Bellefonte, Pa., June 15, 1894. mrss, GLD HAYSEED TALKS TO SL Say, Si, don’t fuss an’ growl st life, An’ furrow up yer brow ; Yer don’t know what life is, my bey ; Yer eatin’ poun’ cake now. The corn-bread time is goin’ ter come, An’ tougher times ye’'ll see, An’ things won't beez they are now, W'en you git old ez me Now is the summer of yer life, An’ natur wars asmile, You'll find more thorns than roses, son, An’ winter after while. Now all looks beautiful an’ fair; O! wat a change thar'll be, Wen storms of age and trouble cum— Wen you git old ez me. Ah! Time will flop its rapid wings, But age comes slowly on, An’ you will see that manhood’s years Come quick an’ soon are gone. Thé older, too, that you may grow The faster they will flee, An’ you'll go runnin down life’s hill W’en you git old ez me. My boy, ez you go skippin’ down The rocky road of life, You'll not find flowers ter tread upon, But thorns of toil an’ strife. Yer step won't be ez nimble then, Yer voice so full of glee, Yer won't feel like a boy eg’in When you git old ez me. Take my advice, while you are young, An’ do the best yer can, You sow the seeds of knowledge, Si, That w’en you are a man You'll have a home, perhaps a farm, From want an’ care be free, An’ you'll be fixed for “rainy days” Wen you git old ez me. Thar'll come er day that face o’ you’rn So fair, will lose its smile ; *Twill bear the finger-marks of age An’ wrinkle after while. Yer curly hair be white ez snow, You'll find yer can not see Ez well ez w'en yer wuz er boy, Wen you git old ez me. You take the Bible for yer guide, Be resolute an’ strong, An’ ef you'll stick ter it, my boy, Twill never lead you wrong. Thar’ll come a time you’ll wish you had An’ cftener bent yer knee, An’ read the Bible more an’ prayed— W'en you git old ez me. Now, Marthy, you an’ me an’ 8i, Kneel down an’ let us pray; *Twill make the angels glad, an’ God Will hear what I’ve ter say. I'll pray that He will teach our boy A Christian true ter be, That he may be prepared ter die W'en he gits old ez me. —Will 8 Hays. A LONELY CHRISTIAN. Grimes was his name—*Old Grimes’ he was called by the irreverent world, which knew him well, and which doubtless he knew to well, as a man knows something that has not been pleasant to him, and the pain and wickedness and ‘hollowness of which have been forced upon him by a grim experience. Grimes’ name was the only thing about him that offered any poetic sug- gestion and was not lightly passed or forgotten by those who saw him every day. The legend of that old man whose dirge has been sung these 60 years—whose coat was old and gray and buttoned down before in every version - of that irrever- rent elegy—is the common inherit ance of all the English speaking race wherever they wander. The ragged urchin twanged it endlessly in his ears from behind the corners of shanties whenever his bent figure came in sight. Even the grownup Texans who lounged, gambled and traded horees at the sutler’s store repeated it to him as a standing joke that could not be worn out. But he paid no attention or di- verted the topic when he could and hobbled away slowly, ever muttering to himselt something that nobody heard or heeded. The residence of this song tormented old person was a rough and canvas covered shanty situated by a rambling path in the midst of a congregation of such, some better, some worse. The place was known by the denizens of the neighboring post as Slabtown. : The open and unfinished quadrangle and the square stone houses that had all a homeless and dreary look were some half mile away. Fort Concho was confessedly a hard place, all of it. Slabtown was its foster child, filled with stranded emigrants, cattle herd- ers, gamblers aud men who had no oc cupation. Out toward the bleak north- west Llano Estacado stretched its end- less leagues of rock and cactus—the wildest land beneath the flag, governed and owned by the Comanche and ut- terly useless and tenantless for all time, save for that Saxon savage who was almost as wild as he. But Slabtown, straggling up from the little river's side, sat with its shaa- ties under the lee ot the post, fully con- fiding in its military neighbor. Here were privileged to come and remain through the windy Texas winter all men, with a due propor..on of women, whose tastes or whose occupations led them to the far verge of civilization. Thither came the cattleman and watched his wild herds on the neigh- boring hills until returning greenness warned him off upon the Eitri trail. Thither returned the man who had accomplished the wonderful jour- ney, laden with fortunate gold. Beard- ed, broad brimmed and belted, here lounged a small army of guides and trailers, playing shrewd games at cards, drinking San Antonio whiskey and at intervals shooting at each other. The gaunt and long footed Texas girl, chalky, yellow haired and awkward, minced from cabin to cabin with neigh- borly gossip and did her calico and green ribbon shopping at the pine counters of the trader’s stores. There were urching many, coatless and shoe less from January to December, who were as the calves of this corral of hu- manity. Here, too, was that pink of the border, the dashing stage driver, who for $40 per month every day ran the gauntlet through 60 miles of In- dian haunted desolation and who at the end of his “trick” rewarded himself with two days of dalliance with the belles of Slabtown, to whom indeed he was as the apple of their pale eyes. And among these people lived Fath- er Grimes, and these were they who sang the ancient ditty to him as he passed by. What his occupation was nobody precisely koew or cared, but “ lowed” he was “well heeled” and “had a little tucked away somewhere.” In the particular condition of society— or rather want of all society—that en- vironed bim the inquiry into Grimes’ business would hardly have gone so far as that had it not been that his daughter occupied a conspicuous posi- tion as the prettiest girl at Concho and was famous alike for the brilliancy of her cheeks and her dresses. She and Father Grimes lived alone, and it was scarcely thought of that at some former period a mother had been necessary in the usual course of nature. “Old Grimesand his gal” filled all the Grimes horizon. It would be entirely in accordance with good taste if it were possible now to describe a dutiful daughter, entirely devoted to her aged father and resent- ing the verbal indignities daily heaped upon him. But: the facts, as some- what dimly remembered, altogether forbid. Of all the man’s troubfes, his daughter was probably the greatest. She was not gaunt and angular, like the other ladies of Slabtown, as a rule. Her cheeks were like peonies, and her round figure had a perceptible jellyish shaking as she walked. She die- turbed her father’s slumbers with hoy- denish laughter while the hours struck small in the night watches, and while her many admirers staid and would not go. She was a coquette besides and refused to comfort the paternal heart by assuming the hard dgties of a Texan's wife. Sary Grimes was a wild girl, possibly not a bad creature, but, asit might have been expressed in an eastern village, “liable to be talked about’’—one of the social punishments not much dreaded, however, in the re- gion of Fort Concho. There was I fear, a consciousness in her face when- ever she passed a man in the road, and it is equally to be feared that her pru- dent chastity had but little suggestion of snow or crystal in it, but as belle of Slabtown she reigned supreme, and of course the greater part of her female friends cast aspersions upon her. She kept all her admirers in a state of mind which had init much torment, with occasional glimpses of beatitude. Charles Hanks, Esq., stage driver, started out upon his trip with a large fortune of happy thoughts and dis- cussed the object nearest his heart with the box passenger for 20 miles at once. But when he returned Sary, would no more apeak to him than if, as he complained, he “had been a val- ler dog.” But Mr. Hanks had no spe- cial cause of complaint, for he fared as all his rivals did. Father Grimes’ reputation was that he was ‘“allus good to that gal o’ his'n. He was never known on any occasion to use a petulant expression to any per- son or thing. The peculiarity more often remarked in him than any other was that he did not swear. It wasa wonder he did not, for nobody doubted that he had a hard life of it. With re- gard to Grimes, the balf bas not been told. We have seen men who had sur- vived some great disaster, some horri- ble mangling, and went crawling through life thereafter lame, scarred, deformed the hideous, semblance of a human creature. Such was this poor, rich old man. His limbs were drawn awry. His shapeless hands almost re- fused to grasp his staff, and every line of his face aenoted an experience of pain, happily past for the time, but ever leaving a grim promise to return and wring the distorted limbs anew until the hour of his relief. Yet Grimes had not been the victim of any sudden accident or great calamity. Fire, nor falling walls, nor the rebel- lion of man’s gigantic servant against his master in rushing steam and fall- ing fragments had been incidents in his hard life. And yet his fate had been little better. His days had been days of pain, and his nights had been spent in torture and in waiting and praying for daylight or death. It is common enough, but Ariel, bright epirit of enchanted air, suffered and groaned no more in the cloven pine than a strong man may beneath rheu- matic torture. Thus it was that the old man’s gen- tleness was a marvel to those who re- viled him daily. Worn and de formed with hie battle of years with his enemy,he sat at his cabin door in the sun and placidly nodded at those who passed by and whispered to himself and smiled. Sometimes he had been asked if it had not burt him while in slow torment his limbs had been twist- ed and drawn thus. ‘Oh, yes!” he said, “it did hurt.” But he smiled as he thus answered a question which would have been both superfluous and cruel if the old man had not seemed to possess some panacea which enabled him to almost defy pain. This distorted figure, this pain writ- ten face and these strange ways Fath- er Grimes possessed alone. They were strange in the land, for sturdy, bearded manhood, reckless ways, loud words and a blood curdling blasphemy were the rule with his associates and near neighbors. While they knew that be had within him something which they neither possessed nor understood, they only said “cur’us creetur’ and passed on. Whatever it was, they had no re- spect for it. They thought him a lit- tle crazy. He had donestrange things that they knew of. Had he not once tried to interfere with a very promising horse race on a Sunday? did he not come down to the trader's store one night last fall and lift up his quavering voice in a Methodist hymn and try to get up a prayer meeting right here among the boys, “and a hundred dollars in the ot, and me with three queens in my and?” It was Charles Hanks, Esq.. who described this scene and added : | “He's an old fool, with a stavin purty gal. 'Twas just that which saved his meat—a-interferin that-a-way.” It wae ‘not strange that with these queer ways Father Grimes was alone in such a place, with only his heart to keep him company. There was a chaplain at the post, but he seemed as yet to have discovered no affinity for this eccentric old man. He preferred soldiers of the cross of more robust tendencies and in line, If being a Christian. was what was the matter with Grimes’ dazed head, he bad an entire monopoly of the complaint. On bright Sunday mornings there was a formal service on the parade ground, and plumed heads bowed slightly in the etiquette of military devotion. But Father Grimes was as much out place there as he was at the sutler’s and stood afar off, failing to under- stand perbaps what all this had in common with a camp meeting in far western Virginia or with such piety and worship as would have been ac- ceptable to his fellow believers of the United Brethren in Christ. Ot course he had little control of the hoydenish Sary. That young woman shared somewhat in the current belief regarding her father's mental condi- tion, Living in the same house, they had no companionship, and while she cared for his common wants and daily meals that was the extent, to all ap- pearance, of her interest in him. He perhaps constituted the sober side of her life. She would have been ready to do battle for him with a ready tongue, but she also claimed the privi- lege of privately regarding him with as much carelessness and half coo- tempt as was possible with her knowl- edge of the fact that he really was her father and she could not help it. The incident which placed Father Grimes prominently before the public in a new light—an incident all the more remarkable because it was the last in his career—came about in this wise : There wandered into Concho a long haired and ambrosial man, who claimed to have been one of those hard riders {rom the Lone Star State who figured so extensively in the cavalry force of the late Confederate army. He was broad shouldered, tall, swaggering, ot a military carriage and claimed to be “still a rebel and a fighting man, sir.” Now, Hanks was not just a Yankee, but he and this child of chiv- alry soon found means of disagree- ment upon another matter. The Con- federate used often to say that he did not care a profane expletive for Miss Grimes, but he “made it a point to al- low no man to stand before him in the graces of a livin womau, sir.” So in a few weeks Hanks and he looked as- kance at each other, and finally re- fused to play poker at the same table and avoided a mutuality in bibulous exercises by common consent. The wicked Sary, gifted with peculiar in- sight into such matters, flattered the new beau and smiled upon him with beams particularly bright, albeit she divided her favors and gave Hanks enough to keep him alive to the stat: ure and strength ot his rival, and the dangers arising from delay and absence. These things did not pass unnoticed by others, and a keen lookout was maintained for the hour when the dif- ficulty should culminate. The pa- tient sitters upon benches and the in- dustrious carvers of deal boxes kept the two men in sight and watched them with an eye to being present when the time came. They discussed the chances among themselves, much as they discussed the projected race for 300 yards between Hopkins’ bald face and the spotted pony. They knew Hanks, and generally considered him the better man. There was a slight inclination to prejudice against the Confederate perhaps. ‘He's full o' brag,” they remarked. “Hain geen his grit yet.” One night Father Grimes sat in the inner room of his poor house! The cotton cloth which did duty as glass puffed in and out in the window frame, and the “grease dip” burned yellow and dim on the edge of its broken cup. There was the usual chatter and coarse laughter in the outer room, and he knew that the Confederate and Sary were there. This gallant gentleman was in his best mood that night, and the laughter of the girl and the man’s tone of light raillery reached Grimes’ wake- ful ears with annoying distinctness. The old man sat in his bent posture near the light and studied out the words of a big worn volume upon his knee. His grizzled bairlay in tangled confusion upon his neck, and as he stumbled through tbe sentences he spelled and whispered the words to himself. The night was his enemy and torment, He was passing the dull time of age and affliction, and, withal, gathering comfort from the only book he possessed or needed. It was no common book be pored over and spelled. It is said to have been the Bible. Presently the outer door opened, and with a gruff salutation Hanks entered. His arrival from his last drive could not have been more than an hour ago. He had not wasted time in paying his respects. He sat down at the rude ta- ble and looked at Sary and her com- panion. That Hanks was in an ugly humor was quite evident. It was equally evident that be was bent upon the operation known among his kind as pickin a fuse.” He did not attempt to conceal his feelings and glowered at his rival and still satsileat. The dark purpose of the border rowdy was in bis eye, and the jealousy and anger of all his kind was apparent in the studied deliberateness of all his actions. The other looked at him with a cool grin of defiance. At a meeting of this kind two such men have little need for tongues, Presently the late comer rose slowly : moved his chair and sat down almost in front of his rival. The old man in EE ——————————————— old man’s stopped. «] don’t do my fightin in the pres- ence 0’ wimmen,” eaid the Confederate, “but I'm a fightin man, an ye kin hev all ye're sp'ilin for. There's no use in bein in a ungentlemanly hurry about this ‘ere little diffikilty. Tomorrer mornin—break o’ day, sharp, at the sand bar beyant Stokes’—Il suit me ef you kin stand it.” “Wot’s yer weeping 2" said the other. “Navy size—10 paces.” “Seconds ?”’ “Nary man.” “I'll "be thar,” and old Grimes heard the footsteps die away in oppo- gite directions. He hobbled into the room where his daughter sat. Her pinky cheeks were a little paler, and there was an unwon- ted apprehension in hereyes. ‘“Sary,” he said, “kin ye do nothin to keep them two young fellers apart?” “No; they’re two fools, an it's none of my affairs,” “Did ye hear what they said out side?” “Yes, I hesrd. I was list'nin. They kin fight it out. There's better men than either of ’em.” Grimes turned and went to his little bare room—the little bare and shabby place where the company who came and sat with him were not inhabitants of Slabtown—and seated himself upon the bed and communed with himself. It is a strange life and a wonderful edu- cation that can teach a red cheeked and hovdenish girl to smile at the pas- sions which lead to the grim revenges of the border. The old man sat and thought, and the hours passed slowly. He lay down upon the rude bed, and perhaps would have slept if he could. Then he arose and occupied himself in reading again and went out often and looked into the shadows of the still night. Only the far guard challenge fell upon his ear at intervals and geemed to announce the passing hours. Finally the ripe stars that glow in the noon of night began to pale in their westward setting. The cocks crew, and the lowing of kine was horne far upon the damp morning air. The day was coming. No soul, save these two men, a thoughtless woman and an old man, almost helpless, knew of the meeting on the sands, from which but one, and probably ‘neither, would cver return. Father Grimes got his hat and staff and hobbled forth. He thought he knew the spot. He would go thither. The chill air of dawn pierced his frail body, and he shivered. Painfully and all too slowly he walked the step- ping stones across the puny torrent and toiled up the bank upon the other side. He saw the gray streaks in the east and hastened, groaning, for he re- membered the words, ‘At break o day, sharp.” His journey was a path- less one. cactus grown and tangled with long grass. Finally he reached the crest of the low bluffs, and the lit- tle acre of brown sand lay before him in the dawing light. Peering with his old eyes he discovered two figures there. One of them stood listless, while the other paced slowly across a little space. ‘Then his companion measured the space likewise 1n long and swinging etrides. As the old man drew nearer he saw that the two men took opposite places, and that while ove leaned forward anxiously the oth- er’s attitude was careless, and his wea- pon hand hung by bis side. He shout ed with the utmost strength of his old wiry voice, but they semed to pay vo heed. Then, and for the first time io 10 years he tried to run. As he drew flapping window to him, and almost between him and the Confederate. Then one said, “Ready !"” and his adversary answered, “Ready!” But Grimes noticed that Hanks held his weapon in readiness to fire, while the other brought his slow- ly up from his side. The thought must have pasced through his mind like a flash, “If I could but push oue of them aside, I could save them I” But already they had begun to count, slowly and simul- taneously, “One, two’—and at the word “Two'' Hauoks dropped suddenly in his place, and two shots awoke the silence almost together. The tall Con- federate stood still a moment, then staggered and fell backward, whilea crimson stream trickled slowly out up- on the brown sand and sank, leaving the stain of murder beside his stark fisure as he lay, with open, staring dead eyes, looking at the glowing sky. Hanks had dropped suddenly in his place and had fired before the word. It was the trick which almost disgrac- es the Comache, from whom he had in a measure acquired it. He now rose up and looked around him furtive- ly. was a dreary and silent spot, and now in the purple morning, with the dead man lying as he had fallen, with the brown sand, and the sage, and the gaunt and thorny cactus on every hand Hanks seemed to shiver as he but- toned his coat and looked nervously around and stood a moment thinking. Then, by chance or throngh fear, he cast a glance behind him and saw Father Grimes sunk down in a heap, with his bead fallen forward npon his bosom. Perhaps he thought the old man dead—at least be had caught the bullet meant for himself. He hesita- ted a moment, looked around the hori- zon, and then moved by sudden fear, walked rapidly away through the stunted trees beyond the sand. This the inner room heard the movement! and stared and listened, closing his | book. Having thus changed his posi- tion, Hanks placed his hands upon his | knees, looked hie rival obtrusively in! the face and calmly remarked : | “I ghouldn’t wonder, mister, ef I thought you was a low down kind of a ' cuss.” | “What? exclaimed the Confederate, “1 say—are ye list'nin ?—that I shouldn’t wonder ef I thought you was a low down, sneakin’’— | The Confederate gentleman arose, ' motioned to Hanks and moved toward ' the door. They both went out, walked tale chronicles no further the wander- ngs of the assassin. He never re- turned. Father Grimes slowly raised his head, by and by pressed his hand to his side and tried to rise. After a while they eame and bore him to bis | cabin and placed him upon his bed, for ill news travels quickly, and the curi- In the sunshine of high noon it closer he saw that Hanks was nearest osity of the hard community bad’ quickly hurried a crowd to the spot. While he lay quietly and looked up- | ward through the cabin roof, calm and placid, the post surgeon came, and the chaplain, and the crowd gathered at the outer door, only parting to permit a little way along the wall toward the : the passage of another burden which and ' was borne there by chance or a fancied connection with Grimes and his daugh- ter and laid upon a low bench beside the wall crying murder through the hush with its white uncovered face. They questioned the old man, and brokenly and at intervals he told them all he knew. No, no; not all, for his mind seemed preoccupied, and at inter- vals he stopped and lay very quiet looking at something they could not gee and smiling as he feebly held out his hand. His carewotn and pain burdened life was passing fast. That they knew and were awed in the pres- ence of that death so many of them had courted; so many had pretended to scorn, They watched him and waited to hear if he had aught else to tell. A little while passed in silence. Suddenly he opened his eyes again and looked intently toward a corner of the room. doubt nor inquiry, but of happy certain- ty and surprise. A faint flush stole in- to the pallor of his old face, his eye brightened, and he stretched forth his hand and tried to lift himself upon his arm. The doctor bent over him (the chaplain bad gone home again) and asked him what he would have. The old man turned with a look of surprise and pointed with his finger. “Don’t you see him ?"’ he said. “I see no one—what is he like 2” “]—1I don’t know. His face shines, and he smiles. It is like him as he walked on the sea. I wonder—you don’t suppose do you ?—he can have come so far for me?” And death sealed upon the scarred and wrinkled face its last beatitude. They went and left him there and closed the door. And as they passed through the outer chamber they saw the girl sitticg by the bench beside the wall and looking with tearless eyes afar off while she held in her lap her dead lover's cold right band.—James W. Steele in Short Stories. One of Lincoln's Jokes Chicago Tribune. Colonel Clark E. Carr of Galesburg, who was minister to Denmark under the Harrison administration, was in Washington one day when Lincoln was president. “I’m going to the White House to see Abe,” said Owen Lovejoy to Carr as they met in front of the treasury building. Carr went with him. They were shown into the president’s work- ing room, and soon after Lincoln came in. He wore a long garment which might have been cut from .a bathroom pattern or the cover ofa prairie schooner. His hair was more frouzeled than usual, and the carpet slippers were worn down and without heels. The condition ' and appearance of the presidential hosiery were such as would have made Jerry Simpson envious, provided the stories they told on Jerry were true,which they never were. The president gave the callers an Illinois greeting and then shoved up one of the sleeves of his curious garment and pointed out to his visitors the inflamed condition of his arm. “You knew I had the smallpox,” said Lincoln in a cold blooded manner. Lovejoy said yes and proceeded to talk about other matters, while Carr's few hairs had inclinatians to stand up, and he moved about in his chair as if it con- tained dynamite. The visitor over, the callers passed out. Once in the air, Clark asked Lovejoy : “Did you know the president bad the smallpox when we went there?” “Centainly,” was the answer. “You d——d scoundrel |” shrieked Carr. “Why didn’t you say so?” “I’ve had it,” replied Lovejoy, ‘‘and I suppose you had.” «Well, I never had it !”” roared Carr. “But if I do have it now I want you to give me a certificate that I caught the disease from Abe Lincoln. That will be something.” But Lovejoy had no occasion todo so, as Lincoln had the varioloid only. When You've Lost Your Corkscrew. I have often been on a fishing expedi- tion and found myself without a cork- screw, with a bottle of wine or ale se- curely corked. The primitive plan of breaking off the neck with a piece of rock is very dangerous and sometimes cracks the entire bottle and wastes the precious fluid. The other day Isaw a number of bricklayers trying to open a bottle of ale at the dinner hour. After they had scooped at the cork with their jackknives one of them took a piece of twine, wound it around the neck twice, and then for two or three minutes sawed the bottle with it. Some water was then thrown on the heated glass, and it cracked instantly, enabling the expert to break off the neck with his hand in the most artistic manner. ——————— Surplus Massachusetts Women. The census of 1880 showed that wom- en had increased numerically in Massa- chusetts at a faster rate than men dur- ing the decade, and appeared at the end to be 66,205 in excess of the other sex. This fact attracted general attention and various theories were put forward to account for it. The 1890 census shows, however, that the drift woman- ward has stopped. It discovers but 63,- 525 more females in tbe State than males. The men are in a larger mino- rity than 10 years ago. rr —— If Lion Pulls and Horse Pulls. From Chamber’s Journal. It was not a look of scrutiny, | If a lion and a strong horse were to, pull in opposite directions, the horse | would pull the lion backward with com- | parative ease ; but if the lion were hitched behind the horse and facing in the same direction, and were allowed to exert his strength in backing, he could easily pull the horse down upon his ha:nches or drag him across the ring, so much greater is his strength when exerted backward from the hind legs than in forward pulling. CAC — Now that fresh fruits are plenti- ful a delicious drink may be made by mixing two cupfuls of sugar in one of For and About Women. “T do not wich to vote,” she said ; “I hate this suffrage rant ; But I don’t want a horrid man To tell me that I sha’nt.” Miss Cora Dow, of Cincinnati, runs three successful drugstores in that city. The new liberty scarfs are simply wide scarfs of silk muslin in pale rose, delicate blue or violet or any dainty color. Slender maidens drape these, fichu-like, around their shoulders, and tie them in a bouffant bow in front. This scarf usually measures eighteen inches in width by two yards in length. Heavy corded bengalines, powdered with small flower and foliage patterns, are used upon stylish tailor gowns as waistcoats, sleeve-puffs, piping and lin- ings to velvet or satin capes. . Rosettes and knots play an important part in summer dress. They are used to give an accent of form or of color or both, and they are placed to “tell” on a costume with wonderful effect. I bave seen the skirt of a dinner gown trimmed with nothing but three rosettes and yet it looked elaborate. The gown wes of moire silk and these rosettes, of velvet, were placed to make a diagonal line across the front; one nigh toward the left side, one in the middle and one near the bottom on the right, and the effect was as great as ifa continuous garland crossed the front. But these rosettes are something more than mere loops of ribbon srranged in circles together, such as the uninitiated usually understand by a rosette. They are made with an art quite new ; they are, indeed, nearly flowers. It would be impossible for a mere layman to ex- plain ; only an artist, whose fine fingers have learned to fashion such things, knows how it is done, and she could not tell anybody else. All I know is that these bits—thoy are not always loops—of velvet or silk or chiffon that ray out from a centre are crushed or curled, or otherwise manipulated till they are sensitive and instinct with life as if they had grown. Sometimes the ends elongate and roll under like the petals of a lily ; or else they are triangular ; to fit a corner as at the neck of a jacket, with a crimped ruffle look round the apex and a long frond falling out into each of the long corners ; or may be they are five rayed like a rose, or eight starrad, or have a curious bisymmetry like the orchid. One of these petaled velvet bows fastens the great lace collar on a dinner corsage, with a diamond pin if you like, placed like a dewdrop in the centre. A little hat for a piquant face, a big hat tor a strong face, a hat set well back for classic features, a hat set well for- ward for an intelligent face with bulg- ing dome of thought—these are the un- alterable rules of taste in headgear which fashion cannot change, even if it makes us forget them. ° The drooping sleeve, by the way, does not look so pretty in the summer materials, therefore the short puffs are much more popular. The puffs are of- ten fantastically crught up or banded by narrow ribbons, or folds of the material, if it be a gauzy one. Mrs. Julio J. Irvin, a graduate of Cornell university, and now professor of Greek in Wellesley, is mentioned for the presidency of that institution. A red and white challie, with black satin sash, was another dainty get up, and a pale pink organdie trimmed with black insertion, also attracted much at- tention. Insertion, black ribbon and the handkerchiet form of drapery for the bodice are three especial features of the summer styles, though in most cases fancy runs riot, with no definite tendency in any objection. Do your long, dark curling lashes lie upon your cheeks like a dusky fringe when you sleep, or when you coyly gaze downward ? Would you like them to if tbey do not ? If your ambition is in the direction of the regulation heroine eyelash, the first step towards obtaining it is to cure any trouble you may have with your eyes. All local irritation is as bad for the lashes as it is to the eyes themselves. The tendency to rub the eyes invariably results in thinning the lashes. Inflam.- ed eyelids always bring about thin, short “scrubby’’ lashes. If the lids are inclined to be inflamed a wash of two or three drops of camphor, a teaspoon of borax and two ounces of water is valua- ble. A mixture of two parts water to one of witch hazel, allowed to simmer and applied very hot, is also soothing to inflamed eyelids. : When these washes are being used to strengthen the eyes, soothe the lid and preserve the lashes from total destruc- tion, the lashes may be rubbed every night with some greasy ointment to en- courage their growth. Vaseline is pro- bably the best thing to stimulate the growth and give a good dark color to the evebrows and eyelashes. A dainty organdie with a pale laven- dar ground, deeply spotted with deep purple flowerets, has two simple six- inch ruffles finishing the skirt—each ruffle trimmed with two rows of narrow moire ribbon in the deep purple shade, Then two other ruffles, more ostenta- ! tious, start from each hip and slant off downward to meet at the back. They are trimmed also with the purple. Broad moire ribbon, in the deep purple, edges the finely pleated organdie front of the bodice and encircles the waist, talliog at the back in two simple long streamers. There is more ribbon on the front of the skirt, starting at each hip just inside the ruffles, continuing down- lemon juice, a pint of the juice of straw- |, berries, a small pineapple grated, two quarts of water and enough ice to make very cold. These will be found very refreshing at a garden or tennis party. ward to meet in & point, and a bow at the foot a little to the left side. The long line of the ribbon is broken by a bow less than half way down tied in the band. Gold chains on eye-glasses are no longer worn much by young people. A slender black silk cord is liked, and sometimes nothing at all, which is best if safe. Elderly’ladies wear the chain in preference to a cord,