GROWTH. TH» c'jmax of the perfect symphony ftoufl-ls not at Its lieittniilut;; lone and low The voices enter, ceaslntr often, so As younf? birds newly learning melody; But other voices join the harmony, And now, from crystal flute, and reed, and bow, Ard brazen throat, a full, concurrent flow Of musla swells in rich sonority. Soul, fret not it the music of thy life To tb-e sounds thin and weuk! An nge remote Cttered chaotic preludes to these years. XMaj well thy part,—though with harsh dis cords rife, Thy life shall touch a nobler, deeper note, •and join to swell the mtisi" of the spheres. —Kobert Ilavn Sobaufller, in Success. I JDDGE AND JORY. 112 « ► "I believe they are utterly miser able and remarltabley brave," said the feirl who thought she knew life. "I believe they are absolutely hap py and have great, self-control,'' said the girl who thought the did not. "I believe they are an extremely ordinary couple who at the bottom of their hearts do love each other, und who yet manage to have some very bad days—meaning rows—like everybody else," said the girl who really did. They were speaking of Mr. and Mrs. Fanshaw, known among their ac quaintances as the "Judge and Jury." Nobody quite knew why they were so called —or, rather, nobody remem bered. The name had originally been a chance remark made by a witty young barrister, who had an oddly clever trick of knocking off his ac quaintances in some little catch phrase like this one of "Judge and Jury." "She's the jury, you know—really Hetties everything; but he imagines it all his own doing, and, in any case, he gets the credit of it, ye know." And they had been so called ever since. The judge dearly loved his wife, but he never told her so. In hip own mind he had agreed that the fact of his having chosen her from a worla of girls—and in hi 3 youth the judge had been much sought after — ol having told her, and that more than oree during his brief engagement, he did love her —and finally having made fcer his wife—all this was sufficient. What necessity for more? So he lived quietly, undemonstrative on, &rd —in secret his wife was miserable. She was rather a passionate and p'so, in some ways, a very proud woman. But she had no children, and above all was sh-3 a woman to whom not only the mere fact of a loving word or a little caress was an absolute pleasure, but, moreover, she pined—if that word or caress were hers —that all her world should see and hear it. It was a species of uncon scious conceit, very common, did one only know it, to most women. Often did she tell her 7riends how the judge would almost ignore her in front of people, but when he got her alone —! Indeed, she had laid some quite pas sionate love scene at the judge's door. Her younger friends looked at her husband with great wonder —at her self with eDvy and the jury, noting this, was th(-n happy. She would move about with a smile on her lips, cheating herself almost into the be lief that the Judge really had kissed her with tears in his eyes after he had been away for two Jays—when, In very truth, the two on meeting had but shaken hands. For though the Judge did occasionally, and on such occasions, embrace his wife, if they met, as they had then done, be- j fore the servants he always treated j her in this stranger fashion. There was one particle of truth in Mrs. Fanshaw's romances. As I have before said, her young friends envied her contemporaries f.miled, and the old people roftly said, j 'Toor thing!" And the Judge and Jury went their ways. She being a clever woman, luled him in all but the one point ! which would have made her happy. i There came, one very hot summer, i to the town this couple lived in that dread disease—typhoid fever. And one of the earliest to take it j was Mrs. Fanshaw. At first the doctor thought it would be a slight attack. The Jury herself was not anxious, and the Judge, as usual, said nothing. "Dick," said she to him, when she bad been ill a few days, "if I were going to die, and you knew it, what, would you do?" "You are not going to die," said the Judge, dryly. "But if I were, Dick?" petulantly. The Jury felt ill. "I cannot imagine, my dear, such an unhappy state of things. Don't you I think you had better goto sleep for a little?" "Dick, would you bid me good-bye i and say you loved me?" the Invalid esked. She was worse than ffither of theai knew, and fever gave her a courage she would not otherwise have pos sessed. "I think—my dear," the Judge re- j peated, rising from his chair prepar- ' atory to leaving the room— "3 ou had better —" Mrs. Fanshaw caught hold of her : husband's hand as he turned away. "Any way, Dick," she said, in a j shriller key than h.*r vont was to '■ speak in,"even if I'm not going to die —and, of course I'm not" 'as the Judge made an impatient gesture)— 1 'lt wouldn't hurt you to say you ' loved me now. Dick, do —just once." i And Bhe pulled at his cool hand and i pressed her hot cheek against it. Bts tha Judge did not answer her, 1 ft ltd presently left the room. A The nest morning the doctor looked graver, and three days after the poor Jury was raving in delirium. And through it all she was having passionate love scenes with her hus band—or, worse still —for now *ha Judge did not leave her night or day —she was imploring him to say ha loved her, and could not understand when he did do so. And this he did, regardless of nurse or doctor. Day after day the Jury grew worse and worse, and from delirium sho tank into unconsciousness, and from unconsciousnes into death. And the judge was left alone. "I love yo"—I love you," he sobbed ! continually, ->ut it was into silenco he spoke. The court was empty.—The Fre« i Lance. NEWFOUNDLAND'S ISOLATION. Queor Ideas of Some of tile People Abouv Hip Outside World. It is probable that no English speak ing people is at this time EO utterly isolated from all the tilings of ad vanced civilization as the folk who fish from the little harbors which lij along that stretch of the ea«t coast harbors between Cape John on the south and the straits of Belle Isle on the north. There are no roads, no paths, leading from harbor to harbor. The land is a wilderness, dense, track less, infested with black flies and mos quitoes, which brave men dare not challenge for many days in hot weather for fear of their lives. Shore fishermen would rather take their lit tle punts through 40 miles of tossing sea than suffer the fatigue and terrors of a two mile tramp inland. Commu nication, indeed, is only hy punt and skiff; and so rarely do tha people go from place to place that a woman who went from home with her husband to settle in a harbor five miles distant did not see her relatives again for 15 years. Moreover, the mail steamer touches at but two of the more im portant settlements, and that only at fortnightly intervals in June, July and August. The news of the world, in distorted form, is passed along by word of mouth, long after it has ceased to be acutely interesting to the people of more favored lands. " 'Tis said," said an old man of Round Harbor, who had heard of the first British defeats in South Africa, "that the English do be beaten. Do the Boers be after capturing St. John's yet? Do they be fighting there, tell me?" One meets such absurd misconcep tions upon every hand. To many of the men of that coast the world, which is flat and almost circumscribed by the horizon, is a world of sea and rocks and punts and fish. Their imagination carries them no further, and they come into touch with the things of other places so rarely that they cannot com prehend the information which the new and passing association has brought to them. 'Does they catch fish with squid or caplin for bait in New York 'arbor?" was a boy's question at Englee. • An attempt to describe a circus to this lad, a few moments later had to bo abandoned. It would have taken the whole afternoon to define the terms. What was sawdust? What was a tent? What did a horse loo* like? WJjat was a uniform? What was a springboard? What was an ac robat? What was a band? What was a horn? Was it like the bait skiif conch? What was a drum? What was a chariot? What was a proces sion? What was a peanut? As for clowns, lemonade, elephants—these were incomprehensible. Questions, po litely put, interrupted every sentence. The lad was soon in a maze out of which he could not be led. The at tempt had, indeed, to be abandoned. But the writer did succeed in describ ing a brick, a sidewalk and a plow. When it came, however, in the even ing to helping the lad's mother to an understanding of the lives of the wom en of New York he was overwhelmed. "They tells me," she said, "that the women up there do be good hand t' eplit fish. Now, how many quintal can they do in a day?" She did not doubt that she could split more than any of them, and she was proud that she could. "My daughter Maria," she went on, as if in challenge, "can lift a barrel of flour." Maria, a muscular young woman of IS, with dark hair, large blue eyes and fine pink and white complexion, blushed and admitted that she could. She had rowed the punt 12 miles that morning, she said, and could sail it in a gale like a man. "That sho can, sir," said her father. "She can sail it so well as me." — Ainslee's Magazine. A Telephone Meter. A patent for an invention by which the actual length of the time that a telephone is used on any occasion can be measure-, so that the company may charge the subscriber only for the ac tual service he has had, has been re cently obtained by Thomas Baret of Sydney, New South Wales. A sub scriber who. in the course of a day. should use the telephone for an hour I would pay for that length of time, and not the same amount as another sub scriber would pay who would perhaps ure his telephone several hours each day. The "telephone meter" consists of a clockwork mechanism which is quiet when the telephone is not in use. but which begins to move the moment the receiver is lifted from the and so registers the length of time the instrument is employed. The appara tus is so arranged that the up-anrl down movement of the lever switch winds up the clockwork. A dial plate indicates how lor.g the telephone has been in use. New York City.—The basque waist, fitted with smooth under-arm gores and extending slightly over the skirt suits many figures and many mate- BASQUE WAIST. rials far better than any other sort. This smart May Manton model in cludes these desirable features and at the same time has a fancy front and sleeves that render it elaborate enough for occasions of formal dress. As shown the material is Sapho satin in pastel blue with front and undersleeves of cream lace over white and tiny edge trimming of fancy scrolled braid, but numberless materialsand combinations might be suggested both for the odd waist and the entire costume. The lining is snugly fitted and in cludes double darts, under-arm gores and side backs. The waist proper is plain and smooth at the back with smooth under-arm gores, but is slightly full at the front. The vest or full SxTLISH SINGLE-BREASTED BLOUSE. front of lace is gathered at both neck and waist edges and is stitched into place at the right side, hooked over onto the left. The fronts are laid in three tucks each and arranged in gath ers at the lielt. At the neck Is a regu lation stock. The sleeves are novel and effective. The under portions are faced into the linings, but the upper portions are quite separate and fall freely over the deep cuffs. To cut this waist in the medium size four and an eighth yards of material twenty-one inches wide, two and three quarter yards tlilrty-two inches wide, or two yards forty-four inches wide will be required, wilh two and a half yards of all-over lace for front and un dersleeves. Woman'* Single-Itreasted Bloufte. No other garment is more popular than the simple blouse. Young girls and women alike hold it the most sat isfactory of all models, both for the suit and the coat of velvet, velours and the like. The example shown in the large drawing has tiie merit of abso lute simplicity combined with smart ness. The original is made of broad cloth in tobacco brown and makes part of a suit, the extension being omitted, but all suiting materials are appropriate as well as those already mentioned. The blouse is eminently simple. The back is plain and smooth, without ful ness, but the fronts, while plain across the shoulders have the fulness stylish ly arranged at the waist line and droop slightly over the belt. The neck is finished with a regulation coat collar nnd notched lapels and a pocket is In serted in the left front. The sleeves are in coat style slightly bell-shaped at the hands. When the basque ex tension is used It is joined to the blouse beneath the belt. To cut ihis blouse for a woman of medium size three and three-quarter ya/ds of material twenty-one inches wide, three and a quarter yards twen ty-sev>n inches wide, one and three quarter yards forty-four inches wide, or one and live-eighth yards fifty-four inches wide will be required, with one eighth yard of velvet for collar. "Pitted" Velvets. Much in favor are the new velvets with surface of black, blue or dark green, "pitted" with white. You see a chestnut brown velvet pitted with am ber or buff, and this looks better than white pitting on browns. Undersleeves, a vestee or blouse frout or collar and cuffs are all made of pitted velvet, to combine with cloth or flannel. An en tire visiting dress of dark green velvet "pitted" with white is richly trimmed with dark furs. A I'lnk Homespun. The word "homespun" suggests & "hackabout" or general utility cos tume. But this season we have them in true evening shades. The new year brings us clear pink and sky blue homespuns as well as the "water greens," pearl and oiscuit shades ranged under the generic name of pas tel colors. These pretty homespuns are treated by the dressmaker precise ly like cloth gowns. They have border decoration of black relvet or dark fur and are then worn to afternoon teas. Chiffon, Pink Bogeg and Lace. A tea gown of surpassing lovelinesfc is of fine white chiffon over pink satin, falling to the feet, where it rests on a ruche of pink roses. This again is veiled by a lace overdress, exquisitely emhroidered with garlands of pink satin ribbon and chiffon flowers, the whole hanging from a berthe of pink roses; a fichu decorated in the same manner, the lace edged with tiny bouillonnes of pink chiffon, completes the costume. Skirt*. There has been a great deal of talk about full skirts, and they certainly are getting fuller. They are frou frou ing round the feet, though still keeping that graceful, clinging appearance round the hips. We all evince a ten dency toward shortening the walking skirt, an extremely sensible one, as long as it does not interfere with our best frocks, which for grace and smart ness should always bo fairly long. Child'* French Dreg*. The long-waisted dress known as th 6 French model suits little girls to a nicety and is the height of present styles. The very pretty May Manton example shown is made of nainsook with yoke and trimming of fine needle work. and is worn with a ribbon sash, but all washable materials are equally appropriate, while cashmere, henriet ta, albatross and simple silks are all in vogue for the heavier frocks. Te waist Is made over a fitted lining onto which the yoke is faced, but which can bo cut away to yoke depth when a transparent effect is desired. The full portion is gathered at both up per and lower edges, but the waist and lining close together at the centre back. The sleeves are in bishop style with pointed cuffs, and over the shoul ders, finishing the edge of the yoke, is a pointed bertha that suits childish figures admirably well. At the neck is a standing collar. The skirt Is circular and flares freely and gracefully at the lower portion, while the upper edge Is joined to the skirt, the seam being concealed by the sash. To cut this dress for a child of eight years of age five and a half yards of material twenty-one inches wide, five yards twenty-seven inches wide, four and a half yards thirty-two inches wide, or three and five-eighth yards forty-four inches wide will be re- FBByCH DEESS FOR A CHILD. quired, with one-half yard of all-over embroidery, three of edging and two and an eighth yards of insertion to trim as illustrated. Renovating; <;llt l r ram«M. To renovate and brighten the gilt frames of pictures and mirrors that have become dirty and dingy simply wash very gently with a small sponge moistened with spirits of wine or oil of turpentine, the spor.ge only to be sufficiently wet to take eff the dirt, or fly marks. The frames should not he wiped, but left to dry of themselves. • Dofendu Hot Helen W. Atwater has written for the agricultural department a bulle tin in which she takes a position that will be approved in the great hot bread belt ot' the south at least. She says that hot bread in itself is net in jurious. She argues that it is not the fact of its being hot which makes tte bread injurious. Hot bread may be and tho cause is identical in both cases. She says: "The fact that the l,read is hot has little to do with the matter. New broad, especially that from a large loaf, may be readily compressed into more or less solid masses, and it is possible that such bread would be much less finely masticated than crumbly stale bread, and that, there ! fore, it might offer more resistance) I to the digestive juices of the stomach. "However, when such hot bread as rolls, biscuit or other form in which the crust is very large in proportion to the crumb, is eaten, the objection nas little force. There is little diffi culty in masticating the crust and it is doubtless usually finely divided." Tlio Juice of a I.emon. The juice of a lemon in hot water ! on awakening in the morning is an excellent liver corrective. A few drops of lemon juice in plain water is an excellent tooth wash. It not only removes tartar, but sweetens the breath. A teaspoonful of the juice in a small cup of black coffee will almost cer tainly relieve a bilious headache. The finest of manicure acids is made by putting a teaspoonful of lemon juice in a cupful cf warm water. This removes most stains from the fingers and nails and loosens the cuticle more satisfactorily than can be done by the use of a sharp instrument. Lemon juice and salt will remove rust stains from linen without injury to the fabric. Wet the siains with the mixture and put the article in the sun. Two or three applications may be necessary if the stain is of long stand ing, but the remedy never fails. Lemon juice (outward applications) will allay the irritation caused by the bits of gnats or flies. Lemon peels (and also orange) should be all saved and dried; it is a capital substitute for kindling wood. A handful will revive a dying fire and at the same time delicately perfume a room. s!M!S Twentieth Century Waffles —Mix to gether just before time for baking, the following ingredients: A pint of sweet milk, half a cup of melted butter, the well-beaten yolks of two eggs and the whites well beaten. Use just enough flour to make a soft batter (about a pi ut) sifted with two teasponfuls of baking powder and a saltspoonful heaping of salt. Beat the batter hard and fast a few minutes and bake im mediately. Serve hot with a sirup or shaved maple sugar. Vienna Chocolate —Mix five heaping (ablespoonfuls of grated chocolate with with enough water to beat it to a smooth paste, being careful that no lumps remain. Put It into a choc olate pot and set the pot in a kettle cf boiling wafer. Pour in two pints of new milk and one of cream (or three pints of new milk), all boiling hot. Stir until the chocolate paste is thoroughly incorporated in the boiling milk, letting it boil two or three mia ures: remove from fire and briskly stir in the well-beaten whites of two or three eggs and serve hot. Salmon Croquettes—To make cro quettes from canned salmon, drain, free from bone and mash the salmon. Put half pint milk over tho firo: rub together one tablespoonfui butter and two of flour, add to milk and cook un til thick. Take from the fire and add yolks cf two eggs. Cook for just i moment longer. To the salmon add a toaspoonl'ul of salt, tablespoonfui of cuopped parsley and saltspoonful pep per. Mix meat and white sauce to- j gether and turn out to cool. When cold ! form into cylinders, dip in beaten j egg. then roll in breadcrumbs and fry i in smoking hot fat. Stowed l ettuce —Wash the lettuca I carefully to remove the dust, take off j the wilted leaves and cut out tho root j even with the head, tie tho top to gether, lay the heads side by side in a | baking pan, add enough stock to cover the pan one and a half inched deep, cover and place in a moderate oven to simmer for one-half hour, or until the lettuce is soft. Kenew the stock if necessary. Lift the lettuce out with a fork, putting it under the middle. Let it drain and lay it double, as it will be over the fork in a row on a hot dish. Season in the gravy in the pan with butter, salt and pepper, thicken with a beaten egg and serve with the lettuce Her Paean Child. "There, the task Is done, the baby's asleep." said a woman friend the other evening as she entered the sitting room nnd piled on the table what appeared to be a very considerable portion of a toyshop's stock. There was a little rubber Lord Fauntleroy with his mouth agape and the end of his nose worn through; a little doll, red-gowned and bolted, and with a tin jewel at her throat, called Betty; a still smaller object in human form, with one leg gone, one arm gone, hair gone and a hole in the top of the head, called Johnny; a white sawdust-stuffed dog with one eye missing, aim ta'.l in a state of collapse from Letpieut pull ing, called .lip. and a rubber cow known as Moo. "I believe that some of my ancestors must, have been Chinamen," continued the mother, " and that their dlsposi ; lions, long hidden through successive generations, are reappearing in my child." One Would not suspect it to look at the child. A little girl of the fairest complexion and cherubic expression, to make whose eyes the sky was robbed of a tiny bit of Its finest blue, and whose hair was as if It had been spun from the sunshine. "But, you see," said the mother, "when a Chinaman dies and is burled, they putin the grave- with him cloili- Ing and food, and perfumes, red torches nnd horses, to be nt his convenience in the other land. Well, my baby must have at her side as she goes to sleep all the toys with which she is wont most to play during the day so that she may have them with her in the laud of dreams."—Omaha World-Herald. Ail Important Particular. "Did you see that article iu the paper the other morning about the discovery of a new way to embalm people after they are dead?" asked the lady who continues to believe that she doesn't look a day over thirty. "No," the one who gave up the strug gle several years ago, replied, "I didu't happen to notice it." "Well it seems that some undertaker has found out how to make a fluid that injected into the body will pre serve it forever—not as Egyptian mum mies are preserved, but exactly as the person was in life. There Is no shriv eling up, no swathing or anything of that kind. The body simply becomes petritied, and in spite of being stone looks just as it did in life. I'm so glad this wonderful discovery has been j made. I have always had a horror of ! being put into the ground to decay or ! perhaps to be eaten by worms. The ! old Egyptian way didu't appeal to me, though. I wouldn't care to be come a shriveled and blackened mum my. But to remain just as beautifu' as In life, that " "Still are you sure that this en balmlng fluid you speak of preserv* the enamel as well as the flpeh? I It doesn't, think how horrible It will I be to be preserved forever with only ! your own complexion and " I At this point the wires crossed anil j communication was cut off.—Chicago Record-llerald. r««l>le live Longer When Married, Dr. Ziln, the leading German statis ' tlcian, is satisfied, after many years o: collecting materials, that married per sons live longer than single persons. The death rate among married pet sons between twenty and thirty year of age is 0.7 per 1000, unmarried 8.4 between thirty ami forty, married !). unmarried 15.8; between forty ar fifty, married 14.2, unmarried 20., from fifty to sixty, married L' 4, unmar ried 42; between sixty and sevent; the proportions are married 45, uu married 71. These figures prove that the deaths o married persons between thirty am seventy are three-fifths less than tlia of unmarried. The average life of tin unmarried persons who passed thirty one is 58.(>, of the married 04.4. I gT. JACOBS; I I'uril f«r • O Year*. if •+: The Great Pain-Killing Remedy. J Never fails to cure. * RHEUMATISM, SPRAINS, * STIFFNESS, SCIATICA, I NEURALGIA, SORENESS, * LUMBAGO, CHEST COLDS, ic .J And All Bodily Aehcs and Fains. * There is Hothing bo Good. £ ACTS LIXE MAGIC. | Conquers Pain -* So'.d in 25c. and 90c. Sizes, * * ST JAC()M^i)ll.(Ulmlted), * BALTIMORE. ************************* mssvax largest p rovers of t/r mover, Timothy nnd Z*" „ Grasses. Our northern grown Clover for vigor, frost and drouth rcslstin properties, hnsjustly become famous. [ SUPERIOR CLOVER, Du. SS.CO; ICO lbs. $9.80 Li Crosse Prime Cloter, bu. $5 60; 100 lbs. J9.2C Samples Clow, Timothy and Grasses and great Catalog mailed you for §c postage. weak ere*, ait Thorny son's EytWi