America is ft a enormous cuntomor fa the diamond mnrkot. The man who fails to pay Lis in rm Ui when it fulls due will 1)0 charged at the rate of one per ceut a auontk until he pay. Snys Dr. Himon Baruoh, a famous physician of New York: "More cold bathing, more fresh air, less meat, ta ami couVo, and moro milk, cream, vhecHii, breud and bnttor, with easy frltiug clothing, will rejuvenate and be the salvation of onr workingwomen." A rorenl seientiflo writer anys that the effect of n "good novel" on a woman's nerves is very much the mame as the effect of brandy on a man's. He asserts that this sort of timuliitiou may iudtieo hysteria, - b u-b differs only in degree from tiriom tremens. do- American millionaires are not the only ones who And life in England Iwftt mited to their tastes, notes the Chicago Herald. The South African millionaire, J. R. Robiuson, will henceforth regard London as his per manent residence and Mouth Africa as iml a winter resort There is a growing practice in col lage tonus for lawyers who collect .debts dao by graduates by attaching their diplomas. The young men just turned out after a long intclloctual struggle are generally brought to terms by this unique process, duclares the, Chicago Herald. The Russian thistle, which has wrought such damage in the far northwest that congress was asked to exterminate it, has appeared in lilt moiK. A few plants have been found growing along the river bank near St. Charles, Kane County, and the farm--rs of the neighborhood are much alarmed in consequonce. Professor James Taft Hutflold thinks that the region of Massachu setts in which Northampton is situated lias contributed to this country a larger bhuro of intellectual ability than ny other of its sizo. He regards Dr. William D. Whitnoy, the Sanscrit acuolnr, as the most distinguished na tive of that region who has recontly joined the army of the dead. Now, exclaims tho Chicago Record, we have a new set of alarmists, one of whom has figured out that tho Atlan tic coast is settling at the rate of about the millionth of an inch in a million jours, and that New York, will, in .time be under wator. This same per on calculates that in 8,000 years Lake Ontario will bo running up Niagara falls H'ul down through Midway plais mc.o to tho Mississippi river ; that Chi cago will be swept uway. Mrs. Virginia L. Minor, of St. Lou is who leaves $1,000 in her will to Susan 31. Anthony, was pluintiff in tho colo brated case, of Minor vs. Happorstett iu which she claimed tho right of suff rage under tho fourteenth amendment. Silie was a descendant iu two lines front the grandfather of General Washington and showed the Washing ton blood in bor faoo. Iu bor youth isho was a beauty, and eveu at seventy ihar face retained a delicacy and re finement whioh years could not oblit erate. Three of her ancestors were members of the commission whioh entcucod the rebels iu Baoon's rebel lion, and it may iutorest antiquarians to know that they wore also auccstors of the rebel Washington who just a . hundred years later completed the work Bacon had bogun. The New York Tribune maintains '4Uat Switzerland has done perfectly right in declining to accord to tho llussian govorumunt permission to oroct a grauito cross 130 feet high oil tho rook ovorhaugiug the Devil's Bridge at Audormatt The object of the projeotod memorial waa to ooiu memorato tho passage of the Musoo viUi Oonoral Souvaroff and his army -over tho St Gothard in 1700. Al though the plea put forward by the Federal Council at Borne for its re . joetion of the Russian application was thut the niouumont would be "out of ILccping with tho lesthotio exigencies if tho situation," yet it may be taken for granted that tho real considera tions whioh lod the Swiss Government to raise objeotious to tho proposal were to be found in the fact that the tnouuiueut would, after all, serve to commemorate a most flagrant viola- lion of that neutrality which is the ba Mm of Switzerland's treasurod inde pp.ndonoe.aud to honor oue of the chief offoudura in tho matter. Indeed, the sleinaud of the Russian Government can ouly ba regarded as one of a oool ucw as monumental iu size as tho pro. joctod oross. - - -- - One rabies In the Dark, Tho whlto star, ono hy one, IPan out nf tlinlr oasnmnnt high I Anil tho lily-cup l foldod up, And tho moon-eloudn wander hy. ' Come liltlwr, ye little wlldwood things, ' ' That sing when tho Arrant nlght-wlndsilng Far up In tho windy sky. . Ours Is ths noon Of tho fnlror moon, . ... And a vol.'o In tho dark am. Morning will oomo to greot ' ' ,! " A litt'e now ross, Iwlsj Hut tho loving air that hoard II ope . Hath weloomed It with a kiss. And the clouds with tho white iip-RSthoiing hands "ringing ths rain from far-off lands, Thoy sing as thoy wandsr by. All are awake For singing's saks j -A voice In the dark am I. What shall we hoar by day? Tho tmad of a thou and foot. Como but hora when the night Is near And lloton, and And It sweot. Thn volns of tho things ye droam are dumb i'lio murmur of living, the waters' bom, And tho growing of the grass ! Voices of all In the night that oatl, A voloe am I that pass. Tho tmmor of moths that flit, The Inughtor of loaves that blow. And the hurtling wings of a wind that slogs And the bonding of gra below. Tho little white voloe of a flower unborn l'liou shalt not blimtom for many a morn i Yut It grows all ntoudfaMly t Vnilnr tho night. It fools ths light Of stars In an nnmn sky. Tim little hastening bare Lhtons with anxious oar To know if tho Day be on bor way Day that must never hoar. Chamoloons shy, anil the hlddon bird, 1'ho silver lizards, all these be heard In thoir strange and wilding speeoh. If yo but hark, Thoy sing at dark, In tho night thnt love them each. Who passu bonoath t Who ilnjs? A voice that may live or die, I.nt the only thing yon know of me Bo the song that wanders by. Como hither, ye little living things) Slug with me now as oach star sings, Each slur In the beokonlng sky For the day must come And we be dumb, And a voice la the dark am I. New York Independent A Song That Joined Hearts. "How oddly things come about I' Mrs. Marshall said, coming into the room where her sister and two daugh tors wore busily engaged in the manu facture of two elaborate evening dressos. "Mrs. Montgomery has jnst called, and tells me her brother Har old will be home in time for Mrs. Grant's party." The knot of blue satin ribbon was suddenly crushed out of all shape by the quick, convulsive grasp of Miss Efllo Solwyn'a fingers, while abont that lady's lips gathered a whiteness and moiuture that threatened a faint ing fit For a moment tho room looked dark and the voieos sounded far away, and indistinct only for a moment then she roused herself bravely, to soo that her agitation had been unno ticod, and to hear hor nieoo, Carrie, saying : "I never knew Mrs. Montgomery bad a brother." "Probably not," said Mrs. Mar shall. "He has boon in China for how many years is it, Effle?" "Twelve." For her very life Effle oonld not have spoken more than one word with composure. "Twelve years 1" oried May. No wonder yon think Carrie and I know nothing abont him. He must be as old aa his sister." "Let me see; he was abont twenty, three when he went away," said Mrs, Marshall, muuingly. "He is not more than thirty-five. That is still young for a man." The Misses Marshall, brightest of blondes, wore to appear at the ooming festival in olouda of white tulle with bine trimmings, and the multitudin ous skirts, puffs and ruffles demanded by fashion required busy stitching for weary hours beforehand. Miss Selwyn had also been bidden to the party, but "Aunt Effla never wont anywhere," the girls said, bo there waa no dress preparing for her adornment Aa her needlo ' wont in anS out, through oloudy tulle and lustrous satin, Effle Solwyn thought) "Oh, the bitter folly of the past) May and Carrie are now as light heart ed and gy as I was when Harold Rus sell and I clasped hands, with a prom iso to be all and all to each other. Ouly one little week of happiness and he left me. "How long was it? A year, two years, before I kuew that he thought mo fulso to him, novor guessing that it wus Kuto's bothrothed husband he saw mo grooi so wurmiy, wueu I never guo.sud ho was near. "Poor sistir Kate never know the anguish hor handsome lover caused mo. "If Harold Russell loves now, it will be some brilliant girl, not the faded shadow of his bid love I 'Yet-yet-" Tho eventful evening cnifie at last, and the girls werq shut up in thoir rooms, untwisting , wonderful crimps and otherwise preparing for conquest In her own room with the door securely fastened,, Efllo Selwyn was, she said in hor own heart, "making a goofce" of herself. Her thirty years of peaceful life, with only one heart strngglc, had left her faoo as smooth as in girlhood. Blooming she had cover been, her oval fooa having a soft, dreamy com plexion that was seldom flushed with color, though its exquisite fairness was never pallor. "Considering it is twelve years sinoe I wore this dress and flowers, I do not look so antiquated. A train is always a train, and I suppose the over- skirt modernizes it," thought Effle. Then she went to a bos hidden away in her bureau drawer, and from its most secret oorner she took a ring, wrapped carefully in soft cotton. "Dare I?" she whispered, turning it round under the gaslight and show ing tho device, an enamelled violet, with a flashing diamond for its heart. "Will he despise me if I put it on?" she thought. "Will he think I am too easify won back again? Should I despise the hasty judgment that led him to condemn me unheard, twolvo long, long years ago?" She hesitated some moments, then put tho ring npon the forefinger of her left hand, turning it so that tho violet was hidden, and only a plain gold band seemed added to her other rings. "Efllo, are yon going? Girls, your aunt is going." "01" cried Carrio, "you magnift centauntio! yon will throw all the girls into tho shade, What a superb silkl and you in full dress 1" she con tinned, with more enthusiasm than grammatical preoision. "Whore did yon dig up that violet silk? ' asked Mrs. Marshall. thought its glories had departed years ago. Do you remember the evening yon wore it, whon papa gave Kate her first party?" "I romomber," EnHo said, in a low voioo. Tho evening was half gono, and Effio had only seen at a distance the tall figure and handsome face of the hero of the evening. He was muoh altered, Efllo thought Yet, as the hours flew by, she caught herself reoognizing oertain expres sions of the dark eyes, the mobilo mouth, certain inflections of tho deep, manly voice, and once her heart boat tumnltuouely as a familiar laugh rang ont upon the air. More than once she had screened horsolf from a tall figure approaching the plaoe where she stood, and more than onos the violet silk had flitted into another room just as Harold Rus sell thought he could touch it. There had been muoh dancing whon a small party of musio lovers collected around the grand piauo, bogging Miss Selwyn to sing. "Just one song, Miss Selwyn," Mrs. Grant herself entreated. "There are so many anxious to bear you. " Very reluotantly the lady drew off her white gloves and seated herself before the piano. The group around bcr listened for the usual brilliant prelude and an elaborate and diffioult "show off song, but after a moment of silenoo the little hands struck two rich, full chords. A moment she paused then to steady tho trembling heart; then, in a dear, sweet voice, she sang the opening verse of "Auld Lang Syne.' The second verse was sung, whon close beside the singer a deep bass voice joined in the chorus. Quiok orimson flushes passed over Effie'a cheek, but she sang steadily, at every chorus the voice she knew so well joining her own. Nobody else noticed it, but with each verse these voioea, so estranged, grew stronger, clearer, more jubilant, till with the last one the spirit seized thorn all, and a deafening ohorus of the company closed the song. They drifted away, broke up into oonplos and groups, while Harold Russell, affeotrng to turn over aome musio, said in a low voioe : "Can we indeed be as in Auld Laug Syne, Effio? Can you forgive me?" For answer she slowly turned the ring upon her finger until ha recog nizod tho devioe he had chosen for her twelve years before. "Mamma, "May Marshall whispered "do you see Aunt Effio danoing with Mr. lluasull? I do not see oue young oouple so haudsome and distinguished lookiug as they are. ' A suddon memory flashed over Mr Marshall. "Tho last time Effle woro that vio let silk," she thought, "she danced ith Harold Russell, and the next thing wo heard of him he was on his ay to China. I remombcr now, Effio soon after bogan to withdraw from society.. I wonder ." C'onslnnt Work Stunts Man. Professor Max Muller has been re gretting that "the luxury and beauty of scholarly loisure" at the universities sve passed away forever. "It is quantity today rather than quality, I fear," he said to an interviewer of tho Quiver. "The tutors become teachers far too young, and they work so hard that they have no time to look to tho right or the left; and what is life if not a continually glancing to the right and left? They give themselves no time to develop. Thoy toko a good first-class and then give out what they have learned as teschers. This en genders the moneymaking spirit, I have no word to say against it, but it 11 tells on the spirit of the univer sity." The present system of constant ex aminations finds no favor with Profes sor Max Muller. "They stunt onr young mon,'' ho said, "they have no time or opportunity to be idle. Now, do you know, it is my idle friends," he added, "who have become distin guished men in later life? I believe in cultured idleness. It gives a man time to read for himself. But look at these examinations; why, a man knows exactly what he hastjoread frequently ro tne very pago. lou don t call tuai study." The professor confessed that at first he had been opposed to the girls' col leges, but they are, ho said a great success, "and it is a real pleasure to me to see the young girls so eager to learn. Young men do as little as they can, young women do as much as they can; too much, in iced. Again, thoy work more systematically, and thoir knowledge is better arranged. It tends wonderfully to tho improvement of the whole of their character. I wish the men could be ashamed and spurred on to further effort Indeed," he addod, laughing outright, "a friend of mine and his wife went in for the some examination ; she took a first class, ho only a second" Professor Max Muller, howover, thinks nothing tangible comes of all tho labors of the girls, while if only they could get fel lowships they might do good work. Westminster Gazette. Flood Uncovers an Old Village, Sinco the subsidence of the recent flood which swopt through the Gonosee Valley, curious things have como to light Among tho most interesting is what appears to be the unearthing of an old Indian village. On a farm worked by James Shcfflin, on the west side of the Genesee River, near whore the Jones bridge crosses the stream, about two miles and a half from this place a large quantity of tho earth waa washed away. Sinoe tho wator got down so that an examination of the place could be mado to detei mine tho . amount of of damage, the prospectors were con siderably surprised to find a lot of old style pottery, such as was In use iu the eighteenth oontury by the aborigines, scattered over the place left bare by the water. Further examination re sulted in the finding of a number of old oopper ooins, arrow heads, etc., and among other things a double solid silver cross four inches long and well preserved. Those ancient relics are being treasured by the finders, who are still on the search. The suppo sition by many is that at soma time or other an Iudiau village was located hero, ss the site is only a few miles below the junctien of Canaseraga Creek with tho Genesee River, and about three miles from the White Woman's Spring ou the Squawkie Hill plot. Considerable iutorest is manifest and the digging will be continued. Rochester, (N. Y.) Herald. An Electric Incnbstor. A novelty in the hatcbiug of eggs has appeared in the shape of an eleo- trio incubator, aaya the Pittsburg Dispatch. The special feature of this machine is tnat tuo neat oi tne egg drawer is automatically regulated to the fiftieth part of a degree. It con. sints of a tank incubator, hoated by radiation from the bottom of a wator tauk, which is constructed on ths mul titubular system. When the egg drawer roaches the temperature of 104 degrees su eleotrio thermostat connects up a dry battery with an electro-magnet, which aouates a dam per, allowing tne neat to escape through the open air, instead of pas sing through the flues of the wator tauk. This entirely automatio dovioe is said to effect a' saving of thirty per eent iu the fuel used for heating. LAiMKH' DKPAUTMEXT. "faiii MAtD op I'F.ntii'a" norsn, Tho house of tho "Fair Maid of Perth" has lately boon reconstructed and restored so skilfully that it socms an Old-World dwelling in every par ticular. It has the quaint clipboards of a former time, and at the door is the "lanpin-on stone," which recalls the period when the stirrup-cup was the indispensable accompaniment of every leave-taking. New York Tri bnue. MRS. LHATnSHS IS A OBBAT BAILOR. Blanche S. Leathers, a woman of charming personality, wife of Captain B. S. Leathers, owner of the steamer Natchez, plying between New Orleans and Vicksburg, hss been granted a master's license, after undergoing a rigid examination before Captain O'Brien, Supervising Inspector of Steam Vessels, and Baker and Young blood, local inspectors. Mrs. Leath ers has passed the greater part of hor married life afloat, and, as her hus band is often detained ashore, she con cluded that by mastering navigation sho oould relieve him of the expense of employing a substitute. New York Rcoorder. BtTTOWS HSR HOBBY. Mrs. Mary E. Harris, of Roxbury, Mass., has had for thirty year the hobby of collecting buttons, until now her collection numbers 12,000 differ ent kinds. Thirty years ago she made a wsger that thore were more than 099 different kinds of buttons ; she reaohed the thousand mark inside of a year. but onoo started in the fascination of "collecting" her pursuit was kept up. Mrs. Harris has aome interesting but. tons in her collection. One was worn by a soldier in Napoleon's army ; an. other by a soldier in Washington's there are buttons from the uniforms of half a dozen European armies, as well as thoso from South Amerioan re publics, the confederate army and the uniforms furnished by different states during the civil war. Atlanta Con stitution. THE DUCOVRAOINO HAND MIRROR. Nothing on the toilet table has done more harm to beauty than tho ubiquit ous little hand glass. The young girl knows nothing about freckles until somebody makes her a present of hand mirror. One blemish reveals another, ignorances magnifies the de feet', and then nnhappiness begins Quack medioines are resorted to and alleged remedies tried that are usually exponsive and either worthless or dangerous. The vain little woman goes on studying hor glass and losing contentment Gray hairs and wrinkles come long before their time ; her tern per loses its sweetness ; she gets round shouldered from constantly scrutiniz iug hersolf, and at the very time that she should be sweet and amiable and serene she is a screwed up, squint eyed, sour old woman. A toilot mir ror is the very worst present that i plain girl could recoivo. New York World. A WOMAN NATURALIZED. The unusual spectacle of a woman being made a naturalized citizen of the United States was presented in Judge Hutchin's court in Cleveland reoently, when Mrs. S. Louise Patti. sou took the oath of allegiance to sup. port the constitution of the United States. Not many weeks ago tho gen eral assembly passed an act permittiug Ohio women to vote iu elections for school officials. Desiring to tako ad vantage of the provision, Mrs. Patti son found it necessary to be natural ized, inasmuch as she had been born abroad ; but having come to thote shores before her 18th year, she had ouly to take out one sot of papers, and may now vote at any elootion whon school offioials are to be chosen She is the first woman to be natural. ized in Ohio, and possibly in the United States. Sho was born in Wey. acb, Switzerland, on February 14, 1853, and came to this country when only 14 years old. She is a business woman, supporting hersolf by work as a stenographer, especially in and about the courts. Everybody ac knowledgos her to be a brilliaut wo. man, and she is universally respeoted. New York Times. LONOBVITX OF rXMALKS. The Medioal Uooord says woman has the advantago of man as regards longevity ; she suffers less from aeci douU, injuries and many forms of dis. ease; she is, in fact more tenacious than man of the limited enjoymonts allowed hor. Dr. Brandreth Symonds has oolleotod and studied a large num. ber of statistic to illustrate this inter esting fact, (Amerioan Journal of the mortality of the sexos at diffeteut ago shown that In tho first year of life the mortality of tho female is much less than that of the male, 1cing at birth 92.64 per 1,000 as against 112.80 and at the end of tho year 81.87 as against 35.08. This difference continues up to the fourth year. From 5 to 12 tho female mortality is greater than that of the male, being at the latter period 8 Crt for males and 4-28 for females. At the age of 46 the male mortality equals that of the female, the 1st er having been up to this time slightly in excess. During the years 46 to CO, the period of the climacteric, the male mortality gain rapidly on the female, being 6.32 per annum for the one and only 8.47 for the other. Hence the climacteric is really a much more se rious time for man than for woman. After 66 the female mortality gains on that of the male, but is always slightly below it. Woman has not only a lesa mortality, but a greater longevity than man. There is, also, a plurality of female births. FASHION NOTKS. The toque is to be one of the favor ites of tho coming season. Jet birds having wing of oelluoid scale or pailettea are very Frenohy. Small bird effects are preferred, whether they are quiet in oolor or brilliantly cheerful. A rain-proof velvet will prove an excellent trimming for an everyday ot "hack" hat or bonnet Very large spreading bows of five- inch ribbon or pieoe velvet will orna ment the fall headgear. A touch of magenta or cherry in blaok, brown or green hats will be quite the correct finish. Haircloth and alpaca skirts, made with three ruffles up the back aud a steel in the bottom, are prophetio of a criioline scare. Moire ribbons in delicate colors and chine patterns are in use for trimming blaok dresses and giving a touch of color to white orepon gowns. The newest waistcoats for wearing with open coats are made of brown holland, thickly embroidored down the front with fawn color and white flax threads. An exoollout black dogskin glove, with fonr buttons, is made of the same skin as the tan driving gloves, which are said to last two years. In light gloves the specialty is the cinder-colored glove, plain or with black stitch ing. Tho newest parasols are in moire, with either jet or cream guipure car ried up each rib and a vandyked pat torn between eaob. Also thoso com posed of crimped chiffon, with guip ure trimmings. These are made up to match special costumes. The newest thing out in straw hast for women are the Panama hats, never before worn except by mon. Tho straw ia left in the natural tint, which, is yellow, with a tinge of brown, and the same straw dyed black is used in some pretty hats as a lining. The newest vests are of thick ribbed cloth in fawn or bright tan shades, made with extremely large lapels, showing a considerable amount of shirt, usually accompanied by a tie, and the double breast fitted with very large buttons of fanoy bone or smoked pearl All the boat dressed women are wearing white petticoats of tho most elaborate detail, flounced with luce trimmed with insertion and with rib bon. Komo of thorn boast accordoon plaited frills, others havo innumera ble headings run through with differ ent colored ribbons. Sots of three gold and silver butter flies infilagree, with some decided color shading in tho center, are sold for the waist, the top of the shoulders and the hair. There are some of the most fairylike flowers, such as piuk mimosa and the tamarisk, mado in the same filagree thread to be used for the same purpose. Tho newest guipure laoe has a renais sance dosign with a not groundwork, the patterns often copied from ths finest Spanish and Italian designs; but, beside this, a great deal of ooarse, thick-patterned guipure ia in troduced on to dressos and mantles, and is fashioned into taporiug battle ments aud deep Vandykes, so that they are introduced between plaits of tho material. Insertions of all kinds are placed horizontally aud perpendicu larly on the mantlos. Chiffon is the favorite trimming and doooratos tho throats of all the fash ionable cloaks. No oostumo is com plete without its rutHo. Thoy sot out round the back of tho neck, but sep arate iu front, leaving a apaoe about three inohos under the chin, aud they terminate with a plated end on either side, whioh hang to the bust.