Boma Wiad, Bellefonte, Pa., May 3I, 1895. LITTLE BOY BLUE. by Eugene Field. The little toy dog is covered with dust, But sturdy and stanch he stands; And the little toy soldier is red with rust, And his musket molds in his hands. Time was when the little toy dog was new And the soldier was passing fair ; And that was the time when Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put them there. “Now, don’t you go till I come,” he said, “And don’t you make any noise !” So. toddling off to his trundle-bed, He dreamt of the pretty toys. And as he was dreaming, an angel song Awakened our Little Boy Blue ; Oh, the years are many, the years are long, But the little toy friends are true. Ay, faithful to Little Boy Blue they stand, "Each in the same old place, Awaiting the touch of a little hand, The smile of a little face; And they wondered, as waiting these long years through, In the dust of that little chair, What has become of our Little Boy Blue, Since he kissed them and put them there. AT PINK HOUSE. John Port held a subordinate post on the Eastern Bengal State railway, and the post carried with it, besides a certain number of rupees per month, a little pink house that sat very flat up- on the ground near the railway line. It was also near a tank and had in conse- quence a green dank garden, where marigolds and poppies eprawled to- gether and big bushes, starred with the scarlet shoe flower, grew in inhar- monious fellowship with them agenta masses of the bougainvillea. A decay- ing tree trunk was glorified by the tan- gled wreaths and orange trumpets of the Bigoonia vernesta, and there were many foliage plants, clumps of brightly colored Teaves boasting long Latin pames, but John Port called them, one and all, “burning bushes.” “ 'Tisn't what you’d call ’omelike,” said John Port to his pipe as he paced among these flowering splendors, “but Ellen’ll make a difference, trust ’er.” And Ellen was on her way out, and every throb of the steamer’s screw brought her nearer to the pink house and the green garden and the expec- tant man, to whom her coming was to make such a difference. It was four years since Ellen Gee had promised to marry John Port, four years since he bad gone to geek his fortune in India. He was a steady, hardworking man, and the fortune had not been long of coming, the monthly salary, with good prospects, and the pink house and the green garden. In the pride of his heart John Port sent home money, a cruel sacrifice at a time when 16 rupees barely equaled 20 shillings, for Ellen's passage out. “The idea !"’ aid Ellen when she re- ceived the money, and she promptly put it into the savings bank against a rainy day. Ellen had made her ar- rangements for the voyage. She came out in attendance on a delicate lady and two small children, and a sec- ond class fare was gladly paid in ex- change for her services. “I only wish you could stay with me,” said the lady, and she gave her £5 at parting. The marriage took place at Calcut- ta. John Port was nervous and ex- cited, and the best coat of four years ago was already a little tight for him. Ellen was very quiet and composed and wore a gray woolen gown. They went straight from the church to the train, and as Ellen traveled with- out a ticket she felt that she was in- deed entering into ber kingdom. Six hours of slow progress brought them to the little pink house, which Port had furnished as a man in his ignor- ance furnishes. Ellen was impressed by the four rooms and the veranda, but her quick eyes took instant note of the scaliness of the color washed walls, the inferior woodwoork and the clumsy doors that would not shut. But the servants astonished her be- yond all things. “Whatever "ave got all these people for?’ she asked, as a row of four stood salaaming to her. “Most men’s wives 'as more,” said Port. “The more shame to them, If I couldn’t manage to do the work of my own ’ouse, after all the time I've been a ‘general,’ it would be a pity.” “Some of ’em you must ’ave, and you won't feel much like working when the ot weather comes filled with tender admiration. “We ’ad it 'ot enough in the Red ceas, I'm sure,” said Ellen, “and as long as I was looking after Mrs. Nu- gent or doing anything for the child- ren I dide’t mind it, but when I sat down with my 'ands in front of me it was awful. Keep busy, and you'll be all right, that’s what I say.” She had already changed her wed- ding drees for a eerviceable blue cotton gown, and she was on her knees as she spoke dusting the long neglected legs of the big square table. Her sleeves were turned up, and she wore a large apron. John watched her in approv- ing silence. She was certainly making a difference already. She went into the veranda to shake her duster, and Mrs. Gasparez, the wife of a ticket col- lector, watched her from across the road. “Qoh, the bride is veree grand,” she said to her husband that evening. **She has brought out an English maid with ber. Onlee fancy, and makes her work so hard alreadee !” It never entered into the mind of Mrs, Gasparez that any woman could possibly use a duster on her wedding day. John and Ellen walked into their garden when the sun was low, and El len spied its flowery tangles with a practical eye. “It'sa waste of land,” she said. ‘“‘Couldn’t we manage some greens instead of all that ’ighbiscus ?” And Jobn marveled at her erudition. She had once attended a series of bo- tanical lectures at Kew, organized by her Sunday school teacher. “Things will look more 'omelike presently,” eaid Ellen as she fastened strings outside the veranda for scarlet runners to be trained upon. She was bending over the strings as she spoke, and John stooped and kiss- ed her smooth hair a little awkwardly. “I knew you'd make it seem different when you came, old girl,” he said huskily. . “Oh, it is nice to be "ere," said Ellen. Three days later Mrs. Gasparez came to call, picking her way through the red dust of the road with little mincing steps. She was quite young and very stout, and her fat, brown face was naively and thickly coated with pow- der. She had abundant shiny black hair and small, good natured eyes. She.wore a bright blue merino dress trimmed with thin satin that crackled like paper. A cape on her shoulders jangled with beads, and there were red and yellow flowers in her bonnet. A little observation had corrected her mistake as to ‘thee bride’s English maid,” ard, although she considered Ellen a person of low ideas, there was no one else to talk to; and she was pre- pared to be kind to her. There was no servant to be seen in the veranda, and Mrs. Gasparez raised her shrill voice in vain. “Qoh, I hope this is not a veree great libertee,”” said Mrs. Gasparez as, tired of waiting, she stepped into the little sitting room. But the room was empty. She examined it critically. “Veree neat,’ she said, “but not at all smart! My, only two antimacass !” She sat down, very genteelly, on the edge of a chair. Her flounces crack- led stiffly. Five minutes later the bride appeared. She wore a big apron and she was turning down her sleeves. “Ooh, I am sorree to have disturbed you, I see youhave been unpacking,” said Mrs. Gasparez politely. * “I'm very glad to see you and I 'ope I ’aven’t kept you waiting long,” said Ellen, “but I didn’t see you come, and I couldn’t make out what that boy Abdool was trying to tell me at first. I was out in the kitchen. Don’t you find it very tiresome 'aving your kitch- en go far from the ’ouse ?” “Ooh, yes, but you will grow used to it presentlee. I am veree particular. I go into the bawachi khana everee morning to see what my bawachi, the cook, you know, is doing, and some- times in the afternoon also.” Mrs. Gasparez's voice shrilled into unexpected cadences, and she empha- sized small words and laid great stress on terminations with that Eurasian ac- cent which is as indescriable as it is nnmistakable. Ellen’s voice seemed very full and deep as she replied. “I 'aven’t got a cook. I don’t mean to ‘ave one.” “My, how will vou eat?” screamed Mrs. Gasparez. “Can’t you cook ?"’ “My, no! I can make lovelee ma- tai, sweets, you know, but to cook thee meate, and thee soups, and thee cur- ries, ooh, no!” “I don’t like curries,” said Ellen. “They’re too spicy and all odds and ends. You never know what you may be eating. John says he likes my cooking the best of any he ever ate.” Ooh, but your hands!” Ellen glanced from her own capable fingers to the tightly stuffed yellow gloves that lay on Mrs, Gesparez’s blue lap. One of the seams had burst and a ring with a vast red stone gleamed through. “Use comes before looks,” said El. len. “Ooh, yes!” said Mrs. Gasparez doubtfully. “Ave you been ’ere long? Do you like it ?”” asked Ellen. “Onlee six months. It is veree dull. There ie no eocietee. I often say to my husband, ‘I think I shall run away.” You see, we came from up countree, and there it was veree jollee, go manee people. Here there are on- lee four houses. 1 do not know what to do with myself all day long.” “I should think your children would keep youn pretty. busy,” said El- en. “Ooh, yes, there are four, but they are veree small. The babee is only 3 months old, and they have their ayah. You see, they are so noisee, and I am not strong.” “T don’t fancy these natives,” said Ellen. “I shouldn’t like to see their black ’ands touching any child I was fond of.” And then she remembered the dark skin which so clearly pro- claimed Mrs. Gasparez’s conuection with the country and felt very uncom- fortable, but unfortunately Mrs. Gas- parez considered herself purely Euro- pean and always spoke of the England she had never seen as “home.” “My, yes, they are fearful, you will see. Your servants will always kikh you, worree, you, you know.” “I shall ’ave just as few as ever I can do with. Wouldn't you like to see my kitchen? You see,” she con- tinued, leading the way into the next room, I keep all the plates in ’ere and hall do the pastry making and so on ‘ere, and [ wanted John to let me ’ave a stove, but ’e says it won't do for the ‘ot weather.” : They went out to the mud hut in the garden, which served as a kitchen. It had been newly witewashed within and without, and at the freshly planed table stood a depressed looking scul- lion peeling potatoes. He had scram- bled from his seat on the floor at the sound of his mistress’ voice. “That's the only servant I've got in the 'ouse,’ said Ellen proudly. #Qoh, thee hot weather will soon make you lazee,” laughed Mrs. Gas- parez. “Well, I made bread enough for three days yesterday and baked it in that queer iron drum thing, John doeen’t like the baker's bread ‘ere. There was a beetle in the last we 'ad.” “Qoh, you will soon grow lazee, we shall see.” In the course of the next few mouths something very like a friendship grew up between these two dissimilar wom- | en. John Port was often away, up and down the line, and Ellen became a frequent visitor at the house oppo- site. It was a larger house than her own, but it always appeared hopeless- ly crowded. The smell of savory meats lingered in that house, and odors of garlic, kerosene oil and bad to- bacco, strangely blended, never left it. The dogs and the children left bones about, to be tumbled over and kicked into corners. The clothes of the household seemed to have the habit of staying and were to be met in unexpec- ted places. The boots and shirts of Mr. Gasparez, the brilliant raiment of his wife and the tattered little gar- ment of the children had alike no abiding city. Nothing, indeed, was in its right place. The baby was lulled to fitful slumber in an arm chair, while a tailor hired for the day squatted sewing on a child’s cot. Mrs, Gaspar- ez's abundant hair was generally brushed and oiled on the front veran- da, and the three elder children ate strange meals at odd hours sitting on the floor of any room they happened to be in, surrounded by servants, pup- pies and tame birds. Presently Ellen tried, both by precept and practice, to instil a little order into the chaos, but Mrs. Gasparez, stout in a white dress- ing gown, only laughed at her efforts : “Ooh, you are veree sillee! What does it matter 2 Wait till the babies come to your house, and then you will not be so particularlee neat. Although Ellen was too courageous to make any confessions, the cruel heat of a Bengal summer was a revelation of terror to her. She fought the heat with her favorite prescription of hard work. Indeed her husband, who was a great deal away, hardly realized how much she did. She cooked and cleaned, she mended and made clothes she even washed clothes sometimes, earning thereby bitter headaches and the scorn of her neighbor, but a firm sense of right sustained her. “Just think of what I'd be doing at ‘ome John,” she pleaded when her husband noticed that her fresh face had grown white and her light step heavy. “I don’t come out ’ere to spend all your money, on living like a fine lady, and yet 'ere I don’t need to wash my own dishes, and that Abdool is learn- ing to cook quite nice. 'E can do lots of things already. And, as for wash- ing, wouldn’t your sister think ’erself in clover at ome with a sun like this to dry and bleach her clothes? You let me ’ave my own way, John. I can sit idle and shall ’ave to be a do noth- ing, for a bit when the New Yesr comes.” And at the thought her nee- dle sped more swiftly through the lit- tle white garment she was making, John thought her looking ill, but he supposed it was natural and inevitable and she never complained. Then the rains came—at first a re- spite from torment, presently torment in themselves. A clinging, penetra- ting damp infected everything, The tank overflowed, and the green garden became a dismal swamp, tenanted by many frogs, whose barking kept Eilen from sleeping. A broad dado of damp showed itself on the walls of the little pink house, and a thin film of blue mold spread over their most cherished treasures. Ellen tried stoves in vain; nothing could get rid of what she called “mushrooom smell.” John Port had several attacks of fever— sharp, short attacks such as he had grown accustomed to and thought very little of, but it was terrible to El len to hear him raving in delirium. She attached no importance to her own sufferings from neuralgia, though a spike of pain seemed to be piercing through her left temple and was her constant attendant all day long. “I don’t believe in giving in,” said Ellen when the autumn fever smote ber in turn, and the ground seemed to glide from her tired feet, and objects were three times their right size to weary eyes, whose very lids felt hot. “Just think of the colds I should ’ave been getting at ‘ome,’ she repeated, with persistent cheerfulness. “The in- fluenza again most likely, and don’t you talk nonsense about this climate being so bad for me,” said Ellen to her husband. After the first few months, after health and high spirits had flagged, came a terrible nostalgia. and that, too, was hidden from John Port. He never guessed the passion of longing for her own people that filled his wife's heart. and it was very rarely expressed in her letters home ; but el less, it was an ever present pain. “My, you are looking seedee I" said Mrs. Gasparez. “I ’ave a little fever at night some- times,” said Ellen, but it’s nothing, and I suppose it will get cooler every day now.” “Ooh, yes, it will soon be ahlright. and I have some news to tell you. My sister is coming to stay with me— my youungest sister, Miss de Cruz.” “That will be pleasant for you,” said Ellen heartily. “Is she a nice girl 2? “My, yes! Sheis a beautee! Eyes that big, hair so long, and her figure, ooh, so lovelee! She will have mon- ee, too, come day, for my old grand- mother is very fond of her and says she will leave her ahl she has, ever 80 manee rupees |” Miss de Cruz was brought to call a few days later—a big girl plump and shapely with magnificent eyes. She yawned openly through Ellen’s at- tempts to talk and brightened to co- quettish liveliness when John Port came into the room. “That's a fine, handsome girl, a fine strapping girl.” said John Port later. Then, with a clumsy laugh, “You aren’t much to look at now, old woman.” “True enough,” said Ellen, laughing back, and then she went and looked at herself in the glass with new eyes. “I do wish it didn’t make one so plain for so long’ she said to the worn face and ungainly figure she saw reflected there. And all this while Ellen took no heed of the new world around her. She heard the wedding music from the | surging ways of the native town, and she said, “Well, they are making a noise.” Sheesaw the dead slowly borne past the pink little house to the funeral pyre, and she said: “They're going to ‘gorgeous east’ burn 'im. Isn’t it ,orrid?”’ She lived in India, save for the wide difference of heat, discomfort and loneliness, ex- actly as she would have lived in Eng- land. The only native with whom she held anything approaching to speech was Abdool, a craven representative indeed, and the conclusion she drew from her study of his character was that they were ‘‘a dirty lot.”” She took no interest in her surroundings. The little pink house in its wealth of strange flowers was only pleasing to her be- cause it had been allotted to her hus- band, and she trusted the garden would look more homelike when a child play- ed there. She watched the long line of rails down which John’s train would come without a thought of what the land had been before the wonderful iron road traversed it. There was no ro- mance for her in the widely varying tracts that train came through, and she had no desire to see more of the coun- try in which her lot was cast. “The held for her neither glamour for glory. Her days were passed in an endless succession of small duties and in secretly hoping that she would feel better to-morrow . Toward the end of November Ab- dool ran over to Mrs. Gasparez’s house one morning with an urgent message. “My,” said Mrs. Gasparez as she caught up a solah topee, “‘onlee seven months!’ That was at breakfast time, and Jonn Port was away up the line and would not return till the morning of the next day. “I am sorry to bother you,” said El- len through her agony, ‘but I was that bad all night, and I did want some one to speak to.” “Ooh, I will stay gladlee,” said Mrs. Gagparez, “and I will send for the doc- tor, and you will soon be ahl right. The doctor came presently and went and came again, Mrs. Gasnarez wept fluent tears over the sufferings that could not be allayed, even as she said, “Ooh, you will be ahl right veree soon’ Ellen lay with clinched teeth, trying not to writhe or cry out. “I do, ’ate to give you all this trouble,” she said. “But she was strong,” said Mrs. Gas- parez to the doctor in the next room, “She worked so hard, she did, ooh, ev- erything! I am not strong, but I was never like this, never” “She has worn herself out,” said the doctor. “The climate counts for some. thing, and she has never considered it.” Some time after midnight the child was born—a dead child—and the doc- tor went to Mrs. Gasparez's house for alittle rest. Mrs. Gasparez sat nod- ing ard blinking and drinking strong tea, and Ellen seemed to be sleeping. Juet before dawn Ellen roused her- gelf and talked for a few minutes to Mrs. Gaeparez. She had a message to leave with her. “Ooh, no ; you are not going to die!” sobbed Mrs. Gasparez. “Go to sleep again and do not be so silee, The next babee will live, and it will be ahl jol- lee.” Ellen emiled faintly. “Don’t you forget,” she whispered and turned her head on the pillow‘ but instead of going to sleep her face changed and worked strangely, and Mrs. Gasparez ran out calling wildly for the doctor. Ellen’s last doleful scene was acted alone, but it must of been a short one, for when Mrs. Gasparez and the doctor came back they found her dead. John Port's train came in at 7 o'clock The doctor met him and told him of his wife's death, but he did not realize or understand what had happened till he came to the little pink house. Abdool was on the veranda lamenting ostenta- tiously, but Por: put him aside and went into the bedroom. Itsmelt stuffy and sickly after the fresh morning air, and it was exceedingly untidy. A white sheet was thrown over the bed and Mrs Gasparez, her eyelids puffy with crying came to meet him, “I have a message for you,’ she said. “I was to give you her love, and she was veree sorree not to see you again, and she hoped you would not mind that the babe was dead, for it was reallee much better and would leave you quite free to marry again. Oh she did love vou,” John stood by the bed and laid his hand on the brown hair, pushing aside the scarlet flowers with which Mrs. Gragparez had surrounded the still face. “Never another wife for me,” he said, “never another woman in your place, all my life long.” And through the window came the sound of the high pitched voice of Miss de Cruz. She was taking a morning stroll with a devoted admirer. “Oh, yes, Mr. Woods that is ahl veree fine, veree pretty I dare say,onlee you do not mean it.” It was in the spring, five months lat- er, that John Port married Miss de Cruz, and Mrs. Gasparez explained to her friends that ‘it was not such a very bad match for Eulalee, for that nice wife of Mr. Port's who died, poor thing, was very thriftee, and she had saved, oh, quite a great manee rupees!’— Beatrice Kipling in Pall Mall Gazetie. ——*Gail Hamilton,” by which name Miss Mary Abigail Dodge is best known to the American people, is dy- ing. She began to write more than a generation ago, bright, lively articles, afterwards taking quite an interest in public affairs and developing a power of sarcasm that made her an antagonist of the most formidable sort. Her lat- est public work was in connection with the thus far unsuccessful effort to se- cure the pardon of Mrs. Maybridge, who 18 undergoing life imprisonment in England for the murder of her hue- band. Miss Dodge was one of the most devoted admirers of the late James G. Blaine, was his sister-in-law and made her home in his family. We suspect that a good deal of his ag- | gressive Americanism was due to her influence upon his life. ——The preacher was indulging in rhapsodies over the glories of the new Jerusalem. Littie Johnnie listened for quite a while, He then whispered to his mother, “Mamma, is he an advance ' agent 7?’ Birds Which Do Good. Owls, Hawks, Crows, Cuckoos and Others Have Been Much Maligned.—An Oficial Investiga- tion.— Thousands Examined to Sec What Con- stitutes Their Food.==Are Friends of the Farmer. Dr. C. Hart Merriam, chief of the di- vision of ornithology of the agricultural department, bas been for several years engaged in examing and analyzing the contents of the stomachs of hawks, owls, crows, blackbirds, meadow larks and other birds of North America which are supposed to be strikingly beneficial or injurious to the crops of farmers. The stomachs of over 7,000 birds, taken at different seasons of the year, have been already analyzed, and the contents de- termined, while some 12,000 arestill un- examined. The results in some cases have been remarkable, showing in several notable instances that popular ideas regarding the injurious effects of certain birds were wholly mistaken, and that they have been the victims of an unjust per- secution. This has been found to be es- pecially the case with hawks and owls, for the slaughter of which many states give bounties. Pennsylvania in two years gave over $100,000 in hawk and owl bounties. Examinations of the stomachs of these birds proved conclu- sively that 95 per cent of their food was field mice, grasshoppers, crickets, etc., which were infinitely more injurious to farm crops thar they. It was found that only five kinds of hawk and owls ever touched poultry, and then only in a very limited extent. A bulletin now about going to press on the crow also shows that bird not so black as he has been painted by the farmer. The charges against the crow were that he ate corn and destroyed ezgs and poultry, and wild birds. Examipa- tions of their stomachsshowed that they eat noxious insects and other animals, and that although 25 per cent of their food is corn, it is mostly waste corn, picked up in the fall and winter. With regard to eggs, it was found that the shells were eaten to a very limited ex- tent for the time. They eat ants, bee- tles, caterpillars, bugs, flies, grubs, ete., which do much damage. Bulletins are also being prepared on the cuckoo and other blackbirds, king- birds, meadowlarks, cedar birds, thrush- es, catbirds, sparrows, etc. In .many cases popular ideas are found to be un- true. In the case of the kingbird, kill- ed by the farmer under the impression that he eats bees, it was found that he ate only drones and robber flies, which themselves feed on bees, and which de- stroy more bees in a day than the king- bird does in a year. The kingbird, there- fore, is to be encouraged, rather than slaughtered. The cuckoos are also found to be very useful birds in this country. Because the European cuckoo robbed nests and laid therein its own eggs, popular fancy attributed the same vicious habit to our own cuckoo, He is, however, not de- praved, like his European namesake, but a very decent fellow, who does much good in the destruction of insects. The result of this work, Dr. Merriam says, will inure to the protection of ben- eficial birds and the destruction of in- jurious. It will also, he says, do mis- sionary work in the matter of state bounties, most of which are ill-directed, and none of which, he thinks, have good results. The crusade, for instance, against the English sparrow, he said, resulted in the destruction of many of our native sparrows. Bounties on pan- thers, wolves, etc., had in the past re- sulted in the manufacture of bogus scalps. Dr. Merriam is also preparing a map, showing the life zones of the United States for. birds, mammals, reptiles and plants, a work in which he has been en- gaged for 16 years. Respect Genearl Hancock's Wishes. It does not appear by what right any- body at Washington assumes to say that General Hancock’s body shall be removed from Norristown to Arlington. Nobody at Washington has any such authority. The War Department doesn’t have it. The Second Corps So- ciety doesn’t have it. The collateral relatives of General Hancock do not have it. General Hancock himself desired to be buried at Norristown. He had de- cided upon this years before his death. He was familiar with Arlington, and the presumption is that he did not de- sire to be buried there. He had a Penn- sylvania’s love for the State of his na- tivity and he desired that his ashes should mingle with her soil. His wishes should be respected, and if unauthoriz- ed persons attempt to remove his body they should be restrained by legal authority. There is an additional reason why General Hancock should not be buried at Arlington. No soldier fought the Confederates harder than he, but none respected their rights more. He did not burn houses or barns, make war on wo- men or seize private property. He knew that Arlington was founded in the hate of Secretary Stanton and, al- though there is no record of the fact, it is not improbable that, possessing ex- alted notions of propriety, General Han- cock would have bad serious objections to being buried at Arlington. It the North bad appropriated all the land of the South this objection might not have been applicable ; but when Secretary Stanton seized General L2e’s home and buried Union soldiers there so that it could never be restored to its owners, he committed an act which was not in ac- cordance with Mr. Lincoln’s policy or the policy of the nation. The talk of the removal has grown out of the condition of General Han- cock’s tomb, Surgeon-General Reed, of Norristown, has already undertaken to repair it and the Pennsylvania Com- mandery of the Loyal Legion have been preparing to care for it hereafter. The condition of the tomb was due mostly to the materials used in its con- struction, and for its degeneration the elemente alone are responsible. There is no occasion for removing General | Hancock's body, and his wishes should not be permitted to be violated. The legislative resolutions con- cerning Nicaragua and Cuba were pure demagogism. We wonder that Gov- ernor Hastings could bring himself to affix his name to such balderdash—A4/- toona Tribune. For and About Women. Mrs. Peary, wife of Lieutenant Peary the well known Arctic explorer, is plan- ning a series of lectures in Washington and in Brooklyn. The proceeds are to go to the relief of her husband, who is now in the Arctic regions and unable to get home on account of the want of nec- essary funds. Mrs. Peary will, of course, in her lectures give her own experiences of life in Greenland, where she accom- panied her husband on the Kite in ’91, and again on his ’93 expedition. She has been making her home in Washing- ton this winter with her mother, and has with her the little baby daughter who was born in Greenland, as well as a lit- tle Esquimaux girl, whom she brought with her from the north. The baby is a pretty little blue-eyed, fiaxen-haired child. Mrs. Peary is a fine looking young woman, with brown hair and clear complexion. That trinity of features, hair teeth and skin, need a good bit of careful attention during the summer months. A physi- cian gives these useful hints for their beauty and preservation: Powder is not bad on warm days; get prepared chalk and dust it over the face before going out into the sun or wind. Never bite the lips to keep them red, but bathe them once in & while with alum dissolv- ed 1n water, then apply glycerine with & few drops of benzoine. Cologne di- luted in water is an excellent wash for the face when one has been in the dust or heat for some time. Water, not even when ’tis hot, takes the [dust and specks from the pores of the skin. ‘Nothing does this so well as oil : either vaseline, glycerine or cold cream should be used. Rub it thoroughly into the face, wipe off with a soft towel and bathe in hot water. It is wise to continue this care- fully every night. For dust in the hair that prevents its being soft and glossy use a mixture of bay rum, glycerine and quinine three times a week. It is an excellent tonic. For a little while you can use valen- ciennes. Itis the tashionable lace at the moment, but it is so cheap that noth Ing is more certaln than that it won’t be the fashion very long. While the fancy lasts, however, it is lavished upon every thing unsparingly. The summer blouse is all valenciennes. I was looking yes- terday at a white taffeta waist that be- longs in the trousseau of a June bride. The back of it was plain, but the front was laid in tiny tucks, between which were set rows of narrow iusertion, edged with valenciennes that stood out in frills The big sleeves were tucked and lace- garnished in the same fashion, and there was a white silk collar all a flutter with with lace rufflings. Black and white is again decidedly fashionable in checks, stripes, small pat- terns, fancy silks and satins,and in com- bination, as, for instance, a black satin gown with white satin vest, cape collar, and puffed sleeves overlaid with jetted lace or net. Striped silks of this kind are also made the foundation for a great display of colored floral patterns. Usually the gay designs are blured,thus toning down the brightness of the colors used. This blurring of colors is almost necessary when strong contrasts are ef- fected, and such contrasts are now uni- versally favored. A blouse waist will perhaps be made of mauve silk with a design of pink and crimson rosebuds. One in blue is patterned with carnations and an olive satin ground is brocaded with tiny clusters of heliotrope and hedge roses. Waists of this character can only be worn with skirts af black in silk or eatin. Only the best of satin should be chosen for a skirt to do duty as an accompaniment to various rich waists. Nothing except cheap lace be- trays its intrinsic poor value like cheap satin. Choose instead a fine Chira silk or a crepon. Either will wear and look better than the other. Few things look richer, however, than a Lyons satin in black. A white lawn dress is another summer example. It has a skirt eight yards round, with three lawn ruffles at the bot- tom. The top ruffle is headed with val- enciennes, and all three are footed with it. The waist is trimmed in dainty fash- ion. Two rows of valenciennes are run together to make a tiny ruche, and five rows of ruching are thrown over the blouse, bretelle fashion. Little rosettes of lace are perched upon the shoulders like butterflies. Small girls wear reefers of medium weight checked cloth or traveling and Continental hats trimmed with quills and gros grain ribbon. Not a sign is there of heavy stiff lin- ing in any of the newest sleeves. The full portions of the mutton leg or other wide sleeves are merely stiffened either by lawn, cheap taffeta, or an extra light grade of crinoline. Krinolina is the name of a new patent dress band used as a substitute for hair cloth and other heavy dress distenders. It is durable and light, and well adapted for pliable extensions, and folds and curves of the silk. Tailor made dresses will, if possible, be made even simpler than they have been heretofore, with nothing but two rows of large buttons on the short hip waist and large flaps reaching to the hem of the skirt, and themselves also adorned with buttons. With such a costume will be worn a small girdle of velvet or passementerie, closing at the side with a single gigantic button. Similar strips arealso applied on the neck and sleeves. It is, of course, un— derstood that these buttons must be as elegant as possible. They are made of oxidized metal, quite plain and flat or plate shapped, and covered with chiseled arabesques or even in open-work effect. There are two far-famed violet farms managed exclusively by women, who are their respective owners. One is Meadow Springs Farm, at Stamford, Conn., belonging to Mrs. Ned Leavitt, and the other 1s the Holmsdale Violet Farm, at Madison, N. J., owned and managed by Mrs. Robert B. Holms. In the West also women are beginning to make a specialty of these flowers. The fashionable sleeve is either full, drooping from the shoulder to the el- bow, or it is made tight fitting to a point halfway between the shoulder and elbow, where it swells in an immense puff, tightening to the arm again as far as the wrist. Sometimes the sleeve is trimmed with a cuff of embroidery or lace and a jockey ot the same on the shoulder.