Bellefonte, Pa., May 17, 1895. POVERTY’'S CHILDREN. Only a newsboy! hast'ning along, Ready and saucy, sturdy and strong! With cap all awry on his dishevelled hair, With ery loud and strident, he goes through the streets Learning hard lessons from those whom he meets, He offers his papers—crying the news, Tells you of accidents, if you refuse, Murders—or other things shocking or sad— Rarely, or never, of things good or glad. Who cares for the newsboy ? Who, on the whole, Has thought for his body Or prayer for his soul? Only a bootblack ; with kit on his arm, So eager and restless—careless of harm, His hands may be soiled, his cheek thin and wan His hat without brim, his trousers half gone. But there stands he ready, blacking and brush To wipe from your boots the dust and the slush. “Have a shine, sir?” he cries t’all those who pass, “Shine your boots? like glass!” He's quick with a smile when you toss him a joke, I'll give them a polish a little exclamation, and there stood in | the door the longed-for young lady, tiny, dainty, and as pink-and-white as | a spray of apple bloom. Lee shut his | teeth with a snap—he had hoped that | there would be a new girl to while, away the tedium of the rest of the sea- | son, and now, after all, she was as! nearly the opposite of his ideal as a woman could be. The ordeal of the introduction was borne gravely, how- ever, and Lee began to think that per- haps she wasn’t going to bea fly-away after all, until she all at once demand- ed that the florist’s assistants be sent away and that the young people them- selves put up the mountain of greens. “Of course, if you want,” said Nell, ruefully, “but we'll make an awful mess of it. These men make it a busi- ness, you see, and we—well, we'll be as crude as children at it.” : “Qh, no, we won't. Just let us try and if it comes to the worst you may send for your men later.” Of course she had her way, and soon there arose such a series of little cries at pricked wrists, such growls at bat- tered masculine thumbs, such a clatter of shifting ladders and calls for tacks When angry, with curses he's ready to choke. Who cares for the bootblack ? Who, on the whole, Has thought for his body Or prayer for soul? Only a beggar girl! look at her come! Sp tangled and dirty! sullen and glum, She ee you askance—glance furtive and Wild Expecting & sneer. She's “Nobody’s child 1” Her bart starves for love! she gets only re- Hu She's hardened and pert, a real little “tough” What cares she for manners! what cares she for law ? She’s cold, and she’s hungry! There’s some- how a flaw : 1n society's structure, is there’s no place Where she can be cared for, and learn of od’s grace. Who cares for these children ? Who. on the whole, Gives thought to their bodies, Or prayers for their souls? Alas! for the little ones, all o’er the land, Whose childhood is erushed beneath pov- erty’s hand— They live without friends, and grow without love, With no one to tell of their father above. So bitter the present! the future so dark ! Neglect and depravity leaving their mark ! Can we then stand idle, and coldly refuse To teach them and help them the right way to choose ? Remember that angels in Heaven, we're told, Do always the face of our Father behold! For God loves these children, And we on the whole Should care for their bodies And pray for the soul. —Kuate C, MEKnight. HER CALM BLUE EYES, Lee had always insisted that he wouldn’t marry any weak little pink- and-white creature, with a mouth made only for dimples and a head fluffy with golden curls. He wanted a fine, big, dark creature, with shoul: ders strong enough to bear the dignity of his name and position, a color whose brilliancy would put to shame the non- descript women about her, and with even a dash of daring in her make-up. He did not care to own something, even though that thing be a wife, whom he did not have to strive a little to ob- tain, and the prospect of an easy, long, certain lapse of conjugal bliss aroused only disgust in his rather reckless na- ture. As Lee was remarkably hand- some, wealthy and tascinating, to say nothing of his being dangerously de- termined when he so chose, the fellows all laughed and agreed that he no doubt would have what he wanted when he finally decided to stoop to lift some fortunate woman to the enviable state ot being Mrs. Grant Haxton Lee. It was the day before Christmas, and a half a dozen young people had con- gregated in Nell Barton's ballroom to witness the preparations for the dance night. Nell, whom one of the men had immortalized as the “girl with the most friends and fewest lovers in the set.”’ had left her companions an hour before to meeta cousin who was ex- pected from the east, and the younger people had spent the time in directing --the white-capped maids who were loop- ing the fresh curtains and the men waxingtthe bright oak floor. The greens had been brought up and piled high by the door, when the sound of a carriage stopping in the street below brought the gay bevy to the front windows, where they craned their necks in careful curiosity to catch a glimpse of the new-comer, “Bah!” remarked Lee, listlessly. “She isn’t bigger than a baby, and I'm afraid she is blonde.” “Thank - you,” came in laughing promptness from the three girls of the party, who, as it bappened, each re- Joiced in light hair. Lee merely laugh- ed—he made no secret of his preference for dark-eyed beauties, and the mem- bers of his set had long ago acquiesced to his tastes- A tew minutes later Nell ran panting up the stairs, saying : “Oh, she’s dearer than when I saw her last, and then I worshiped her, Yes, she'll be up soon—mamma is helping her to get rid of a little dust and incidentally talking her to death. You men will have to be careful this winter—she's to stay till spring, you know—all of you but Mr. Lee, and he isn’t in any danger from her calm blue eyes, “Then she is light, after all.” wailed he of the fastidious ideas. I was in hopes she at least had brown eyes—the yellow kind with the gold glints in them, you know.” “Yes, we know," laughed one of the men. ‘‘Lee’ssuch an experton eyes that he’s got us all trained up to a re- markable degree of intelligence on that subject. Why, until he began his ex- haustless hobby I never noticed wheth- er or not even my best friend had any eyes at all.” “Sh-h’* drawled a tiny, blue orbed miss, with & reproachtul glance at this | neglecter of good things. Whereat everybody laughed knowingly and the injured maiden pouted coyly. The subject of the expected cousin was dropped here, as the little group returned to the chairs about the walls, peered out the high dormer windows at the housetops below or practiced a few pew steps of the latest dance, to the extreme discomfort of the men rub- bing away on their knees till their cheeks puffed. All at once Nell gave and twine as never before bad broken the dignified elegance of the Barton ballroom. Cousin Bess directed it all, flitting about from each amateur dec- orator, correcting here, suggesting there and planning everywhere, until she had each and every member of the lit- tle party wholly at ber sweet com- mand, with the exception of the tall, dark Lee, who looked at her so grave- ly, almost condescendingly, that before the first hour was gone she felt that she in some way aroused in him the severest disapproval. Of course, she was puzzled, for she had often heard through Nell’s letters what a fascinat- ing fellow he was, but she was destined to discover the true state of affairs sooner than she hoped. Lee was on top of the highest ladder, and one of the boys had climbed up just behind him to act as a go-between in the process of handing up the rope of cedar, with which he was winding one of the snowy pillars, which mark- ed a jut in the east wall. “Well, what do you think of the little lady by this time?” asked the man on the lower steps. And Lee, all unconscious of the fact that Bess was standing just beneath him around the corner, laughed back : “I told you, when I found she was such a tiny, light-headed thing, that I shouldn’t like her. And the more I see of her the more I realize that I'm right in branding her as a butterfly. Of course I'll grant that dignity wouldn’t become her any more than it would a kitten, but I'm not going to make excuses for her. The only thing that redeems her at all is that her eyes sometimes have a hint of seriousness in them.” And the unconscious Lee marveled all the more the next time he spoke to her at the quiet of her calm blue eyes. The next night he had the first waltz with her—*‘just to please Nell,” he ex- plained to the men, who began to twit him a little. He drove with her, walked with her, dined with her con- stantly, yet for the first fortnight, in the midst of all these marked attentions, she got hints of his having spoken of her “as light as foam’ or as “with as little depth as a mountain stream.” Still she went on receiving him, per- mitting his ever-increasing homage and absolutely refusing any advice or warning from the now frightened Nell, who had betore seen a little too much of Lee's adventures. At the end of the first month, how- ever, all the other men had dropped out of the contest, and poor defeated Lee had anoounced at the club one night that if anybody ever again re- minded him that he had ever spoken disparagingly of blue-eyed, slight little girls there would be trouble. Where- at all the men smiled kndwingly, and began to speculate upon who would act as best man. They soon found, though, that they had reckoned with- out their host. One day Lee seemed in high favor with the tiny fairy tyrant, the next he slunk into the club with clenched hands and his-head on his chest. He sent her flowers by moun- tains; one aight she wouldn’t even thank him, while the next she would bury her tiny, warm face into their cool petals till his very heart rose in furious envy ot them. One morning he had brought her a bunch of violets, and as she bent her pretty lipsto them he cried : “] saw you—jyou kissed them.” All the pretty, tantalizing brightness fled from her face as she drawled : “Is there anything wrong in that ?” “Wrong !"” cried poor Lee, half mad with delights “Wrong! No, it's— it's heavenly —they’re mine, you know" Then the defiance died out of her eyes, leaving only the old sweet calm which always puzzled him so, and she hos out the poor little blossoms to him with : “I humbly beg your pardon, but I thought you gave them to me.” “So I did,” stammered the puzzled man. “Of course they're yours now, but I gave them to you, you see.” And this tiny, golden haired young lady deliberately looked up into his face as the pinned the flowersat her throat with : “No, I don’t see at all. Why are you stammering and blushing like a | school boy ?”* The next time he sent roses and it | I same instant he did. happened that the box arrived at the! He had come to | take her for a drive—Nell had a head- | ache and couldn’t accompany them--- | and she met him in the big sun-flooded ! hall just as the butler handed over the package. Slowly bravely, almost me- chanically, she lifted the first pink! blossom from its fragrant bed and de- liberately kissed it, all the time look- ing straight at him from out her clear, still eyes. The defiance set his blood boiling and he could not trust himself . to speak. Slowly, though with a bow which served to help calm him, he reached out hishand and she gave him therose, dewy and fresh, and blessed in his eyes above all the precious things of earth. Ashe silently slipped it into his pocket she watched him without a hint of rising color. Then, turning, she laughed a queer little. laugh, which he would have given worlds to know whether it meant gratefulness or ridicule. However, she dashed all his hopes to the ground by deserting him before the morning was over to walk home with that lank young fellow from Yale, with the cool little remark that she was tired of riding. Time went by. Again and again had she brought him to the point of telling how he adored her, only to repel him just at the critical instant with a crushing force. He struggled day aft- er day to conquer her, by kindness, by fierceness, by strategy and honest open- ness, but all to no avail. Then he tried to tear himself from her, and once even bade her good-by with the an- nouncement that he was going to New York for a month. Varying stories of the attempt were heard afterward, some of the fellows insisting that they had accompanied him to the station, while others declared that he had spent the whole evening in stalking up and down in front of the Barton residence ; what- ever was the truth, the fact remained that he was seen walking with Bess the next morning and she was laugh- ing at him till her very spirit seemed to be torturing him. A week later she electrified the little band of young peo- ple by insisting that she was going the following day to a little town in the southern part of the state to visit anold school friend. The first week passed, during which Nell wrote pleadingly for poor Lee, asking the unruly little runaway to send him a word ot greet- ing, if nothing more. Still Bess’s let- ters came, full of accounts of country dances, long, rustic rambles and every- thing under the sun but a mention of Lee. At the Second Sunday he rushed out from his room with coat and hand- bag, calling to the fellows at the door that he was going up north for a week. They laughed aad went over to tell Nell. She immediately wrote Bess all about it, and the next evening that little lady complacently arrived at the Barton home and spent the rest of the week in gay court with the callow youth from Yale. When unsuspecting Lee arrived at his club that Saturday night and heard how matters had been going his lips paled a little and his hands shook eo that his friends were frightened. However, he savagely re pelled all their offers of help or sym: pathy and kept his room for three days until one morning brought him a coax- ing little violet scented note which took him to the Barton home on the wings of the wind. But she met him with that same slow, tantalizing smile, and asked, idolently, whether the weather up orth had been particularly severe for so late in the spring. What a fool he had been to have come eyen at her request! With one last mighty effort he turned from her and walked down the hall, and for the first time since she had come into her home Nell found her cousin sobbing as though her heart would break when she went up to cee why she was late to lunch. From that time forth he remained away from the house, exeept when the close social union of their own particu- lar set brought him near her. He didn’t grow cynical, or even desperate- ly attentive to some other girl, but the hurt look in his deep, sad eyes seemed to have grown from the very depths of his wounded heart. Bess tried at first to keep up the old-time brightness of spir- it, but soon the farce became too much for her, and the pink-and-white of ber cheeks gave way before a strange pale- ness. In spite of her efforts the calm eyes grew nervous and the gay little laugh was rarely heard. Nevertheless she never unbent in the least toward the tall, grave Lee, and the puzzled spectators came to the conclusion that the only cause of her new mood was the strain of a long, full season. Still when the news came that Bess was too ill to leave her room, one or two of the brighter boys remarked that Lee smil- ed oftener than before. She had been kept indoors tor a fortnight, when Nell sent a note to the man from Yale that Bess could see some of them again if they limited their calls to a brief afternoon visit, Of course, the whole club flocked over to see the sweet little invalid, burying her under sweets and blossoms and trying in & hundred ways to renew her weak spirit. Lee heard of it all, but never offered to go near her until he saw that she had recovered enough to walk a little each day. Therefore, the follow- ing afternoon, just as the last tardy callers were coming down the Barton steps, Lee passed them with a deter- mined bow, and a moment later found himself in the little, low music-room, where the dusky shadows had begun to creep about the weird strings and shapes of the instruments. Bess was alone in her low-cushioned chair, and he halted reverently at the threshold Lee suspected that he heard a hint of a sob. When she saw him she half rose, then sank back again without a word, only turning her face hastily from the light. He now knew that he was the master of the situation. and without a word he sank to a seat be- side her, calmly taking her thin, little hand, as he said: “Don’t you think you have punish- ed us enough now.” “Us? she acked, but not daring to { lift her face from the shadow. “Yes us—both of us, I know that | you began it to punish me, and I could endure it then, for I deserved it. But will you hear me, Bess, mine? When I saw that you were hurting yourself, too, I took courage again. Will you tell me, little girl, what made you be- gin your cruel treatment of me?’ He had both of her hands now, and his face was #0 close to hers that he knew her breath was coming short and fast, even though the shadows were growing deeper. She tried once to draw away from him, and again she closed her lips in a brave determina tion to remain unmelted. But his calm, masterful waiting, the sight of his grave, tender face, outlined against the closed windowpane, undid her, and at last she breathed penitently : “The day I came I heard what you said of me in the ballroom.” And the proud air of superiority died away from his lips in an instant, leav- ing them hopelessly pale. Without a word he dropped ber hands and buri- ed his face in his paims, ashe groan- ed: “How blind I have been! I do not blame you, then, for all you have done to me, for it was the most cowardly, ! senseless thing a man ever said of a woman. I see it all now—how it hurt you, and you vowed then to punish me. Well, you have succeeded, and I can- not ask you even to forgive me.” The silence grew unbearable; the darkness grew closer. Finally she put out a thin little hand and laid it timid- ly on his fine, bowed head. ed from head to foot, and then death- like silence began anew. “Grant ?”’ she at last asked, faintly. The name awoke him, and an in- stant later the little golden-crowned head was held fast against his cheek. It was very dark, indeed, and still, per- | haps, it was because he was so close that he thought that the calm blue eyes had at last found a power to melt them. The Delaware Retribution. The Republicans of the State of Dela- ware have suffered a fearful retribution for the debauchery that gave them a sweeping victory in November last, ap- parently putting them in power for four years by the election of a Republican Governor, and assuring them a United States Senator for six years, together with the Congressman, Legislature and all the emoluments of the State. That victory has turned into blister- ing ashes in their hands. The Republi- can Governor, who won his position by the lavish debauchery of the ballot by Mr. Addicks, who bid $100,000 or more for the United States Senatorship, is no longer living, and a Democratic Execu- tive is in his place and will remain un- til his successor shall be chosen next year. The Legislature last Thursday adjourned without day, after nearly four months of the most disgraceful wrangling over the United States Sena- tor, and without solving the problem by un election. Thus the United States Senatorship goes again to the people, and with the flood-tide of shame brought upon the party by the no- torious purchase of a party victory to serve the meanest individual ends, there is little doubt that Republican success in Delaware is postponed for years to come. The Republicans of Delaware have sown to the wind and are now reaping the whirlwind. There was not a Re- publican leader of the State who did not know that Mr. Addicks had been spending tens of thonsand of dollars for a year before to win a Republican Leg- islature by open bribery and corruption; but they welcomed him to his work, hoping that he would win the party victory by venality and that they would then be able to cheat him out of the honors he purchased for himself. When he had won the battle he logically de- manded his pay and it was denied: whereupon he logically declared that he had not debauched the State for the benefit of others who were his foes, but solely for himself. At the outset he de- clared that the Senator would be “Ad- dicks or nobody,” and he was entirely cousistent in maintaining his attitude until the disgraceful spectacle closed at 3 o'clock last Thursday, when the Leg- islature finally adjourned without elect- ing a Senator. The victory in Delaware last fall was not a Republican victory. It was sole- ly an Addicks victory. He contracted for it ; he won it, and that he was doing go was as well known to Mr. Higgins and Mr. Massey and every other promi- nent Republican in the State as it was to himself. Whether Mr. Addicks is most to be reprobated for his purchase of the political power of the State, or his Republican foes who were seeking to reject the criminal and yet steal and wear the stained honors, is a question upon which there will be littte differ- ence of opinion ‘among intelligent and honest citizens of the State. The his- tory of the Delaware battle may be summed up in a single sentence. It was an appalling corruption of the Commonwealth, bringing appalling re- tribution. — Phila. Times. Pants Made at 8 Cents a Dozen, A Sweat Shop Employer Admits That He Paid Such Wages. The starvation wages paid by some of the *‘sweat shop” speculators to poor women toilers were brought out in bold relief at a hearing before the Reinhard Assembly Investigating Committee to- day. Abraham Newman. such an em- ployer, at No. 151 Essex street, who had formerly refused to produce his books or pay-rolls and testify, reconsid- ered. From an examination of his books he said that he paid women em- ployed by him 8 and 12 cents a dozen pair for making knee pants, according to the size. Most of the women, he said, did not make more than 30 pairs a week. On this basis, if the 30 dozen were equally divided between the eight and 12-cent sizes, a woman would make $2.76 a week. Some of the women are not able to make even that much. Newman, during the early part of his examination stated that the books pro- duced contained the records of his em- ployes’ work up to yesterday. Later it was found that this was not true. “You are the biggest liar that has been on this stand yet,” said Counsel Mayer. “I am no liar, I am a gentleman,” shouted Newman. “I will not answer another question if I am to be insulted like this, even if am arrested.” Chairman Reinhard straightened the matter, and the examination proceed- ed. ——Circus Manager—‘ Why are you feeding camphor to that elephant ?"’ Trainer—*To keep the moths out of his trunk.” — Willie Doo—‘Japan is like mother’s dishpan.” Lillie Doo—‘‘How so, brother ?”’ Willie Doo—‘Makes it warm for China.” He thrill. | Claims Re-Opened. Adverse Decision of the Commissioner of Pen- sions Overruled. A decision of much importance to | children claiming under the general ' law has been rendered by Assistant Sec- retary John M. Reynolds, whereby the i action of the Commissioner of Pensions is overruled, and the practice prevailing ; prior to such adverse decision of the : Cominissioner is resumed. This will | operate to reopen a great number of | claims for minor’s pension under the | general law that have been rejected dur- (ing the past 14 months upon the | ground that the children claimed for were over the age of 16 years at date of | filing the application. This decision "has no bearing upon claims filed under | the act of June 27, 1890. The case on which the decision is made is that of the ! children of Thomas W. Baugher, Co. A- 29th, I11., (No. 510,278); viz., Samu- i el Baugher, born Oct. 5, 1863 ; Alice | Blair, Oct. 7, 1865, and Mary Mitchell, | May 5, 1868. A declaration was filed | April 21, 1891. The soldier died Jan. | 23, 1869, and the mother remarried Sept. 26, 1869. The claim was rejected Jan. 5, 1894, | on the ground that claimants had no ti- | tle at date of filing their application, be- ling all at that date over the age of 15 | years. From this rejection an appeal | was taken Jan. 23, 1894. i | Section 4702, R. S., as amended by | ! the act of Aug. 7, 1882, under which | this claim is made, provides, in sub- stance, that where the soldier’s death is directly due to his service title to pen- sion shall devolve upon the widow or minors, first, if there be no widow ; sec- ond, in case of her subsequent death wijhout payment to her of any part of the pension, and third, from the date of remarriage of the widow. The right of the minor child becomes absolute upon the death of the father leaving no wid- ow, but if heleaves a widow this right is beld in abeyance to await the contin- gencies of the widow’s death or re-mar- riage, and upon the happening of either their title accrues and the date of com- mencement relates to the period fixed by the statute. There was no exception from limita- tion in favor of minor’s claims prior to July 27, 1868. But under the act of March 3, 1873, as re-enacted in Section 4709, R. S., and finally as enacted in Section 2, act of March 3, 1879, claims by or in behalf of insane persons and children under the age of 16 years wera expected from any limitation upon the date of their commencement and such claims stood, under the act of 1879, which repealed ali prior laws relative to date of commencement, as though the proviso therein had not been enacted. The interpretation which the Depart- ment now gives to this statute was not only entertained by those who were first called upon to execute the law, and who were probably concerned in framing it, but through an almost unbroken prac- tice for 15 years or more such claims had been admitted. It is therefore held in the light of this construction and practice, coupled with what reasonably appears to have been the intent in the enactment of the statute in question : 1. That the clause “children under 16 years of age is descriptive of a class of claims the right to which has ac- crued by reason of the claimant being under 16 years of age at the death of the father from causes originating in the service and line of duty, and such claims are excepted from the limitation con- tained in the proviso to the act of March 3, 1879. 2. That such claims are not forfeited by neglect to apply therefore during the period of pensionable minority. le ——————————————— “The Perfect Cat.” Should Be Slender, Graceful, Light-Footed and Vigilant. A scientific specialist, who is regard- ed as an expert at the cat show, has made a drawing of the ‘‘perfect cat,” which we cannot admire. Itisa thick beast, with big and heavy legs, a very little head and a floor sweeping tail. It looks like a fatted sheep or some lazy and imbecile brute. ofa cat. The perfect cat in our estima- tion, isslender, graceful, light-footed, very spirited, wistful, rather.low in the haunch and of vigilant disposition. The cat is of the order of carnivorou, mammalia, to which belong the leopards jaguar and cougar, which hunt a living prey ; and the ideal cat should be shap- ed in conformity with the natural, phy- sical and moral laws of its genus and species. The ‘perfect cat’’ of the scien- tific specialist of the cat show is better fitted to serve as a feast for a hyena than to hunt rats and mice.--New York Sun. Nobody need be surprised if they are asked to pay a higher price for shoes these days than they have been accus- tomed to give in the past. The cost of leather has gone up about 100 per cent. within the space of a week and the natural result is that the makers of footwear have decreed an advance. The cause of the raise is said to be the same as that whick has affected the price of beef, as all the products of the cattle are concerned in their scarcity or in the alleged combine which controls their market. ——Pastor— What are they going to name your new twin brothers, Willy ? Willy—Thunder and lightning. Pastor—Why, Willy, you must be mistaken, Willy—Well, that's what pop call- ed 'em, when the ourse brought em in! —Mrs. Logan Square—:What's this you say. you're going to leave me ? Why, only last week I voluntarily raised vour wages.” Bridget—¢*It’s the razin’ of me wages that makes me go. I'll acipt no favers from the loikes ov you.” I ———T—— “Coot-night, Mrs. Prown. I hat to sank you tor de most bleasant efening I haf effer schbent in wy life!” “Oh, don't say that, Herr Schmidt !" “Ach! bot Tdoso say dat! [ al- ways say dat!” m——————————————— -— Lipsey—¢They ought to serve this soup the last thing at dinner.” Flipsey—‘So they ought. It is ox- tail soup, of course it ought to come af- terwards.”’ For and About Women. With the beginning of May, weddings cease until June, and the gown of the fair girl graduate requires attention. The simplicity of white muslin is again talked of for these frocks, and something very like it may be obtained in the present varied styles. Indeed it is quite realized in the French ingenu gown of white organdy shirred below the high collar and again at the belt, the sleeves a large puff to the el- bow, and the skirt nearly straight, full, and simply hemmed, over lawn or taffe- ta linings, the whole completed by a collar and belt of white ribbon. Extremely sheer mull, so fine that it has the sheen of silk muslin, dotted or sprigged Swiss muslin, and thin cream- white batiste are used for those youth- ful dresses. It something more elabo- rate is desired for college girls, taffeta is chosen with fine stripes of satin or small figures, or else mousseline de soie is made up over silk. Fine qualities of China silk, with small brocaded daisies or violets, also make effective dresses. the flowers all in white. Ribbon, lace, insertion, and chiffon trim these white gowns. Some schools permit only ribbon trimmings, while others allow both ribbon and lace, per- haps confining the lace to a small ruche about the neck. The stylish ribbons for a stock collar and belt with an aig- rette bow at the back, with ends point- | ed upward, are four or five inches wide, and are striped rather than plain, the ground of taffeta or ot faille, the narrow stripes of white satin, with perhaps a It is not our ideal | i | | i two. wider border of satin on the edges. If the class color is introduced, it appears in these stripes. Or else the whole rib- bon is ot the class color, with self stripes of satin. Some girls insist on plain sat- in ribbon instead of taffeta, for the bet- ter effect of color it gives, now that sash- es are not used. Another bit of color is sometimes added in four ruches or square bows of taffeta, satin, or chifton, set in a ruche of lace which trims the high neck. Still another, novelty is the Valenciennes striped ribbon, with col- ored bands of satin alternating with narrow insertions of this lace. Dres- den ribbons with clear printed fAowers and the blurred chine ribbons are used for the white lawn frocks of very young l-girl graduates in high schools.—Haz- per’s Bazar. Black is now an emphasizing note for little folks as well as big ones. Com- bined with white embroidery or thick lace, silk gingham and chambray frocks are munch improved with a touch of it. Satin ribbon an inch wide is most effec- tive on these, and besides rosettes and flyaway bows, belts, collars and waist- bands are often of inserting, showing the ribbon through. On the figured lawns and dainty linens that are always so large and important a part for the lit- tle girl’s summer wardrobe, black daisy ribbon is much used ; itis run in and out of Hamburg beading and forms loose rosettes, whose long scattered loops give them the air of black chrysanthe- mums. Linen canvas in solid tones, sage brown, cardinal and art green is anoth- er and newer trimming for little girls’ gingham frocks. Mrs Marie Robiszon-Wright, the Mexican traveler and writer, received the highest price ever paid for a news- paper article—$20,000 in gold—paid to her by the Mexican Government for an illustrated article on Mexico in the New York World. The latest importations of gowns show very conclusively that the abund- ance of stiff interlining is going out of fashion, in Paris at least ; Skirts vary in width from five to eight yards around as they have done for some time, but they are cut to flare more from the knee down, fit very closely around the hips, and have only a facing of hair cloth or crinoline around the foot. On skirts which still have the godet plaits in the back panel, trimmings are seen made of lace, passementerie, or contrasting ma- terials ; while in some instances this ef- fect is gained either by wide kilt plaits or by arranging the side breadths in folds over the seam at each cide of the front. Other skirts are cut so that each gore laps over the other, forming a nar- row flap, which is trimmed with a band of ribbon or a tiny row of jet ; and pan- ier trimmings, formed of ribbon of pase- menterie, arranged in short bands from the belt down on either side of the skirt, are coming in again. A very pretty gown was of pale blue and white stripes, the skirt full and plain and the bodice half tight fitting with a front of mulle and yellow Val- enciennes lace over which very wide black satin ribbon forms a plaited semblance of a zouave. Elbow sleeves, finished by a band of black satin ribbon and a soft collar of black satin, finished one of the Frenchiest creations we have been privileged to see for a long time, and 1t didn’t cost quite ten dollars. The eatin ribbon was picked out piece meal from boxes of remnarts, and the mull and lace front was also the out- come of a search amid the odd bits left over from larger sales. That ‘it’s not so much where you are us what you are that makes your heav- en.” The bright cheery soul who lives the life of trust only sees the sunny side of everything, she has learned to en- dure cheerfully, and wear a bright face when everything looks dark ; to her it is not all dark, there is light from the face of our Father, and she rests assured that all is well. The best dressed woman on Broadway way sauntered slowly by the shops the other morning, thus giving her envious sisters an opportunity to feast their eyes upon her frock. It was a greenish gray cloth of a shade suggesting linchen-cov- ered rocks and other delectable things. The skirt was plain, with strapped seams. The jaunty, short little jacket which rippled below the waist line also had strapped seams. It was open in front, and the public was thus permit- ted to see that it was lined with a Scotch plaid silk belonging to some clan of quiet tastes running rather to blues and greens than to reds. A box-plaited blouse of the same silk was worn with the suit and an openwork gray straw hat, which displayed a plaid rosette or Milady’s gloves were gray and her parasol of the silk. Mrs Cleveland rarely fails to attend the regular church services, and is scru- pulously exact in being present on all special days.