HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NTILi DESPEKANDUM. Tmo Dollars par Annum. VOL. IX. RIDGrWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUKSDAY, SEPTEMBER -11, 1879. NO. 29. I I Ovcrthe Wires. I hour a faint, low singing, Like the sound oi distant choirs; Tis a message gleefully winging Over the telegraph wires. And what are the glad wires humming As they stretch in the sunlight away T " I am coming, coming, coming I am coming home to-day 1" And now I hear a sobbing, Like some soul sitting alone, With a heart that is weary throbbing, And lips that can only moan. Oh ! what are the sad wires sighing As they reach through the darkness ot night T " He is dyin g, dying, dying Come on the wings oi light !" The tit illation oi laughter Next tails upon my ear, And a burst of mad mirth after, Like the sound of a distant cheer. And what is the gleeful story That the round wires spread afnrT " Our Nine is orownod with glory Hip, hip, hip, hurrah !" Oh ! what are the wires relating, Morning, and noon, and night T "The market is fluctuating !" " Uoports of the Sonnto fight !" Cashier S a defaulter !" ' Arrest a ninn named Drawn !" "Jones died to day by the halter !" "Wheat went suddenly down !" " Deal ." Horn'." "Going!" "Coming ?' "Oelugo"' and "Drought!" and " Fires !" Singing, and sobbing, and humming Over the telegraph wires. Ella Wheeler. A MOUNTAIN RIDE. Of course we girls all pitied Rachel Tinklinti), but wc never quite made her one of us. Siio was such a shy little tiling, and Mushed if you spoke to her, and aeted afraid of her own voice, and wore print dresses alt the time, and never was in vited to our partus. She iived in a tumble-down old house which had been a very grand mansion once. The Tinkhams had been great people in my grandmother's day. Nothing was left ot their grandeur now, however, for there had been wine in one generation, and whisky in the next, and delirium l.vuieriK in the third. Hay's father was the third. She had a. wretched time keeping house for him. Her mother was dead. ' Wo" were the girls of Mrs. Bland" private school. A dozen of us were out upon the east verandah one morning. We were all talking at once. Some one, it seemed, had said the high school girls were bet ter scholars than we werfc " Very well. So they are." This was Kate Avery, and site was standing up by the lattice where the morning-glory vines grew, and where a hundred clusters ot little bells swung out blue and purple ami rose-pink, li Kate was anything, she was honest, though she was handsome too. " Wc have music and French conver sation, and Lou has a phaeton, and 1 have two donkeys, and Queeny has been to Europe; but," lowering her voice, "it's an awful secret though it's the truth. The high school girls are miles and miles beyond us in Latin and mathe matics." " Indeed they are," said I. "I'm what mademoiselle calls an 'idgit' in arith metic. I really suppose that two and two make four, but if one of those girls were to tell me that they made five, I shouldn't dare dispute her." "The fact is," said Kate, "little Tink liani is the only one of us who is sure of her multiplication table. But then she doesn't really belong to us Site would not bo hero if it wasn't for sweeping and dusting to pay her tuition. There site is this minute." A small, tirod-Iooking figure in a coarse a-ess came in sight round the corner. It Wiw R'tchel with her load of books in her arms. " Shu 1.33 worn that dress every day for three months," said Lou Stedman; " I verily believe she goes to bed when it is done up." " My dear, she ean't. Site lias to wash ,-ind iron it herself. Oil, there is Queeny !" cried Kate. It was such a gentle, grace ful girl who came walking fast to over take Kay. caught step as she overtook her, and began talking pleasantly. " Doesn't she look nice in that seal-brown suit? Ard isn't it just like her to carry Hay's books for her?" Qiieeny's real name was Alice You would have known why we called her Queeny if you had seen her walk beside little Tinkham that morning, open the gate, and stand still, erect, with that grand way of hers, for the girl to pass through. I believe we all rather wor shiped Queeny. Kate met them with her forehead all tied up into hard knots, and asked Kay, "didn't she 'want to be an angel,' and help her with those dreadful fractions? ' So they two sat down on the door ctep, and the rest went into the school room. Then Ixu called out to Ray to come and dust her desk. She said "it wasn't half dusted." Queeny said: "Ray is busy, I will do it;" and she, silent and looking prouder than ever, dusted Lou's desk herself. It was this morning, Friday, that Mrs. Bland told us that to-morrow would be " Mountain day." All the schools in our town drive to the mountain once a year. Our day always comes in September. This time Mrs. Bland couldn't go, so she sent along her cousin to matronize us. She was a fidgety person, afraid of spuine, nun jiu guuu any way, "We are to start at nine o'clock," Queeny said. " Ray, can you bo ready so early ?" Queeny was a new scholar. She didn't know that Ray never went with us to such places. Now she flushed and replied : " I don't think I can go to the moun tain." "Certainly, you are going." Alice said it in her queeniest way. " If you can't go to-morrow we will put off . going." . "Saturday is my day to clean the school-room." Ray answered. N -, We will clean it. Let's begin this minute," and off came Queeny 'e cutis jn.d Kate's, all the ouffa, in act. We went to work, and had such fun sweep. Ingand scrubbing. Just imagine Kate and Queeny washing the floor. They did it well, too. "Now, remember, Queeny said, the last thing, " everybody is to wear her oldest 'dress. And, Ray, would you be kind enough to bring hard-boiled eggs for your luncheon? One apiece for us all round?" Ray looked bright ail over, and said yes. Now I think it was just beautiful of Queeny to think of that. She knew Lit tle Tinkham couldn't bring frosted cake and French rolls as the rest of us did. So she spoke of the eggs. We all re membered that Ray had wonderful chickens. I am sure the word about old dresses, too, was meant to help her. The next morning Obed Taintor came round with his uncovered omnibus and his two great horses and picked us up. We went for Ray last. She was stand ing in front of the old house, beside the tumble-down gate, with her basket of eggs in her hand. She looked perfectly happy, and her dress was so clean and smooth Kate whispered to me: "That dress has been washed and ironed since last night. Just think of it!" It was a clear, warm morning and every one was in such a glow of good spirits. I think we were all glad we had Rachel with us. But if it hadn't been for Queeny Ray would never have gone, and if Ray hadn't gone the rest of us would never have come home, and this story for there is a story would never have been told. It is eight miles to the mountain and there is a carriage-road to the top. The last two miles are very hard nna steep, because you rise nearly a thousand feet above the Connecticut river in that dis tance. But Obed was a steady, good driver and his horses were steady, good horses. We always drew lots for the seat be side Obed, and it was one oi our treats to get him talking about his " team." as lie called it. "What are their names P" asked Queeny. " Well "a pause. Obed was a slow talker, but he had a great deal to say. " The off one there is Cresar an' the nigh one lie is Alexander." "Are they afraid of the cars?" " Aint afeard o' notliin' in natur." Obed paused for us to think this over, and then went on : " Know too much, them creeturs do. They've carried a load to the mountain four times a week all summer. They'd take ye 'bout 's well ef I wa'n't along. They know well beats all what them animals know. Understand 't I'm talk in' 'bout 'em this minit 's well 's you do. They're used to being talked to. My wife she thinks a sight of 'em. Beats all! She'll go out to the barn, and she'll carry 'em apples, and she'll be all over 'em; an' one week when she was sick, an' kop' in the house, you c'n b'lieve it or not. but it's a fact that them creeturs lost flesh. She braids up their front hair for 'em, and ties it with a red rib hin one day, an' then the next day she upbraids it, and it's crimped, all in the fashion, you'll understand. As they was acomin' to a party to-day, they've got their hairs crimped." But alas for Ctesar, and alack for Alexander. It was a terrible piece of work that you came near doing that day, though we girls never shall feel that you were much to blame. You see this was what happened. We were all tucked into the wagon as tight as tigs in a box, that afternoon, ready to start for home, when Lou called out that she had left lur parasol. She must, get out, and run up to the tower to get it. " You just keep y'r sittin'," said Obed. " I'll fetch yer umberill;" and he started for tlie tower. It was about ten rods off. The tower and stable are built in a small cleared space at the top of the mountain. Ail around and below are thick old woods and great rocks. Obed had just gone out of sight when Queeny gave a little scream, and put her hand to her eyes. "Something has stung me," she said, and then, that instant, while wo were all looking at her, it hap pened. The horses both reared, then gave a plunge, the omnibus seemed to rise from the ground with a great leap, and sooner than I can tell it, we were all being borne, at an awful speed, down that nar row rocky road. I glanced toward Cresar and Alexander, and saw a terrible pair of wild animals. I looked toward the girls, and saw two rows of white, frightful faces. The reins were dragging on the ground. Some of us were shrieking, " Whoa!" A tew were getting ready to jump. All this in an instant, and then, suddenly. above the noise of the wheels and of everything else, we heard a voice ring out clear: " Sit still, girls! I think I can stop the horses." It was Ray Tinkham, of all people in the world . She stood up with a steady look in her eyes. I must explain here that the road from the tower runs down a gentle slope for half a mile, and there comes a sharp turn. Beyond that is Long hill, the steepest, most dangerous part of the way. Kate seized my hand and whispered : " If the horses are not stopped before they get to the turn, we 3hall all he killed." Ray was climbing over the driver's seat. She always could climb anywhere, liken cat. She didn't pause an instant, but she called back to me: "Natty Brock, put on the brakes. The rest of you sit still. Only pray as hard as you can." t I sprang to the driver's seat, and lammed down the handle of the brakes. I prayed, too. I believed I should never pray again. I saw and thought of a hundred things at once. I saw the great tree trunks and the huge black rocks close upon u. I remembered the clematis over the front door at home, and wondered who would tell my father that I was dead. Meanwhile, Ray was over the dash board, and down with her feet over the whiftletree. How she did it, I shall never know, but the next we 6aw of her, 8he was creeping along ihe pole between the horses, steadying herself with her hands on their backs. The horses went tearing on like wild horses, their manes flyiner, and their great bodies quivering all over. Every instant the girls were becom ing more excited. Queeny was holding Mrs. Bland's cousin with both hands, to prevent her leaping out. Kate cried t "We art almost to the turn. What is Ray doing? She will frighten the horses worse than ever 1" and she covered her eyes. 1 lie brow of the hill was not forty feet off. Far behind, we could hear Obed's voiee screaming to the horses to stop. The keeper of the tower was fly ing toward us. But they were too far awav to do anv good. There seemed not one chance in a thousand for us. But that very instant, when we all believed we were lost, we looked at Ray. We saw her reach forward with one hand, and grasp the reins which joined the heads of the horses together. Just where the connecting straps crossed one another her fingers clutched them. One sharp, herce jerk ot those great heads backward, and the horses slack ened their speed, and in an instant more stopped. The wagon stood still, although the creatures were snorting and plunging yet. But that small hand of Ray's held on with a death-grip, and in a moment, more Obed caught the horses by their heads. His face was as white as it ever could be, and lie spoke one word only. It was i .nornets r The horses had been stunar in moro than twenty places. They were unhar nessed at once, and we were all out on the ground directly. We laughed and we cried, and Mrs. Bland's cousin distinguished hoYself by fainting away. " I don't blame the horses in the least," Queeny said. "One sting is bad enough," and she showed where her eye was beginning to swell. "The hornets came swarming out of the woods there." As for Obed, he was a humili ated man. " But I was the one to blame." be said. " I thought the horses would 'a' stood till the'r hides dropped offn the'rribsj but I tell ye ther' never Was the team hitched up yet that 'ud stan' hornets. Blarst the creeturs!" he added, in under tone. " But Rav Tinkham !" cried Kate, and she went up to where the little thing was sitting on a rock, looking pale. "You saved us all, you blessed child. How did you ever think of doing that?" "My grandmother stopped some run away horses in that way once," gasped Ray. "I didn't know whether I could stop these, but I knew somebody must do something, or we should all be dashed to pieces." " Well," spoke Obed,, "I've known o' that thing's hem' done just once afore in my lifetime, but it was a boy that did it. There's a savin' 'monirst teamin' men that, when you haint got the reins, you can stop a runaway it you walk out on the pole and grip hold o' the bridles, but 'taint every horse that'll stand it." " But wasn't it splendid of Ray ?" cried Lou, going over, nrM putting her arm round Iter. " Never knew a girl c'd have so much pluck," answered the driver. "If she hadn't V been liuht on 'er feet, an' level in 'er head, she never c'd 'a' done it. 1 tell you if these horses hadn't been un common good horses, notliin' on airth would 'a' stopped "Pm'." Ami Ray? I never meant to make so long a story of it, but I must tell you that we gave her a party soon after this. All the fathers, and mothers, and brot it ers went, and we carried her a carpet for her room and a new chamber set, and nice new clothes all through; and a few of the gentlemen gave her a bank-book, whatever that may mean. I only know that she was to have the income of cer tain money, and that it wm enough to educate her thoroughly. We had the best time that night, and Queeny's lather took Kay out to $upper, and she sat at his rigltt hand, and everybody treated her as though she had been a princess of the blood. I do believe there never was a happier girl on earth than Rachel that night. Youth'' t Companion. American Honey Abroad. Twelve months ago no American honey in the comb was sold in England, al though a considerable quantity was ex ported from New York to Europe in glass jars. Now the trade is a large one, and the New York Commercial Advertiser tPlls how it has been worked up by Mr. Hoge, a well-known bee and honey man. After contriving means to ship the pro duct without hreaking the combs Mr. Hoge set himself to get it introduced on the royal table. Accident suggested a plan to this end which only American enterprise would have ever dared to carry out. Mr. Hoge, while dining in an Eng lish chop house in London, took up a bottle of sauee, and on the label found that the condiment was prepared by one who had been high steward at Windsor Castle. "There's my man," "thought Mr. Hoge, and away he went in search of him: ultimately succeeding in obtain ing an introduction to the inventor of the sauce. I he merits of the sauce was of course the first thing spoken of, and the American praised it to the utmost. He then, said that his object in seeking the former high steward was to intro duce the sauce into the United States, where of course it would certainly have a large sale through the New York house which had sent him to England. Arrangements were made to have the sauce introduced here, and the ex-high steward was in good humor. This was the tine to in troduce the real object of the visit, and the American said : Now, I want you to do a good turn for me. Can you not get a case of American comb honey placed on the Queen's table? The honey will tell for itself afterward, as vou will find when I send you a case for yonr own use. .Nothing easier." replied the ex-hieh steward: "I am well ac quainted with the present high steward of Windsor Castle, and he will do any thing I request of him." The next day a case of the best honey was sent to the ex-high steward's house, and soon after another one was in Windsor Castle. The beautiful combs were placed on the Queen's table, and her grandchildren, the daughters of the late Princess Alice, were so pleased with it that the Queen gave orders that ten cases should be at once purchased for the use of the castle, meaning, of course, her own table. . The fact of this order having been given by the Queen soon became known through the enternrise ot the American, and the London press took up the subject of American comb honey, praising it to the utmost. Even the British Bee Jour nal took back all it had said against the honey, and was loud in its praise. The result was that the American comb honey was to be found in a very short time on every "fashionable" person's tahle, and its success in Great Britain as ured. An order has been received to ship at once 500,000 pounds of the new crop, to be followed by a like qu intity at a later penoo. TIMELY TOPICS. - At the close of last year there wero 81,841 miles of . railroad in opera tion in the United States, with a popu lation of about 38,000,000. The number of miles of road in operation in Europe was about 94,000, tor a population of something over 300,000,000. The United States thus has a mile of railroad to about 464 inhabitants, and-Europe one mile to about 3,323 inhabitants ; or, in other words, every inhabitant of " the United States has about seven times as much railroad as every European.. A congress for the improvement of the condition of the blind has been held in Berlin. Foremost among the ques tions was that of the printed or written character to bo used by t ie blind, and the congress decided that the system of writing and printing by combination of raised points, first introduced by Louis Braille in 1834, should be adopted in Germany without modification. Another important decision was that the prac tice ot uniting the blind and the deaf in the same institution was highly objec ttonable. The congress also recorded the fact that in the experience of German institutions rope-making is one of the best trades there practiced by ttie blind. The funeral of Herlig, a Socialist mas ter turner, was the scene ot a great So cialist demonstration at Dresden. Sev eral thousand sympathizers followed the body to the grave, but the police took advantage of an old Saxon law against the public exhibition of repub lican emblems to forbid the wearing of political ensignia. No funeral oration was permitted, ana wnen a woman stepped forward and spoke a few words an order was given to arrest her, the execution of which was, however, ren dered impossible by the closing in of the crowd. Several wreaths were thrown on the coffin, but not before the police had insisted on the removal of the red silk ribbons with whicli they were tied. A great business is being done this year in tlie importation ot iron from Africa for use in American manufac tories. The great reason for preferring African iron to native ore is. of course. its cheapness, but it has the further nd vantage of being remarkably free from phosphorus. Tins ore has been imported to some extent for two or three vears. but never in such quantities as now. one authority estimating that two hun dred thousand tons will be shipped to Now loi'k tins year and half as much to Philadelphia, the latter for use at the iron works in lictuieiiem and Johnstown and by the Pennsylvania Steel Com pany. Another notable feature in tlie ii on uaue la me importation oi nessumer pig, of which forty five thousand tons ire known to be Under contract for tlie United States. There have liech no im portations of this sort before since 1&.'1. The great importance which ostrich farming has acquired :n Southern Af rica may he seen from an ostrich auc tion recently held at Middleburgj Cape Land, the lowest -price paid lor one pair of these birds was 180; and several pairs fetched JLaba. A lew years ago ostriches were obtained by hunting only, and nt that time a good bird cou'd be bought for a menagerie or a zoologi cal garden at a moderate price. But since their domestication uhtl the devel opment of ostrich farming as an Indus try their price lias risen enormously. At present tlie Zoological Garden m london owns not one living ostrich. From tlie Cape of Good Hope 2.207 pounds of ostrich feathers were exported in 1800, at a value of 10,901 ; but in 1873 the exportation had risen to 31,581 pounds, at a value of 159,670, and l e cently a hunch of picked bloods were sold at Port Elizabeth for 07 15s. a pound that is, about 15s. a feather. The Anthracite. Coal Fields. At the meeting of the American Science Association in Saratoga P. W. Sheafer, of Pottsville, Penn., spoke of the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylva nia and their rapid exhaustion. He said : The work of mining anthracite coal in that State was begun in 1820 with 305; now 20,000,000 tons per annum are pro duced. Mr. Sheafer asserted that only one-third of tlie coal goes into consump tion; two-thirds are wasted, lost in the mines and in preparation. He put the maximum product at about 50,000,000 tons per annum, and at the present rate of increase this limit will be reached in the year 1900, and in 186 years, say in the year 2065, our anthracite coal fields will be exhausted. Then we must fall back on our bituminous coal area, whicli reaches tlie enormous total of 200,000 square miles, say over 400 times tlie area of the anthracite. Mr. Sheafer said that the competition between our several coal companies and by them with the bituminous coal will always keep tlie price moderate. He doubted if Great Britain could much increase its now enormous product of 136,000,000 tons, yet at her present rate of increase she will exhaust her coal above 4,000 fee in about the time in which our anthra cite output will cease. But she has no 200,000 square miles, as we have in tlie West. Czar Peter and the Wig. Peter the Great was a half-savage in his manners. He never had pleasantry enougli to play a joke, though some of his rudenesses had a very comical effect: On his second visit vo a town in Hol land! he and the burgomaster of the place, attended divine service, when nn unconscious action of the czar almost upset the gravity of the congregation. Peter, feeling his head growing cold, turned to the heavily-wigged chief mag istrate at his side and transferred the wig, the hair of which flowed down over the great little man's shoulders, to his own head, and sat so till the end of the service, when he returned it to the in sulted burgomaster, bowing his thanks The great man's fury was not appeased till one of Peter's suite assured him that it was no practical .joke at all that his majesty had played : that his usual cus tom, when at church, if his head was cold, was to seize the nearest wig he coumciuicn iseigravia. , It is estimated that there are in the United States 400,000 railway cars of alj kinds, also 16,000 engines. These engines and cars in traveling over tiie roads lose annually between 4.000,000 and 5,000,000 of nuts. These will weigh over 1.500.- 000 pounds, and their cost is between 30,000, and $ 40,000, and this loss is continued from year to year, saying nothing of the nuts thrown In the si-nip heap, with their bolts withle fi the use of the jam nut, also- the liability iv Kviuec uvta juvie buisy . FOR THE FAIR SEX. Incompatibility. At Inst, sinoe thou art nil my own, My love, my life, my promised bride!" He murmurs softly, sinking down Clnrinda's peerless form beside. " Let's figure, sweet, how we'll begin Our married state that Is to be." " Yes, love. To out a figure in The world is all my with!" says she. " For house," says he, " what hotter thnn A tiny cot by ocean's flow T" " Twotild do," she savs, behind her fan, " It marble lronts were scarce, you know!" " Ahem! And wo might well engage One maid-ot-all-woik, stout and neat!" " Y-e-e-s! and a footman, cook and page, And coach and pair!" she murmured sweet. " Why, really, dear! but words are With love for guests at home a field, Our food shall be the simplest lare, Our drink the dairy's snowy yield!" " Y-e-e-s! with etceteras rare and blest," She coyly addsi " that money brings Fish game in season wines the best i Broils,, stews, fruit oake, loe-oreem and things!" . . , - , " In Midas' name!" he cries, with look, And tone and mien from rapture tree, " Dost deem a millionaire to hook, Ambit iotip girl, in wedding me?" " Why, not at all, Sir Stinginess!" She quick responds, with scornful shout; " But just remember none the less, As servant I'm not hiring out!" . They sever she with ongry look That never bids him pause nor stay; He clutching tight his pocketbook, And precious glud to get away. " Dissembling might have done with tnct, II not too soon betrayed," says she; " How lucky that to sober fact I brought her ere too late!" says he. Fashions of the Season. Among the new dress goods in silk and wool mixtures are found some novelties in the form of welted striped goods, tlie stripes running across, not lengthwise the goods, producing a cor duroy effect: and upon this surface, whose ground is either gendarme blue, bronze, plum, dark green, brown, or black, bright silk threads produce a flowered design in jardiniere effects, tlie figures being for the most part small set designs. This stuff is intended for tlie panicrs, back draperies, cuffs, rovers, and collars of costumes whoso under skirts, sleeves, and minor parts are com posed of self-colored, nil-wool, welted striped goods of tints and shades corre sponding with the grounds of the figured goods. In the plain goods intended for the underskirts the welted stripes are also crosswise the goods. Other fancy silk and wool mixtures have narrow alternate stripes of plain wool and figured silk, the silk stripes in small bright arabesque or armure de signs. Other striped cloths have parti colored grounds of bronze, French gray, cherry, garnet, peacock, gendarme ntid navy blues, and shades of stone mid ardoite or slate color. Plaid Jacquard is a genuine novelty, tlie lai'ge plaid being produced in a variety of novel and striding designs and sharply contrasting colors' woven in a Jacquard loom, and, while they imi tate the size and colors of tartans, nr very unlike them. Broken blocks, squares, and dashes of color arc pro duced in the midst of tlie wool mixtures by bright threads of silk thrown in, the predominant tints being old gold, sap phire and turquoise blues, cherry and other shades of red, and bright shades of green on dark grounds. In plain all-wool goods, in addition to the camel's hair goods, cloths, flannels and cashmeres of last winter, we are shown a new material called toile ilv sanylier. This is plain woven, hut has a rough surlace, and resembles bunt ing made sufficiently heavy to serve for warm winter dresses. Tlie ready-made suits, thousands of which are sold every season and sent all over the world, are shown this fall in dark cloth colors in the new shades of amaranth, Rembrandt green, gendarme or duck's breast and navy blues, dauphin and dark French grays, Burgoyne and golden Drowns and black, with garni tures and parts of the costumes of trim ming satins, plain, plaided or striped. silk plush. Jacquard corduroys or welted stripes, wide woolen braids and Scotch and Jacquard plaids, or other trimming goods of silk and wool mixtures similar to those described above. The greater part of these suits are made up in the form of a coat basque, with pointed waistcoat in lront and a postilion back, curved shorter on the hips. When the basque has not a waist coat it is given a stomacher like a plas tron, which is pointed below the waist. and consists of two re vers sewed together down the middle, extending from the neck down and tapering gradually na- rowerto the waist, under this plastron waistcoat or" stomacher the basque is fastened with small flat buttons. The plastron may be either of plain cloth or satin, or it may be covered with parallel lines of zigzag braid set on crosswise in points. Tho postilion backs are some times pointed, but oftener square, and are given flat box-plaits beaded with fancy buttons. The skirts are short, trimmed with the usual flounce or flounces, in tho usual variety of kilt, knifeblade and box- plaitings. Paniers appear on many of these skirts.or scans arranged to produce panier effects. Wide bells are seen on many of the basques, beginning in tho seam under the arms and fastening in front. Other basques are halt double breasted, and others again have surplice plaits rr gathers in front; and blouse of ten are also popular in basques, fasten ing down with three-inch wide belts, to which the side pocket is attached. The buttons on the waistcoats are smaller than those on other parts ot the costume. Few.outsido pockets are seen, but some times a lonffsauare or pear-shaped ap pendage of this kind is attached to the lower edge of a basque, and made very effective with trimmings. Plaid silks and silk plush of the same shade as the wool material of the dress, and self colored Jacquard corduroys, also of the shade of the woolen stuff, are used for trimming cashmeres. Utile des Indes, camel's hair and toile de tnnalver cos tumes. These ready-made suits range in price all the way from $30 10 $75 and $100. , i I .fir He and small bonnets, the first very large and the second very small, are seen amopg tlie importations of millinery goods. The large bonnets are either pokai with oIom tides, dirsetoirs bon nets with square crowns and flaring brims, or Rabagas bonnets that iramo the face like a halo; The small bonnets are close 'ottnge shapes, or are square crowns and almost brimless, such as have been worn at Saratoga and Newport during tlie summer, and tlie favorite Carmen bonnets with greater breadth in tho back. Other shapes serve as either a round hat or a bonnet, and English turbans, Derbies and largo Tyrolean Imts are all among the new shapes. The Gainesborouglis and other fanciful, pic turesque shapes are not by any means discarded. All these shapes are brought out in smooth soft felt, silk plush and fur beavers, with pile an inch long. Some times tho crown of tlie hat will be of silk and the brim of beaver or the re verse, and sometimes felt brims are given fur or silk crowns, or felt crowns are seen with plush or beaver brims. The feather felts which were introduced last season appear again this season in greater numbers, and in tlie delicate ecru and beige tints and cream and pearl white, which show that they will be used lor the richest full-dress occasions. The felts, beavers and plushescome in the same variety of colors and tints this season that they did last, or even greater. The new tints of cloth shades that are seen in the dress goods appear in the bonnets and hats, showing plain ly that costumes will require a hat or bonnet to match this winter, and at least an attempt will be made to revive that fashion. For the new shades, colors found in felts and other millinery goods, new names are given. Rembrandt Is a a new name for a dark bluish shade of peacock green. A new red with a dash of purple in it is Amaranth, and the old Egyptian or Pompeiian reds are now vleux rouge. Japbniers is a new green blue, and gendarme blue takes the title of Douariere and duck's-breast blue, golden brown is cannaue, and tho most fashionable shade of plum brown is Burgoyne. Old gold is as fashionable as ever, and the ciel blues and rose pinks, the beige tints with cream, ivory and wax white, are all in demand equal to the supply. Fancy feathers will be used to excess again in trimming bonnets and hats. Whole and half birds, tails, wings, pom pons, and feather fringes and ruches are all seen in tlie millinery stores. Ixmg gray ostrich plumes of the natural color are also to be revived, and tips, demi long and Mercutio, and willow plumes, are all to be worn. The fall wraps are for the most part mantelet visites similar to those worn last spring, but ulsters, round cloaks and close jackets will be worn as the season ad vanees. Most of tlie fall suits now in the hands of the dressmakers have a jacket of the material of the suit, and jackets of light, dark and black cloths are found in' abundance in all the houses where ready-made garments are sold. When the jacket is a part of a costume it is trimmed to match the same, but the independent jackets aiv untrimmed, save witli rows of stitching and effective buttons of ivory, horn, shell or metal. A7cm York Hm. Position in Sleep. Position affects sleep. A constrained or uncomfortable posture will often pre vent repose. Lying flat on tlie back with the limbs relaxed 'would seem to secure the greatest amount of rest for the mus cular system. This is tlie position assumed in the most exhausting diseases, and it is generally hailed ns a token of revival when a patient voluntarily turns on the side; but there are several disad vantages in tlie supine posture which impair or embarrass sleep. Thus, in weakly states of the heart mid blood ves sels, and in certain morbid conditions of the brain, the blood seems to gravitate to the back of tlie head and to produce troublesome dreams. In persons who habitually, in their work or gait, stoop, them is some distress consequent on straightening the spine. Those who havo contracted chests, especially per sons who have had pleurisy and retain adhesion; of tho lungs, do notsleep well on tho back. Nearly all who are inclined to snore do so when in that position, because the soft palate and uvula liani; on the tongue, and Unit organ falls back so as to partially close tlie top of tlie windpipe. It is better, therefore, to lie on the side, and in tlie absence of special chest disease, rendering it desirable to io on the weak side so ns to leave tho healthy lunir free to expand, it is well to choose tlie right side, because when the body is thus placed the food gravitates more easily out ot the stomach into the intestines. A glance at any plate ot tlie visceral anatomy will show how this must be. Many persons are deaf in one ear and prefer to lie on a particular side ; but, u possible, tlie right side should be chosen, and the body rolled a little for ward, so that any saliva which may be secreted shall run easily out of the mouth, if not unconsciously swallowed. Again, sleeping with tlie arm thrown over the head is to be deprecated ; but this position is often assumed during sleep, because circulation is then free in the extremities and tlie head and neck, and the muscles of the chest are drawn up and fixed by the shoulders, and thus the expansion of the thorax is easy. The chiet objections to this position are that it creates a tendency to cramp and cold in the arms, and sometimes seems to cause headaches during sleep, and dreams. These smalllmatlers often make or mar comfort in sleeping, Medical Journal, A Smart Wife. The other mornins a citizen called at a hardware store on Woodward avenue and said he wanted a key to a certain door in his house, and he took up nnd carried away almost tlie first key handed out to him. On his way down town af ter dinner he stopped and exchanged tho key for another, explaining that the firsts wouldn't nt. These changes took placo twice a day for the next four days, the citizen being unable to get hold of a key to fit. On the sixth day he drove up to the btore with a door on a dray, and calling to the proprietor he said : " Bring your box of keys out here and we'll get a fit to that lock. Here I have been running back and forth for about a week, aud 1 might not have got a ht for a whole month if my wife had not sug gested that I bring the door down heie. Some of these women are might v smart." , " Put why didn't you take the lock off and bring It down in your pocket? asked the dealer. " The buver looked -at him in a vacant way, stared hard at the door, and sat down on , the curbstone with the re mark: ' " " It's a wonder that the whole .family wasn't sent to the fool-housv ton years ago." vttrou iree trtai, . Astronomy Made Easy, Ili-diddle-didille, Tho Sun's In the middle, And planets around him so grand Are swinging in spaco, Held forever in place In the Zodiao girdle or band. Hi-diddle-diddle, The Sun's in the middle, And Mercury's next to the sun; Whilo Venus so bright, Seen at morning or night, Comes second to join in tho Inn, Hi-diddle-diddle, The Sun's in the middle, And third in the group is our Earth; While Mars with hin fire, So warlike and dire. Swings around to be counted tholourth, Hi-diddle-dlddlo, The Sun's in the middle, While Jupiter s next alter Marst And his lour moons at night Show the speed of the light Next golden-ringed Saturn appears, Hi-diddle-didttle, The Sun's in the middle, After Saturn oomes Uranus far; And his antics so queer, Led astronomers near To old Neptune, who drives tlie last car. ITEMS OF INTEREST. An imperious Ctesar The sheriff. An indescribable uncle Carb-uncle Sound logic Arguing through the telephone. How many oassensers will a train of circumstances carry P Mount Stanford, in the Sierra Neva- das, is covered with red snow. A man who declared himself to be in toxicated with music was considered air tight. ' A new Mormon temple now in course of erection at Sal Lake City is to ot $5,000,000. To use the new machines or the old- fashioned washboards? Aye, there's the rub. Picayune. There are now in Texas over 5,000,000 sheep. Last year over 1 1,000,000 pounds of wool were shipped out of the State In Tennessee. South Carolina and Delaware elerevmen are not permitted to become members of tlie State Legis ature. Black Hills correspondent states that he believes he development of the mineral resources ot the lilack lints lias only begun. Miss Porter, of Detroit, paid a hack man less than ho demanded, and he angrily struck her. She drew a revolver from her satchel and shot him dead. Samuel Nussbaum murdered his wife at Girardeau, Missouri, and was stopped in an attempt io kill himself on tlie spot; but he was determined to die, and hns linally accomplished his purpose by starvation. The French have been trying, with some success, the plan of towing canal boats by locomotives. A railway is laid down on the towpath, about one meter (30 inches) from the side of tlie canal, and on this are run snvill ocomotives of lour or more tons, according to the weight to bo pulled. Queensland, the youngest of tho Aus tralian group, occupies the northeastern quarter of tho Australian continent nnd stretches from the northern boundary of New South Wales to tlie Gulf of Car pentaria. It is twelve times the size of Ensjland, twice tho size of Canada and half as lursro again as England, Ireland, Scotland. Wales, France and Spain com bined. It is rich in gold. MISS BANGS. The beauteous, buxom Bertha Bungs Is one ot our divinest girls; elm hangs tho doors and ImnH the chairs, And likewise liungs lutr unburn curl. She bangs on the piiuniy, too, And bans upon the light puitor But, oil, of all tho bangs Bhc hangs, Shu mostly bangs her auburn ha'r. Oh, banning, bouncing, buxom belle, Tho poet's lyre with rupture twangs i(t.-)Oiifivo to tlie influence Of thy beloved mid bouutoons bungs. ,S7. Louit Timtt-Journal. An Aerolith in Court Prof. Pierce's speech before the scien tists, at Saratoga, dealt mainly on those heavenly bodies called meteors, and which, according to Prof. Newton, of Yalo College, are so uumerous that no fewer than four hundred millions of them enter the earth's atmosphere every year. Fortunately for us, it is only the largest of these meteoric stones and these are exceedingly rare which do not become wholly dissipated before reacningthe ground: from all otherit the air is, as Prof. Newton expresses it, "a shield to protect us from an otherwise intolerable bombarding." Oneofthcc few has, strangely enough, brought up an entirely new question of property law in France. One night not very long since a peasant crossing a field saw a meteor of unusual magnitude, which fell with a great noise and touched the ground within a few yards of his feet. Recovered from ins Iriirht. he went to the spot and unearthed a stone of con siderable size, which, in scientific lan guage, is called an aerolith. It occurred to the man thnt what had dropped down to him lroni Heaven must be a rarity and might have a money value. After consulting tlie schoolmaster of hjs com mune, he took the mysterious suostance, of no terrestrial operation, to tlie Issou dun Museum, and there received in ex change for it the, to him, wonderful sum of $25. Short-lived was his joy. The proprietor of the field visited by a product ot t lie skies, who lives in runs, read in the newspapers an account of the celestial transaction, and strong in a maxim prevailing in franco to this day, that property in land extends from heaven above to Jieii beneath," in structed a county a.torney to bring an action. IIo claimed either the restitu tion of the aerolith which fell upon his land, or $2,000 damages, which Le judged to be the value of it. The case has not yet been decided, and threatens to drag its weary length for some time to come. It has, however, been pretty clearly es tablished that the damages claimed are excessive. There is a regular tariff of the value of aeroliths at the Paris Mu seum, and $ 25 is a high average price. Eminent legal talent is engaged on both sides, and thus fur the pensivnt it believed to have the better of the Pwrioiiin. . , 1 '