i ' Bellefonte, Pa., May 28, 1897. SWEETHEART AND WIFE. If sweethearts were sweethearts always, Whether as maid or wife, No drop would be half so pleasant In the mingled draught of life. But the sweetheart has smiles and blushes,” When the wife has frowns and sighs, And the wife's have a wrathful glitter For the glow of the sweetheart's eyes. Jf lovers were lovers always, The same to sweetheart and wife, Who would change for a future of Eden _ The joys of this checkered lite ? {But husbands grow grave and silent, And care on the anxious brow Oft replaces the sunshine that perished With the words of the marriage vow. Happy is he whose sweetheart Is wife and sweetheart still : Whose voice, as of old, can charm him 3 Whose kiss, as of old, can thrill. Who has plucked the rose to find ever Its beauty and fragrance increase, As the flush of passion is mellowed In love’s unmeasured peace. Who sees in the step a lightness ; Who finds in the form a grace ; Who reads an unaltered brightness In the witchery of the face | Undimmed and unchanged. Ah, happy ! Is he crowned with such a life : Who drinks the wife pledging the sweetheart, And toasts in the sweetheart the wife. —Memphis} “Commercial Appeal”? SOLOMAN HOLT, TWIN. “I ’low that this slavin ver life away on a pra’ry claims perty bard on a man of your years.”’ said Doc Pitkin, removing his sheepskin gloves and ‘warming his brawny hands over the fire. ‘Jes 80,” replied Soloman Holt, careful- ly brushing the dust from a cheap crayon portrait which hung on the cabin wall. ‘‘ ‘Tain’t goin ter be fer long, though. When I git ter be guard—?’ “Ive heard tell as how you're goin’ to git an office. I'm glad of it, Sol ; you de- sarve it.’’ “Thank ye—thank ye. ’Tain’t much uv er office—jes’ guard up at ther pen’ten- t'ary. I’ve already writ ter the gov’nor.”’ “‘Perty sure of gettin’ the office, you think ?”? “Ain’t no doubt about it. now—"’ : “Who is it 2’ ‘asked Doc, surveying the crayon portrait, critically. “That’s Lige. Mebby ye didn’t know Lige.” ‘No... “Nearly everybody knowed Lige. He knowed the gov’nor and the gov’nor knowed him. Tain’t every mansthat can have sed that uv him.” © “That's so.” “Lige war in the Legislature ; he war | one uv a pair uv twins.” This picture, Then he glanced at the postmark and next at the printed words on the corner, his heart giving a great bound. “Governor's office,”” were the first words that caught his eye, and thrusting the letter into his pocket he walked towards the door. “What's the news, Sol ?”’ asked the postmaster, whose curiosity was raised to a high pitch by the sight of the letter. ‘It’s only er letter from the gov’nor,”’ he replied, loftily, and opening the door, he went out. “It’s my ’pointment,’’ he muttered to himself, as he hurried across the prairie in the direction of his little cabin. It was getting dark when he reached home. He replenished the smoking fire, lighted a small kerosene lamp, then seated himself in one of the low splint-hottomed “chairs, he drew the letter from his pocket. He gazed at it for some time in fond anticipa- tion before venturing to break the seal. “Yes, it’s from the gov’nor’’ he said, as he opened the missive, and spread it out under the rays of the lamp. “I recken he thought he’d give me a surprise by send- ing the ’pointment by mail. It's a good thing I told the squire to mention ’bout Lige, an’—the twin. But let's see what he sez.” He read as follows : “STATE OF K—r “Executive Department. ‘Governor's Office, ‘January 17, 180— ‘Mr. Solomon Holt, Benton's Post Office, K—. —My Dear Sir: Yours of Jannary received. We note your application for position as one of the guards at the penitentiary. In reply the gover- nor directs me to say that the same will be filed | and carefully considered with other applications. Yours very Truly, “J. L. BRIGHTON, “Private Secretary.” The letter fell from Solomon’s hand, while a look of deep disappointment came over his face. *’Tain’t the ’p’intment after all,’ he muttered, then relapsed into silence. . The disappointment was a severe one to him, hut he did not lose hope. He re- | vead the letter many times, studying its every word. How cold and formal is all seemed. It was not even written by the governor himself as he would have wish- ed. Perhaps the governor had not seen his application at all. He could hardly believe that such a formal note would have been written to him had the truth been known. Perhaps he would hear from the governor later on. “The gov’nor don’t know nothin’ ’hout this, like as not,”* he muttered. “I kent b’lieve he’d have sich a letter as that writ ter the twin brother uv Lige.” Three days later the squire returned from the capital and came over to Sol’s cahin. + “I didn’t have time to write after learn- ing of the appointment,’’ said the squire, “and as I was coming home I thought it best to wait till I got here and come over amt see you in person.’ Sol nodded. . ~ “I'm a thousand times obleered ter ye.” ‘he said. *‘I reckon I'll hafter be goin’ ter the capital fore long.’ The squire shook his head. “I’m sorry it turned out the way it did ; but you didn’t get the appointment. ’’ “What ! didn’t git it 2” said Sol, his face growing a shade paler. ‘No ; vou didn’t get it after all. It was given to Bill Shucker, who lives over on Soap creek.”’ “He war?” * “That's a fact. I’m the other twin.” “You don’t say ?”’ “They did say we looked a power alike. Would you take that to be me—say, five years ago ?”’ “Well, there’s a family resemblance, only the clothes—?’ : “That’s a fact ; T never thought uv the Solomon Holt sat as if stupefied, gazing into the smoldering fire. It was several moments before he could find ‘voice to speak. “Ye seed the gov’nor in person 2 he asked at length. ‘Yes. “You tol’ him about Lige 2” “Yes.” clothes. Lige always would spruce up— had to do it yer know, being a legislater. Yas, as I war sayin,’ Lige knowed most everybody, everybody knowed him, an’ that’s goin’ ter help me in gittin' ter be guard.” “No doubt of it. Lige now 27? ‘‘He ain’t nowhar—he’s dead—bin dead these five years. People come fer miles ter go ter his funer’l. It wara powerful blow ter the state when Lige died—he’d a’ been gov'nor ‘fore this, like as not.” “Like as not,” répeated Dok Pitkin. “There was no doubt in the mind of Solomon Holt that he would receive the appointment which he had asked, and he Whar’s your brother “An’-—an’ the twin 2”? “Yes ; but there were so many appli- cants for office—"’ _ “I reckon he never knowed Lige,” said Sol, in a sort of hopeless, dejected way, as if speaking to himself. “No, he couldn’t a-knowed Lige."’ He sat there gazing gloomily into the fire long after the squire had taken his de- parture. The darkness deepened around him ; the fire died out and the cabin grew bitterly cold. Still he sat motionless, his chin resting in his hands. He was think- ing of—well, no matter ; his lot had been a hard one ; his life had been a fierce strug- gle with poverty and want—yes, want. He had not always had even the necessaries of set to work making preparations to £o to his post as soon as he should he called. Squire Spludford, who was something of a local politician, was going to the capital to attend the inaugural ceremonies of the newly-clected governor, and he had promised to present the claims of Solomon Holt for appointment, and if possible to see life. If he had got the appointment he ex- pected he might have. got along ; but now— He shivered like one with a chill, and rising, he groped his way to his cold, hard bed. Three days later some of the neighbors came to the cabin, to find him in a dying the governor in person. “I’ll see that your claims are presented to the governor,”” said the squire’ “and there isii’t any doubs that you will get the appointment, that is, if sonieone don’t get in ahead of us.” “I’ve heen in the state fer 35 years an’ that ort ter count for somethin’, said Sol- omon, “Yes, I've no doubt it will.” “You'll he sure an’ tell the guv’nor about it?’ “Yes.” condition. Pneumonia, the doctor ‘said. He had but a short time to live, that was the verdict of all who looked into his pinch- ed and wasted face. They gathered about him as the ‘end drew near. He lay as if he were already dead, save when he would murmur some incoherent sentences. ‘Yes. the gov’nor’ll know Lige,”” he said, in a faint whisper, his mind wander- ing. “Tell him—I’m his twin brother,” He lay silent for a long time, his breath coming faintly. ‘An’ about Lige 2’ “Of course.” “He'll know Lige—least the other gov’- nors did.” “Yes.” An’ about the twin—tell him I’m the twin brother of Lige.”” 3 “I'll do that, and as soon as I learn about the appointment I'l] let you know.” In due time the squire went to the capi- tal, where he expected-to remain for two weeks. After a few days Solomon began to pay daily visits to Benton’s store at the crossroads, where the post office was kept. “I'm lookin’ fer a letter from the squire,” he explained. ‘‘He’s goin’ . ter let me know when I git the ’pointment.’’ Solomon Holt was almost 65, and age and the hardships of life were already tell- ing upon him. His frame was very spare, and his thin hair was thickly streaked with white. He wore a suit of faded blue material that was threadbare in many Places, and he made a grotesque appear- ance 2s he hobbled across the wind-swept prairie. “I must git me some new clothes when I git ter be guard.” he said, casting a glance at the pile of cheap, ready-made clothing at the store. | His frequent visits to the store soon be- | came the. source of comment among the idlers that frequented the store and more than once Sol and his appointment were made the butt of rude jests. But of these he took no notice. The time would come, he felt sure, when he would he in position to ‘put the joke back on em” as he ex- pressed it. : * But the days went by without bringing any tidings from the squire. The uncer- tainty-of the issue kept Sol in a state of restless anxiety, and every day found him at the store, waiting for the arrival of the mail which the stage brought daily from Stoper’s station. One evening the postinaster handed him a letter in a" large, offlcial envelope. He stared at it a moment in ‘bewilderment. “It’s a long dark road,” he said, feebly, “but I ken see the light now. It's gettin’ closer an’ closer ! I see ’em comin’ ter take me up thar—How bright it is—the : 'p’inment’s comin’ now—thar ain’t no mis- take this time—they—they knowed Lige —tell em the—twin !? He fell gently back on his pillow. He was dead.—N. Y. Ledger. Mistook Acid for Whiskey. A dispatch from New Bloomfield Tues- day says: John Halman, a resident of this place, suffered terrible burns from carbolic acid Friday night last. Mr. Hal- man is a cigar manufacturer and a member of the Bloomfield school board. Friday night he got wet in the rain, and feeling chilly he went to a closet in his house, and, as he supposed, grasped a bottle filled with whiskey, kept in the house for medi- cinal purposes. Pulling the cork, he put the bottle to his lips and took a large drink: from it. No sooner had he done so than he discovered his terrible mistake. In the dark he had taken hold of a bottle filled with carbolic acid and poured his mouth full of the deadly burning liquid. Quick as the realization of the terrible mistake flashed through his mind he endeavored to spit the deadly poison from his mouth, and in a short time succeeded, as the acid had not been swallowed. His mouth, throat, tongue, lips and chin were hurned in a terrible manner. A physician was hastily summoned and the pain alleviated as much as possible. In time Mr. Halman will recover from the burning and acid poison- ing, but he certainly had a narrow escape from more fatal results. ——Nice Gentleman-—How old are you, little boy ? And how old is your brother ? Swipsey—We’re craps. N. G.—Crapx'? Swipsey—Yes. leven.’ Jim’s seven and I'm a INTERESTING READING FOR TAX- > PAYERS. Criminal Extravagance—Our State Officials Guilty— They Should be Arraigned. ' We do not advocate any ‘‘cheese paring’ policy in the buildings or furnishings for the State. They should be as good as the best, but should not be wasteful nor smirched with jobbery. If a father uses the money earned by his wife, at the wash tub, to purcifise a ‘gold chain with which to adorn his rum red neck, instead of using that ‘money to buy bread for his starving childrden, or clothes to cover their shivering forms from the biting winds of winter, the common con- sensus of mankind would say he has been guilty of a crime, and deserves to be pun- ished. It is not enough to say, as he stands over the emaciated form of his starved boy now cold in death, that ‘‘I was the father of the fatnily. In law I had the right to control its earnings. It was wholly a mat- ter left to my discretion as to whether I would buy a gold chain or bread, or legal- ized rum, and into the exercise of that dis- cretion the law may not intrude to say what I should or should not have done.’’ Never in the history of this generation have the people as a whole been so pressed for the necessaries of life as during the Years’ of the present State administration. Bank or business failures have been of daily occurrence, suicides have multiplied, some- times of men reduced from opulence to poverty, and frequently of men and women starving for bread, and no work with which to earn it. There have heen in- stances in which the father or mother have slain their children rather than see them starve. Thousands of the tax-payers of Pennsylvania have lost their homes and with them the savings of years of hard toil. Benevolent societies, such as the one in Harrisburg, headed by that prince of hene- factors, Gilbert M. McCauley, and our City Missionary, Rev. B. F. Beck, who delights to go about doing good, have exhausted their resources in a vain attempt to feed all the hungry and tlothe the naked. Individuals who believed that their own personality and sympathy should be brought in contact with the suffering ones have gone to the homes of the poor and ac- companied their alms with their prayers, their tears and their affection. People of all ranks in life, except multi- millionaires and State pampered politicians, have had to practice the most rigid econo- my, if not for themselves, yet for the pur- pose of helping their relatives, friends or neighbors who were in need. ; In the midst of this suffering what have been the estimates of Messrs. Delaney, Hastings, Haywood and Mylin as to the amount necessary to make our Governor and his family comfortable. These are the men who pounce upon a private citizen with three libel suits, because, forsooth, he dared to suggest a Court of Inquiry to ascertain in part whether they had not been extravagant in using the hard earn- ings of along suffering but law-abiding constituency. Let it be remembered before we give | figures that the Executive Mansion was remodeled and renewed, if we remember correctly, during Governor Beaver’s term at a cost exceeding $25,000, and that dur- ing Governor Pattison’s term the mansion was kept in good repair and the furniture renewed and replenished when actually needed. Let it also be remembered that in order to make room for the new furni- ture and furnishings ‘hereinafter descrih- ed,” nearly all of the so-called old, but really new, and very valuable, furniture had to be disposed of in some way. Ladies, who were watching for the public sale of the many valuable curtains, were disap- pointed at the small number offered, and so of all the furniture. What became of it ? It was worth many thousands of dol- lars. What, for instance, became of the two chairs, elegant and valuable, bought by Governor Pattison and placed in the mansion as relics of the great Columbian Exposition. They should have remained there. They were not sold, as the law directs to the highest bidder. Where are they ? ; Let us leok at some of the new pur- chases for Governor Hastings, and remem- ber that he helped. to make the estimate that these things at these prices as a max- imum, were necessary. . Not that there were no books, glass-ware, silver-ware, ete., ete., there, and in good condition for use, but it was not sufficiently rich, rare and costly. However, future examina- tions will show whether these things have the real value indicated by the figures, or whether, on the other hand, much of it is mere surface tinsel’ with the purchase of which there was connected the most un- conscionable jobbery. Much of the so- called sterling silver-ware called for is marked ‘Marquise,’ showing an affection Presently he spoke again. for the luxurious tastes of the worn out nobility of England. But to the figures : One batch of spoons and 7 knives, £150.00 | One tea service, six pieces, latest and richest designs. 400,00 Other silver-ware, 559.50 Total for silver, $1,400.50 The above includes three dozen Trilby forks at $30. The estimate for cut glass reaches the modest sum of $467.25. This includes one Combination Bowl (what for ?) at $100. . For rugs, mats, ete., for all buildings in the year 1896, they asked for the enormous amount of $4,151.85. Of course some of them were expensive luxuries for the ‘‘Soup House’’ period, estimated at nearly $800 each. From the number asked for the year 1896, it would seem that rug® were to take the place of carpets. But not so. They wanted 659 yards of best Wilton carpet at $2.25 a yard, amounting with the lining to $1,633.20. : In 1897 over six times as much as call- ed. Four thousand yards of Wilton, cost- | ing not more than $9,000, the lining to which was not to exceed in the aggregrate $1,000. Total, $10,000. The mats and rugs for 1897 were fot to cost more than $609.25. : : Enough carpet was called for this year to cover 70 rooms, each 20 feet square, to say nothing about the rugs and mats. In the back yard of a house kept by a woman who is visited almost daily by a prominent employe at the capitol, not her husband, fifteen elegant rugs were one day counted by a neighbor—they were being aired. Query : Was there any connec- tion between these rugs and the large num- ber purchased for the capitol this year ? It was to this employe that a prominent Har- risburg attorney and statesmau brosecuting the libel cases against us, sent word to ‘have the furniture taken away from this house or it will give our case away.” In the home of a relative of another of these attorneys is a fine carpet which she says she bought of the woman of many rugs. In 1897 Messrs. Delaney, Hastings, Hay- wood and Mylin called for 8 fire sets at $900. These included fenders, andirons, shovels, pokers, ete. In 1896 they needed 12 carpet sweepers at $54. The average life of a Sweeper is said to be from three to five years ; but in 1897 they wanted 18 more at $81. They also call for a piano cover at $100. Won- der if it is for the mahogany piano in the Governor’s house, which captain Delaney had painted white. The window curtain and portiers bill is so large as to render one incredulous, yet we have gone over the hooks again and again, and where windows are named and so much a pair for the curtains is given we have assumed that the plural form meant but two windows, though it might mean many more, so that our calculations fall short rather than reach above the actual figures. With this explanation let us look at some of the rooms-in the Governor's house and see what he thought necessary to make him happy. For the Louis XIV room the drapery estimated as nec- essary was worth (maxi- mum), seises Moorish study,........ Guest Room, 3rd floor,... 1,292 + «“ “ « ! 190 ” ft year... . 130 Bachelors® Room,. 130 Smoking, * rs 455 Governor's Private Office,. : 530 Sitting Room,t........ © 000 Dining Room,.. 1,290 Hall, i 60 Reception Room, Louis ) 2,140 Total for drapery, $12,027 How does that look for curtains alone dur- ing the starvation period of 1896-972 Only a Woman. There is living over in England at the present moment a plain, simple, rather commonplace old woman who is attracting a good deal of the world’s attention. Her name is Victoria, and she ‘happens to be by the accident of birth Queen of Great Bri- tain and Empress of India. There are millions of brighter women in the world, but by reason of the hereditary laws of the monarchy and by reason of the manner in which rulers are selected she is the most distinguished, the most noted, the most powerful of her sex. She is, also, by rea- son of these circumstances, partly by rea- son of her character and bearing as well as by reason of her age, the most illustrious individual in the world. She is the belov- i ed and respected sovereign of all the mil- lions of people who dwell in the territories subject to British domain in all quarters of the world and in every zone and clime. She is not ®nly this, but, by reson of the fact that she was called to the throne when very young, she has the added distinction of having reigned longer than any other British occupant of the throne. Not only that, but her reign has been the most ii- lustrious in the history of her country, and has witnessed the most marvelous advance in arts, science, industry and literature. This is the 60th year since she came to the throne as a young girl of 18, and the What a travesty on economy to attempt now to shut the taxpayers’ eyes by going to the opposite extreme and attempts to build a Capitol for $550,000. Let us see what Megsrs. Delaney, Hast- ings & Co. estimated the other furniture necessary for the Governor’s house. Parlor Louis XIV—Centre cluster with four chairs $186; 2 sofas $350; 2 arm chairs $270 ; 2 window lounges $200 ; 2 reception chairs $100 ; cabinet each $200 ; table each $130; grilles each $75 ; pier glass frame each $250 ; mantel and glass each $200; lady’s desk each $100. We have used the word each as found in the schedule. If they bought more thah one as the language would infer, they of course ought to be able to explain what was done with the extra one or ones. It foots up $2,061, and tax-payers will perhaps never know how much more, as indicated by that word cach, was brought in the name of Louis XIV. The language of the schedule is such that the estimate, may as easily be $4,000, or $6,000 or $8,000. From the schedule, no bidder, unless he had a private understanding, could offer an estimate on the work proposed and done on the Governor's Mansion. The failure to give measurements, etc., makes it im- possible for bidding to be accurate. This gave the favorite bidder the job. We will not now say, as many have said, that the favorite bidder must needs “divvy’’ as the condition of favoritism. Some of the ceil- ings had been finished in expensively pan- eled quartered oak, which grows richer in coloring and more valuable the older if grows. - The spirit of vandalism run wild, combined with the spirit of avarice, tore out these beautiful ceilings and in their stead put perishable plaster-of-paris at fig- ures that are simply appalling, when, con- sidered in connection with the poverty- stricken condition of our industries and of a large share of our tax-payers who must foot the bills. Eight or ten rooms, including hallways and bed-rooms, were decorated. Under the head of papering and decorating sched- ule for the Executive Mansion, the Board’s estimate includes— For side walls, each panel frame $30 ; filling panels $6 a yard ; ornamental plas- ter ceiling per square foot $1.10 ; cornice per running foot $1.25. Then, for decorat- ing this ornamental ceiling and cornice per square foot $1, making $3.35 a square foot for mere ornamentdtion. They might al- most as well have papered it with green- backs. For columns and pilasters per square foot $3.50 ; wainscoting, $3.50 mM square foot; for mirrors, $150 each 5 for mirror frames, $75 each; for repairing present plaster work, 50 cents a square foot. In smoking room ‘for wall hung,”’ presumably with paper, or it may have been with gold, per foot, $3. Moorish Room ‘for stuff’ for side walls hung per foot $3.25, and so on ad nauseam. We leave the tax-payers to figure out the prob- able totals. It évidently runs into more money than the mansion originally cost. The furniture must he considered at some other time. As the reader walks through the Capitol grounds let him look at the four black hoards having gil letter directions to rooms n diflerent buildings. They are a few months old and are so defective as that one at least is splitting from the action of the weather. We have asked mechanics what they were worth. Ten dollars each is the highest estimate, but the ground commis- sion’s maximum estimate was $50 each, or $200 for $30 or $40 worth % material and work. These boards are really standing guide boards, sort of ensamples of the flimsy known young man of New Stanton, West- work and high price of everything done. The fire has quickley effaced the evidences of tinselled fraud that a single year’s wear would have demonstrated to every man who has eyes and care to to use them.— Pennsylvania Methodist. : ——— The Presbyterians. Dr. Jackson Was Elected Moderator by a. Big Majority. There were but two candidates for the moderatorship of the Presbyterian general assembly, now in session at Eagle Lake, Ind., Dr. Sheldon Jackson, the home mis. sionary, and Dr. Henry C. Minton, the sem- inary professor. The politicians of the as- sembly were treated to a great surprise, and the election of Dr. Jackson by a vote of 313 to 338 was characterized by many delegates as ‘‘a breaking of the machine.’ It was claimed as a victory for the more liberal branch of the church, and was in line with the election of Dr. Withrow last year. The new moderator, in taking the chair, disclaimed any personal elements in his election and charged it to the desire of the church to forward the home missionary work of which he is an exponent. Swallowed Two Dozen Eggs. ~ Thursday evening James Gaffney, a well- moreland county’, made a wager of fifty cents with George Crock, of that place, that he could eat two dozen raw eggs inside of five minutes. The contest took place in Gal- lagher’s store, and Gaffney won both as to the amount of eggs and the time required to do the eating. He was given his win- nings. Although it is said he became sick, no fears of any serious results befalling the Young man from his mess of eggs are anti- cipated. people of England are going to spend mil- lions in a mammoth celebration of the event, which promises to be memorable for centuries to come. There is no question of the loyalty and devotion of the English people everywhere to their Queen. In spite of the spread of democratic ideas, there is no doubt whatever of the stability of the English monarchy and the continu- ance, for the present at least, of hereditary rule. | One strange thing about all this is that Victoria is really not an English woman. She is one of the several generations of Germans who have ruled over England, and she is about the first of her family of whom it could be said that the English was her native tongue. In addition to this she married a German, her cousin, one of the petty German princes, Prince Al- bert of ee Coburg Gotha. But none of these things affect her sovereignty, and Englishmen have long ago got over any chagrin they may have felt over the fact that their rulers are not of pure English blood. This woman, however, great as she is, is more of a figurehead than a person of positive power, having really less authori- ty and less initiative in the conduct of the government than the President of republi- can America. She is subject to the British constitution, which, unlike that of the United States, is an unwritten one, and is made up of a great mass of traditions and precedents, that has grown up in the course of ages, but which controls everything. She has, like the President of the United States, a veto power, but while every President exercises this power more or less, it has become almost obsolete in Great Britain and bas not been exercised for several reigns. As the mainspring of the government, as the fountain of honor, as the head of the great social machine, as the head of the church, and in other ways, this old woman has vast power and influence. The senti- ment toward her amounts toa sort of idola- try. To kiss her hand, to be spoken to by her, or even to be in her presence, is con- sidered by many the crowning of a career, a thing worth the struggles of a lifetime. While all other women are denied the or- dinary rights of citizenship, it is considered no inconsistency that the chiefest among the millions of British people, and the one to whom all citizenship owes allegiance and royalty, should be a woman. And yet, in all that pertains to her per- sonality, she is only a woman. She loved and married her handsome cousin, she rais- ed a family of nine children, and she was much devoted to them as any mother in her kingdom. She mourned her husband when he died with a grief that refused to be comforted, and she even had the -ambi- tien to write a book which was as poorly written, as books go, and could have been produced by any of her women - subjects. She has had little to do with the great progress which her empire has made dur- ing her long reign. She has simply con- tributed to it by having sense enough to allow those who were capable of its man- agement to have their way, and by yield- ing from time to time to the voice of pub- lic opinion. She has devoted herself to making matches for her daughters the same as any other mother, and to trying to repress the waywardness of her sons, some of whom were disposed to sow an undue quantity of wild oats, and through all her life she has set an example of piety and womanly propriety. She has been a good wife, a good mother and a good woman. ple or hereditary rule, we cannot but think that in this the year of her jubilee it is fortunate for the world that for so long a period such a woman should have been in a place where her virtues were so con- spicuous and her example so far-reaching. Whatever honors may be her due as a queen, they are equaled by those which should be paid to her as a woman. ——Even the Pullman car porters enter perity, for which Mr. Pullman made them all vote last fall. They have petitioned the Pullman company for a raise of salary, giv- ing as one of the principal reasons for the demand that tips from the traveling pub- lic have fallen off, and they find it hard to support their families on their earnings. There has been no depreciation in Pullman charges, and the case the porters make out isa good one. Turning the porters loose on the public to exact their wages in tips that should be paid them by one of the richest money grabbing corporations in America is the meanest display of petty ex- tortion of the times. Mr. Pullman de- serves a monument commemorative of his genius in making money. He was the first of Yankees to naturalize the English tip system, which is another way of begging wages from the public taat should be paid by the employer.— Pittsburg Post. —1It was a little hard on the young man for he meant it well and had a sincere admiration for the girl. They were sitting at the table with a company of others, and as he passed her the sugar he whispered ; “‘here it is, sweet, just like you.” The compliment was a little awkward to be sure, but he meant it, and it seemed more than cruel when a moment later she had occasion to pass the butter to him. She drawled ; ‘‘here it is, soft, like you. ———————— Newly married husband (home late for the first time)—I know Iam a little late, Alice, dear. You really shouldn’t sit up and wait supper for me, darling. Newly married wife (with withering scorn )—Supper, dearest ; it’s too late for supper. I've laid the breakfart table !— Tit Bits. pe eS MMG—————————— —— ‘I would I were a tree that I ight leave,” remarked the stranded hotel guest. ‘But you forget,” said the other. ‘‘that sometimes the trunk of a tree is seized for board.”’ ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. i mushn. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. It is a peculiar fact, though an admitted one, that transoms are of little or no nse except-to accumulate dust, but no builder will honestly declare it. If you really be- lieve in the ventilating value of a transom, remove the window entirely and supply its place with a silk curtin, loose at the lower | edge, which will flutter to and fro not un- pleasantly. Yon may close the transom entirely and cover the opening with a drapery, which will be a good background, and just below it fix a shelf, which will hold a plaster cast or two and a pot of some bright; colored ware. Sometimes there is light enough in the hall to admit of having a jar filled with loug sprays of German ivy or tradescantia growing in water, set upon such a shelf. Again, you may conceal your ‘transom with a mass of the dried palm leaves which are sold in the Oriental shops. Or a panel of fretwork may take the place of the discarded window, and the transom still be useful as a ventilator. When two transoms come close together, try the shelf and drapery arrangement for one and the palms for the other, arranging the latter so they will rest partly against the drapery. Against the inner or flat side of a transom you may with advantage hang a picture of such shape and size as_ to-entirely conceal the opening and its frame, fastening it flat- ly against the wall, I wonder who thought of such a dainty mode of decorating their stuffs, as tuck. They always seem so perfectly appropriate, and so daintily neat. Gowns of thin stuffs are more or less elaborate with tucks, often separated with narrow insertions, or edged with tiny frills of butter-tinted vale lace, A pretty frock of leaf green organdie is made up over a foundation of leaf green The organdie is sprinkled plenti- fully with huge clusters of dull pink roses with graceful stems aa deny leaves. The skirt has a hip yoKe laid in tucks, each tick edged with a frill of the yellow lace. From this yoke falls the body of the skirt which is set in full fashion all around. The bodice is round, and is provided with a yoke made of tuck like the skirt. The full lower body is caught into a crushed girdle of leaf-green satin, while the throat is swathed in a stock of the same. The very latest bodice is no longer the bolero. but the kind that fastens from the right side over to the left. Some are full- ed and finished with a jahot just against the sleeve ; some have a double knife plait- ed rufile from the shoulder to the-waist, while still others are finished with a point, just at the bust, with a narrow frill all around. The very latest shoe has the modified bull dog toe ; not the very man- nish broad one of the past winter, nor yet the old fashioned round toe, but an unde- scribable modification of both. One of the latest modes consists of a checked skirt and jacket of plain cloth to match the prevail- ing color in the plaid. Black and green is a favored combination. Speaking roughly, the imported gowns last opened show four distinguishing char- acteristics. The heavy linens in their var- ious weaves have their braiding, which means anything, from a few straight rows to the most intricate designs : the semi- elaborate gowns have their shallow yoke, which forms epaulets over the tops of the sleeves ; handsome gowns for occasions Whatever we may think ahout the prinei—| complaint at the delay in the era of pros- ; have double edged insertion let into their silken surface, “while the frail evening dress has its chiffon sash. Red is running riot ! It is the color of the moment ; the talk of the shops. To ignore the subject is to avoid that which is of utmost interest, as far as toilettes go, to shoppers and well dressed women. Why this flaming shade should he desi- red when the blaze of Midsummer heat is upon us is a query that belongs to the ‘who was Junius” category. Red is here; it will be worn ; it shows on everything ; it is the belle gf shades ; to be on speaking ‘ac- quaintande with it gives one a cachet. One can Raveit in degrees from a ‘Jack?’ rose in one’s Panama hat to a red straw toque banded in geraniums, with a red canvas gown made over red silk and a red parasol to match. Red organdies are the latest innovation among summer dresses 3 and some of them are made up over pink silk, but the majority over red silk or dim- ity. These trimmed with plaid taffeta rib- bons and Swiss knife pleatings are very dashing. : : No material so ordinary but what flaunts itself in the chosen color. Red and ‘white striped pique, polka-dotted duck, batiste, dimities, percales and muslins galore answer to the call. Repped piques in red and white are made up with Eton jackets, trimmed with white or black braid and worn over cotton waists; white muslin makes the prettiest combination for a shirt waist. Old fashioned guimpes of lace, muslin and embroidery are coming in, and and each week they are growing more popular. In white they are especially attractive with red organdies. I saw one yesterday made of finely hand tucked Swiss’; the red organdie blouse made over red silk was cut round at the shoulders, a narrow, stand-up frill finishing it in the old fashioned way. Another innovation is trimmed sashes, Ribbon or muslin, they tie at the back in a small bow, and the ends fall to the hem of the dress. Each side is trimmed with ; narrow lace rufiles, or fine pleatings of Swiss or muslin. Thisis one of the pret- ties fashions of the season and will be re- joiced in by youthful looking matrons. In making the simple French dressing, says an excellent salad maker, so many keep the quantity of oil, vinegar, pepper and salt in mind, but the manner of using them seems of no consequence. It is of consequence if you do not want the vinegar on the leaves and the oil at the bottom of the salad bowl. In the first place it must be remembered that a wet leaf will repel oil, therefore the lettuce or other salad must be dried before it is sent to the table. Now it is quite evident if a leaf wet with water will refuse to retain oil one wet with vinegar will do the same ; for this reason the leaves should be covered with oil be- fore the vinegar is added, or the salad will be crude and very unlike what it should be if properly mixed. Don’t wear a dark underskirt beneath a light or white gown, fancying it will not be seen. It will make its presence known some way, be sure, and the effect is not good. That petticoats are apt to be seen proves the use of elaborate and expensive ones. ——Young men should take warning from the story of the watchful mother, who thinking that her daughter’s gallant had stayed long enough, walked out on the pi- azza and inquired if the morning paper had come.