Beilefonte, Pa., March 4, 1892 DOESN'T IT BOTHER YOU TOO? Do you ever get mixed up in spelling With physic and phthisie and such? Can you, as a favor, please tell me Why t's not inserted in much ? It’s no wonder that much should be jealous Of t in that cripplish cruteh ! Did you ever take time to consider Why programme is spelt with an e? It’s foolish and stupid to some folks That gnashing is preceded by g. And beabugs are righteously jealous Of a in the cute little flea. I've thought and I've thunk till I'm crazy, And wondered what they were about, Pronouncing that R-o-u-t-e Asif t'were defeat and a “rout.” And whatis that little b doing Ina dubious wordlet like doubt ? I’ve sab up till 2 in the morning, Oft times, before going to bed To find out what business a-i had In a simple expression like said. You read—when tie volume is finished; You then say the book you have read. You visit your tailor and tell him To measure your form for a suit; But you never can write to your shoe man To send you a new style of buit. And if you spell water like daughter They’d call you a crazy galoot. There is dying and sighing and guying, And lecherous and treacherous and neigh, A sweet suit of rooms and a valet, “0. RK.” and obey and au fait. i BUT You can spell as you want to in future, But 1— ru just spell my own way ! Howard Saxby. SE I ——. COUSIN MARK. “I wouldn’t marry the best man that ever lived!” And she meant it, or, what answers the same purpose,she thought she meant it. After all, how few of usreally know what we mean ? “I engaged myself once, when a girl, and the simpleton thought he owned me. [soon took that conceit out of him, and sent him about his business.” The voice was now a little sharp. What wonder with go galling a memo- ry ? “No man shall ever tyrannize over meé—never. What the mischief do you suppose is the ‘matter with this sewing-machine ?” : ‘*Annoyed at your logic, most like- ly,” said my friend, a bright young matron, as she threaded her needle, “My husband is not a tyrant, Miss Kent.” Iam glad you are satisfied,” was the laconic auswer. I was quite evident by the dressmak- er's face that she had formed her own opinion about my friend's husband, and was quite competent to form and express an opinion on any subject: Miss Kent was a little women, fair as a girl, and plump as a robin. She wasn't ashamed to own that she was forty years old and an old maid. She had earned her own living most of her life and was proud of it. She was a good nurse, a faithful friend, and a jolly companion ; but stroke her the wrong way and you'd wish you hadn’t in much shorter time than it takes me 0 write it. Her views ou all subjects were strikingly original, and not to be combated. “What are you going to do when you get old ?” persisted the mistress of the establishment. “What other folks do, [ suppose.” “But you can’t work forever.” “Can’t say that I want to.” “Now, Miss Kent, a husband with means, a kind, intelligent man—" “I don’t want any man. I tell you, Mrs. Carlisle, 1 wouldn’c marry the best man living, if he was as rich as Creesus, and would die if I didn’t have «him, Now if you have exhausted the marriage question, I should like to try on your dress.” There was something behind all this I knew well. My friend's eyes danced with fun; and as Miss Kent fitted the waist, she threw me a letter from the bareau. “Read that,” she said with a kncw- ing look. “I may amuse you.” This is what the letter said :— “My Dear JeNNIE:—I shall be de- lighted to spend a month with you and your husband. There must be, how- ever, one stipulation about my visit— you must say no ‘more about marriage, I'ahall never be foolish again. Twen- ty years ago to-day I wrecked my whole life.” (“Better embark in a new ship, hadn't he?” pat in Jennie, sotto woce.) “So unsuitable was this marriage,so utterly and entirely wretch- ed have been its consequences, that I am forced to believe the marriage in- stitution a mistake. So, for the last time, let me assure you that I wouldn't marry the best woman that ever lived, if by so doing I could save her life. “Your old cousin, Mark Lansing.” “Rich, isn't he?” said Jennie, and then pointed to the chubby little figure whose back happened to be turned. I shook my head and langhed. “You'll see,” said the incorrigible, “See what?’ inquired Miss Kent, quite unaware ot our pantomine. “That parties which are chemically attracted will unite. Of course an alkali and an acid. Don’t you think this sleeve a little too long, Mss Kent 7” “Not after the seam is off. But what were you saying, Mrs. Carlisle? The other day at Professor .Boynton's, I saw some wonderful experiments,” “And did they succeed?” inquired Jennie, demurely. * “Beautifully.” +» “So will mine. job in my life.” . “Idon’t think I quite understand you,” replied Miss Kent, perplexed. “No? I always grow scientific when talking about marriage, my dear.” “Bother!” was all the little womaa said, but the tone was much better na- tured than I expected. The next week Cousin Mark arrived, and I liked him at once. An unhap- I never yet botched py marriage would have been the last thing thought of in connection with that gentleman. He had accepted the situation like a man, Jennie told me, and for fifteen years carried a load of misery that few conld have endured. Death came to him at last, and now the poor fellow actaally believed him- self an alien from domestic “happiness. Singular as it may appear, Cousin Mark was the embodiment of good health and good nature ; fifty, perhaps, though he didu’t.look it, and as rotund and as fresh in his way as the little dressmaker was in hers. As I looked at him I defied anybody to see one and. not be reminded of the other. True, he had more of the polish which comes from travel and adaptation to differ- ent classes and individuals, but he was not a whit more intelligent. by human nature than the bright: little woman whom Jennie determined he should marry. -#L'was surprised you should think’ it necessary lo caution me about that, Cousin Mark,” ‘cooed the plotter, ‘as she stood by his side, looking out of the window. “The idea of my being 80 ridiculous 1” and in the same breath, with a wink at me, “Come, let us go to my sitting-room, We are at work there, but it won’t make any difference to you, will it?” = Of course Cousin Mark answered “No, promptly, asinnocent as a dove about the the trap being laid for him, “This is my cousin—Mr. Lansing, Miss Kent,” and Mr. Lansing bowed politely, and-Miss Kent arose, dropped her scissors, blushed, and sat down again. Cousin Mark picked up the re- fractory implements and the Mrs. Jen- nie proceeded with rare caution and tact to her labor of love. .Cousin Mark at her request, read ‘aloud an article from tiie Popular Science Monthly, drawing Miss Kent into the discussion as dettly as was ever fly drawn in to the web of the spider. “Who was that lady, Jennie ?”’ Cou- sin Mark inquired in the evening. “You mean’ Miss Kent?" said Jen- nie, looking up from her paper. “Oh, | she is a lady 1 have known for a long time. She is making some dresses for me now. Why?” “She seemed uncommonly well post- ed for a woman,” eh Under any other circumstances, Mrs. Carlisle would have resented ‘this, but now she only queried, “Do you think 80 2" and that ended it. . Two or three invitations to the sew- ing-room were quite sufficient to make Cousin Mark perfectly at home there, and after a week he became familiar enough to say :— “If you are not too busy, I should like to read you this article.” “Oh, I am never too busy to be read to,” Miss Kent would say. “Sit down in this. comfortable chair, and let's hear it.” i) Alter a couple of weeks, when the gentleman came in hoarse with a sud- den cold, Miss Kent bustled about, her voice full of sympathy, and brewed him a dose which he declared he should never forget to his dying day; but one dose cured. After thie occurrence. Miss Kent was a really wonderful wo- man. Ab, what an arch plotter! She let them skirmish about, but not once did she give them a chance to be alone to- gether—her plans were not to be de- stroyed by premature confidences—un- til the very evening preceding Cousin Mark’s departure for California. Then Miss Kent was very demurely asked to remain and keep an eye on Master Carlisle, whom the fond mother did not like to leave quite alone with his nurse. “We are compelled to be gone a couple of hours,” said she; “but Cous in Mark will read to you—won’t you cousin?” “Certainly, it Miss Kent would like it,” replied the gent'eman. The infant Carlisle, thanks to good management, was never awake in the evening, so the victims of this matri- mounial speculation would have plenty of time. The back parlor was the room most in use during the evening, and out of this room was a large closet with a large blind ventilator, and out of this closet. a door leading to the back stoop and garden. Imagine wy surprise when I was told that Mr. Car- lisle was going to the lodge, and that we, after proluse warning about the baby, and promises not to be gone too long, were to proceed to this closet ov- erlooking the back parlor, by the way of the back gate and garden. In vain I protested. “Why, you little goosie,” laughed Jennie, “there'll be fun enough to last a lifetime. John wanted to come aw- fully, but'T knew he'd make an awful noise and spoil everything, so I wouldn’t let him.” The wily schemer took the precau- tion to lock the closet door from the | outside, so there was no fear of detec- tion. On a high bench, sill as two mice, we awaited results. Presently, Cousin Mark, as if arous- ing from a protracted revery, asked, “Would you like to have me read 2 “Ob, I am not {particular,”’ replied Miss Kent. “Here is an excellent article on elec- tive affinities. How would you like that? hs , Jennies elbow in’ my side almost took away my breath. SWho'is it by 2” she inquired. Jennie exclaimed (clearin my ear), “That's to gain time, see if it ain't,” “It’s by a prominent French writer. I believe,” answered Coasin Mark. “I don’t think I care tor a transla tion to-night,” said Miss Kent “Nor I; vor reading of any kind,” he continued. “This is my last even- ing in New York, Miss Kent.” : “I hope you've enjoyed your visit,” she returned. 2. Jennie (into my very head this time); “She's as shy as a three-year-old colt.” “I'didn’t think I should feel so bad about leaving,” Cousin Mark went on. “He is the wreck, you remember,” whispered Jenuie. Along pause. ' | ii : “I think I hear the baby,” exclaim: ed Miss Kent. * (beverage go crazy. “Oh, no, said Cousin Mark. “You are foud of babies, are you not, Miss Kent?” No answer from Miss Kent, “I have been a very lonely man, Miss Kent,” Cousin Mark resumed ; “but I never realized how lonely the rest of my life must be until I came to his house.” : “Oh, how lonely,” echoed Jennie.’ “Now I must return to my business and my boarding-house-boarding-house for.a man so fond of domestic life as I am, Miss Kent,” es Just then we very distinctly heard a little kind of a purr, which sounded very like a note of intense sympathy from Miss Kent. | “I have friends in Syn Francisco of course,” said Cousin Mark, “but no fireside like this no one to care for me ; I am ill, nobody to feel very badly if die.” “That'll fetch Wer,” said Jennie. “T wish that I lived in San Francis: co,” said Miss Kent, in a little quiver- ing voice. “You could call upon me at any time if you needed anything.” “If you will go to California with me Miss Kent, I'll wait another week.” “Why, Mr. Lansing, what do you mean? What would folks say ?'’ said she. “We don’tcare for folks,” said Mark. “It you will, go, we will have a house as pleasant as - money can make it, You shall have birds and flowers and horses and all the scientific monthlies that you want—deuced if you sha’n’t --and you shall never sew another stitch for any body but me. Will you be my wife?” Just then Jennie and I stepped up another peg, and their was that little o'd maid, who wouldn’t marry the best man that ever lived,*hugged close to the man’s breast, who wouldn't marry the best woman that ever lived, not even to save her life. We came away then, but it's my opinion that they remained in just that position till we rang the bell half an haur later. “How do you know ?7 I asked of Jennie, “My dear,” she answered, “my whole reliance was upon human na- ture ; and let me tell you, dear goosie, what ever else may fail that never does. “Why, Miss Kent, what makes your face so very red?” inquired Jennie, upon entering ; “and Cousin Mark, how strangely you look ! your hair is all mussed up.” “And I hope to bave it mussed up often,” said Cousid Mark, boldly. “Miss Kent and 1 are to be married this week.” . Jennie laughed till ker face was pur- ple, and when I went up stairs, Miss Kent was pounding her back. a ‘Tolstoi on the Famine. There have been many conflicting re- ports of the distress among the Russian peasantry, but fortunately there is at least one authority whose statements are universally received with confidence. In spite of his many peculiarities Count Leo Tolstoi, the novelist and philan- thropist, is generally believed to be thoroughly sincere and trustworthy. He has been very active in the work ot practical relief in his part of the empire, and his report of a recent visit to one of the famine threatened districts throws some light on a very wretched state of things. Itseems that even in Russia there are those who doubt whether there is real famine. Tolstoi refers to the “dispute that has arisen between the zemstvos (or local authorities) and the government, on the elementary question whether the population is actually in the throes of hunger, or is suffering im- aginary terrors from fears and vain ru- mors of famine.” Itis charged that the people have counted upon aid from the goverment orthe charitable therefore refused to work and became intemperate. To de- cide this question and study the causes of all the trouble he visited the province of Toola, which he says is not the worst off of the famine stricken districts. As he penetrated the afflicted region the evidence of distress increased. The first indication ot what I noticed was that the bread eaten by nearly every one there conteined 35 and in many places 50 per cent. of pigweed. It is'not the brown bread which is us- ually cailed black, but, isin sober truth, of inky blacknes, heavy, clammy and bitter. And this is the stuff which young and old, weak and sickly con- sume. There was also great scarcity of fuel. These facts point to the conclusion that the population has nothing but un- wholesome bread to live on, and has ab- solutely nothing at all to warm them- selves with— a frightful condition for human beings to be reduced to. And yet, strange to say, if you look at the people, who presumably suffer such privations; you are struck with ‘their contended, gay and healthy appearance. The men were all from home, at work I was told, while the landowners bitter- ly complained that they could not get them to work for love or money. ‘ He found some families eating pigweed, although they had enough ay grain, but by far the greater number were re-' duced to desperate extremities, and in one cluster of villages 80 per cent. - of theinhabitants would have nothing at all to eat in a few weeks. Hunger does not seem to have pinch- ed the cheeks or emaciated the bodies.of thé populations, whose looks speak un- mistakably of contentment gaiety, health and exuberant spirits. = And this view was amply confirmed by the local authorities, themselves peasants, who declared that never before had drunk- enness been so rife. But the farther. he advanced the more miserable was the condition of the people. Pigweed bread was the staple article of food, and to make matters worse, it was not the ordinary pigweed that was employed, but a green unripe variety devoid of the white kernel, without which it is absolutely unfit for consump- tions. Bread made of 50 per cent. of this stuff and 50 per cent. of rye, cannot, be eaten alone. It actsas a very vio- lent emetic, and when brewed an quass is'made fron: it those who partuké of: the 0 The farmers. who: were badly off were eating their last ‘crust of this bread when I was, passing through. And miserable as they undoubtedly off. One of the large villages of the Ephremovsk district may serve as a typ- ical instance. Out ot seventy home- steads only ten were able to support themselves for a little while longer, All the members of the other farms had devoured the last ear of corn, their last pinch of flour, and had set out with their skeleton horses to beg. The few who stayed behind were living on pig- weed bread with an admixture of bran. I wentinto a hut to insp et that bread, andl saw it'and many other things be- sides which provoked my astonishment, The head of the family bad just re- ceived some rye from the authorities to be used for seed, but seed time was long since past, and ne had used his own corn for the purpose at the time. He was now mixing the rye with bran in the proportions of half and half and grinding it up together, and the bread that resulted was tolerable. But unfor- tunately there was very little of it, and that little was the last. The housewife told me that her little girl had eaten the two fold effect of a violent purgative and a powerful emetic, after which she resolved to bake no more of it. The corner of the hut was filled with twigs and the excrement of cattle to be used as fuel. The women regularly scour the roads and fields in search of this malo- dorous substitute for wood and steal in- to the forests, whence they furtively abstracted bundles of twigs as long and as'thick as one’s finger. The filth of the dwellings and the raggedness of the inmates were indescribable. He tells of a poor soldier's wife with a family of five starving children, who walked forty versts a day begging scraps of food, and this she has done for three years. There are multitudes of others just as badly off as she, and not this year only, but every year. All the families of prisoners—of whom there are legions— of drunkards, and very often the famil- ies of discharged soldiers, as well ‘as countless multitudes of weak-willed peasant farmers, are suffering the same horrible death in life. Every year, whether there is a famine or abundance inthe land, the wretched wives of these men prowl about the forests, watching for an opportunity stealthily to crawl in and pilfera little fuel to warm their famishing children, painfully conscious that if discovered committing this hein- ous crime they will be beaten or impri- soned. Year after year these people subsist on the charity of their neighbors, who throw them crusts and crumbs to teed their forlorn and hungry offspring. And this harrowing state of thing has always existed. It is part and parcel of our national existence. We live and thrive in the midst of it and by means of it. And the cause thereof is assured- ly not the present failure of the crops. Proceeding to the discussion of the causes of the distress ip Russia, Count Tolstoi says that the wretchedness found in the Russian villages described is not the result of any sudden catastrophe, as famine or fire, but of far more terrible and slow working causes. And the number of these vegetating communi- ties is as formidable as their misery. And yet throughout the length ard breadth of the Russian empire there are numerous villages more comfortless and desolate even than these. “I passed through several in the Ephremoff and Dankoff districts, and the impression they produced upon me is still fresh and vivid as the memory of a horrid dream.” He graphically describes one of these villages found in the midst of the pros- perous and wealthy estate of a large land owner. The contrast between the plenty of the great and the abject misery of the villagers, notwithstanding the picturesque appearance of their hamlet is very striking. He found the people with the smallest stock of food, but ap- parently quite indifferent as to where they would get more. Twelve out of thiry homesteads kad not a single horse to follow the plow. Indeed, it would be hard to denv that the failure of the crops this year is a but a trifling disappointment in comparison with the special causes of misery to which each individual family in expos- ed, and in comparison with the calami ties common to the entire body of Rus- sian peasantry, which have gradually reduced them to their preézent terrible condition. ‘ The general evils are in like manner wider-reaching, more intense in their ef- fects than any bad harvest, for they in- clude dearth of land destructive period - ical conflagrations, ruinous quarrels, drunkenness and utter dejection, bor- dering on despair. Before leaving this villageI lingered a moment by the side of a peasant who had just carried home a load of potato stulks from a neighboring field, which he was engaged in piling up against the walls of his hut. “Where did you from ?”’ T asked him. “Bought them from: the landlord yon- der.” i 10] Bought them | For how much ? “For two and one-fourth acres of stalks I’ve got to till two and one-fourth acres of his land,” he replied. This means that for the privilege of; gathering the potato stalks from two and one-fourth acres of land, the peasant is forced to plough, harrow and sow an | equal amount of land, reaping, binding | and carting the corn and generally per- forming all the the work required. The peasant was a talkative fellow and while I stood leaning = against: his cart chatting with bim, half a dozen otbers sidled up and gathered round us, and the conversation became general." The women too, crept out of their ‘huts and stole up within earshot, but still at a considerable distance from us. A crowd of ragged urchins,chewing lumps of ink black 'pigweed ‘bread, revolved slowly around us, eyeing me furtively and eagerly devouring every word we uttered. I put several questions to the men, answers to which I had already re- ceived from the elder, in order to verify his statement, and I found that he, had exaggerated nothing, Thus. amon other things I" have learned that the get these stalks i | | these peasants disclosed their poverty without the least hesitation, though I cannot say exactly they puraded it« or took a pleasure in proclaiming. it, | but everything they said. was. barbed, with bitter satire, intended’ for ‘some person’ were, these villages were not the worst | some pigweed bread, which produced | or persons understood, “How do you come to be so badly off { —so much worse than others 2’? I asked ‘and so fixed and definite was the ex- | planation that several voices uttered the i reply 1n unision. “We can’t help that. In summer balf the village was burned down as bare and smooth as if a cow had licked it. Then came the failure of crops. { We were bad enough off before autumn | came on, but now we're cleaned out as | clean as an eggshell. - And it’s little the bad harvest troubles us, seeing that we have little land to speak of.” | Yes, but how about your earnings?” | I inquired. | “What earnings? What are they? Why, the land owner yonder has hedg- ed us in on all sides for a stretch of eleven miles or thereabouts. Go where vou will you're always on his estates. No wonder the wages are the same avery wherein this neighborhood. And with that yon turn around and pay him 10 shillings for potato stalks that'll hold out no longer than a month.” “And how do you mean to lve then ?” ‘As best we can,” he replied. “We will sell everything we can hunt up and after that it is as God wills.” “Sell, indeed! It’sa precious lot as we’ve got to sell,’ chimed in another: “It isn’t the horse manure you’d be of- fering for sale, is it? If so, I've got a whole corner of my hut piled chuck full of ’em.’ ‘And it isn’t much benefit we get from ’em, I can tell you. When you put ’em in the stove to take the chill out of your bones they make you cough as if you'd half a hundred weight of pepper. and your inside is a heaving up, it is.” “They’ve written and written about us till all their paper and‘ink gave out and that’s all the good it’s done us,” re- marked another. “It’s easy to see the scrawlers were poor hands at the busi- ness; but grandfather there’ (pointing to me) “will write he has a firmer hand. And just look what a pen he has!” &o. "And with this they burst out laughing, in'such a way as to give me the im- pressions that they possessed some secret in common which they are unwilling to reveal. Now, what is the meaning of such extraordinary fiippancy and light heart- odness on the part of men thas over- taken on the high tide of misfortune and in hourly danger of being overwhelm- ed? Can it be that they fail to realize the gravity of their position, or is it that they are so confident of receiving ade- quate and timely aid from outside that tbey deem it superfluous to make any effort to help themselves? I may be mistaken in my view, but I am s’rong- ly disposed to favor the latter hypothe- sis without wholly rejecting the former. And I was confirmed in this supposi- tion by the recollection of the two tipsy old peasants whom I had met shortly before in the Ephremovsk district as they were returning from the cantonal board, whither they had gone to inquire how soon their sons would be summoned for their annual military drill. TI asked them what sort of a barvest they had had and how they were getting along, and they replied in a blithe, ofthand manner : “Oh, right enough, God be praised.” Thanks to their Little Father, the Tsar, they added ; they had received corn for seed, and now there was to be a regular gratuitous distribution of food--thirty pounds of rye a month for every man, woman and grown up boy and girl un- til Lent, and sixty pounds a month af- ter Lent. And yet these unfortunate people, who all reside in the most distressed dis- tricts of the government of Toola, can- not possible live through the winter, | unless they bestir themselves in time. | they are bound to die of hunger or of | some disease engendered by hunger, as surely as a hive of bees left to face the | rigors of a northern winter, without | honey or sweets must perish miserably | before the advent of spring. The all | important question, therefore, is this: Will they exert themselves, while yet | they possess the strength, if indeed it be | not already wholly exhausted? Every- { thing that T saw and heard pointed with | terrible distinctness to a negative reply. i One these farmers had sold out the | meagre possessions which he could call "his own and had left for Moscow to | work or to beg. The others stayed on | and waited with native curiosity. ; watching for what could happen next, like children, having fallen into a hole in the ice or lost their way in a dense forest, and not realizing at first the ter- rible danger of their situation, heartily laugh at its unwontedness. Where Tebacco is Raised. Lancaster county, it appears, still stands at the head of all the tobacco growing counties in the United States, with her 19,217,800 pounds grown in the season of 1889. Four other counties— Christian and Henderson in Kentucky ; Dane, in Wiszonsin. and Pittsylvania county, in Virginia, grow over 10,000,- 000 each. There are seventeen other counties that grow from 5,000,000 to 10,- 000,000 pounds each. Lancaster county’s product in 1889, as all known, was sold at exceedingly low prices--about the lowest in our history—and even then produced the growers $1,340,090. The | nearest approach to this by any other in- | dividual county was $886,840 by Hart- ford county, in fact, fetched ‘more money than that of the entire state of { Connecticut or of Wisconsin or of New i York and Massachusetts combined. ‘A Romance in a Nutshell. She went to a ball: wore too thin clothing ; ¢aught cold ; she was very ill for many days; a devoted admirer brought a remedy, when her life seemed to hang by a thread ; she took it; re- covered ; and finally married the man who had saved her life. And the re- medy he. brought her was Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical discovery, whichis a certain cure for all throat and lung dis- eases and scrotula’ complaints, of which consumption is one. BUCKLEN'S ARNIC SALVE. —The best salve in’ ‘the world for Cuts, Bruises, number of farms: without horses ‘was Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, greater than he had stated it to be. All! Tetter,. Chapped Hands, { Corns, and ail Skin Eruptions, and pos- | itively cures Piles, or no pay required. | It isiguatanteed to give perfect satisfac- Chilblains tion, on. money refunded. Price 25 ‘cents per box, For sale by C. M, ‘Parrish. * The World of Women. Mme. Patti thinks that singing should be taught a child as soon as it can speak. The etiguette of ‘the day forbids the use of numerals in letter writing. Even the date must be spelled out. It was the women of Toronto who gave the city free text books and shut off Sunday cars. They had votes and were not afraid to come out and use them. An English governess is hereafter to educate the: daughters of the King of i Siam and she will be rewarded therefor with a salary of $700 a year and a resi- dence in the royal palace. A special fancy this spring will be the use of pale-green shades for accessor- les on dresses of light tan, and darker greens in pine sage and moss ; also the use of palest yellow with gray and fawn gowns, The ckoice of a wife for Prince Georee has gradually narrowed down to two. women—Princess Victoria, daughter of Prince Christian, and Princess Victoria of Hesse, the youngest’ daughter of Princess May. Both are charming and popular girls. An exquisite centre-piece used at a recent luncheon was of sheer Irish lin- en. The border was of forget-me-nots embroidered in pale bluesilk. In the middle of the cloth was & butterfly out- lined in silk, : embroidered ir silk and tinsel. Miss Mary Wilkins, the writer, is a slender little woman, with a fair skin blue eyes, clean-cut features and a nose that might be celled sharp but for the gentleness and refinement of the face. She wears her hair ina knot at the nape of a neck which is simply perfect, To emphasize this good point the bodices of her evening dresses are invariably cut very much in the back. At last the milliner "has given to womankind a thoroughly becoming bon- net tie, We have for so many seasons past been confined toa single choice, the narrow strip of ribbon or velvet, that a change of any kind should be hailed with delight, and it has been, the aver- age woman being sharp enough to rec- agnize a good thing when she sees it. Even a plain face is wonderfully im- proved by the addition to her capote of bia velvet strings knotted under the chin. A charming visiting or carriage gown is of cloth corduroy in fine lines of pale fawn and black. The fourreau skirt has a broad band of jet passementerie all round the bottom, while the Russian jacket has a soft scarf of black silk twisted about the waist and knotted on the left side. The deep revers on the jacket are heavily trimmed with jet, while the waistcoat is of a dark shade of fawn silk with a close line of tiny jet buttons. A small Russian toque accom- panies this gown «nd it has a crown of tawn-colored velvet embroidered with jet while a panache of ostrich tips and jet aigrettes is on the left side rather to- wards the front, Black has lost in popularity because it. makes every line deeper and ages a wo- man more than even an unbecoming color. The woman, fair, plump, with few lines and no care inher face, can wear black, but the thin woman, the. woman who has fretted ber face into a map of all the woes in the world, would better keep .out of black unless she wants to be mistaken for a grandmother before she is one. Every woman should have one good black dress in her ward- robe tor an emergency or a change from colors, but after that let the pinky browns, mauve, soft grays and all ne- gative colors in which a beautiful wo-- man locks all the more beautiful and a plain woman less plain, reign supreme. The spring girl at the top notch of" fashion will look something like this: Her bell demi-train will have on ita fluffy silk border, reminiscent of discard- ed fur, with bands above of galoon, in true Russian feathers, and it will flange very much at the bottom ; her blouse will also flange at the bottom, like a bias edge that has been stretched ; her collar will spread out over her shoulders and cut a horizontal wedge in her profile, the upper sleeve will flange out at the elbow, and the hat may cut the outline after the same manner, The general effect of the whole will be a succession of flares. It will be confined at the waist by the costliest cincture her pock- et will buy, for the belt will be the fash- ionable jewel of the season. Girls who wish to look ‘quite Eng- lish” affect the crush felt which resem- bles a walking bat creased through the top. In the shops it is known as the “Alpine” shape. . Most styles in milli nery shown for young woman are ex- tremely fantastic in outline. Whimsical brims invariably slope'downward at the front, standing high atthe back and resting with platter-like flatness upon the head. Theinside band has become a necessity when one wishes to secure a jaunty finish. These bands are still used to hold a coquettish bunch of pink posies or a knot of ribbons, almost as many flowers being worn now as during the fairest and sunniest of June days. Fur heads peep over the edge of the broad brims at the fresh garland of" blooms as if in wonderment at the sea- son’s inconsistencies. Bags are coming in again." Milad;- wears one attached to a chatelaine and hanging from her waist. Some of the bags ‘are of leather or suede, mounted either in silver or gold. A novel shop- ping bag 1s of seal brown leather, with six litt e gold pigs frisking upon it. The chatelaine from which the bag hangs is formed of afat gold pig, with eyes of blue sapphires. ' Shopping bags ‘of ‘woven steel, in the shape of a heart, are used and many of them have the owners monogram in silver. With these four silver hearts are used as the chatelaine. Odd shaped bags of red Russian leather are popular. Occasionolly some: woman upon whom fortune smiles will wear hanging from her waist 8 shopping bag of fine woven gold wire, with her mono- gram outlined in her favorite gems. Leather bags, with the upper: part of: of silk, are convenient ard pretty. The: silk matches in color the leather: used. oe n The raised wings wera —