I CLEfI. } £ By Percy T. Qriffith. £ It was noonday in a little country vil lage on the banks of the Hudson, well termed "the Rhine of America. From many a lowroofed farmhouse came the welcome sound of the dinner horn, calling the weary toilers in the fields to their mid-day meal. Relieved from their irksome studies, a merry stream of children trooped forth from the vil lage school, some repairing to their homes nearby, others flocking together in groups, to eat a generous luncheon beneath the shade of the great over hanging oaks. Their joyous laughter, echoing afar, rippled through the closed shutters of a small cottage not far distant, whoso evident gloom strangely contrasted with Nature's gay, spring like splen dor. It reached the ears of a group seated in the "best room" of the little house —a group composed of three persons of varied ages, whose coun tenances each expressed a different emotion. . One, a spectacled old gentleman, at tired in clerical garb, who listened with manifest approval to the matter of fact tones of a strong minded look ing woman of perhaps 40, with re pressed malice and well simulated charity struggling for mastery on her brow. The last of the trio was a slight figured child, "whose ordinary half girlish, half-boyish face, surrounded by golden, curly hair, now seemed won drously mature and almost manly in its righteous wrath, while the old cler gyman spoke,— "My child, what you suggest is impossible. You could not live in this cottage all alone, now that your moth er and brother are dead. You are barely 14 years of age,and we have de cided It to be for your best interests to —to stay—with Mrs. Anderson. "You mean, sir, that we are bound out. You might as well say the words at once. Why should I fall from the status of a free citizen to that of a pauper and a slave? Did not my poor mother leave all this property which you benevolent people have just sold for over $300? And if I went into this bondage, what opportunity should I have for study and improvement? You know mother always wanted me togo to college and be a teacher or a mu sician or an author or something great, but I don't see what chance I would have if I followed your plan." "What did I tell ye, parson! What did I tell ye!" cried the sharp-visaged woman with uplifted eyebrows. "That's what comes of sendin' a child to school when it tain't no more than five years old and a makin' of it study ail its life to home. What good's a person what's spent their life on booji-larnin'? Tell me that." "Oh, Mrs. Anderson," deprecated the minister, who prided himself on his knowledge, "education is surely valuable." "Yes, I know all that —I alius thought so, too. I wuz giv a good eddi cashun myself, but it warn't none of this new-fangled book-larnin' that this oostinate child's got. My mother, at any rate, warn't no fool, which is more than you can say of some people's mothers, even if they be dead an' gone —though it tain't for us poor mortals to say where they're gone. I might give a mighty sure guess where some people's mothers is gone, what never laught them nothin but book-larnin'. but then, we're all poor, frail human bein's." "Doctor Wesley," here broke in thi child, "if you think I'm going to stand here and have my mother's spotless name reviled and desecrated by that low-lived " "Low-lived, you little pauper in grate, you!" "Yes, low-lived, ill-bred, rude, un couth!" declared the angry young per son. "Oh, I know all about you, Mrs. Anderson, and I know why you've got a grudge against her and me. Did you ever hear the name of Francis Sum ner? Ah! you see I know —I read all the letters " "Ye've been spyin', reading a pack o' lies, have ye? Just wait till I have the charge of ye, and I'll larn ye to spy around things what don't belong to you." "I beg your pardon. As I am the only heir to my mother's property, they are now mine. And, doctor, let me tell you what they said. You know Francis Sumner and my mother were engaged to be married and broke it off. Do you know why? Because " "Parson, if you don't shet that little liar up I will!" "Gently, gently, Mrs. Anderson," said he old man. "It's only natural for Clem to be excited after just losing two dear relatives, and you must make allowances. Now, Clem, we'll leave you to rest after all this worry and trouble. And tomorrow morning Squire Morgan and I will come over, and we'll make all the arrangements for you to stay with Mrs. Anderson —" "I'll never go! I'll die first!" de clared his excited young hearer, pas sionately. "Oh, ye won't, hey? Jest wait. Me and my Hiram'll take some o' thet high spirits out of ye. Good by, ye little firebrand. Jest wait." That night a little figure stole to the window and looked out upon the road below and the sky above. All Nature was sleeping. "How still!" it murmured. "Oh, mother! Can you 'see me now? Am I right in fighting against this woman IjUo lost you your life's happin««s? And myself—how can I bear living with her and her Ignorant husband and children?" The figure stole to a chest, and raising the lid drew out a suit of man ifestly homemade but neat-appearing clothing, and divesting itself of sev eral lighter, but less serviceable gar ments, was soon arrayed In the former apparel. "Poor Frank! I am indeed stepping into a dead man's shoes! But he has no use for them now, and I—l could never wear them all the way to New York. New York! It is awful togo out into the world alone, with not a friend. Why not take mother's mon ey? It is now mine—but no—it would be like stealing, and then they would -ave some incentive to search for me. But I will take my own money out of my iron bank—that'sslß andtheydon't know I have it. Oh, mother, the Bible, which they say gives them the rigut to enslave and beat me, says one must not take his own life. Buthad not the same words often dropped from your own lips, tomorrow I would be with you and Frank." The gray dawn was just appearing in the east, when a boyish form crept out of the house and swiftly fled toward the railroad station, four miles distant. "Farewell, old house —my own home, from which strangers drive me—fare well," murmured a voice trembling with emotion, and the next moment the small fugitive had disappeared in the darkness. The morrow's sun had nearly reached the meridian as it poured through the dim window panes into the dusky office of a prominent city lawyer, who gazed perplexingly down upon a small applicant, who stood hanging } upon his scarce formulated answer. "Why, my boy, you are much too young—you could not do the work — you know nothing about office routine. You should first take some position at two or three dollars. Your parents should " "My parents—all my relatives are dead, sir, arid I am thrown upon my self for a living. I could not live on such wages as you speak of, and see- j ing in the paper that you offered SB, I thought I'd try and get you to give me j the place. I can write well and figure accurately, sir. Won't you give me a trial?" The legal light hesitated. The plea, 1 while earnest,had been made in such a dignified tone and manner that he > could not. worldly as he was, turn the boy away as he had many another more hardy one. And then he thought of his own child, surrounded by every luxury. "Well, my lad," he said, with a sigh, j "I'll see what you can do. What is your name?" "Clement, sir," answer the bay, bold ly, though flushing somewhat. "Clem ent Travers." "Well, Clement, you can start in at once. Fuller (to the head clerk), this is the new boy. Give him something to do. And, Fuller" (in an undertone), "don't treat the poor little devil like you did the last —ne can't stand it." "All right, sir," assented the clerk, respectfully, but with a sneer at his employer's softness after the latter's back was turned. "Here, just sit down and copy this off, and don't make any more mistakes than you can help!" Despite the apparent hospitality of Fuller, this was indeed a promising opening for Clement, and he set to work with such will and energy as to astonish the ordinarily somewhat easy going employes of the law firm of Johnes, Clarkes, Robinson, Smyth and Browne, who wondered "how that del icate looking kid was such a hustler." However hackneyed the authority for the assertion, it must be said that perseverance will always win in every branch of life, and the lad who had made such a favorable entry into the celebrated law office was no exception to the rule. Before three years had fuily gone by, his industry, had more than doubled his starting compensa tion. "Fuller," said Browne, the junior partner, one morning, "isn't today the date set for the transfer of town site of Pullman's?" "Yes," answered that individual without looking up. "But he provides the customer, and we only draw the papers." "We were to look up the title," re sponded the junior partner, sharply, and your report guarantees its clear ness. Are you sure there's nothing in the way? No second mortgage?" "There is but one document recorded besides the original grant of (JO years ago." said Fuller, in the staccato tones of a man who wishes his words to im press the hearer. He uttered a sight of relief as his inquisitor walked away satisfied, and, glancing around the room and meeting the honest blue eyes of Clement keen ly fixed upon him, he turned ashen pale, and wheeling his chair around abruptly left the room. Clement withdrew his gaze and bent it thoughtfully upon a law book before him. "You seem to be deeply interested in something, Clement," broke in upon him stiddently. He looked up. "Will you stand a catch question, Mr. Jefferson?" he eagerly inquired of the new comer, somewhat irrelecant "If it has a practical bearing," laughingly replied the latter, a young member of the bar, who was already noted as being the one lawyer who could always anticipate the decisions of the judges of his circuit. "Suppose," said Clement, "a man makes out a document —say a mort gage—can he draw another for the came property upon the same sheet of paper?" "Hum —that's a case that I cannot conceive of," answered the lawyer, cautiously, ' why should lie want to?" "What else could he do, presuming, for example, thut he had no other pa per within reach?" "Now I have what I want," said Jef ferson. "Clement, you may always con sider It a safe rule that 'in law every wrong has a remedy.' In such a case the second deed, unless incom patible with the first, would hold—bar ing fraud." "Barring fraud!" echoed the boy, as the attorney left. "But it would hold until upset by a court." "Is Mr Brown in?" inquired a voice at his elbow, interrupting his revery. "Yes, sir," answered Clement, rising and facing a handsome stranger, who, at first sight, scarce looked the 4i) years a sharp observer would have pronounced him. "Then please give him my card and tell him I have a note of introduction from Mr. Pullman, a client of his." Clement started. This was the "cus tomer" then. 1-Ie took the card, and glancing at the scrolled name on the small slip of pasteboard, the words "Francis W. Sumner" 'seemed to brand themselves on his brain. The card dropped from his hands, and reeling, he would have fallen had not tba stranger caught him in his arms. "Young man,"he murmured, in a kindly but trembling voice, "where have I seen you before? Your face is familiar. Why does my card affect you in this manner?" Clement, scanned the deserted ante room in which they were. "Will you promise not to reveal a warning if I give it?"' he whispered, and as Sumner assented, ''Postpone buying this property, on any ground ' you like, for one week." How do you know? Why? What i reason why I should?" ejaculated the astonished caller, and then, after a pause, he> added calmly: "I will take your advice, but I shall want to know all before, tomorrow." "Fuller," said Brown, the next day, after a long interview with the custo mer, whose entrance to the legal pre cincts had resulted in such a curious encounter with the young law clerk, "Pullman's buyer holds off on that deal." "What!" cried thai, ordinarily pomp ous individual. "What's his reason?" "Short of funds," said his employer, dryly, noting his excitement. "Not re markable for a man to find it hard to raise $50,000 all at once, is it?-By the way, I've let Clement oft' for a day or two. You'll have to make some of the others do his work." Two days later Clement Travers was seated opposite the individual referred to, in a Pennsylvania train speeding lo New York. "Clement," said the latter, "how came you to detect the fraud in this matter? I can understand Pullman and Fuller drawing that second mort gage for $40,000 upon the back of the first one, but they had covered up their tracks so well that I don't see how you first found a clue to work on." "Oh, as to that, it was their intima cy and something I overheard that gave me my first suspicion. At first I couldn't understand why Fuller should want to risk his position for such a sum as he could secure in this way, but of course his plan ensure! secrecy for years until a thorough examination of the title was made, and then It would merely appear as if he had overlooked this second mort gage on the back of the first, and no harm would be done even to his repu tation. I never, though, clearly com prehended the case until the very day you called, and then I had just found it out." "You have great intellect, Clem, for a boy." "For a boy!" repeated Clem, half sadly, half bitterly. "Oh, it was noth ing but guess work all through," he added. "A clever guess, which has saved me that forty thousand, and I shall see that you lose nothing by it, though Johnes and company's head clerk will. By the way, Clem, you have never told me your name. Why, what's the mat ter?" He peered into his companion's face, somewhat obscured by the dusk of evening, which was rapidly falling. Clem nerved himself. "Clement Harrison Travers," he an swered. "Clementine Harrison!" murmured Sumner, in startled accents. "Oh! Clem! I'm doubly fortunate in finding you. Your mother—it must be—the likeness, I see it now. Is she alive?" I "Your name was the last word she j breathed," answered Clem, mourn i'ullq. "A letter to you, the last lines she wrote. It explained " "Needless! I always loved her. though parted by a lover's quarrel. That letter, have you it with you?" "I have carried it constantly in the 1 hope of finding you," replied Clem, and then in a tone of anguish, "But oh! how can I give it to you—you will learn all!" "All! All what? Clement, can you i betray your mother's trust? I must see It." "Take it, then," replied Clem. sad!y, "and with it my secret." Sumner perused the letter with min gled grief and bewilderment. "Why, Clem, how she speaks of you! 'An orphan to make her way'— 'let her take my place!' " And then, reading txie truth in his companion's face. "Ah, Clem, why could I not see? My poor little girl! Image of her. What trials you must have had! But cheer up. Your mother's friend will make amends —ha, she's fainted!" The three years' strain and the pres ent embarrassment had been too much lor the delicate girl, and her limp form lay almost lifeless at hia feet before his sentence was finished. • • • • "I don't understand this, Browne," remarked Johnes, one morning, per haps a year following, as he held an open letter in his hand. "Our old lriend Sumner writes that he's Bent Clement onto Europe and married his sister. He, of course, means Clement's sister." "Nothing queer about that," an swered Browne, who, in such leisure moments as an active attorney gets, dabbled in amateur biology and was a crank on Darwin. "Clem was a bright chap, though awfully dainty. Got rid of Fuller before he wrecked the firm for us, and saved Sumner big money. Why shouldn't his si'ster be attractive and all that. Science tells us that inheritance " "But where did he get a sister?" persisted Johnes, impolitely interrupt ing this flow of learning. "Clem told me he had no relatives." "Don't believe it," answered Browne. "Survival of the Fittest don't agree with it. Smart people and hus tlers ought,according to this theory, to have enormous families, and if evolu tion " "Fiddlesticks!" replied his partner, as he took down "The Evidences of Insanity" from the well stocked shelf and repaired to his sanctum. —W'averly Magazine. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Every Chinese woman is practically a slave until her son marries. Then, as mother-in-law, she begins to rule, her son's wife being her subject. The Chinese pen from time imme morial has been a brush made of some soft hair and used to paint the cur iously formed leters of the Chinese alphabet. From Tomsk, to Irkutsk, on the Sib erian railway, a distance of 932 miles, there is only one town deserving the name—Krasnoairs—with a population of 28,000. Berlin pays a salary to a profession al bird catcher, who keeps scientific educational institutions supplied with birds, birds' eggs and nests. He is the only man in the empire permited to do so. At Montalto, in the province of Genoa, in tearing down an old church, a small underground room was found full of art objects of the Roman time, chiefly chiselled silver amphorae and vases filled with gold and silver coins. The plow is certainly the oldest and probably the simplest of agricul tural implements, being represented among the hieroglyphics on the an cient tombs of Egypt, dating back more than 4000 years. As early as the year 1000 B. C. the plow was described by a Greek historian as consisting of a beam, a share and handles. The following curious advertisement recently appeared in a London paper: "Gentleman wants board residence. Real good home, in small family. No other boarders. Being overstout, therefore subject to many annoying re marks, advertiser prefers very stout people's company. No others need write. Referrences exchanged. Ad dress," etc. A syndicate comprising English cap italists has been formed to promote the sale of"tie silks," composed of 30 percent wood pulp and 50 percent arti ficial silk. Samples are being submit ted to the New York wholsale neck wear manufacturers, and considerable experiment is taking place. In point of price this material shows advan tage over conventional fabrics. Its luster, feel and general appearance, closely resemble genuine silk. Wu Ting-fang'" Rfgard for Trnfli. The reporter who lied to the Chines#, minister at Washington, Wu Ting : fang, about salary, no doubt Je- I luded himself with the thought—if he I gave the matter a thought at all, —that j it was a "white lie" that would hurt nobody. But let us see the sequel: On the first occasion, when he called to interview the minister, he was ask ed what salary he received. "One i hundred and fifty dollars a week," glib -1 ly replied the youth. "It is too much. It is altogether too much," said the : more candid than polite Wu Ting-fang, j "You are not worth more than twenty ; five dollars a week." The Chinese minister, It is said, learned later, through other news ; paper men, that the reporter had not ; spoken the truth, and that, instead of one hundred and fifty dollars a week, ' he received but sixty. Consequently, ; when he again presented himself at the Chinese legation for information for his paper, he was curtly dismissed by Wu Ting fang with these words: "You lied to me about your salary. If you will lie about such a thing as that, you will lie about anything. I do not trust you. I have nothing to say to you. 1 want to revise my former esti mate of your value. Instead of being worth twenty-five dollars a week, you are not worth anything, sir." —Success. New York City.—Novelty waists are In demand for all occasions, and some of the latest designs are buttoned at ono side. This way of fastening Is said A FANCY WAIST to admit of a great variety of rich embroidery and other effects across the front. White satin, taffeta and novelty silks and light shades of pink, blue or gray are among the materials used for waists to be worn with black taffeta silk or velvet skirts. The chiffon separate waist has also come to stay, despite the efforts of fashionable dress makers to discountenance It. A Paris Importation in this line was made with ! the groundwork of pink satin, veiled first with blue and then heliotrope chiffon, and trimmed with ecru lace and touches of silver. Woman'* Five-Gored Skirt. No skirt is more generally satisfac tory than the one cut in five gores. FIVE-GORED SKIRT. The admirable May Manton model, shown in the large drawing, includes an upper portion so shaped and a grad uated circular fiounce seamed to the lower edge and is shaped to fit with perfect snugness at the upper portion, while it flares at the lower, and the flounce falls in graceful folds and rip ples. The original is made of sage green veiling, with trimming of bias folds headed with black and white fancy silk hraid that are arranged at the foot in the centre and over the seaming of the fiounce and skirt; but all dress materials are suitable, and tailor stitching, with corticelli silk, can be substituted for the bands when pre ferred. Both front and side gores are ixnrrow in conformity with the latest style, and the fitting is accomplished without hip darts. The fulness at the back is laid in inverted pleats that are pressed quite flat. The flounce is curved to give the fashionable fulness, and is seamed to the lower edge. To cut this skirt in the medium size nine and three-fourth yards of material twenty-one inches wide, eight and oue eightli yards twenty-seven inches wide, seven and one-half yards thirty-two Inches wide, four and one-fourth yards forty-four inches wide, or four and one-fourth yards fifty inches wide w'Jl be required. All-Overs an Trimmings. Dressmakers have discovered that the lace all-overs are possessed of even greater posslbilitiss than the narrow appliques. Hence we see them used for everything from whole dresses to the tiniest appliques—some one figure, a leaf or a flower, being chosen for the latter. Then, too, these cut up into big bauds, some of them a dozen Inches In width. These are usually edged with the narrowest sort of a scroll ap plique in the same lace. A band set on the skirt in apron overskirt effect serves admirably to head a flared or a pleated flounce. For these dresses silky voile and crepe de chine are ideal fab rics, and white Is first choice. New Work For Chiffon ROIM. Chiffon roses are no longer "lilies ot the field." They must now toil, being useful as well as ornamental. Their especial labor is to hold down the ends of black velvet ribbon trapping. A charmingly dainty dress in white chif fon with Chantilly appliques has the bodice as well as the skirt given dis tinction by a number of full-length strappings. A pink chiffon rose, ex quisitely made in different shades, catches the end of each strap. Lest It prove not trustworthy, the strap is also held some Inches above by a glittering rhinestone buckle. Work For the Summer Girl. Summer-girls-to-be with leisure and skill may make for themselves very pretty bolts, which will look especially well with their white waists or whole dresses. Rows of ribbon arranged gir dle fashion are feather-stltehed to gether with white silk. A few whale bones covered with white may be necessary to keep the belt in shape. A Saxon Decree Ajtalnst Cornet*• The Minister of Education in Saxonj has issued a decree that no girl attend ing the public schools and colleges may wear a corset. He maintains that tight lacing is as deadly a foe to in tellectual effort as the cigarette, there fore as legitimate an object for educa tional legislation.—Woman's Tribune. Woman*! Three-Piece Skirt. Skirts with flounces, that produce ample flare at the feet, and that lit with snugness about the hips are In the height of style and appear to gain in favor month by month. This grace- ful model Is adapted to all soft ma terials, whether wool, silk or cotton, but as shown is made of foulard, In pastel tan color with figures in white, and is singularly effective and stylish. The flounces curve in a way to give the best results and run up just suf ficiently at the back to give a smart effect, their edges being finished with stitching in self colored cortieelli silk. The skirt is cut in three pieces, tittod at the waist with short hip darts, and the fulness at the back may be gath ered or laid in inverted pleats, that are fiat for a few inches below the belt, then form soft folds and fall in rip ples to the floor. The flounces are circular, curved to give the fulness desired by fashion, and are arranged over the foundation. One, two or three can be used as may be preferred. To cut this skirt in the medium size, fifteen and one-eighth yards of mate rial twenty-one inches wide, ten and THREE PIBOE SKIRT. one-elghtli yards twenty-seven inches wide, ten yards thirty-two inches wide, or seven and flve-eighth yards fort£- four Ipches wide will be required.