleeves of accor- ! deon-pluited chiffon. It is not the | slightest use protesting against accor- “ceon plaiting. Itisand will be—irre- | vocable facts, which adverse opinion cannot alter. Other gowns which al- ' ways look well are tailor made tweeds when not in too large a check. The basques of all these are cut very full and rather short this season. It would | not be impossible by the aid of a clever ' maid to make a last year’s dress, if fresh and pretty, quite up to date by adding a very full, short, bais cut basque of moire with full collar and perhaps revers to natch, I