Denisrraiic atc Bellefonte, Pa., dan. iil, 1895. THE ISLE OF BOREDOM, As you sail through life take pains and steer Away from the island that lies too near— The isle of Boredom, which all men fear. The island sets up like a shelf of rock, But woe to the sailor who lands at the dock And offers the people a chance to talk. For they talk all night, and they talk all day, And try as you will to get away They pin you down, and they make you stay. They talk of things they have done and said: They talk you awake, and they talk you tobed Till you aimost wish they would talk you dead And the queerest thing and the one to deplore About the dwellers upon that shore— Not one of them knows that he is bore. So steer away from that island shelf That is governed, hey say, by a wicked elf, Lest you be a bore and no knowt it yourself. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox in Youth's Companion. MAN-SIZE IN MARBLE. When we were married we knew quite well that we should only be able to live by “strict punctuality and at- tention to business” I used to paint in those days, and Laura used to write, and we felt sure we could keep the pot at least simmering.—Living in town was out of the question, so we went to look for a cottage in the country. Our search was for some time quite fruitless. But when we got away from friends and house agents, on our honeymoon, our wits grew clear again, and we knew a pretty cottage when at last we saw one. It was at Benzett—a little village set on a hill over against the Southern marshes. We had gone there from the seaside village where we were staying, to see the church, and two fields [rom the church we found this cottage. It stood quite by itself, about two miles from the village. It was a long, low building, with rooms sticking out in unexpected pla- ces. After a brief examination we took it, for it was absurdly cheap. The rest of our honeymoon we spent in grubbing about in secondhand shops in the country town, picking up bits of old oak and Chippendale chairs for our furnishing. Soon the low- beamed, lattice-windowed rooms began to seem quite homelike. We were as happy as the summer was glorious, and settled down into work sooner than we ourselves expected. We got a tall old peasant-woman as servant. Her face and figure were good, though her cooking was of the homeliest. We had three months of married happiness, and did not have a single quarrel. One October evening I had been down to smoke a pipe with the doctor—our only neighbor—a pleas- ant young Irishman. Laura had stayed at hometo finish a comic sketch of a village episode for the Monthly Marplot. 1 left her laughing over her own jokes, and came in to find her a crumpled heap weeping on the window seat. “Good heavens! my darling, what's the matter ?’’ I cried. “It’s Mrs. Dorman,” she sobbed. “She says she must go before the end of the month, and she says her niece is ill, but I don’t believe that’s the reason, because her niece is always ill. I believe some one has been setting her against us. Her manner was go queer—"' “Never mind, dear,” I said ; what ever you do, don’t cry. I'll speak to Mrs. Dorman and see if I can’t come to terms with her. Perhaps she wants a raise in her wages. It will be all right. Let us walk up to the church.” The church was a large and lonely one, and we loved to go there, espec- ially upon bright nights. A large, low porch let one into the building by a Norman doorway and a heavy oak door studded with iron. Inside the arches rose into darkness, and between them the reticulated windows, which stood out white in the moonlight. In the chancel, the windows were of rich glase, which showed in taint light their noble coloring and made the black oak of the choir pews hardly more solid than the ehadows. Bat on each side of the altar lay a gray marble figure ofa knight in full plate armor lying upon a low slab, with hands held up in everlasting prayer, and these figures oddly enough, were always to be seen if there was any glimmer of light in the church. Their names were lost, but the peasants told of them that they had been fierce and wicked men, ma- rauders by land and sea, who had been the scourge of their time and had been guilty of deeds so foul that the house they had lived in—the "big house, by the way, that had stood on the site of our cottage—had been stricken by lightning and the ven- geance of heaven. We walked to the chancel and looked at the sleeping warriors.— Then we rested some time on the stone seat in the porch, and at last went home. Mrs. Dorman had come back from the village, and I said, when I had got- ten her into my painting room‘ “what’s all this about your not staying with us? Are your wages not high enough ?"’ “No, gir; I gets quite enough.” “Then why uot stay ?”’ “I’d rather not”’—with some hesita- tion—‘“my niece is ill.” “But your niece has been ill ever since we came. Can you not stay for another month ?"’ I asked. “No, sir; I’m bound to go by Thurs- day.” And this was Monday ! “Well, must say I think you might have let us know before. Why must you go this week ? Come, out with it.” Mrs. Dorman drew the little shawl, which she always wore, tightly across her bosom, as though she were cold. Then ghe said with a sort of effort,— “They sav, sir, as this was a big house in Catholic times, ani there was many deeds done here” “Tell me all about it, Mrs. Dor- man,” I said; ‘you needn’t mind about telling me. I'm not like the young people who make fun of such things.” “Well, sir”’—she lowered her voice— “you may have seen in the church, beside the altar, two shapes. , I mean them two bodies, drawed out man-gize in marble,” she returned, I and had to admit that her description was a thous- and times more graphic than mine. “They do say, 88 on All Saints’ Eve them two bodies sits up on their slabs, and gets oft of them, and then walks down the aisle, in their marble, and as the clock strikes eleven they walk out of the church door, and over the bier- walk, and ifit’s a wet night they comes back here to their home, sir, and if anyone meets them—"’ “Well, what then?” I asked. But no—not another word could I get from her. I could get nothing but | warnings. “Whatever yon do, sir, lock the door early on All Saints’ Eve, and make the cross sign over the doorstep and on the windows, And I'm sorry to inconvenience you and your lady, but I must go on Thursday.” I did not tell Laura the legend of the shapes that “walked in their mar- ble, ’because the legend concerning our house might. perhaps trouble my wife. I had very soon ceased to think of the legend, however. I was painting a portrait of Laura, against the lattice window, and I could not think of much else. On Thusday Mrs. Dorman went. Thursday passed off pretty well. Friday came. Everything that hap: pened on that day is burned into my brain I got up early, I remember, and lighted the kitchen flre. We pre- pared breakfast together, and found it very good fun. We spent the day in dusting our books and putting them straight, and dined gayly on steak and coffee. Laura was, if possible, bright- er, and gayer and sweeter than usual, and I began to think that a little do- mestic toil was really good for her. We had never been so merry since we were married, and the walk we had that afternoon was, I think, the hap- piest time of all my life ; and we came back to the house. We spent a happy hour or two at the piano, and about half past ten I said, “I'll take my pipe outside.” I strolled out of the front door, leav- ing it unlatched. What a night it was! The jagged masses of heavy dark clouds were rolling at intervals from horizon to horizon, and thin white wreaths covered the stars,.— Across the meadows I could see the church tower standing out black and gray against the sky. I walked there thinking over our three months of happiness—and of my wife, her dear eyes, her loving ways. I heard a bell beat from the church Eleven already! I turned to go in, but the night held me. I could not go back into our little warm rooms yet. I looked in at the low window as I went by. Laura was half lying on her chair in front of the fire. I could not see her face, only her little head showed dark against the pale blue wall. She was quite still.— Asleep no doubt. My heart reached out to her as I went on. I walked s'owly along the edge of the wood. A soand broke the stillness of the night—it was a rustling in the wood. I stopped and lietened. The sound stopped too. I went on and now distinctly heard another step than mine answer mine like an echo. It was a poacher or a wood stealer, most likely, for these were not un- known in our Arcadian neighborhood. But whoever it was, he was a fool not to step more lightly. I turned into the bier-walk and passed through the corpse gate between the graves to the low porch. I paused for a moment on the stone seat. Then I noticed that the door of the church was open, and I blamed myself for having left it un. latched the other night. I went in. It will seem strange, perhaps, that I should have gone halt way up the aisle before [ remembered—with a sud- den chill, followed by as sudden a rush of self contempt—that this was the very day and hour when, accord ing to tradition, the “shapes drawed out man-size in marble” began to walk, Having thus the legend, I could not do otherwise than walk up toward the altar, just to look at the figures—as 1 said to myself; really what I wanted was to assure myself, first, that I did not believe the legend, and second, that it was not true. With my hands in my pockets I passed up the aisle. In the gray dim light the Eastern end of the church looked larger than usval and the arches above the two 1ombs looked larger, too. The moon came out and showed me the reason. I stopped short, my heart gave a leap that nearly choked me and then sank sickeningly. “The ‘bodies drawed out man-size’ were gone. and their marble slabs lay wide and bare in the vague moonlight that slanted through the East window. Were they really gone? or was I mad ? Clenching my nerves, I stooped and passed my hand over the smooth slabs and felt their flat, unbroken sur- face. Had some one taken them away? Was it some vile practical joke? I would make sure, anyway. In an instant I had made a torch of a newspaper which happened to be in my pocket, and lighting it, held it high above my head. Its yellow glare illuminated the dark arches and those slabs. The figures were gone. And then a horror seized me, a hor- ror undefinable and. indiscribable. I flung down the torch and tore along the aisle and out through the porch. I leaped the churchyard wall and took the straight cut across the fields, led by the light from our windows. Just as I got over the first stile,;a dark ficure seemed to spring out of the ground, Mad still with that cer- tainty of misfortune, I made for the thing that stood in my path, shouting “Get out of the way, can't you 2” But my push met with a more vigor- ous resistence than I had expected. My arms were caught just above the elbow and held as in a vice, and the raw-boned Irish doctor actually shook me. “Let me go, you fool,” I gasped. “The marble figures have gone from the church ; I tell you they’ve gone,” He broke into a ringing laugh. “I'll have to give ye a draught to- morrow, I see. Ye've bin smoking too much and listening to old wives’ tales. Come back with me we'll look at the church, and let me see the bare slabs.” “You go if you like,” I said, a little less frantic for his laughter ; I'm going home to my wife.” “Rubbish, man,” said he ; are ye to go saying all ver life that ye've seen solid marble endowed with vitality, and me to go all my life saying ye were a coward? No sir, ye shan’t do it.” The night air, a human voice, and I think also the physical contact with this six feet of solid common sense, brought me back a little to my ordi- nary self, and the word “coward” was ' a mental shower bath. “Come on, then,” I said perhaps; you're right.” He still held my arm tightly. We got back to the church and walked up the aisle. I am not ashamed to con- fess that I shut my eyes ; I knew the fizures would not be there. I heard Kelly strike a match. “Here they are, ye see, right enough; ye've been dreaming or drinking, ask- ing yer pardon for the imputation.” I opened my eyes. By Kelly's ex- piring vesta, I eaw two shapes lying “in their marble” on their slabs, I drew a deep breath and caught his hand. “I am awfully indebted to you,” I said, “It must have been some trick or light, or I have been working rather hard, perhaps that's it. Do you know I was quite convinced they were gone.” “I'm aware of that, he answered, grimly ; “ye’ll have to be careful of that brain of yours, my friend, I as- sure you.” He was leaning over and looking at the right hand figure, whose stony face wore the most villainous and deadly expressipn. “By Jove!” he said, ‘something has been afoot here, this hand is brok- en,” And so it was. I was certain that it had been perfect the last time that Laura and I had been there.” “Perhaps some one has tried to re- move them,” said the young doctor. “Come along,” I said, “or my wife will be getting anxious. You'll come in and have a drop of whisky and drink confusion to ghosts and better sense to me.” “All right, I'll come back with ye.” I think he fancied I needed him. So discusssing how such an illusion could have been possible, and deduct- ing from this experience large gen- eralities concerning ghostly apparition, we walked up to our cottage. We saw, as we walked up the garden path, that a bright light streamed out of the front door, and presently saw that the parlor door was open, too. “Come in,” I said, and Doctor Kel- ly followed me into the parlor. It was all ablaze with candles, not only the wax ones, but at least a dozen gut- tering, glaring tallow dips, stuck in vases and ornaments in unlikely pla- ces. Light, I knew was Laura's remedy for nervousness. Poor child ! Why had I left her? Brute that I was, We glanced around the room and at first did not see her. The window was open and the draught set all the candles flaring one way. Her chair was empty and her handkerchief and book lay on the floor. I turned to the window. There, in the recess of the window, I saw her, Ob, my child, my love! had she gone to the window to watch for me? And what had come into the room behind her? To what had ehe turned with that look of frantic fear and horror? She had fallen back across a table in the window and her body lay half on it and half on the window seat, and her head hung down over the table, the brown hair loosened and fallen to the carpet. Her lips drawn back and her eyes wide, wide open. They saw nothing now. What had they seen last ? The doctor moved toward her, but I puehed him aside and sprang to her. I caught her in my arms and cried, “It’s all right, Laura, dear! I've got you safe.” She fell into my arms in a heap. I clasped her and kissed her and cdlled her by all her pet names, but I think I knew all the time that she was dead. Her hands were tightly clenched. In one of them she held something fast. When I was quite sure that she was dead, and that nothing mattered at all any more, I let him open her band to see what she held. It was a gray marble finger. The Jewish New Year. Rose Hashonah is the Jewish New Year. Two days are celebrated, in ac- cordance with the custom of the old Jews, who were uncertain as to the exact date of the New Year because of the confusion in which they found the calender. They celebrated two days so as to be sure not to miss the right one. The Reformed Jews celebrate but one day—the first—which fell on Sept. 11 in the year 1893. Rosh Hashonah means the feast of trumpets. Accord- ing to the Jewish chronology, this is the year 5654. The head woman in every Jewish household lights three candles at the first appearance of the three stars, On New Year the ram's horn is sounded in the Jewish synagogues, the significance of which is to remind the people that the new year is being usher- ed in ; that new resolutions may be formed and preparations made to live better during the year. The ceremonies are also preparatory to the more solemn day of atonement— the 10th day of the month Tishni. ——Do you read the WATCHMAN, No One Can Escape. He met Mrs. Dr. Sherlock Holmes and She Was His. All of a sudden she turned to the man in the street car on her left and said : “You were putting down an ingrain carpet at your house this morning. Don’t attempt to deny it, for I have the most conclusive evidence !’? “How do you know ?’ he stammered in surprise.” “There is lint on your knees, sir, showing the kind of carpet, and your thumb is done up in a rag to prove that you hit it with the hammer. You have a bunion on your left foot. Deny it at your peril I” “Yes, I have a bunion, but’”’— “I knew it, because you can’t keep that foot still, while n. w and then you utter a cuss word below your breath. You are living with your second wife. Admit the truth of what I say or take the consequences !”’ “How on earth can you tell that?” he asked as he began to turn pale around the mouth. “By the hairs and dandruff on your coat. Your first wife always brushed you before you went out. Now, sir, you have a small child at home.” “Yes, a little boy 8 years old, but’’— *I knew it, because he shoved that jumping jack into your pocket while you were playing with him just before you came out. You are also an absent- minded man. Denial will be useless and may get you into serious trouble.” Hf? “If you were not an absentminded man, you would not have pocketed that table napkin for a handkerchief nor come out with your old hat on. While your first wife has been dead for several years, you have not yet placed a tomb- stone at her grave. Don’t try to bluff me, sir |” “You are right, but”? — “Of course I am. When we passed that marble shop, you gave one look at the tombstones and placed your hand on your wallet. Your present wife “is not domestic.” “No, she is not, but how on earth can you tell. 7”? “The moths have eaten your coat, there are two buttons off your vest, and from the way you wiggle that right foot I’m sure you have holes in your stock- ing. Think not to deceive me !”’ “Great lands, woman,” he gasped as the perspiration stood out on his fore- head, ‘but yon must be’’— “Mrs. Dr. Sherlock Holmes, sir,” she finished. “I have to get out here to solve a mystery in a butcher shop. Blood has been found on a cleaver, the buther’s wife has got a new sealskin sack, and the errand boy has a boil on his leg. ’Sdeath ! I will unravel the whole affair in five minutes and spot the murderer | Good day, old man. By the way don’t use sandpaper on your celluloid collar, as it leaves scratches !’’ New System of Grading. W. J. Shearer, superintendent of the public schools of New Castle, Pa., has introduced a new system of grading pu- pils which has been in successful opera- tion in that city for two years. He be- lieved that in the manner ot grading and promoting was to be found the weakest point in our public schools and his system is the result of special study of the subject. His object isto do away with the ‘iron clad’ system of yearly grades and to give something more pliant. This is attempted by removing the cause and dividing each grade into small classes, according to ability, with but a short interval between the classes go that pupils may easily pass from class to class, as they are able. One excellent feature of the new sys- tem is the abolition of the examination period, looked forward to with dread by teachers and pupils, His reasons for thinking the final examination is not best for the children are gived at length in the forthcoming Pennsylvania School Journal, and may be briefly stat- ed as follows : It is a test of memory rather than of power. It may show some things the pupil does not know, but does not show what the pupil does know. It destroys and prevents broad and intelligent teaching, makes out of the teacher a “grind’’ and turns out ‘‘machine pupils.” It forces many to take far more than they can grasp or understand and causes many to leave school. It brings unnec- cessary mental worry to the nervous ones who often fail to pass, while the less worthy succeed. It is a great temp- tation to deceit, It demands cne third more time than is necessary to give as much knowledge and better training. It does not put a premium upon the work done day by day, during the year, but upon the amount of stuffing that can be done at the end of the year. It is the cause and bulwark of the attempt- ed uniformity and the great obstacle in the way of such a system of grading, as will make possible to suit the school to the pupil. It is useless, for every teach- er knows before the examination, what the result of the examination should be For these reasons, we believe the final examination is a moral injustice to the pupil and teacher, one of the worst edu- cational blunders, a psychological ad. surdity, and should be abandoned for some system similar to that now in use in this city. Rival Shows. James B. Bailey, “Nate’’ Salisbury and W. F. Cody have formed a part- nership to consolidate the Wild West and Forepaugh shows next season, with a capital of $1,000,000. The new part- ners will have no interest in the Bar- num and Bailey show. This is a slap at Barnum & Bailey’s circus, as the public will now be able to witness the great Forepaugh show and the wild west, all for the sum of a half a dollar. Forest Fire Incendiaries. Dr. J. T. Rothrock, forestry commis- sioners, says there is probably not a sin- gle incendiary undergoing punishment for starting forest fires, and that all our legal enactments are in public contempi because they are never enforced. Very Severe on Him, Gus de Smith—Ah, Miss Birdie. I weally fear I fatigue you. Birdie McGinnis--I would not be so rude, Mr. de Smith, as to contradict you.— Tammany Times. Japan is Impatient. Has grown Weary With Waiting for China to Close the Negotiations. —May Declare them off. Hinted That Conditions First Proposed Will not Be Accepled.—The Army Has not Been Asleep. Ready at Any Time to Still Further Demonstrate Their Strength. The Annexation Idea Is Favored. It is the belief of officials in a position to know the statue of affairs between Japan and China, that Japan will de- clare the peace negotiations off unless China hasten them. There is increas- ing irritation on the part of Japan be- cause of the delays in presenting definite peace proposals. More than a month has passed since it was agreed that a tender of peace con- ditions would be considered by Japan, and as yet the conditions have not been offered, and there is doubt as to China’s plenipotentiaries having the right to make any final offers. At one time the general understanding was that the ba- sis of peace would be a cash indemnity and the independence of Korea, and the work of the plenipotentiaries was to set- tle the exact amount and terms of the cash indemnity. Now, however, there is an intimation that Japan may no longer accept the two conditions first proposed, but may insist also on China’s ceding extensive territories, probably the Island of For- mosa, or the valuable strategic points of Port Arthur or Wei-Hei- Wei, or a por- tion of Manchuria, already occupied by Japan. Opinion differs in Japan as to which piece of territory should be demanded. This annexation sentiment is uriversal, and it is believed Japan will soon make it known to China, probably through Minister Dun at Tokio, that the pro- crastination in presenting the terms of settlement is such that the negotiations will be abandoned unless closed within a reasonable and definite time. In the meantime there are evidences that Japan is preparing for an aggres- sive military movement calculated to impress China and the plenipotentiaries with Japan’s ability to increase the ad- vantage she has already secured. A gentleman who has been some years in diplomatic service in China, and is a recognized authority on inter- national custom, points out that it is an invariable rule’ with China not to grant absolute power to her plenipotentaries, but merely to confer advisory powers on them. Detectives Made Love. To a Pretty Girl Who Finally Told of an Illicit Distillery. HAzLETON, PA., Jan. b5.—George Hess, a moonshiner, was captured and brought to this city to-day by Chief of Police Hampton and U. S. Marshal John W. Walker, of Pittsburg. Hess has been conducting an illicit distillery in the mountains near Hobby for a year An officer attended a dance two weeks ago. Among the girls there was Amanda Shive. There was lots of cheap whiskey on hand. The detective was convinced that she knew something of the distillery and made love to her. He ingratiated himself into her confi- dence. The result was that Miss Shive told the spy that George Hess, of the Valley, was making whisky on the mountain near Hobby. With this clew the officers started out in search of Hess. Hess was captured and taken before United States Com- missioner Hill here. = Amanda Shive was also taken before the Commissioner and testified against Hess. ——The wild rush for office at the opening of the Legislature is uonprece- dented. There are from ten to twenty applicants for every position, from the highest to the lowest. So great is the rush that the leaders, who are supposed to be able to divide the official pap among the hungry applicants, are at their wits end, and the bigger tycoons are compelled to hide from the hordes to keep from being run over. The prop- osition that successful seekers for places should divide their salaries with one or two who may miss connection, causes a great deal of kicking. Any- body who is an uninterested witness of the scramble will agree with Mr. Jef- ferson, who once said ‘The post of hon- or is the private station.” Yet there are hundreds of men who would rather carry in wood or shovel coal for the Commonwealth than to earn better wages, and retain their independence and self-respect, in a private capacity. Official place, however menial, is a big thing in the eyes of the perennial office seeker. -—-There is likely tobe a call on Irish Americans for help for ‘the folks at home.”” as there is something like a famine prevailing among the peasantry of the west of Ireland by reason of the failure of this year’s potato crop. The chief secretary for Treland has officially notified the cabinet that the distress is urgent and that means should be im- mediately taken to alleviate the suffer- ing. According to the Dublin papers the calamity is widespread, people are starving, and any relief under the poor laws is wholly inadequate for the emer- gency. There must be in America, the New York ‘Sun’ estimates, a million of immigrants from the most seriously afflicted region of Ireland by the pres- ent calamity, which includes the coun- ties of Sligo, Galway, Connemara, Mayo and Clare. It is advised they take measures for relief, either by send- ing an agent over to gather information, or what would probably be better, seek the advise of the archbishop of Tuam, who is cognizant of the facts. On this they could cable relief in a very short time. Electricity annihilates space in works of charity as well as other under- takings. —— Contributor. — “Pretty poem, isn’t it ?” Magazine Editor.-—'‘Yes, very; but we can’t publish it.” Contribusor.—*“Why not ?” Magazine Editor. — “Why, anybody can tell at the first reading precisely what it means.” — Somerville Journal. -——John Ford a colored carpenter of Augusta, Ga., has named his four sons Jay Gould, Vanderbilt, Rockefeller and Phil Armour. For and About Women. Miss E. V. Askew, of Tampa, Fla., is a stenographer and typewriter with a record to be proud of. In a document of 100 pages of legal cap sent up to the Supreme Court of the State there was not one erasure, omission, or mistake in punctuation. — Tbe daughter of Jefferson Davis, Miss Varina Anne Davis, but whom her friends will always know as “ Win- nie, the daughter of the Confederacy,” has just finished her first novel, and un- der its title of “The Veiled Doctor” it will be published within a fortnight. The flower bonnet of the hour is a novelty. It usually consists of a sin- gle nodding flower, which appears to be growing from the high coil of hair. The bonnet’s sole foundation is a soft coil of velvet. The flower is caught at the back. One shows a twist of pink velvet, with a American Beauty rose , standing with graceful erectness at the back. Another has a coil of violet vel- vet and a careless cluster of heliotrope arranged toward the back. Mrs. Amelia Bloomer, who died at Council Bluffs, Iowa, on Sunday last, gave faithful service to the cause of womanhood with vecice and pen and brain ; but she never did her sex better service than when she bravely adopted the common sense business costume which took its name from her, and which she found necessary to her com- fort and convenience in her pesition as postmistress. For a generation or more her independence had subjected her to much good-natured ridicule. With the rising generation her name will be apt to summon up only grateful associa- tions ; certainly such will be the case with which the many thousands of her sisters who find kealth and pleasure in the bicycle. Miss Nellie Cushman, of Arizona, a tall, angular, dark-haired, dark-eyed girl, a rapid talker, and a great reader, has the reputation of being the only woman mining expert in the worid. She is a Kansas girl, and began her work in examining ore at Tucson, Arizona, nine years ago, when she was a girl of seventeen. Tartan plaids are a veritable dress rage. Paris began the wearing of silks and velvets in tartan patterns six months ago, and we have followed suit by decking ourselves gorgeously with the plaids of the Scotch clans. Every woman whose name is Stuart, Macpher- son, MacGregor or anything that has the faintest smell of the heather, walks abroad 1n the big checks of “our tartan, you know.” Men wear neckties of the solid red and black of the famons out- law Rob Roy, women display itin vel- vet sleeves, and now and then in cross- ing a street the dainty lifted dress reveals a glimpse bf Rob Roy hoisery. The coats with long skirts are most becoming to the majority of women, but the real new fashion is a sort of short double-breasted reefer, which has slanting pockets that are good to use, Another coat is desirable for busy wom- en because it does away with the nec- essity of carrying a muff. It has open- ings on a level with the arm sizes and 1nside pockets, just as the man’s ulster possess. It is a fine idea and the pock- ets can be added to any coat that is not tight fitting. The novelty of the moment is a little collar-band of fur, to be worn as velvet stock-collars are. 1t is merely a straight band of fur about three inches wide, standing out in projecting loops on the sides, then hooking in front, where it is adorned with two miniature heads of the animal that meet together there. This little odd Zour de cow is made of the glossiest black silken Persian lamb or of the moire Persian, orelse of seal- skin, otter, or the shorter brown furs, especially mink or sable. Chinchilla 1s very decidedly the fash- ionable fur for those who have suffi- cient color in lip and cheek to wear it becomingly. There is great choice in this fur, the inferior skins looking brown and dingy besides the clear gray shades seen in the best qualities brought from Africa. An undulating collarette in two rows, or with a stole froat, is the favorite shape, as many insist that a mass of this fur when seen in large capes is not effective: It is however, a charmingly warm and velvety fleece. It is at its best when combined with black or with seal-skin. An 1dea which originated with a bright hostess is very pleasing. On a strip of white satin ribbon which hangs frown a tiny brass rod in her guest cham- ber, she has written the hours for ar- rival and departure of the principal mails, and on the back of it, there is pasted a perpetual calendar. Now, there is adulterated sense for you. It saves a lot of questions, insures punc- tuality at meals—it her guests have any sense of honor and helps a recreant memory, when importent communica- tions might be neglected but for this gentle inspiration. Heavy dresses, with sleeves contain- ing more material than all the rest of the gown put together, make it impossi- ble to wear the additional weight of a big cloak or coat, with sleeves to cor- respond, so the fiton jacket is still with us, in the shape of a bodice of fur, minus sleeves, though sleeves can be added if you choose. Mrs. W. D. Egenhoff has been Superintendent of Public Instruction for Mariposa county, Cal, for eight years, She was left a widow at 22 with two young sons. A correspondent in Mariposa writes; ‘‘flected to office a year or two after her husband's death, she has proved a capable superintendent an excellent teacher and a first-class mother. There is not a railroad in the county. Sometimes alone, sometimes with a lady friend, Mrs. Egenhoff has driven 150 miles at one trip, over steep roads skirting dizzy precipices, to visit the schools. Nearly every school in the | county has been visited annually, in- cluding the cnein the Yosomite Valley.