Dovri itin Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 10, 1834, UNAWARES. Once there was a man without no hairs, An ’is head was shiny an’ smooth, Jes’ like an egg that's fresh from the layers, An’ his mouth on’y had one tooth ; An’ some wicked, wicked boys met this poor ol’ man, An’ they telled him to “go up, bald head,” But they didn’t see the bears Coming on em unawares, So now the bad boys is dead. An’ at a nother time, some Philisteen folks ’At lived where Samson did, Was haughty an’ was proud an’ was allus makin’ jokes ‘Bout the Samson fambly’s kid ; : So what'd Samson do to bring them to time But hit em with a bone on the head ¢ An’ that was worse than bears Coming upon them unawares, So now the bad folks is dead. An’ there was another man call Jonah, fer short, ’At would do no work fer the Lord, An’ he tumbled off a boat, ’bout a mile from An’ got swallowed by a whale fer reward : An’ he tasted awful bad, an’ It made the poor whale sick, So he throwed up ol’ Jonah on his head ; An’ they wasn’t any bears Coming on 'em unawares, But Jonah an’ the whale is dead. So Sian little girls, er any little boys, Er folk’s that’s growed up big, Don’t stop a-bein’ bad, an’ a-makin’ so much noise, An’ they p'tendin’ they don’t care a fig, They'll find that after while—jes’ ez like ez not— Mebbe when they've jes’ went to bed, They’ll ‘be some awful bears Coming on ’em unawares, An’ then the bad chiles ’ll be dead. HEIMWEH. BY ELSIE 8. NORDHOFF. Huntingford unsaddled his horse and led him to the little wooden trough near the house for water before turn- ing him out to graze for the night. He watched with languid interest as the animal drew "n long draughts with a sipping sound, wondering idly about the horses in general. heavy and his back ached, so that he was glad when tke horse slipped away quietly to browse on any dry grass it could find, aad he could sit down on the steps of his two-roomed shanty and rest. The sun was setting ahead of him in a glory of crimson and orange. On every side, as far as his eyes could see. stretched prairies—dull, brown, life less prairies— “Waste endless and boundless and flowerless,” for though it was April, the time when there is green if ever there will be, it hed been a dry year, and everything was dead. To be sure there were patches of orange prairie flowers all about, which struck one as a fever with which the land had broken out; but there was no green. For those who like prairies, prairies are what they would like; but their monotony drives some people mad. Huntiogford eat gazing about him with a blank, miserable look. He had been two days riding fifty miles out from Azure to his rancho, through arid parched land, always the same rolling country for miles on every side, passing herds of lean, half-starved cat- tle, who gazed at him listlesely with their large, pathetic eyes, too weak from want of food and water to be wild and past many a dead animal, which had perished from thirst and starva- tion. “The fever” was in his blood, although he was unconscious of it, and this, added the original throes of home- sickness, which he had fought for the past year, and the sight of the poor starved cattle, had used him up. He sat on his door-step facing the sunset, his three Lens and a lordly rooster clueking contentedly at his feet as they grabbed for their evening meal. He eard the bark of a coyote, and saw it, & brown speck in the distance, as it ran across the country and was out- lined against the red in the eky. His thoughts travelled in a circle, from the lean emaciated cattle and browa prairies to the rich spring land- scape of his father’s park in the south of England, then back to the cattle and prairies again. This was April. At home the frogs: would be trilling and caehunking themselves hoarse. He could see them as they plunged sidewise into the ponds—the fat green creatures, making great silver wakes in the still water, only to come up on the other side in the sun. He could almost smell the spongy turf, and all the young green things pushing up through the soft earth, and the pink- green tips to the hawthorn and oaks. He drew in a long breath of pleasure, started with a jerk and looked behind him. His hound, standing ou the step behind him, had stuck his cold wet nose against his eheek. Huntingford put his arm around the dog's neck, while his heavy eyes wandered off again to the brown, the monotoaocas brown roll of the prairies ; not a tree, not a hill, to break the view of the horizon ; only the burnt land every- where ; and the cattle! wherever he looked he saw their pitiful eyes; and he, too, was starving fer a sight of water and something green. As he thought his yellow head went down on the hound’s back, and he choked back a great sob that rose in his throat. The fever was getting a firmer hold on him. After a moment he raised his head again. The glow in the west was subsiding into silvery robin’s egg blue, and just where the last reflection of pink lingered, the evening star shone out with almost a bold vigor. There was not a cloud in the sky. Everlasting blue above—and miles and miles of brown below ! Ae Huntingford gazed blankly ahead of him the land seemed suddenly to rise towards him—he swayed, lost his balance, and fell, face downwards, on the ground by his door-step, frighten- ing the hens, who broke the eilence by loud hysterical squawks of terror as they fled. Hig hound watched him fall, then His eyes felt | rose, stretched his tired legs, and moved down by his master, whom he sniffed over very carefully, and at last, finding an ear, licked it lovingly. When there was no response given he sat down upon his haunches, and rais- ing his pointed nose to the sky, gave one long, mournful howl. At noon the following day Cow- puncher Dick hove in sight. He was whistling right merrily, and made a fine appearance in his loose gray trousers, high boots, and large sombre- ro—a scarlet tie finishing the effect. “The boys” had called after him as he rode away, ‘Goin’ to pay attention somewhars ? You look so slick.” “Naw,” Dick had drawied back with a good natured chuckle ; “I'm just off to see that blue-eyed Britisher, aud cheer him up a bit. I seen him yesterday in Azure, looking a bit down in the mouth. Guess he’s homesick again ; and, somehow, when I geen bim, I thought of the fever, and I ain't felt comfortable sence. So I'm ridin’ down to his place just to ease my mind.” “The boys” looked half solemn when Dick mentioned ‘‘the fever.” They knew it, and stood in awe of it. “Guess yon're scared,” one of them said, encouragingly. “Hope the parsons all right, though.” Huntingtord had been twelve months in his shanty on the prairies. His youth, clear blue eyes, and a cer- tain open-heartedness had won their way among the cow-boye. They ad- mired his grit in trying to live down his homesickness, and not giying way. At first they had pooh-poohed his no- tion of “Sarvice reg’lar on Sunday,” which had been propounded modestly to Dick, always his staunchest admir- er. Dick had gone the first Sunday, taking back to the others glowing ac- counts. He loved music, and was considered quite an expert in camp, where he sang lovelorn ballads in a bass voice like a young bull’s, and he found Huntingford sang like an angel. “The sarvice’’ had consisted of mora- ing prayer, and as many hymns as they chose, after which there had been dinner for Dick and himself and the two hounds. Such was the fame Huntingford won through Dick that the following Sunday eight horsemen appeared to hear “the parson” sing. They looked rather like sheepish ban- dits when, after dismounting and tying their horses in the shade, Dick mar- shalled them up to shake hands with his friend. “Guess I ’ain’t shook hands for the Lord knows how long,” one of them mumbled. There were only two chairs in the shanty, but by pulling a trunk and a kerosene box into the front room every one was pro- vided with a seat. “The boys” fidget- ed, they felt self-conscious and out of place, and broke into nervous giggles when Dick presented them with two hymuals, and told them to be “d quick and find the number.” But Hunvingford’s easy unconsciousness made them feel less shy presently. He was doing as well as possible what he had done every Sunday of his life at home. As he sang, one by one of the men stopped gazing about the shanty and pinned their eyes on him. Dick was ‘‘doing himselt proud,” roaring out the hymn at the top of his power- ful voice, but above it, beyond it, lead- ing it by the force ot clear sweetness, rose Huntingford’s, and “soared away to realms unknown,” but with so much maguetism in it that he drew his list- eners with him until they forgot that they were sitting on wooden boxes in a prairie shanty. At the end of the first verse Dick wag requested soffo voce} “to shut up, and let’s hear the little parson alone” — he “shut up” willingly. Hunting- ford was his “claim,” and he wanted to prove it a good one. So ‘the par- son” began the second verse alone, and sang half-way through it; then he stopped, looked at Dick amiably but firmly, and said, “You aren't singing. You'd better ali sing.” he added ; “it's good for your lungs.” He began the verse over again, and one by one the men joined in, shyly at first, but to- wards the end with a volume of sound bewildering to any one more conscious than “the parson” So ‘‘sarvice at the parson’s’” became a regular institution, and the boys learnt hymns in plenty, and to roar out the “tug of war” till it rolled away over the prairies, amazing the rabbits aud coyotes. Once a clergyman, hear- ing ot Huntingford’s “meetings,” had spent Sunday with him, but “the boys’ heard of it, and fought shy, on- ly Dick turning up at the appointed time, in rather a surly frame of mind, to the amusement of both “the parson” and his guest, who counted the visit a holiday in his hard-worked lite. The Sunday following they all came again, rather sheepish, when Huntingford chaffed them on their non-attendance. Dick rode up to the back of the shanty, where the shed was, hallooed, but got mo response. His heart sank a little, but he dismounted, tied his horse out of the blinding sun, patted “the parsen’s” hound, who met him with friendly wags of his tail. and went around to the door, followed by the dog, who watched him curiously 88 he bent over his master, and, pick- ing him up, earried him into the shanty and put him to bed. Where Hunting: ford had dropped the night before he had lain ever since, for nothing rouses a man the first day of ‘the fever.” Dick knew from much experience with fever patients that the exposure was the worst thing that could have hap- pened. “Guess it ain’t much use, but I'll try fur it,” he said to himself, as he hunted up Huuntingford’s brandy, and poured it raw down the boy's throat. It was of no use, and he lay uncongcioue until evening, when the fever set in. He opened bis eyes and began to talk in a high unnatural voice, and to toes about restlessly, his cheeks flaming and his eyes brilliant. Of course he did not recognize the cow- puncher. Dick bad once seen a physician rub alcohol on a patient's and wrists when ill with “the fever” ; and although he had not fathomed the reason for it, he hunted up the bottle he knew “the parson’ kept, and bathed his head with it until it was all used up. The fever was horrible. Huntingford’s rambling excited talk worse. It was sometimes about a meadow with a pond near it, when he begged invisible people to be quiet a moment and let him listen to the frogs, saying, with a break in his voice : “It is so long since I have heard them. It you could only be quiet just one moment.” Then he would break in with a moan, and “Oh! if the cattle would only not look at me go! To think that it was I who kept the rain away! O Lord, I did not mean to.” He had caught the idea that the drought was a punishment for him, and that the cattle knew and re- proached him with it, Dick nursed him ag carefully as he knew how for, the next two days. It was impossible to leave him long enough to go the fifty miles into Azure for a physician. The third day the sun rose clear and hot again; no sign of rain in the sky, or of the fever abating. But to- wards afternoon Huntingford fell into a doze and woke to recognize Dick, whose heart rose a degree, though he hardly dared to hope. One never does with “the fever.” The first question he asked was, “Has it rained ?’ and when Dick shook his head, burst into a fit of weeping, far too weak to con- trol himself. “It's those poor cattle, Dick. I rode through a herd the oth- er day, too weak for want of food and water to be afraid of me, and their eyes—oh God! their eyes! If you would only make it rain,” he added, half to himeelf, as he turned his face to the wall. Dick turned with a jerk to look out of the window ; the lump in his throat was growing too large to be swallowed, but he intended to master it. Through the window he saw the prairies, all brown but for the patches ot gaudv orange, which looked thirsti- er than the brown, and had a greedy look as well. The sun was so hot that the atmosphere was reeling, and swayed to and fro with such a ryth- mical motion that it seemed to the cowboy’s tired fancy to be dancing a deyil’'s dance. When he looked to- wards the south he saw a pool of blue water, and cattle in it kuee-deep. He knew it was only a mirage. He turned at a little sound from the cot. Huntingford was sitting up, lean: ing on one elbow, and listening. Dick saw that the fever had re- turned, and gave up the fight. As he looked at him “the parson’ tured to him with a radiant smile. “That’s rain, old fellow. Hear it?” he said. “And the frogs, too, trilling until they are hoarse. The wetter the better, the wetter the better—that's what they say.” His cheeks were flaming, and his eyes bright. He sat listening for a few moments, breathing heavily in the hot, dry atmosphere. Dick turned to the window again. He could not stand the sight of Hunt. ingford ; even the devil's dance of the atmosphere was better. Presently Huntingford began in a low voice: “There it is, just the same old gray church, as though I hadn’t been away a day. Come along, old Dick, they are at the processional, and as sure as I’m alive they’re singing my hymn.” His voice rose with excitement. “For all the saints who from their labor rest” was one of the first hymns he had taught “the boys.” “Come on, let's help them,” he cried, and broke in on the fifth verse : “And when the strife is fierce the warfare long, Steals on the ear the distant triumph song, And hearts are brave again, and arms are strong, Alleluia! Alleluia!” His voice rose high and clear, stronger than Dick had ever heard it before. He turned to look at him, then walked over to a group of ama- teurish water-colors tacked to the wall and looked at one of an old church covered with ivy. Huntingford paused in his singing, then went on with the sixth verse. The devils in the atmosphere were diminishing, and red and purple be: ginning to show in the west. A little breeze had sprung up, and came in the shanty windows refreshingly. Max whined at the door, attracted by his master’s voice, and was let in, when he sat down by the bed and watched Huntingford with a great desire to un- derstand in his faithful dog eyes. When “the parson’s voice rang out in the last Alleluia! Alleluia!” Max howled in sympathy, but was comforted when his master put his hand on his head and said, “Poor old dog,” emiling at him, The silence ot the room grew intense, Dick felt it, and turned towards the bed wearily, prepared for what he saw. Huntiogford had dropped back on his pillow, and was dead. “The fever” takes its patients that way. The next day Dick rode back to camp. It was sundown when he got there, and “the boys” were gathered around a big wood fire watching the cook get supper, their figures silhouet- ted against the flames. They shouted to him to know if it was he, and got but a gruff response. Some one asked, “How's the parson ?"’ and they waited patiently for an answer, while Dick dropped off his horse, unsaddled her and as he strode off towards bis tent said, savagely, “Dead, of that thar fe- ver |” . There was absolute silence for a few moments, and no one moved. Then one of the men rose and went fora pail of water for Dick’s horse, whistling as he went in a reminiscing way the All-Saints’ day hymn, which the night wind carried back to the men in the firelight. and on towards the fading red in the west. The cook's great stirring-spoon, sus- pended over the kettle for the past few moments, dropped into it, and the broth within was sent spinning round and round, Then the life of the cam went on. — Harper's Monthly Mag- azine. The Corean Uprising, The Meaning of the Trouble in the Little Pen- insula Which Involves Three Nations. The American people may not be deeply interested in the ordinary inter- nal troubles of Corea. The present grave disturbance, however, threatens to reopen the question of the far East on Corean soil. We are likely to hear much about Corea in the next few months, and it may be worth while to shed a passing light upon the scene and the actors engaged in the drama. Itis not very difficult to get at the gist of the trouble, though the cable and mails have given little information on the subject. The same general causes and complications, however, have produced all the uprisings in Corea withing the past fifteen years. The on- ly difference is that the present insurrec- tion is likely to result in far-reaching consequences of world-wide interest. There are some elements in the situa- tion that look like the plot in an opera bouffe, and if Corea were not a land of surprising anomalies most people would rub thrir eyes when they read of some recent doings. There has been an up- ricing of the peasantry of Corea, a most patient and long-suffering people, often cut to the quick by the onerous exac- tions of the ruling classes, and explod- ing occasionally, when they eannot stand the pressure any longer. As us ual, they have worsted the government troops in several engagements, and this is not surprising, for Corean soldiers do not shine in the military art. As usual, too, the King, who likes to pose as an independent ruler, and who makes treaties with foreign nations in which there is not the slightest intimation that he is really a vassal of China. sends: post-haste, as he has done several times before, to Li Hung Chang, the great viceroy, imploring him to send Chinese troops to his relief, Almost simultan- eously Japan, who has large interests in the country, though she has not as much to do with the country as we have had through the American advis- ers of the King, lands about 10,000 sol- diers in Corea, practically takes posses- sion of Seoul, the capital, and its seaport Chemulpo, badly scaring the King and disturbing the composure of Russia and China, who make haste to tell Japan that she had better mind her own busi- ness and, at any rate, she must keep her hands off of Corea. We may briefly des- cribe the primal causes of all this tur- moil and then the relations to it of the various parties who are taking a hand. This mountain peninsula, jutting out into the sea until it almost overshadows Japan, occupies strategically a most pregnant and important position, and thisis one reason why Russia has a con- suming desire to get hold of it. Its 80,000 square miles support about 8,000, - 000 people who are closely allied to the Chinese in blood, language laws and re- ligion. The soil is fertile, though only a small part of it has been turned to ac- count. The mineral resources are large, but still lie almost untouched in the riv- er valleys and on the mountain sides, The people outside the governing class, are wretchedly poor and the whole country is a conspicuous object lesson, proving that a naturally rich land may be kept almost a howling wilderness by evil and corrupt government. The great burden under which the country staggers is that it is taxed to death to support a vicious official class. In theory the officers are the meed of those who have won literary distinction in competive examinations. In prac- tice the examinations are a farce, and the officers go to those who pay most for them. There are officials without number, from the King’s ccuncilors to the governors of provinces and the mag- nates of the villages and hamlets, and their chief business in life is to wring from commen people all the taxes they can pay. A large part of this money clings to their own fingers, as the re- ward of offices that are purchased, and though the country groans under taxa- tion, the government is notorfously im- pecunious. This genteel office-holding class, while agreeing that the common people must suppbrt them without work, are divided into the fiercest ot factions on some other questions. There happen to be more genteel people than there are offices, and the party of the outs have for along time been led by the father of the King, an unamiable old gentleman, who ruled the country as regent during the minor- ‘ity of his son and was guilty of all sorts of atrocities. His persecution of the Christians and of all foreigners at last brought the warships into Corean har- bors and resulted in the treaties that opened Corean ports to commerce. Discontented politicians of the ex-re- gent’s party stirred up the recent insur- rection. Hating all foreigners and particularly the Japanese, who are the predomina- ting foreign element, the secret agitators employed the double shibboleth of “Down with the tax-gathers who op- press the people,” and “Turn out the foreigners, who make all the money, while we remsin poor.” The Corean peasant, through long suffering is quick tempered and 13 apt to explode at short notice when adroit politicians inflame his mind with the contemplation of his wrongs. This has occurred three times within the past fifteen years. This time the uprising occurred in the region around the capital itself, and of course most of the interests of the foreign ele- ment and the government of the King were directly menaced. Then came the King’s appeal to China for troops and Japan's uninvited occupany of the cap- ital and the port of Chemulpo with suf- ficient force to make her master of the situation at the heart of Corea. She did the same thing in 1882 and in 1884, and exacted the most complete re- paration for injuries inflicted upon her subjects and their property in Corea. For centuries she has repeatedly invad- ed the peninsula. Theonly excuse that she can give for such proceedings is that her people have large financial interests in the country. To be sure, Japan claimed, centuries ago, that Corea was her vassal, but she has done nothing for ages to make the claim valid and for hundreds of years Corea has actually been one of the vassal states of China, attempt to revolutionize the traditional state of things in Corea that may very easily give rise to complications of a for- midable kind. Japan bas come forward with entirely new demands. Shesays she is tired of sending armies into Corea for the pur- pose of protecting her large interests there. What are her interests ? Her people engaged there in trade far out- number all the other foreigners put to- gether. They have absorbed nearly the entire export trade of the country. They control the Mint, though it does not appear that they have done much to improve Corea’s circulating medium. They have established a banking busi- ness atthe capital and the amiable King in a large borrower. Very likely he has forgotten the time when he and his government were free from fin- ancial obligations to Japanese money- lenders. . With all their active and prominent participation in the business of the country, the Japanese are most unpopular. They treat the Coreans as their inferiors and are cordially bated for their supercilious and arrogant air. But it cannot be denied that though China collects the customs, is recogniz- ed by King Li Hsi as his suzerain, re- ceives the tribute that annually wends its way from Seoul to Pekin, main- tains a resident at the capital whose word is practically law, and always re- sponds with soldiers to Corea’s appeals for aid, Japan has valid and important interests in the country and nobody can blame her for trying to safeguard them. Japan demanded that China join her in imposing fiscal reform upon the country and the correction of political abusesso as to do away with the period- ical insurrections that completely upset the land and inflict great annoyance and damage upon all foreigners engaged there. This seems to be a progressive and laudable idea, but conservative and suspicious China has declined the pro- posal with thanks. Her answer was that it was her traditional policy not to interfere forcibly in the internal affairs of a vassal State. Thereupon Japan replied that if China would not help her reform the country she would under- take the task herself. It is this new phase of Corean affairs that may lead to ugly complications and make the Pa- cific border of Asia an object of interest for awhile, to all the nations. At this point Russia has made a few marks. She has warned Japan that she will not be permitted to acquire terri- torial rights in Corea. There is no doubt that China and Japan would long ago have been at odds over Corea if it had not been for their mutual fear that Russia would seize upon any interna- tional disturbance as a pretext for oc- cupying Corea. Next to India, Russia would like to include this fine peninsula in her Asiatic domain. It would give her the strategical and commercial posi- tion on the Pacific which her ice-bound northern coast does not afford. The Coreans, in very considerable numbers, are already living in her Amur province of Ussuri, and Russia finds them a hard- working people, who are helping to make the province a field of fruitfulness. There are a number of the finest harbors in the world along the Corean coasts, and Russia, with only Vladivostock, ice-bound half the year, looks with longing eyes at the splendid harbors of Gensan and Fou-san, where her war- ships might ride safely at anchor in the most furious gales, with no danger of being held captive by an ice blockade. For years Russian officers and agents have been pushing their surveys far and wide in Corean territory, and the only decent man we have of the country emanates from Russian sources. They have never lost an opportunity to culti- vate the friendliest relations with their rather unsocial neighbors on the south and have cordially invited them to move over the border and live in the Russian villages, an invitation which not a few Cureans have accepted. We do not lose sight of the fact that eight years ago China obtained from the Rus- sian Government a distinct official pledge that she would not occupy Corea. China and Japan, however, are} not de- ceived as to the value of such an engage- ment, and their fear that Russia would improve the first opportunity to seize Port Lazareff and Fou-san had the effect until now to moderate their ardor over Corean questions, so that no possible ex- cuse for over action might be supplied to the Czar’s government. Russia, at least, does not propose to see Corea recede further from her grasp by letting Japan acquire territorial rights. It is not at all unlikely that China and Japan will, after all, settle their trouble without going to war over it, for they know very well that while they were quarreling Russia would probably try to run off with the bone of contention. In that case the Chinese resident at Seoul will doubtless continue to be the real master at the Court of Corea. Almost Incredible. The Hams Were so Good that the Lady Bought the Whole Lot. Mrs. Bill Plumbbottle is one of the wealthiest ladies in Dallas, but she hasen’t got a particle of sense, although she graduated at a fashionable seminary One day last week she drove to the store door of a prominent grocer. He came out bowing and asked what he could do for her. “Have you any more hams like that one I got last week ?’’ she asked. “Yes, Mrs. Plumbbottle, we have six wore just like them.” “If they are not the same kind I don’t want ’em.”’ “Why, madam, I assure you they are all from the same animal,’’ said the gro- cer taking advantage of her ignorance. “Well, if the whole six are from the same hog you may send them to my house,” responded Mrs. Plumbbottle, A Case. Clara—*Did you ever see a case of suspended animation, doctor?” Doctor--4Oh, yes ; It was a young lady in a hammock, who was trying to keep a June bug from getting down her back.” ——A gigantic fir tree felled near and though Japan pretends to ignore | Whatcomb, in the State of Washing. knows this relationship she It is her present enough that it exists. lumber. well | ton, recently, contained 20,000 feet of | For and About Women. Here lies a poor woman who was always tired, For she lived in a house where help was not hired. Her very last words were : “My friends, I am goin To a place where there's nothing of washing or sewing. Oh, everything there wiil be just to my wishes ; For where they don’t eat, there’s no washing of dishes ! The courts with sweet anthems are constantly ringing ; But having no voice I shall get clear of sing- ing. She folded her hands with her latest endeavor And whispered: “Oh, nothing, sweet nothing, forever. There are now three women physi- cians on the sanitary corps of the New York board of health— Drs. Alice Mitch- ell, Helen Knight and Frances G. Deane. They are under the same rules and are required to do the same amount of hard work as their masculine asso- ciates. The very latest word--in fashions, there never was a last one—is simplic- ity. Simplicity of skirt at any rate. It is admissible to beruffle and bewitch light and cheap materials, but things of worth must be displayed in masses nearly unbroken. In bodies the wildest extravagance of cut and color are per- missible. This severity of cut in the skirt tends to encourage brocades, sprigged and striped goods which show a pattern in the material. But one doesn’t hear so much about moire. “I want to say,” said a woman of spirit plus sense, ‘‘that the very next person who shakes hands with me after | the new style of handshake will never live to make a fool of himself or me again. I shan’t kill him because I really want to, but just because I have to. Constant dropping may not really wear away stone, but constant trial of our nerves will wear away reason. I shall go mad just as surely as you stand there the next time an idiot palms off socinty’s latest wrinkle upon me.” It is surprising to how great an ex- tent both tulle and net are being used as trimming, and mousseline de soie is even more popular. In scarfs and rosettes for hats; in puffy, gathered bodice fronts ; in sleeve puffs and in trimmings for evening dresses—these materials come universally into play. The tulle is very perishable, but the mousseline and net repay one for their using, so dainty and fresh do they look and remain. One of the prettiest of the summer hats is a deep fashionable maize color, of that rough straw that is yet so frail looking that vou can crush it with your fingers. A tiny shape, slanting up to a modest point in the centre of the crown, was draped with a soft scarf of white mousseline, knotted closely at intervals. At the left side it was bunched 1n fuller tolds, among which nestled a graceful, white- plumaged bird, and at the back the ends of the scarf fell down. My lady would wear this at eventide, and when the breezes began to blow and her hair would get ruffled in the winds, she would draw the ends of her scarf for- ward and knot them in a charming bow beneath her dimpled decided chin. Oatmeal bags used in the bath give a velvety softness and whiteness to the skin. Take five pounds of oatmeal, ground fine, a half pound of pure cas- tile soap reduced to powder, and a pound of powered Italian orris root. Cut a yard of thin cheese cloth into bags about four inches square, sewing then on the machine, and taking care not to leave any untied threads, where a break may let the contents ooze out. Mix the soap, oatmeal and orris root thoroughly and fill the bags loosely. Sew up the opening in each, and lay them away to use as required. They are used as a sponge, dipped in warm water, making a thick, velvety lather and wonderfully softening the skin, while the orris imparts a Jasting fra- grance, The recent manificent gift of Miss Mary Garrett to the Medical School at John Hopkins, by the terms of the en- dowment, opens wide to wom ankind the doors of this particular part of the uni- versity. ‘ The reign of white petticoats pre- dicted for several months approaches slowly. The lifted dress skirt still shows the dainty silk and lace trimmed petticoats in a more bewildering variety than ever. For wear under white and delicately tinted lawns, mousseline de soies and other gauzy materials nothing is so satisfactory as silk, imparting a finish and effect that is impalable, yet missed without it, and except under gingham gowns of the plainest variety the muslin or cambric petticoats has no sphere. ——— The prettiest kind of a sun hat for a round-faced girl of the dimpled variety is a big white leghorn, with the wide brim left to droop as it will. A twist of soft white mull or wash blond tied loosely around the low crown, and fast- ened with a big fluffy rosette in front, or at the side, makes all the trimming necessary, with wide strings of the same, but a maiden who wishes to be especial- ly fascinating will stick a few drooping blossoms through the twist atone of both sides, or all around, and tie a bud in the string just where it will be under her chin. A gown made of white mull, made with a full-gathered skirt, and a waist gathered to a round yoke, out- lined with a ruffle needs only a sash of blue silk to transform the wearerinto a veritable picture of innocence. With such a gown, white Oxford ties are a necessity, and the whole outfit may cost $5, or $500, as the wearer chooses. In dress Mrs. Cleveland still adheres to gray as her favorite color, and even her home is gray and called Gray Gables. Hats are not in favor with the fash- ionable small girl. She scorns them. Only sun bonnets find favor in her eyes. She wears one in the morning, at noon, and on full dress occasions as well, With her morning gowns the sun bon- net is of gingham or dimity, with a very much frilled poke. Sometimes she owns one to match every morning frock. They are inexpensive and shade well the baby face.