His Sweetheart's Name. Oh! would you know the sweetest maid Phat ¢'er drank from the fountain, The fairest one, the rarest one In valley or on mountain? If I should tell the secret now You then would know it well sir; But as she's mine, by vows divine, J} think 1 will not well, sir, Her eyes are blue, Of tender hue, Aud elear as yonder wel Though me you blame, Her pretty name ¥'il never, never tell, sir. 1 1, sir; She's a farmer's daughter deas, Aud trips among the daisies; She's like a dove, my little love, And [| will sing her praises; Thougu down the rosy, rosy lane, To greet me she advances; With smiles so rare, she doth not care + To meet a stranger's glances. Her eyes are blue Of tender hue, And clear as yonder well, sir: Though me you blame, Her pretty name I'll never, never tell, sir My little wild-flower bloometh swet, Alar irom town or city; Her matden heart is full of love; Her soul is full of pity; i The grand old farm glows with the charm | She gives, from field to dell, sir; { But as she's mine by vows divine, + name 1 will not tell, sir, Her eyes are blues, Of tender hue; Her voice is quite divine, sir; nd when the leaves il with the sheaves, She'il change her name for mine gl AIT HRA, LOVE'S AWAKENING, “You understand cine and beverages?’’ ts softly assented about the medi- x es,” the new nurse, She had laid aside her widow's bon- net and veil, In her p black dress, serviceably unadorned, sue looked very | shim and young. Though her hands were so soft and white, they looked capable. Mrs. Rameaux might be inexperienced—she owned as much berself--but she would assuredly learn quickly, and intelli gently; and her sympathy would never be at fault. | This much the young doctor’s pro- fessional intuitions told him as he saw her softly bead over her first ¢ot in the extemporized fever hospital. Then he passed on. } She might be a young woman and a beautiful one. The atmosphere of the countryside around bad been such these many weeks that a man, watching as he did, day and , by the bedsides of the dying and the dead, could have hisdrift and tenure of mind scarcely such that facts like these would bear in upon it with any element of the exciting. It had been Had beer? It day, week after knowing} no a hit nigut $ visitat Day after week, the fever raged, abatement. T who could flee, leaving all, did so. Among those who stayed fresh vy were marked and dropped wi new sun. A great pall, an awe- fallen er the co ectre of Death amor inn an awful was so still. 080 $ ALHE every it 4 ar, Haq The sp walking their down, a familiar a board, had given to all the faces a serious expression, terrified had asked ng with th some word mm with tri) > x y SLTUCK it Ov m- street oieat gUesL oY acted amor an explosive. v 100 gO al all, I shall stay.” \ Lek ¥ “Many hands will be needed—and I may be of use. It is what I have wanted, It is my opportunity.” she might have said it was what she had prayed for—the chance of devoling herself, of practically renouncing the world, of leading a consecrated life, It had been her one wish since her husband had died—she scarcely at the time more than a child. All seemed to have died, too. Her friends said she was morbid. Mrs. Buneaux only smiled gen Her smile in those days was sadder than tears, “She will get over it said the friends next. S» young, so lovely, how could it be otherwise? This giving up, as it were. of all her future; this monastic simplicity of dress; this visiting of the poor and the sick, and dedicating of all her days to the cutting-out of charity children’s clothes—this was a phase; it must pass; the reaction would come. There was a mingling of the sarcastic the impatient in these assevera- The inpatience predominated, pethaps, To prate of charity and the love of one's fellow-man, is a thing permis- sible In good society—provided it be | not carried too far. But to have | one’s intimates suddenly proceed to put such theories into effect is a grievance to be looked upon as personally offzn- SIVe, jut Mrs. Rameaux’s unconscious- ness and serenity under this half | or wholly expressed opposition were singularly unwavering, If this was a **fad?’ she failed to tire of it as quickly as flesh and blood usual- ly dispose of such. When this last astounding announce- ment came, the Rameaux acquaintance 1 : had an air of dismissing the matter as | 4 ua le Liye “0 i Aaliu now having passed beyond comment | altogether. “Lucy always was queer,” said one | female voice. i “Not always,’ retorted a masculine | organ more dublously. ‘That is, she | was always rather high-strung. But— well, having been married to Rameaux might be enough to-’' Then the speaker bethought himself and stopped. Meanwhile, the new nurse gently, with soft footfall, passed on in her self- chosen work, Tne weeks dragged by, still the fever raged. She had held the hands of those writhing in mghtless delirium of pain and moistened the lips of the dying. } The strain had on her. The fine oval of her face had grown more trans- parent. About the full brown of her eyes the blue circles had hollowed. . ~ She was bending now over the pillow of a yo girl who had been hovering on the owy brink for days, To- night the crisis been reached. girl was of a singularly nervous and sensitive temperament, and through all her ravings Mrs. Rameaux’s low tone and magnetic touch had bad a strangely soothing, controlling effect upon her. her voluntary nurse, came to coustitute on the latter one of those claims by which all rich natures are in bondage to some weaker one, that the eyes were closed and the chest sound and normal sleep, she realized that the crisis was passed and the life saved, Mrs, Rameaux suddenly gave and burying her face in her “Mrs. Ram+aux]” She started up breathless, coloring “I.—don’t think me a very weak. 1 is the mattter with of his grey eyes, were not the worn is,” You 11 you matter out. Wi “But I know what said, *“*You are have you ill also.” Ile spoke with an almost abrupt 1 “How can I rest? They need me, door to a visla The faint light ickered over her vhite sweetness of which 1ndignat t unwonted dried das mt through the open of white cots beyond. ion a t emotional her own most ee] Frey A CY do have not need as you been giving thi retorted Dr. “lt is ¢ May, pointing t You to hols lavish convent bet ween amid the They stoo where at sphere ntiment sweeh. “lizzie on murmured extenuatio! have been sorry for her.” After the were would hay depends given much { eel TA 119 y unworthy—was There were elements broughy back Mrs. tragic experience, She Rameaux’s shrank—wi of all her face—{1 any might seem to bear uj of 1 life in whic! i ii i had been bruised i . yn ar el 6 coul t and fury of the disease pent themselves, There was tough a great lull Mrs. Rameaux had stepped one night the door. The wind was soft and humid, and there was a vague SUITING of spring in the air, Ragged tatters of dark streak-like clouds swept the faint of moon; and above the watcher’s the bare trees clashed together a rasping of dry branches, Mrs. Rameaux ch drew a long breath. When she up coming through the towards the door. He was pale, and she noticed at once a drawn look about his eyes that she had never seen before. He stopped near her. “Will you rest now?’ he said. “You mav. The worst is And—Liz- zie 18 nearly well” shit to disc tue head with wed her eyes and looked Dr. May hghted Wiis hall over. into Mrs. Bameaux’s cheek, “You have more 1,” she said, * You look iL” “Do IY He still lingered opposite her. Ie did not seem to attach any importance to her words, The breath of the night wind brushed zoftly in between them, He put his hand abruptly into the pocket of his inner coat. The object he drew out was very small and dark. “] saw these to-day, driving through woods, Toey are wonderfully You Mrs. Rameaux held out hand, and in it he laid two frail wild She caught them, with rapid, sensitive motion, to her face, “Oh, 1 like them-1 like Thank you,” And then she turned and left him, drove slowly away. There was a strange tumult in his veins, It was as though he could feel the throb of the spring in all this hushed, awakening nature. His path led him by way of the woods again. Through the naked wterlacing boughs above him the moonlight, white and watery, filtered in ghostly gleams, Faint, intangible perfumes of stirring soad-life haunted the air, He seemed to breathe the very soul of the night. A desperate joy that life was still his, to feel, to enjoy, seized him, Nature, long su by the chill charnel- house atmosphere of death, asserted itself with a mighto rebound, He sud. denny drew his horse with a sharp | tightening of the muscies, There was a reason for this throb and | rush of blood through his arteries, And | he had found it in the phantom of | a woman's face, sweet and pale as | a white camellia bud, and framed in black, that Lad risen and floated him, - luminous as a vision wrought from the beams of the moon He found all hig patients doing well. He drove back rapidly, The whole [Ie had not hopad to see her again, But as he went in she was crossing the hall, She held some bandages iu her | hands and her sleeves were drawn up from her delicate wrists and the | waxen curve of her arms, In her dress he saw the two wood- violets. A silver bar of moonlight she turned towards him with a half smile, The fever in his veins burned more fiercely. Never had there been such a night as this! They two were alone on With his eyes on hers, drawing nearer to her, he spoke at once. “I love you,” he said—"1 love you. You are the one woman, and we were meant one 101 the other.” White tot him. “You are ill! know what you are sa He caught her by fierce gesture “Po not speak in that way. gay is as hfe and death to me.’ } x if t } . £1111 ter} She drew herself up to her full height he lips, she started from 14 2 You don’t 4 “1 1y vAVINE ying. the ' hand with rembling in 1 A id every 1 n you si Know ih 1 1 } f 1 ¥ 1 81 5 Ol is dead oa id Ag me fr oul vurie arales iit Hil any as { Wi - ie A slight ue Mra, Rameaux was pale as the whit sroat. Pale? As she me clear gaze of the haggard eyes, In» ill intelligence had or mingle wilh a nameless or swept, m yanted, desp rus, over ' Ii ryait pain, ¥ 1 we med, wit ow and a sullasing neck, br chesks, she took Her effort she another step forward, lip quivered. Oae despairing made to master the emotion, then, like tall, slender sapling that is felled to the ground, dropped suddenly on her and, as once before, buried her face against the border of the col It was y st in the room a long interval, except for her sobs. Then he touched her bent head, She looked up, crying at his face. “Oh. I have hurt you! I agitated you! [How ill you look! “No.” eame the deep breathless anawer. “You make me live!" She dared not speak or move, holding his hand in both of hers. Then when the spasm had passed: “Ig it true, dear?" Again the beautiful eolor sweeping over neck and brow. “Oh, I never thought to k nees, deathly iii the sight of have 's came love—~I way again!’ she cried with a sobbing “It is all so strange! Just But when you fell {ll—when you took the fever—the very | “Hush, hush! Are you sorry the | She had buried her face against “I am weak-—to love you," she whis- | pered low. i But for all answer he drew her close, “You have suffered,” he said simply. i —Spanish and Russian short jackets of flounce lace are made up over surah, the edges of the jacket formed of the well-defined scallops of the lace, these opening over plaited or shirred vests of the silk, There are also cream-colored sets of Irish point lace, which inciude gilet cuffs and deep Charles IX collars, ready for use at a moment's notice, and always dressy and becoming. Also maring collars with scarf ends attached, in beaded nets and all the fancy white and cream laces, to say nothing of legions of beautiful devices in lace, from the stately Medici fraise to the simple ruche and frills of etamine net. —Immensely big buttons—too large to pass through a button: hole are used simply decoratively, being sewed on dresses that are ned with hooks and eyes. LOOK AT YOUR SOLES. Different Styles of Shoes, “New pair of shoes, eh! Well, I guess you need them, and I’m not cer- looks o’ these soles,” aud the speaker, his left calf on his right knee, exposed remarks, he isn’t it, how many in this country in a the different et stylishly-shaped shoe, toe and Continuing his worn year, and also There you see a tapering . 1 Yih. on the foot of some elegant gentleman the polished floor, keeping time to latest waltz, polka or schottische. I the hard pavement, it leads yon it in disgust at its unsteadiness Lo one side, walking on pers, as it were) owing to the inebriated condition of the wearer. “There goes a coarse cowhide brogan, a made ho! 'twere intended to last forever. It ‘soled? the up- shoe as ApPeEAr- ance, and 18 § { { iriena . i 5 wth pearance labor of mand 1 young ths legged. b ai K at They are shoes thal toes early days in near) family in America. We don’ for certain whether babies are proud of their first not. My observa. L rection serve # Ol shoes or in this cases Inclined me toward the tive and i oward I do know, however, that I the little fellow does when he has put on his little feet is to kick as hard as can to see if he can shake them ofl; not s10- ceeding, he grasps one at a time with his two dimpled fists and puts it into his rose bud mouth how tastes “Now. here 1s a pair of shoes, a Ii out of the ordinary they were built for a hunting shoe, or boot, after the idea of a young gent here in 1 They afford protection from cold, keep out snow and water and brace lhe “Then. here's the riding boot that might tell many a thrilling story were it imbued with lite and furnished with a Lively tongue. It's a pretty thing, isn’t it? And I tell you, to see them filled with the calves of a good looking young gent banging gracefully tions di have in some aflirma- n others { he and 00 it #41 wie Hn Lil, OWI. eg, a boot 3 sore eyes,’ - Milk Venders of the Canary Islands. Another industry is that of milk ven- ders, Goats's milk is used almost ex- clusively. And instead of carrying the milk about in gourds or in cans, the goats themselves are driven into town his servant inspecting the entire pro- cess, This certainly prevents the milk- man from entering into silent partner- ship with the pump. Cows do not seem to be used for milk, but are employed very generally for draft, The yoke does with us, but are fastened to the fore. head just below the horns; so that the cattle seem to bunt their load along rather than to draw it. I understood that the gain in this sort of harness 1s that thereby thereby they secure the strength of the neck as well as that of the body. If they would hitch to the top of the horns they might get the strength of those too, HP ——————— Crit Davie, of Harrodsburg, Ky , purchased recently a chestnut coupe horse, b years old, sixteen hands high and very stylish, for Geerge A. Sin- FASHION NOTES Wide, white IT reules braid, fringed and knotted at the ends, forms the gash belt falling low on the hips of many frocks for girls of 12 to 15. i-When the sacgue-form of frock 18 used for little girls it is now med as to simulate a long, round amd full skirt, with high hip draperies, aria § ct ¥ ain —Pea-jackets are provided for cool and there are summer ulsters and dust coats for traveling. Play suills are made of thick twilled linen, and for country use mothers will find a blouse and kilt skirt of dark blue denims one of the most useful items in the outiit, — The new silk mulls have stripes of mossy looking friese that are very pret- combination with the thin foun- dation fabric. Other goods of this sort have stripes of satin open-work, revering, Yet others ha over-pattern resembling nille, the heavy spots; where there is appearance of kmots, thick plush. —Coats and kilts of chevl nel, and also of thick brown linen are shown for country are jackets of fine linen duck or cord pique: These are worn with walsts fine cambrie having plain or embroidered ruffles at and wrists, a! own the front. The kilt underwaist, a h and 1HKe ve an netted « nade being made W and blouse of the neck id also £ to al f-fitling bil HE over from 1 Yeu » 4 I Teaches oll) r and tear been BO i Fithin the few te fallen into disrepute, and that there is soine- will be welcome fell constrained that asl years Us qui jabde hose who to wear it, —Every-day suits for boys are made of gingham, linen, blue apron check or light flannels or suitings. They are in one-piece suits for younger boys, and in kilt suits for the next grade older. The little dresses that the well-grown boy at 2 or 24 years should wear are made with a yoke, and either one box- plait down the middle of the back or eacn side of the middle, five box-plaits both in front and at the back, or with two in front and three in the back. These may be real plats, or the ma- i i i i i ASW HORSE NOTHI3. Sr - A, J. Cassatt has purchased of Colonel Doswell, of Virgina, the prouy Mr. Douner's g. m. Russells, 6 years old, a full er of Maud 8, has been bred to Startie, sire of M Denver (Col. f Bell wed] the | field for £10,000, - Mr. D Iryea (rould again sorpewhere in mile Lrack, mare el bietonian, —)etrolit has the 2.27 and 2.25 Cireult programme from $1000 to $1200 § sum total purses fot classes on Lhe Grand the of purses, we ET LET TE lard h the road e BE resignen iv as residency \rK recently el ; Be 8 brother dhie lale George 1. Lorillard. —{. N. Payn’s blk. s. m ¥ of the entries to the free-for-all novelty race at Ion il r, which did not 0 Harry Wilkes and Phil ol Lie other entries, % iry } {s Monmouth : AS hich he was a8 One + » heste Annie Laelie (Olid Maud Mess 11 0 10 American Darby Jerome Phil Th Char Occident 10 2 16% it 3 ~The Suburban handicap, which was run at Sheepshead Bay on Thurs jay, June 10th, resulted in an easy vic- tory for 8. 8. Brown’s br. c. Trouba dour, by Lisbon, dam Glenluine, his time being 2.123. There were twenty starters, This was the third running of the Suburban, a sweepstakes for 3.year-olds and upward, at §100 each half forfeit, $25 if declared bj £2500 added, the February 20, with receive $5 #) of the added Le oniy ing the waist cooler and lighter. The ine, and the fullness below this point makes the skirt. There may be a plain hem only, or fhe hem and several tucks it Some of these dresses are double-breasted and have two rows of buttons. Metal buttons or those of vegelable Ivory are used on goods, while pearl or bone buttons are more appropriate for washable ma- terials, Flannel suits: should be kept in suitable wearing condition throughout ones should be dressed in them. linen dresses does very well with ordi- nary weather; but there is a chilly that requires something for proper protection. As soon as the boy, by reason of years or size, has outgrown his dresses, there are Kilt suits of serge, flannel, camels’-hair or any of the light. weight wool fabrics that are ordinarily employed for boys’ wear. The skirts are laid In deep plaits, often with a single, very wide box plait in front and narrower plaits around the rest of the skirt. The coat can either be double or single-breasted, and there may be side or box-plaits or a vest, in the latter case the sides of the coat being slightly cut away at and below the waist-line. There are no collars on any of the new coats, the collar of the skirt waist upon which the skirt 1a buttoned turning over the neck of the coat, which is bound or faced with braid or stitched by machine. The cuffs of the shirt waist reach the wrists and show a line of white below the sleeves, —Maud 8. is being trained to trot without toe-weights, the* third 10 per cent of the stakes. Troubadour carried 115 pounds. Gen- eral Monroe won the first Suburban with 124 pounds up, in 2 11§, and Pon tiac, last vear’s winner, made the distance (1; miles; 2.004, earrying 102 pounds. Mr, Brown 18 said to have won $42,600 on the victory of his horse outside of the stakes, The new York World of June 11, has this to say of the race: “In racing circles, especially since the Kentucky Derby was run, n¢ other event has been so discussed, © the eighty odd acceplances more than dozen had been named as sare winners, Twenty riders weighed in and the: in iid showed that the public and the sporting things’ absent were Exile and Pontiac The latter had never been considered @ i i a splint, and had to be ‘scratched.’ Aa to the twenty that did appear, ther presented a magnificent spectacle They got an even start, which was vir tually a sure thing with the flag ‘onnor’s hands, They rap a good race, and while the finish was not as close or exciting as it was when General Monroe just beat War Eagle and Jack of Hearts, it was a good race cleverly won by Troubadour, with Richmond second. Away back in the ruck were the blasted hopes of thou. sands who had pinned their faith and invested their money on Joe Cotton, Favor, Ban Fox, Barnum, Lizzie Dwyer and Springfield, all of which had been named sure winners, badour ran in the lead from start to finish, and won very easily. He was den by Fitzpatrick, who never tain Brown, must have been very gratifying especially as he not only stake, but raked in a much of which was on at