Pewarraly ce Al ~TaO Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 27, 1897. | OH, LET ME DIE AT HOME! Though I might travel all the earth Or sail the ocean o'er, Should fate decree that I must sail To that celestial shore, Oh, guide me to my native land, Wherever I might roam! When death shall come and call for me. Oh, let me die at home ! Though I might gather all the sweets From out earth’s fairest bowers, The moments steeped in ecstasy, And golden winged the hours, Though richest treasures should be mine, Wherever I might roam, When death shall come and eall for me, Oh, let me die at home ! Through fields of art and ancient love, Through castle and through hall, In vineyards fair, where golden fruits In rich abundance fall : By sunny stream or bat bling brook, Wherever I may roam, Whenever death shall call for me Oh, let me die at home ! Then guide me to my humble home In my dear, native land, Where I can feel the tender touch Of a familiar hand, That I may rest at last in peace When I shall cease to roam And death shall come and cali for me, Oh, let me die at home ! —Carrie E. Emery in Boston Ideas, — AN AFFAIR OF THE HEART. When a woman is thirty and unmarried it is fair, if she be neither deformed nor de- ficient, for her neighbors to speculate whether she is single from necessity, hav- ing never been ‘‘asked,’’ or whether she has had ‘‘an affair.” Almost never, by any chance, is she giv- en the benefit of the doubt and credited with the choice of single blessedness. In most minds it stands to reason that if she hasn’t she conldn’t.”” How the advent of the new woman may effect this I am not prepared to say, but with the old woman it has always been as I describe. Miss Sarah Burdick was known to have had ‘‘an affair.”’ Even those who were sure of the fact and time of it were not possessed of many details. With the na- ture of such things, it had been variously reported in Miss Sarah’s circle, during the last ten years, that her lover had been dis- covered to he a drunkard, and she had tearfully cast him off ; that he, the | which blew which was the distraction of shadowy man in the case, had jilted her for a girl with money ; that he was a Pa- pist, and her father had forbidden the un- | ion ; that she was his social inferior, and | his parents had whisked him off to Europe; | and lastly, that he was now, in this very day of grace, an inmate of an insane | asylum, and that Miss Sarah went regu- larly, and under cover of secrecy, to see him. This last report obtained with eminent satisfactoriness among the more dramatic- ally inclined, as the jilt theory pleased those who had any reason to dislike Miss Sarah, and the drunkard story came into periodical favor with such as loved to dwell on the blight of drink. For unusual and unforeseen necessities there were left the theological and, least interesting of all, the social explanations of the tragedy. Once upon a time it had occurred to a tim- id little woman, at the missionary tea, to venture the surmise that ‘‘he died.”” The vehemence with which this uninteresting theory was frowned down, and the great number of reasons put forth to show why it could not be tenable, prevented its ever | being raised again in Plumpton. To remain true toa living but errant lover, however, was considered very fine. The particular errancy of the lover | was of minor moment ; it was the faithful- ness of the waiting one that Plumpton took a pride in. - Pertinacity is a quality in high favor with Puritan blood, and Plumpton was Puritan to a degree. Midway of Plumpton’s main street was Miss Sarah’s cottage. The best key to the position of Miss Sarah, and the subtle dif- ference between her house and others like it to all outward seeming, was that the lonely occupant was always called ‘‘Miss.”’ No one ever ventured upon the gross fa- miliarity of “Sarah Burdieck,’”” and ‘Sally’” would have seemed like calling the preacher “‘Bill.”’ Miss Sarah was an artist. She painted miniatures of the most exquisite type, and it was understood in Plumpton that she put annually several thousand dollars into the bank, or wherever persous of opulence deposit their fortunes. It was even whis- pered in Plumpton that in New York, where Miss Sarah spent her winters, she was considered quite a personage. Now success in New York was identified, in the Plumpton mind, with the Vanderbilts, and when Plumpton tried to picture Miss Sa- rah as a personage in New York, the Van- derbilts always figured in the picture. Sut if Miss Sarah knew the Vanderbilts, | she had never been heard to say as much, | and somehow she fitted so admirably into the little cottage where she had been born | and raised, and into the life of P] umpton her | native heath that for the most part, noone | thought much about her probable existence | from November to May. Anything might readily be believed of a young woman who | bought the old manse after her father’s | death, and in exchange for it gave a new | one, much better, to the young man who | succeeded him. | The young man was delighted, and Miss | Sarah was gratified, and Plumpton looked | on and admired while it marvelled, With all her reputed wealth, Miss Sarah made | few changes ; and it soon became a part of | Plumpton’s existence that the minister’s | daughter, who had been away studying so | much of her girlhood, came back in ‘Ther | young womanhood with the May blossoms of each year, and lived quietly on in the | old home until the first flurries of snow be- | gan to fly ; then hied her back to her mys- terious town life again, only to reappear with the lowers next spring. In Plumpton she did her house-work, and painted, and read, and played the piano, and sang softly, and sewed and vis- | ited with her neighbors, and went to | church to hear the Young man preach crude | discourses with the stamp of seminary | learning and world ignorance on every sen- | tence. None of these things savored of a ! broken heart, but Plumpton drew its own conclusions about a woman who was thirty | and pretty and had money, and was a per- | sonage in New York and yet unmarried. | Miss Sarah knew all about these conclu- sions, and often smiled over them to her- self. Sometimes she cried, too—cried all night almost, and then in the morning the sun would be shining and the flowers smil- ing and a neighbor would run in witha plate | of hot muffins and a hurried word about | “thinking you wouldn't he makin’ ‘em | i | i i | | just for one,”” and Miss Sarah would tell afl someness that made her feel bad, and, so herself that it was the dark and the lone- saying, would begin to hum a tune as she put the water on to hoil. One summer Plumpton had a delicious excitement. A man from New York—a man who looked as if he might be on very intimate terms with the Vanderbilts— | came down to Plumpton and took board { with the widow Tripp. He was having a picture painted by Miss Burdick, he said. That was all the information he offered. Plumpton had its opinion of a man who had no more to do than to go off for three weeks to have a little picture painted, es- pecially when the painter was in town with him for six months of the year. Presently Plumpton solved the problem to its entire satisfaction—he was in love with Miss Sarah, of course ! The painting went on, for the most part, under a strip of awning-cloth which Miss Sarah had stretched from the high brick wall, in the corner of her garden, to two slim poles about six feet away. The red wall at the back and one side was covered with a luxuriant growth of Virginia-creep- er, and a very old lilac-bush shaded the other side, so that this improvised bower looked deliciously green and cool and fit for a studio. The sun was away from that Spot in the morning, and there in the hours betwixt ten o’clock and noon all Plump- ton might see, if it wished, Miss Sarah at her work. She was quite large, was Miss Sarah, and just the kind of a woman any one would call *“fair,”” in preference to all other ad- jectives. Her hair was of that soft, light brown which has been gold in early youth, and besides a huge fluffy braid of it at the back of her head, Miss Sarah had witching little tendrils that were not exactly curls but about her forehead in a fashion every Plump- ton woman under forty. Miss Sarah’s eyes were blue—not deep blue, but the color of the sky on a bright, warm day in summer, and her skin was fair and beautifully clear and soft, while her hands, although she washed her own dishes, were the most fas- cinating things imaginable, so white and slim and graceful: Not a woman to dazzle was Miss Sarah ; not a woman for satin and diamonds, a woman to breathlessly worship ; but a woman to enchant, a woman for soft mulls and pearls and cash- mere and tea-rose buds, a woman one ached to touch and enfold and adore. Courtlandt Taylor thought 80, as he sat for the miniature which was to be ‘‘a birthday gift to his mother.”” He could find so little time for sitting in town, he explained, and as the fly-fishing near Plumpton was celebrated (Miss Sarah had never heard this before), he thought he would kill two birds with one stone dur- ing vacation. If Miss Sarah thought that Mr. ’ "aylor could have had a dozen pictures painted in the hours he had sat at her five-o’clock-tea table, or if he had begged to drive her to any of the four corners of the earth behind his Kentucky thoroughbreds, she did not say so, of course. So the picture went on, although the fly-fishing must have been poor, for what time Mr. Courtlandt Taylor should have devoted to it, he spent either in reading Shelley or talking music with Miss Sarah, or in fretting ahout by himself and wishing that he were with her. Presently the picture was done. *‘Miss Sarah,’ said her sitter, falling un- consciously into the title he had heard so much from the villagers—*‘Miss Sarah, my mother died when I was a little boy.” Miss Sarah said nothing, and the contrite look on her sitter’s face began to give way to a look of anxiousness. It was hard to go on. “If she were alive, though,” he finally said, *‘I know she’d like that picture very much. Don’t think I don’t reverence my mother, please. I do; and I wouldn’t have brought her name into this only I had | no sister and no male relative that I could think of who would value a miniature of me. So Isaid it was for mother, and if it hadn’t been that I thought mother would be with me in the undertaking I wouldn’t have said so. Miss Sarah I'd like to give you to mother instead of the picture. She never had a daughter, and I’m sure she’d know and be glad.” A proposal of marriage might have been far funnier than this and not seemed to Miss Sarah a thing to be smiled at. Her eyes were wet when her lover finished. Miss Sarah was not one of the women who would will it that men should love them hopelessly. It seemed a reproach to her that she had let such a thing come to pass. Then she looked, through the mist of her unshed tears, at the big, loving man across from her. He looked ridiculous, on the small camp-chair, leaning forward in an agony of expectancy to catch her word or look. - But Miss Sarah saw only that he was bonny and that he loved her. Why should it be a reproach to her instead of a crown ? Probably only women can imagine all that Miss Sarah saw in her mental vision in those few breathless moments while her lover waited for her reply. The whole of her lonely life arose before her, the memory of all her hunger for love and care and the clinging caress of baby fingers on her own. She put out her hand, and it was on her tongue to say, ‘‘Let me make her glad, then,” when another vision completely shut out all sight of the man before her, and there was a fair-faced boy in his place, and a sunny-haired girl in hers, and all the heavens and earth seemed full of the glory of plighted love. “I'll wait and be true,’’ she said to her- self, for the ten-thousandth time, and rais- ing the the hand that had clasped hers to her lips, she kissed it once, and murmured, “I'm so very sorry,”’ and fled within doors where the pillows of her little white bed held out their embrace to her as they had since she was a child with a hroken toy, and Miss Sarah went all through the battle of her life again ; and the fight had not been harder at twenty, when it was first fought, than it was now, after ten years of fighting. If she had stabbed Courtlandt Taylor he could have stood the pain, but the burn of that benediction kiss drove him frantic. Ii Plumpton knew that Miss Sarah had “given her young man the mitten’’ as well as if he had told it. He left very abruptly that very night, although Farmer Wiggins had promised to take him to some really good fishing the next morning. And Miss Sarah sent a note to the minister's wife saying that she was not well enough to go to tea as she had expected. Sunday, however, found Miss Sarah in her pew in the little old church. For once she was unconscious of the interest her affairs had excited, and those who studied her face and her movements with the hope of discovering some indication of what she had gone through had no more satisfaction than if they had looked for love-lorn symptoms in fat Serena Gibbs, who was known to have married her equal- ly fat hushand because he owned a pasture and she owned cows. Emmaline Hitt, so hopelessly a spinster as to have no further need for any of the graces of delicacy and shyness, made bold to ask Miss Sarah, ‘‘as innocent as could be,” if her young man had gone, and Miss Sarah, looking straight at her with her large light eves, had smiled serenely and answered : ‘‘Oh, yes! The picture was fin- ished on Thursday, and he hurried right on to keep other engagements.’ Emmaline said ‘Miss Sarah Burdick couldn’t fool her with her baby face and her baby ways.”” But Emmaline, in com- mon with the rest of Plumpton, recognized that the late sitter was no more to be dis- cussed with the mistress of the old manse than was that mysterious he of long ago who figured in Miss Sarah’s historical ‘‘af- fair.”” This same ‘‘he’’ was become more interesting than ever now, and Plumpton was exercised, from foundation to circum- ference, to know what manner of man it could be for whom Miss Sarah refused an elegant personage who looked like a Van- derbilt. The summer was quite gone when Miss Sarah’s next visitor came, and it was that delightful time of year when the first fires are lit and a downy blanket feels so good at night, and out-of-doors is full of that glorious crispness which makes the blood tingle and labor seem a delight. Miss Sarah knew he was coming. He had written and told her so, and she had wired him back, “Always welcome,’’ and then sat her down to think. She was used to all sorts of strange freaks on the part of Joe Hastings ever since the day he had come to her in the summer of her bliss, and told her in a straightforward practical way that he found it was going to hamper him seriously to marry ; and while he should always be immensely fond of her didn’t she think it would be sensible to forget those foolish boy and girl dreams of love in a cottage, and try the world a bit? Miss Sarah was twenty then, and the | “hoy and girl dreams’ had heen of three | years’ duration. He was a young Senior in college when they began, a penniless youth, but rich in hope ; and she was in { the second year in the seminary in the penniless, though | same town, and equally rich in faith and love. Three years in New York. in a profes- sion, killed or blighted all the romance in Joe Hastings. He saw the future with a clear eye, and there came a night, in his boarding-house room, when he took the picture of Sarah Burdick out and looked long and hard at it, then held it in the gas flame until the features were burned to a charred tissue. At Christmas he went down to the college town just before the holiday break-up. He sought Sarah out | and told her, and came away. The next mail brought Sarah a packet of letters, and she locked them away. ina daze of distress. Afterward, when she thought of them, she had an impulse to burn the pitiful little pile. Then she said: “I'll wait. When I’m willing to burn them it will be a sign that love is dead.’ And for ten years those letters lay in Miss Sarah’s desk. Love never died. When school was done, destiny took Miss Sarah to New York. Every now and then destiny crossed her path and Joe Hastings, and he told her he was doing splendidly. He did not say, ‘‘See how much better off we hoth are than if I were a strug- gling practitioner and you were cooking my meals and tending children !”’ but his manner towards her always implied it ; and the hard times in Miss Sarah’s battle with her heart were nor when she was away from Joe Hastings, but when she was near him. For this reason Miss Sarah’s summers were her happiest time. Then she could indulge undisturbed her woman’s blessed short-sightedness. Then she could tell her- self that Joe’s folly was the folly of youth, and that some day he would taste ‘of the emptiness of wordly things alone, and then mayhap he would come back to her. “And he shall find me waiting,’’ said Miss Sarah to herself, with no thought of making him suffer for his folly, no thought of the dignity due her slighted love, no thought of any kind save ten- derness and pity. And now Joe was . True, he had not said what for, but he evidently needed her in some way, else he would not have sought her out, and Miss Sarah’s pride in the fact was beautiful. After many hesitations and fluctuations between several plans, Miss Sarah decided to ask Widow Blodgett to house her guest, and she herself would feed and entertain him. This was somewhat in defiance of Plumpton opinion, but Miss Sarah had long since learned to do what she thought host, pnd leave public opinion to do as it would. So the round table was spread for tea in Miss Sarah's dining-room, and the old fire- place of this one-time kitchen was full of blazing hickory logs. Miss Sarah had lit her lamps and replenished the fire and tak- en five unnecessary peeps at her biscuits in the oven, besides nervously re-arranging the chrysanthemums on her tea table and twice changing the location of the pickled pears, and still no sound of footsteps from that five-thirty train. Then Miss Sarah did a queer thing for her. She lit a candle in one of her dainty china candlesticks and went into her bed-room, holding it close to the mirror in her dressing-case to see how she looked. Half an hour ago she made a careful toilet, and felt a sweet pride that was far from vanity in the result. Joe had seen her in elegant array, and it was not a sense of how well she could look that she longed to give to-night. Her heart told her that it was not for an elegant woman that Joe had left New York and come to Plumpton, so it was a gray dress she chose to greet him in—a pale, soft cashmere, very plain, with a big Marie Antoinette fichu of white mull, fine and filmy and feminine, such as men love to see on the women who reign on their hearths. She had a sheer actually coming. white apron on, had Miss Sarah, and pret- | y white cuffs at her prettier wrists : ty white cuffs: prettier wrists, and | how many yards did you get?" she had fastened two chrysanthemums into her bodics, but instinct told her they were a jarring element, suggestive of being “fixed up.” and she removed them. This | of | might have been, but from fooling they drifted into banter, and hy easy stages into argument, with relapses into banter again, and then they fell to talking about their respective work and plans. Miss Sarah would have avoided this if she could, but Joe Hastings was not a man to be easily di- verted. His mind was evidently on this matter, and to a feverish degree, and Miss Sarah felt a queer little tugging at her heart as she wondered if the reason of his coming was about to be explained. ‘I’ve made a queer mess of all my work and plans, or rather they’ve made a queer mess of me,” he said, abruptly, asa man plunges into a critical subject, and bitterly as strong men acknowledge defeat. ‘Why, what do you mean’’? If he had come looking for sympathy, Miss Sarah’s face and tone must have been a comfort to him. “I mean that I’ve got to leave New York for good inside of a month, and that the rest of my life, however much it may be, I’ve got to live in Colorado. Sarah !’’ and the ring in his voice startled her, ‘‘do I'look like a man whois going to die of consumption ?’’ His eyes rested appealingly on her face while he waited for an answer, but none came, and presently two great tears chased rapidly down Miss Sarah’s face. ‘Sarah ! What have I ever done to de- serve that you should cry over me 2”? In an instant he had left his chair and was standing by her, forgetful of his im- pending fate and mindful only of his un- worthiness of those tears. How little a man knows of good woman- hood unless he knows that women were not made to be just, but to be generous ? ‘‘Listen, dear!” by her side, holding both of her hands. ‘Physician that I am, I did not know un- til a week ago. I suspected something for months, but tried to make myself believe that it was the fantasy of a morbid brain. Lately I began to know better, and con- sulted specialists to make sure. There is no mistake. The taint is in my blood, and has got to come out. I am thirty-five and my life is done.”’ It was too much for him and he bowed his head on her hands. In an instant Miss Sarah had disengaged them from his clasp. and laid one of them tenderly on the bowed shoulders, and with the other was softly caressing his hair, as she had done long ago in the golden days when joys were many and comfort was for headaches and ‘‘stiff exams.” ‘Not ‘done,’ Joe dear,” she said. “Why, you can live years Colorado ! who are far worse when they go than you are. And think how you can help them— there are so many like you there, and you, with your medical skill and your sympa- thy born of like suffering, can do so much fer them. Why, I more than half envy you all the good you will do !”’ Joe Hastings did not raise his head for a | few moments. Then he looked up at the sweet face bending over him, and kept his hungry eyes on it while he said : “Sarah, I half hate myself for what is in my heart now. I can’t imagine how I came to have the cheek, I'm sure, but I came down here to tell you this, and to ask you if you would go to Colorado with me. 1 deserve to he kicked for my pains, I know, I’m a selfish brute for to come to you in my trouble, and if yon don’t feel like throwing yourself away to help a consumptive die, Ishan’t blame you one little bit. I—?* Miss Sarah’s finger was on his lips. “I'd die for you, if I could, dear,” was all she said.—By Clara E. Laughlin, in Har- per’s Bazar. The Value of Her Time. She didn’t like housekeeping ; she pre- ferred to have a place in the world of busi- ness, she said. “I want to earn something,’ she fre- quently proclaimed. “I know I have the business instinet, and that I would be a success if I only had a place in some office.”’ “Well,” returned the old gentleman thoughtfully, ‘I'll take you into my office, if you wish.” **Will you really 2’ she cried delighted- ly. ‘“‘And how much will you pay me?’ ‘‘Whatever your time is worth.’ ‘‘But how will you decide that?” she demanded. “Oh, it is very easy done,”” he ans- wered. “‘Let’s find the valuation first.’ ‘I'd value itat about one dollar a min- ute,’’ she returned promptly. **You never have shown any indications of doing anything like that yet,” he said. “We'll just figure it out. Now, yesterday you and your mother went down town didn’t you ?”’ “Yes. We went down to get some cloth for a gown. But what has that to do with it 2’ “I heard you say that vou found just exactly what you wanted at the first place you stopped, but that they asked too much for it,”’ he continued, ignoring her question. “That was right,”’ she admitted. {They wanted 90 cents a yard for it, and hoth mamma and I knew that we could get it for less.” “Did you?” ‘Of course we did. I guess we know enough not to be cheated on ordinary dress goods. We had to go pretty nearly all over town, but we finally got the same thing precisely for 87 cents a yard.” ‘‘How long did it take you?’ he asked next. “Well, we went downtown before lunch- eon and never got home until dinner time. One can’t geta bargain in a hurry, you know.”’ “Of course not,” he admitted. You put on it “And ‘Six, ”’ she answered. . “Saving altogether the magnificent sum eighteen cents,’ he suggested. “The 1 ie v +: 3: y y ry v was hardly accomplished when the knock | prop) on 8 ve ry Sipe poy ; oy ou 2 on came, and in a moment Miss Sarah had | worked nearly one whole ¢ iy eigen the warmth of her hearth and her love. After the first moment of constraint it was a pleasant meeting. Joe was full of fos trad cents, or nine cents apiece. Making a lib- ed her visitor, and taken bi Ys . | Welcomed he A aken him in mln estimate for the time you spent at home in the morning I should say that You and your mother value your services . . ? . : sd 8 ¥ ‘e cents p Hl. N £ spirits, and Miss Sarah fell readily into his | & Ahan swelce coms a day each. Now mood. They laughed and talked like children ata play party, and Miss Sarah half hoped it was only for a visit he had come. He praised the biscuits and the sal- ad and the ham, asked for a third helping of preserves and a third cup of tea, and Miss Sarah laughed merrily when she got up to replenish the cake-plate. > Then she gathered up her pretty china, and would have piled it away until he had gone for the night, but he begged that she wash it and let him “wipe.” “I used to for mother, when I wasa boy,’’ he said. And they cleared everything away, only wishing the dishes were not so few, and then Miss Sarah drew two chairs to the fire and they sat down to talk. Not a word said either one of things that I shall be very glad to pay you—" But he never finished. “Then both of them declared that he was a mean thing, and there was nothing for him to do hut take refuge in flight. a ————— Price of Salt Advanced. The Michigan Salt Association has ad- | vanced the price of salt in all markets of the West five cents a barrel and in the home markets eight cents a barrel, which brings the price up relatively the same in | all markets. Salt is moving fairly and is in good de- mand and it was thought advisable to ad- yance the price because the amount on hand is much less than at this time last year, and the prospects for the future are bright. He was on his knees | green crests above the earth all that re- and years in | Lots of people do, and people | a man that’s got to | die and face another world, but I just had | { over the country to see it. | so that I had to knock the roof out of the | greenhouse to give it room. | plant is I have no means of knowing, It { has been here for several years, stowed Century Plant in Bloom. When the Flowers Die Many Uses Will be Made of the Plant. Nearly three months ago a century plant in a greenhouse in New York sent forth a flower shoot. The plant, with many others of Mexico, had been lying untended in a corner of the greenhouse, and when one of the employees told the proprietor that it was behaving in an unusual man- ner Mr. Condcn supposed at first that it was merely developing a new leaf shoot. After three days, during which time the pale green point had ascended one foot, he changed his mind, and had the century plant moved out into a sunny spot. It ; Was carefully tended and watched, for the blossoming of one of these plants is so rare in this climate that the occasion on which it has happened in New York within the fifteen years can be counted on one’s fin- gers. Now the plant is in full bloom. It has reached a height of twenty-five feet, and fifteen feet up the first branch appears. There are twelve other branches above this. Each branch is decorated with corn- colored flowers hanging in clusters like the familiar begonia rubra. These flowers are more curious than beautiful, their pale hue unfitting them for an ornamental flower. For a month the flowers remain 3 then they fall, and when they alight hun- dreds of little century plants will spring up. With the falling of the flowers and the consequent propagation of the species, the plant, which has lived perhaps seventy or eighty years to this end and purpose, dies. First its leaves swell enormously, then they wither away, and almost before the tiny cententarians have probed their mains of the mother plant is the round, spike-like stem, hardened to a stony con- sistency. In Mexico, where this species of century plant flourishes—it is called scientifically Agave Mexicana—the plant is put to many uses, and Mr. Condon intends, as an ex- periment, to get all the use from his plant that he can. The Mexicans use it for the three primal necessities of life—food, drink and shelter. As Mr. Condon has roofs on all his buildings, he doesn’t know quite when he shall use the dried flowers for thatching, though they form an excellent thatch, impervious to rain. From the leaves he will experiment at making a flour much esteemed in Mexico. The juice he will ferment into the insiduous pulque or distill into the fiery vino mezcal, both of which are highly esteemed drinks in Mexico, and aid largely in keeping the population down, both by doing their own killing and by inspiring their victims to murder. The owner of this plant will deal cautiously with this particular pro- duct. Besides this he will use as soap a sort of waxy substance which exhudes from the leaves, and plait the fibre into rope. Also he will get ice from this extraordinary plant by splitting the leaves lengthwise and laping them flat in the sun. Evapora- tion is so swift from the leaf that thin strips of ice form on it. Finally he will split the stony stems down the centre and have the best razor strop known to man. “I have been particularly fortunate in century plants,” said Mr. Condon ‘for this is the second one that has bloomed in my greenhouses. The other was in 1892, and people came from all That one grew How old this away under a bench most of the time. In Mexico these plants blossom sometimes after twenty or twenty-five years of growth | while other specimens will require seventy | or eighty years. | century plants about, but I am not look- I have a number of other ing for any of them to sprout, as it is very rarely that one of these plants blooms in this climate, and two in a lifetime is as much good fortune as any horticulturalist bas a right to expect.’ Coal is Too Cheap. We have spoken with some of the larg- est employers in the coal districts respect- ing their present difficulties with their men, and without an exception they agree that the pay is too small. They all be- lieve in higher wages, but point to the prices of coal at the seaboard and else- where as an insuperable barrier to im- | proved wages. Competition among themselves has brought coal to an unprofitable level, and the wage scale has followed it steadily downward. They cannot raise the price of coal, because their competition is of such a nature that they cannot maintain an agreement as to either production or price. They must submit to being howled at and abused for not paying their men more money or agree to he stoned for de- manding a better price from consumers. The coal operator’s lot is an unhappy one. Between inability to keep his men at work and inability to get a living price for his coal he is likely to be crushed out, to the advantage of none. He wants to pay higher wages. The prosperity of his employees is reflected in his own condition. How .is he to do it ? There is only one way ; one sound, effi- cacious, and common-sense method. It is to pool all east-bound coal and appoint a single sales agency to distribute it on the basis of a rational apportionment and at a price which will provide wages for the miner, profit for the owner of the coal, and compensation for the railroad and the boat that carry it. How grinding is the reckless competition that starves the miner, impoverishes the employer, and ruins the railroad, when, were the business tactics of the humble miners adopted, there would be instantly a sufficiency for all! The miners are a unit against the aggression of their em- ployers ; they are banded together in one earnest and vigilant association to main- tain the price of their labor, whereas their employers are all at war with each other to see who can mine the cheapest, and so un- dersell all his competitors. The labor trust has the better of it this time. It is winning, as it ought to win and that by the sheer moral merit of its case. Now let the masters follow the men and betake themselves to common sense for the obvious and handy remedy for all their troubles.— New York Sun. Willing to Please. ‘This is too much !”’ he exclaimed when his wife appeared in her new bathing suit for his inspection. “Do you think so 2”? she asked. ‘Well, I'll take off six inches more of the skirt.’ Defined. ‘‘What’s the meanin’ of ‘responserbility,’ Billy #7 *‘Oh, well, suppose as yer 'ad two but- tons on yer trousers an’ one cum orf ; w’y, all the responserbility ’ud be on the other 1”? put onto a net foundation. built over black, white or colored silk. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Some women apparently consider that hey are not looking their best unless their collar is so tight it makes a deep red mark on the throat. Miss Agnes Slack, secretary of the World’s W. C. T. U., who is now in this country, said in a recent speech in Boston that the women of England and America will yet bring about the passage of an arbi- tration treaty. Biting the lips is a very bad habit, and one calculated to do a lot of harm, not only to the lips, but to the expression of a face. Very often people bite their lips on account of nervousness ; and sometimes if a girl has pale, colorless lips she tries to remedy the defect hy an occasional press- ure of the teeth to bring the blood to the surface. This, however, is likely to de- velope into a habit of nibbling at ‘the lips unconsciously, till by and by they get a cracked, parched look, and the mouth loses all its pretty curves through the con- stant distortions it has undergone. A pretty combination for mid-summer is black chantilly and white muslin. An ef- fective design shows a full skirt and blouse waist, hooped about the hem, bust and half-way up the skirt with narrow black insertion. The small sleeves of white are finished with epaulets of black lace, and for a slender figure a sash of lace will make a pretty finish. The hat to be worn with this gown is of white straw, the crown al- most covered with white and pink tulle, and the brim faced with black velvet, This is turned up on the left side, and on the bandeau is fastened a large white bird. At the present day the charm of a wom- an is the sense of cleanliness about her— the bloom on her sweet skin, the luster in her hair, the sparkle of her teeth. This cleanliness is her wise effort to main- tain and if the least particle of what is known as “making up’’ should become ap- parent about her she knowa her charm is lost. The rouge pot, the hare’s foot, the pencil of the eyebrows, if there is a suspicion of the use of any of these, there will be left a hint, a suggestion of uncleanliness in the beholder’s mind. which utterly destroys anything accomplished by skill in the pic- torial line ; for no one who is not virtually an artist can use these articles so that she will not be discovered and she who is discovered bears not only the stigma of having failed in her purpose of the vani- ty of caring too much for her personal ap- pearance, but of having tried to cheat, and having beeu unsuccessful in that also. For the woman who “makes up’ in her dressing room never knows exactly what the effect is going to be in the full sun- shine of outdoors, and she who powders and paints and pencils by daylight has no notion of the effect of her work by candle light, and she who puts on her bismuth and her antimony and goes to the ball or theatre does not know at what moment the gas from the chandelier or from other sources is to streak her with moldy green and bister brown and blue. The good grooming of the bath, the brisk rubbing of the brush, are really all suffi- cient wherever there is any good degree of health. Those whom that does not make lovely will never look lovely in false col- ors, and it will make anyone who is at all healthy and wholesome look more so ; and in the long run, the wholesome look is the greatest attraction of all, for when the beauty of early years has faded, the per- fectly healthy woman who never had any beauty is bound to be more attractive than she who has neither beauty nor health, health itself being a beauty; and continu- ing a beauty into old age. And then the ‘‘well groomed” woman knows not only what sort of clothes to buy, but how to wear them. She is aware that style is not a matter of money, not yet exactly of brains, but of taste. No matter what the fashions decree, a ‘well groomed’ woman always discovers something which is becoming to her. Every year wider scope is allowed for in- dividual fancy. Red will be much worn this fall but the girl who can afford only one dress should not invest in a red one as it is rather con- spicuous. One worn lately by a girl who filled all the requirements called for is worthy of mention. It is red striped pique and red chiffon. The skirt is made with- out a lining, with hem eight inches deep. It is trimmed with folds of the same mate- rial. The body is of red chiffon shirred over cords. A double pleating of red taffeta is placed down the side. The sleeves have three groups of shirring inside the top, forming a puff. Fantail of red taffeta, over sleeve and a fall of the same at the wrist. Shirred stock and belt are finished with pointed bias pieces of taffeta. A black hat and patent leather ties, with very delicate cream yellow gloves and para- sol the same shade, do much in toning down and softening the effect. The sailor hat holds its own. Nothing has heen found that will take its place, as a shade for the eyes. Tan shoes, both high and low, are worn with all outing costumes. There is a notable decrease in the size of the sleeves of jackets and shirt- waists. Duck stocks have taken the place of stiff collars for golf players. The newest patterns have the band part of white and and the tie or ends of colored duck. Maid- ens devoted to their golf clubs wear the club colors not only on their hat bands but in the ends of their stocks. The recent tennis tournament has made that game popular among the women. The favorite costume worn for the sport has heen the white duck skirt and colored shirwaist. Cool evenings also bring forth the dainty and alluring neck ruches. Colored chiffon in all tones is converted into decorations for the neck, but the black and white ruches are the most popular. Feathers, or rather short tips. are nestled in the full puffs of the thin fabric .The Marie Antoin- ette style of wrap is now seen worn over charming frocks of muslin and silk. A dainty affair of pale gray mousseline de soie, plaited, has one of the old fashioned Maltese lace scarfs draped hood-fashion at the back, the long ends extending around the full ruched collar and fastened in front with a jeweled clasp. The latest capes are either only sufficiently long to reach to the elbows, or much longer. almost touching the knees. A blouse wrap has a bodice of plain black satin, pouching over at the waist, where it is held in place by a cur- iously eniumeled belt. Old-fashioned black capes and collarettes are being converted into shoulder wraps. They are made to reach nearly to the waist line. If the lace cape is too short it is made longer by plait- ed chiffon or additional lace ruffled and They are Grass stains may be removed by cream tartar and water.