SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W. M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. VIII. The Song. The poet gang of War, that mighty king Whoso crown is flame, whose oath is thun dering, Whose sceptre pteel. The p.xan shrilled unheard Of fiery souls by battle-fury stirred; And screaming shells out-sang his minstrel ing. Again he sang the glories Gold can bring; Ort-voiced him now the coins' metallic ring; And, mad for gain, men heeded not a word The poet sang. Then softly to his own heart did he sing; And trembling-sweet a song of Love took wing, As tender as the call of mating bird: The smoke-grimed soldier in the trenches heard, The flushed goid-henper caught each whisper ing The poet sang! [Dorothea Dimond in Frank Leslie'!. HER PARTY. BY SHIRLEY BROWNE. "I'm sorry to disappoint you, little girl," said Doctor Deemer, "but I am afraid this party of yours is quite out of the question." Stacy set down the quaint old Chinese eofl'cc-pot and looked at him with large beryl-blue eyes of disapproval. "Uncle," said she, "you promised it to me." Doctor Deemer retreated behind the stronghold of tho weekly paper. Stacy's reproachful eyes were too much for him. "Yes," he acknowledged, "I know I did. And I meant to keep my prom ise, but I couldn't foresee then how things would turn out. Our funds are very low; in fact, we seem to be in debt everywhere. I don't really know what is to be the end of it." "Yet," said Stacy, with slow, severe accents, "you went to the book sale 112. . paid forty dollars for that old edition of 'Beaumont and Fletcher.'" "Ye~-, I know, Stacy; it was a great bargain." '•Forty dollars would have furnished music and refreshments for my party." "Don't scold, child," said the doc tor, stirring his egg. " I'm very sorry! I forgot all about the party." "You're always forgetting me," 6aid Stacy, a big tear balancing itself on each reproachful eye. "My poor party—and I'd told so many people about it, and promised to invito all the girls! I shall never accept any more invitations, now that 1 can't repay them!" Plash—plash! went the big tears on the old Canton china breakfast plate. Doctor Deemer was a tender-hearted man, and the two diamond drops went to his very soul. "Don't cry, Stacy," said he."Have your party just the same, with cake and lemonade. Deb' >y can make very fair cupcake, and lemons arc only thirty cents a dozen. And Simeon shall bring up his fiddle." "Cupcake, and lemonade, and Simeon," scornfully uttered Stacy. "No, Uncle Deemer, 1 haven't fallen so low as that. I can do without a party, but 1 can't condescend to second rate invitations." And she ran out room in the tempest of tears, coming into collision with old Debby as she did so, and scattering a plate of graham gctns on the floor. Doctor Deemer and his niece, Anas tasia, lived all alone in Koslyn Hall, one of those great echoing houses where everything goes to prove the empty glow of the past. Doctor Deemer had lost his fortune, and Anastasia's too, in a series of disastrous speculations. He had all the lasts of a man of wealth, and a blind adoration of his ancestry. He himself was quite con tent to dwell in life's shadow; but sometimes it seemed to him as if Stacy ought to have a little more sunshine. Stacy thought so, too. Her 18-year soul revolved against the sort of life she led with a yreat rebellion. "Louise Melton is engaged to be married," thought she, "and Emily Eldon spends her winters in New York. But I shall live and die an old maid, for I never see any one, nor travel anywhere- Louise was going to bring her Chicago cousins to my Easter party, and Emily was going to write to Mr. Vavasor to come down from New York for it. Emily said Mr. Vavasor thought 1 was the pret tiest girl in Claneonnell. I don't be lieve that; but I should lil.e to have him see n* 4a a white serge dress with kaby-b)wM£* ribbons. 1 wor« a hid eous blue seersucker that day when he came to see the prize chrysanthemums in the garden." Up and down, up and down the long oak-floored gallery tore Stacy with flaming cheeks and yellow curls stream ing out behind. It was Stacy's way when she got into a passion to walk herself out of it. Just opposite a por trait of her great-grandaunt, whose name she had somehow inherited, 6he came to a sudden stop. "Well," she cried, "why do you stare so steadily down at me, Aunt Anastasia, with those big blue eyes? It really does seem as if you had some thing you wanted to say to me and somehow couldn't get it out. Really, one don't wonder that old Debby slur ries past you in the twilight and says the family portraits haunt her worse than any ghost. Oh, it's all very well for you to smile in that simpering, inane fashion," .she added, shaking her little dimpled list at the counterfeit presentment of her dead-and-gone an cestress. "You were an English beauty, and danced at General Wash ington's state balls, and Gilbert Stuart painted your portrait, and you were married at eighteen and went to the West Indies. That was life and hap piness enough, even if you did die young. People say your eyes and mine are exactly alike, but I'm sure I never was half as pretty as you. But perhaps it's the string of pr«rl« and the satin gown that makes you so lovely and—" She stooped suddenly and picked up an opened letter lying on tho dark oaken floor, directly under the tar nisl 1 gilt frame. "What's this?" 6he cried, "Oh, a letter from the picture dealers in New York. They want a genuine example of Gilbert Stuart for a private collec tion, and have heard of 'The Lady with the Pearls' in the old Koslyn Hall gallery. 'Anastasia Koslyn, 1789.' Are prepared to give two hundred dol lars for it if Doctor Doerncr will kind ly consider their offer. And here's Uncle Deemer's pencil writing upon it. 'ltec'd March 3d, 18— Mem. To write back that, the Koslyn pictures are not in the market I' Oho! But l.'n cle Deemer never consulted me—and 1 am the owner of the Koslyn pictures! Two hundred dollars—that's a deal of money. What do you say, Aunt An astasia?" looking up with eager blue eyes at the dim pictured face—"will you help me with my party? It isn't that 1 have no family feeling, but you're dead and buried, you see, and you went to parties and danced when you were a girl, and you must know c«actlv how I feel." Stacy Deemer rushed upstairs to her room, wrote a hurried letter to the New York picture tlealcr, ran to the postoffice just in time to save the mail, and came dancing back, her yellow curls afloat, her cheeks pink as roses. The wreaths of snow were melting away from the hillsides, the maple trees were bursting into red stars of bloom, the lilac and white crocuses lifted their tiny heads along the shel tered edge of the path, and an adven turous bluebird shrilled his tiny trum pet from the old cedar grove. Stacy, too, could have sung aloud in the full ness of her girlish glee. "I shall have my party, aLcr all," said she. " What's this, Stacy?" Dr. Deemcr stared first at her, then at the slip of pale-green paper in her hand. '•lt's a check, Uncle Dcemer, for two hundred dollai-6. Can you cash it for ine?" "A—check I" "Yes. I've 6old my aunt Anasta sia," calmly admitted Stacy. "She's going to help me give my party, the darling 'Lady With the Pearls."' It was 6ome time before the old gentleman could be made to under stand the full extent of his niece's der eliction. Then he grew pale. "Stacy," said he, "you don't desrvc to have any ancestors! I would re deem this picture with a thousand dollar bill if I had it! lias it gone?" "A week ago, Uncle Deemer." He threw the check back to her. "I'll have nothing to do with it!" said be. "It's almost equal to trading in human tlesh and blood! You'll be selling me next, you wicked girl!" "But, I'ncle Deemed—" "Please leave me, Stacy; I'd rather be alone." fctacy went away rather awed. There LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, JUKE 13, 1890. was something in Uncle Deemer's pale old face tliet frightened her. "I—almost—wish I hadn't sent the invitations," thouglitshe. "But, after all. Aunt Anastasia was my very own grandaunt, and I'm quite sure sho was willing. I could read it in her eyes. Sho was a girl once, and I know she liked parties." But Stacy had not calculated for all that followed. Uncle Deemer was an old man and very feeble, and the shock was too much for him. He took to his bed. A physician was sent for, who shook his head and looked un utterable things. "Something 011 his mind," said he. "It's Aunt Anastasia," faltered Stacy; "and it's all my doing. I—l sold a family portrait that he is especially fond of." "Get it back again, at all hazards," said the doctor. "I can't light disease as long as all tho mental forces are against me." "Do you think he'll" die?' said trembling Stacy. "I hope not," said the man of medicine. For the first time in her life Stacy went to New York, to interview the picture-dealer. The picture-dealer was sweeter than milk, smoother than oil; but it was beyond his power he said to help her. The picture was already hanging in the private collection, No. Fifth Avenue. "Can I go there?" said Stacy. "Well I suppose you can," doubtfully observed the picture dealer. "But I don't believe it will do any good." Stacy, however, was resolute in try ing to undo the mischief she had done. She went straight to No. —, Fifth Avenue. "I have called abut a portrait," said she. "A Gilbert Stuart, 'The Lady With the Pearls.'" The butler eyed her closely. She had 110 leather bag in her hand, nor did she appear like a solicitor of sub scriptions. "I'll ask master," said he. "Take him my card," said Stacy, loftily. "Miss Deemer of Koslyn Hall." The butler showed her into a recep tion-room with crimson crape curtains festooned between pink marble col umns and a great, grinning Japanese idol in old ivory and cloisonuee, and leparted noiselessly. Presently another footstep crossed the threshold. "Miss Deemer." Stacy uttered a little cry. "Oh, Mr. Vavasor, is it you? Oh, please, I want my grandaunt back again, and hero is the picture-man's check. 1 haven't even cashed it, you see." "But," said Mr. Vavasor, looking with artistic admiration at the sun shine glinting on her golden hair, the shifting light in her wonderful blue eyes, "I don't think I quite un derstand." And then Stacy, blushing and em barrassed, made her confession. Poor little wrong-headed, impulsive Stacy. "I didn't know uncle Deemer was so fond of her," murmured she, "or 1 never would have sold her. And please, may 1 have her back." ' I don't think you realize, Miss Deemer, how much 1 value that 'Gil bert Stuart, 1 " hesitated Vavasor. "Oh, but she's my ancestress," urged Stacy. "And she was my namesake, and people say I am like her, and when I sold her I sold the luck of Iloslyn. Please, please," cried Stacy, wringing her poor littlo hands, "let me have her back." "Oil one condition only," said Mr. Vavasor. Stacy looked terrified. "That you allow me to give you that party. You arc to supply the old hall for dancing and the evergreens, and I aui to send down the music and the supper, and mind, you are to give me the very first dance of ail." Stacy clapped her hands. "And I shan't have to recall the invitations after all," said she. "Oh, how splendid it will be! If only Uncle Deemer gets better!" Uncle Deemer did get better, dating from the dav when the "Gilbert Stuart" was hung up on his bedroom wall. "The luck of Roslyn has come back," said he. It was very kind of Mr. Vavasor to tiavel (.'own with you, child. 1 suppose ho knew the picture must b« carefully guarded." The party came oft' with eclat. Stacy looked like a newly opened rosebud. The music was delightful—the supper such as onty Charezzi could get up. "But Starr," said Emily Eldon, who was of a rather critical turn, "mamma says yon shouldn't acccpfc so many favors from any gentleman who is neither your relative nor your ac cepted lover." "Does she?" said Stacy, with a mis chievous sparkle of the eyes. "Well, then, tell her to 6et her mind at rest; Mr. Vavasor is my accepted lover I He asked me to marry him last night, and I'itt sure Aunt Anastasia knows it"— with a bright upward glance at the por trait—"for see how she smiles down upon me." And for a moment it did seem as if there was a smile on the face of"The Lady With tho Pearls." [Fireside Companion. Ran Ills Train Through the One Ahead. "There are heroes and heioes, and there arc heroines and heroines," said Chauncey M. Depew in speaking of personal bravery. "There arc blue shirted men who go over our railroad lines every day in engine cabs who would laugh at you if you intimated to them that they are heroes, and who in spite of all are as brave as any man who ever drew a sword or carried a musket. Kailroad men have seldom much time to think. They are cowards or heroes in a second. Not long ago one of our engineers of an express trail! rounded a turn in the road and saw that another train had been derail ed, and lay right across the track. A collision was inevitable. The engineer might have taken chances and jumped, but he didn't. As he said afterward: "'I saw right away we were in for it, and like a Hash it struck me that our only chance was togo right ahead and cut through if we could. So I threw her open and let licr go.' " Tho exnerimcnt was perilous, but it was successful. He did 'cut through,' and no 0110 was injured. This act of the engineer was that of an exceedingly courageous, cool-headed man. "Another engineer on a Western road performed a similar act sometimo ago with tragic results. He tried to —or in fact was forced to try to —cut through a freight train that had been thrown across the track. Non; of the passengers were injured, but the engin eer and his firemen were killed. This is but too often the reward of bravery 11 all walks of life."—Philadelphia Press. (Jol«l From Siberian Minos. A very heavy consignment of gold from the Siberian mines recently ar rived at St. Petersburg. Our corres pondent telegraphs that the caravan, which left Irkutsk on the 9th of De cember, took 18:5,840 ounces of gold. The wagons containing it were escort ed by 300 Cossacks, under tho com mand of Lieut. Cols. Mekrassoft' and Karneyoff. Part of this gold was from the Atnoor fields. Very Timely. Stranger—"l have here a poem, sir, on 'The Beautiful ' " "My dear sir, wc have 10,- 000 on 'The Beautiful Snow' on hand now, and we don't want any more." Stranger—"Then perhaps, sir, you will allow me to continue. My poem is on 'The Beautiful Mud. 1 " Editor—"We'll take that, young mail."—Judge. Helping an Author. A French millionaire who wanted to help a French author to somo money, in an indirect way ordered 75,- 00( copies of his book and burned thorn for fuel. Then he learned that the author had sold his right, title, and interest before publication for the sun of $l5O. To Be Inferred. A Michigan weekly says of a sub scr.bcr who died the other day : "Had he maintained a different attitude to wards water, wc have no doubt that ho would have lived on for a score of years to come." Wc infer that he drank too much water—altogether too much. A Fine Distinction. Under the laws of New Jersey "a disorderly person" may be a person wLo "stands and looks over a fence at at a woman standing on a step-laddei to wash a kitchen window." A man's privileges arc being whittled down pretty thin nowadays. Terms—sl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months, LADIES' DEPARTMENT. VANITY AT THE TABLE. From Paris comes tho information that an essential to a perfect dinner service at the present time is a small mirror, handsomely mounted, placed upon tho table in front of each lady. This singular appurtenance enables the lady to gratify her natural solicitude as to the condition of her coiffure and as to her general appearance; further more, by an adroit manipulation of the mirror one is able to see what is going on around her. SPANISH WOMEN'S MANTIU.AS. A Spanish woman's mantilla is held sacred by law and cannot be seized for debt. There are three kinds of man tillas which form tlu toilette of the Spanish lady. Tho first is composed of white blonde, used only on state occasions, birthdays, bull lights and Easter Monday. The second is black blonde, trimmed with deep lace, and the third for ordinary wear is made of black silk trimmed with velvet. — [Dry Goods Chronicle. BLUSHING POWDER. A perfumer has not only invented a face powder that will not come oft" 011 gentlemen's coat-?lceves, but lie has patented a blushing powder. You en ter a ball room, ladies, looking quite interesting by reason of your pallor, and gradually your cheek will warm to an engaging flush, and your young man will exclaim: "That marvelous complexion is, indeed, her very own. No doubt of it, for I have seen her change color."—[Argonaut. PAINTING A HOUSE TO MATCH DRESSES. Tte idea that women should dress in such colors as will match their sur roundings has its advantages, and again it has its disadvantages. The writer knows of a young woman whose hus band recently purchased an artistically painted Anne cottage in a de lightful suburb of this city. Last summer, the lirst in the new home, his wife would never sit upon the veranda without being dressed in a gown which contrasted harmoniously with the color of the house. The long winter inter vened and this spring the color of the house was allowed to escape from her calculations in buying her summer dress goods. When they were all bought it was discovered that they contrasted vileiy with the veranda. Now she insists that the house be re painted.— [New York Tribune. A HEART DINNER. A debutante had a heart dinner giv en to her tho other day in New York city. The tables were heart shaped and covered with pale pink satin over laid with a drawn linen cloth. At each plate was a heart-shaped, pink satin bonbonnicic and the menu had stuck through it heart scarf pins for the men and brooches for the girls. A single heart of moonstone framed in diamonds formed the pins, while two hearts of the same style fastened to gether with a tiny arrow of gold made the brooch. Tho centre piece was a huge heart of pink carnations, with an arrow of white lilies of tho valley transfixing it. The hostess wore a rose crepe gown and had a silver heart as the buckle at her waist ribbon, while about her neck was s narrow silver chain and a little silver heart on which was inscribed: "To my heart's de light." "Well, hearts have been play things from time immemorial, and if it is really true that for once hearts are again trumps then Cupid Esquire can laugh at money and sing again : •' 'Tis love that makes the world go round.'' —[Philadelphia Inquirer. HAIR DRKSSED IN JAVA FASHION. An entirely new style of hair-dress ing is thieatened, says a fashion writer. In Paris the frizzy bang has meekly subsided to give the Javanoise head dresses a chance. Fashion ap pears to have gone daft on those pe culiar ornaments, and the great jew ellers of the Rue de la Paix have been ordered to reset diamonds of more than one grande dame after the pat tern of those flat metal ornaments. At the opera a few weeks ago a daz zling light in Parsian society appeared with her hair dressed perfectly tlat to her head, on one side, right over the ear, an ornament as large and as flat as an individual butter plate, composed of diamonds and pearls, and medallions as larife as an JEiunisli ueuuy. of the NO. 35. same gems, going round to the other ear, across the forehead just at the line of the hair. How those gorgeous jewels were kept in place waR a secret known only to madame's coiffeur and jeweller, but it was "Javanoise," and, therefore, a beautiful and distinguished innovation on the diamond star and butterfly ornamentations. Such is one of the results of the Paris Exhibitions where the fashions of Java dancers were first introduced to Western imi tators. TnF. SUMMKFt BODICE. In nothing is the range of ideas more observable than in the bodice. The basque is by 110 means dispensed with, it is freely optional. The Empire waist is also retained, with its shorten ing effect of wide, soft gash, so becom ing to young figures. Bat there is also a distinct revival of the lengthened, slender, moyen-age bodice of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which reappeared in a modi fied form, forty years ago. It is now outlined upon the hips with a shaped band of silk or velvet, taking the place of the girdle, which, however, is alio revived in magnificent designs, and occasionally displayed inartistic cos tumes. Such styles arc only suitable for the ceremonious dresses of ladies 110 longer very young; soft materials, gathered skirt, and surplice waist and the Swiss corslet bodice, suit better the light fabrics worn by young girls during the spring and summer season. The pretty plaited ruffles for the neck will be used as much or even more than last year, but young women, in fact all women who want them of the desirable, soft, India tone in white muslin and Jisse, should make them for themselves, or the plaiting will not be tine enough for elegance. A light summer cotton, or spring woolen dress is wonderfully becoming with one of theso rullles surrounding the r. ther low-cut round ncrk, which so charmingly frames the throat.—[The Housekeeper. FASHION >*OTKS There is no decrease in the length of the sunshade sticks this season. Velvet ribbon an incli and a half wide do well for bonnet strings. Armurc and faille Francaise silks are appropriate for elderly ladies. Perfumes are worn any place and every place but on the handkerchief. Fans to match the costumes are out in all the new colors; thanks to Japanese industry. The latest stylos in bedroom furni ture are very beautiful, introducing several new woods. A new material for summer dresses is the Japanese grenadine, which is said to "wear forever." Little wraps of black lace and jet and of netted passementerie in cords promise to become popular. Dresses of wool arc combined free ly with colored silk or with striped satin in harmonizing colors. Many of the new suitings brought out for tailor gowns have fringed bor ders in a contrasting color on one sel vage. All the new bonnets are very small. The front have sometimes wired lace lappets for trimmings, which look like butterflies' wings. All the little bonnets and toques have strings of narrow velvet ribbon in the back, and from the knot some buds and bits of foliage peep out. The marvclo.is excellence of the French flowers this season almost sur passes belief and is the delight of the ladies. They come into play in nearly all styles. The latest fancy in floral bonnets is a study in hawthorn and briar roses surrounded by aigrettes of light green foliage and tied with black or moss green velvet strings. A new style of glove, with the stamp of Paris on it, has the top or arm made of alternate rows of kid and flat Val lace. Proportional to the novelty is the price. Cream, dove, ecru, reseda Milan braids are all in favor, but are led in popularity by Tuscan yellow, which in turn is surpassed by black hats and bonnets, these easily leading. A neat hut for a n»s» is a poke shaped leghorn with silk crown and trimmings of white velvet forget-me nots. The facing is of lace, with a wreath of the same fOl set-me-nots.