Dewsrralic Al Bellefonte, Pa., May 18, 1894. THE DUEL. The gingham dog and the calico cat Side by side on the table sat ; "Twas half-past twelve, and what do you think ? Neither of them nad slept a wink! And the old Dutch clock and Chinese plate Seemed to know as sure as fate, There was going to be an awful spat. (I wasn’t there—I simply state What was told to me by the Chinese plate.) The gingham dog went “bow-wow-wow!” And the calico cat replied ‘‘me-ow!” And the air was streaked for an hour or so With fragments of gingham and calico. Whils the old Duteh clock in the chimney ace, Up ith its hands before its face, For it always dreaded a family row! (Now mind, I'm simply telling you W hat the old Dutch clock declares is true. The Chinese plate looked very blue And wailed : “Oh, dear! what shall we do!” But the gingham dog and the calico cat Wallowed this way and tumbled that And utilized every tooth and claw In the awfullest way you ever saw— And, oh! how the gingham and calicoflew ! Don’t think that I exaggerate— got my news from the China plate.) Next morning where the two had sat They found no trace of the dog or cat; And some folks thinks unto this day That burglars stole that pair away ; But the truth about the cat and pup Is that they ate each other up— Now what do you think of that? (The old Dutch clock, it told me so, And that is how I came to know.) — Eugene Field. MY BUNKEY. ©] have eaten your bread and salt, I have drunk your water and wine, The deaths ye died I have watched beside and the lives that ye led were mine.” A long dreary waste of glistening sand that extended for miles and miles in all directions, off to the left a slug- gish stream of thick yellow water that crept over an uneven and rocky bottom, and above all a hot August sun that beat down unmercifully on the roofs of the few adobe buildings constituting Fort Packer, in Arizona. It was not an attractive sight, but to our little de- tachment of recruits, just joining after a two ‘week's wagon trip over the hot, arid sands of Arizona, it meant at least rest and comparative comfort. It was back in the seventies, when railroads were few in Arizona and fighting plenty, when men held life very cheaply, and when the mere handful of troops stationed there did deeds glorious enough to reconcile one to the living exile service there meant. Our detachment numbered twenty, and when we halted in front of the ad- jutant's office, and looked around at the bearded and bronzed faces of the men with whom our lote were to be cast for the next five years, life seemed indeed a serious thing. The allotment was soon made. There were only troops of cavalry at- the post, and the detachment was evenly divided between them. An hour Li I found myself a tall-fledged trooper, gazing rather hopelessly at the kit just issued me—two bridles, a sad- dle, saddle-bags, currycombs, brush, lariat and picket pin, nose-bag, side lines, carbine, revolver, sabre, spurs, prairie belt, and a dress belt and cartridge-box. For a moment I gazed at the chaotic pile, almost lost in de spair, and then, hearing a footstep be- hind me, turned, and beheld John Sil- verton, the man in whose memory this little sketch is written. Itis hard to say just how old he wae; his hair was rather gray, but his face and figure were those of a man still in the early thirties. He was a magnifi- cent specimen of manhood, almost six feet, superbly put together, and with an air and grace that at once stamped him a gentleman. Upon his arms be wore the most chevron of a cavalry sergeant, and the letter K on his campaign hat 1 saw we belonged to the same troop. “Somewhat perplexing, youngster ?" His voice was rather low, with a some- thing in it that instantly attracted me, and then, without waiting for an answer, he knelt down, and in a short while had reduced the appareotly un- manageable pile to shipshape. Later on, after the usual prelimina- ries, I was assigned the place next to Sergeant Silverton in the troop bar- racks, and thus we became bun- keys. i Soldiering was different in those days; post exchanges had not been dreamed of, and a barrack was by no means the comfortable ard even luxur- ious one of the present. It was a time when men lived hard, drank hard, gambled hard, aud tought hard. Their jests and jokes were rough, their lan- guage not always polite their manners abominable, but their hearts were gen- erally true, and there was a rude. hu- mor among them that smacked strong- ly of real manliness. 1 was the youngest of our detach- ment, still in my ’teens, and to Silver- ton’s kindness and tact I owe more than can ever be repaid. There were times when the life seemed absolutely intolerable ; times when one almost envied the men who cared for nothing and lived accordingly ; times, espec- ially during the long hot summer nights, when sleep was impossible, and one was seized with horrible morbid fancies that almost made lite a hell on earth; and there were other times, thank God, when “boots and saddles” drove all drivelling ideas out of one’s head, and the real soidiering began. The first year at Packer was rather uneventful—a decent amount of field service, two or three little skirmishes, and a slight change in the personnel of our troop. I had gotten my first pro- motion, and was a corporal in Silver ton’a squad. My chevrons had been properly welted according to troop tra- ditions ; I had put my bead in the water-barrel and called coporal to see how it sonuded, and had almost been reduced the day after promotion for imagining (for a few brief moments only) that the junior corporal ranked the first sergeant. In Silverton there was little change, / ro E0500 NS OC ARE Bn A He He was the same quiet, dignified sol- you imagine my feelings? How I dier, perhaps a trifle more impatient, but thoroughly liked and respected by the whole troop. My Bankey had grown to be my friend and mentor, and it was due to his teaching and care | that I achieved my first step towards my cherished goal. The summer of 187—will be remem- beredby all who were there asthe hottest and driest summer the Territory had ever known. and, to make matters worse, the Mescallero Apaches were at their old tricks of raiaing and murder- ing the defenceless and isolated set- tlers. On the 20th of August a detachment consisting of Sergeant Silverton, Cor- poral— (the writer.) and fifteen pri- vates was ordered out on a ten days’ scout in the direction of Tombville, from whence rumors had reached us of an anticipated raid by Chiet Victoria. Our orders were to take in carefully the adjacent country, and to gather any and all information that might be of service in case of any further trou- ble. It was a wearisome and thor- oughly uninteresting march across the hot, sandy prairie, studded with mes- quit and cacti. We made Tombville on the fourth day, and after a careful survey of the situation, Silverton, after a night's halt, decided" to return to Packer by what was known as the old “Animas Trail,” winding round to the south through the foot-hills of the Gra- ham Mountains. What his specific orders were we never knew. He was a man of most excellent judgment, equal to any occa- sion, and, I am inclined to believe was given carte-blanche by the post com- mander as to the way of conducting the scout. On the morning of the third day we were only twenty miles from Packer, and not a sign of an In- dian had we beheld. Silverton, who was always very quiet and reserved, seemed in an almost buoyant frame of mind that was a rev- elation to us all. I rode by his gide, and he chatted, absolutely chatted, merrilv over some of the few funny io- cidents of the trip, and about soldier- ing in general. “It was the only life for a man, after, all,” he said his blue eyes flashing as he gazed around to- ward the little detachment jogging along quietly in the rear. “The lite of a trooper—"" Crack | A puff of smoke from bebind the few rocks to our right; a singing. shrieking sound none of us were strangers to ; a sharp pish ; 3 sound of tearing flesh’; and “K" Troop could report another casualty. For a moment Silverton reeled in his saddle, and then fell toward the ground head foremost. With one accord the detachment halted. As I went to his assistance, ten of the men deployed and started to- ward the rocks. The engagement that followed was of short duration. Not over forty shots were exchanged, but the firing from behind the rocks was goon silenced. There were three good Indians in Arizona that we could vouch for, Silverton was shot through the body, how seriously we knew not. We dressed his wound as best we could, and then struck the trail again for Packer, which we made late that day. The news of Silverton’s hurt created some little excitement in the garrison, which, however, soon subsided, for ev- en the death of a man meant not much in those days. The morning re- port bore him from ‘duty to death,” and the monthly return showed” oue more recruit required.” There was no hope from the begin- ning. The doctor told me, assoon as he had examined him, that death was a matter of only a few hours. That night I sat with him as he lay stretched on the little hospital bunk apparently asleep. Taps. bad just gounded, and the lights in the barracks flickered up for a moment, and then went out in total darkness. There was the stillness of death around us, and for a moment I almost feared, yet hoped, the end had come. “Bunkey I” It was the first time in our service he had ever called me so, and in an instant [ was by his side. It was almost over. Boy as I was, I could see that the shadows were fast gathering about him, though his eyes shone with their old brightness, and his face had that brave and subdued look I knew so well. With one hand he groped under his pillow, and then bringing forth an old long leather case, placed it in my hands. “I want you to have it. Keep it al- ways, youngster, and may be some time it may help you. Believe; have taith—"" His voice was growing rapidly weaker ; and then with a pathetic lit- tle smile he said, “Always take your medicine like a man, Bunkey. It was almost over. I had to bend to catch his words: “My wife, my sweetheart—my son.” His eyes were almost closed, and then as his hand wandered along the coverlet as if 1n search of something, I ‘caught it in mine. He never spoke again, and death came so quietly, I knew it not until his band grew cold within my own. Io the case I found a tress of a wo- man’s hair, a newspaper clipping an- nouncing the birth of a son to the wife of John— (the name was not Silver- ton,) another clipping six months later telling of the death of both mother and boy by accident, andothe following let- ter, which I give ia its eutirely : “Itis just one month ago to-day, dearest, that our boy was born, and I have not had a line from you since you left me two long months ago. You left with a sneer on your lips and a look in your eyes that nearly broke my heart, and yet I did not and could not eay one word to keep you or call! you back to me. Pride is a dreadful thing, but sometimes it is all we poor women have with which to hold our own in this world. When you left me I thought you would surely come back in an hour or so, But the weary night dragged on, and daylight found me sleepless and wretched, eagerly waiting for your footstep. The days' passed, and still you came not. Can managed to live God only knows! And then at last your lawyer came, “When he told me you would never see me again | almost laughed at him, What did he know of our lite, our love. and our—hope? He raid you had been generous, and spoke of an allow- ance that he called princely. An al lowance of what, dear? Of money ; and my heart was breaking for a sight of you. It all seems like a horrible dream, and I remember little of what occurred until after my baby was born. They tell me I called for you constant. ly. Do you wonder, dearest? To whom should a woman call on at such a time? And yet called in van! At first I prayed God that we—the boy and I—might die; but when they brought him to me, and I felt him at my breast—our boy, dearest—I wanted both to live for your sake. Do you re- member the plans we made for him so long ago? What a man he was to grow into—strong, sturdy, and fear less! He was to have been a soldier, dearest, like your father ; he was to have been named after him, He was to —oh, how can I bear it all! John! John ! come back to me! You must know how wickedly you are treating me! “Do you remember the night you asked me to marry you ? It was the happiest moment in my life, and when I became your wife there was no prouder woman in the whole world. How could you leave me as you did ? Why, dearest, no wife has been truer or more honest than yours. Even now 1 don’t know why youare away from me. Your lawyer simply told me you had sworn to never see me again. And I asked him nothing ; I could not bear to speak of it. “But now I asked you, what havel ever done to merit such treatment ? Is it manly ? Is it generous ? But for all this I care nothing. Come back to us; for it is us, now dearest—your wife and your boy | Come back, I say, and let me take you by the hand and show you your son. When you have seen him, look into my eyes just a moment, and then, if you still want to leave me, I will gladly let you go. ¢ I don’t even know where you are or what you are doing. Ionly know I love you and am miserable without you, [I send this to C——, where Mr. Grant tells me he last heard from you. Your boy sends a kiss, and his mother prays God to seud you back to both of us before long. “Your OwN Wire.” More of my Bunkey’s life I never knew. The letter was old and worn and ofttimes almost illegible. There were stains in many places, probably made by the hot regrettul tears of the man to whom it was written. Therecan be no betrayal of trust in givingit to the world now, tor my Bunkey has lain for, lo | these many years, neath the shift- ing sands of Arizona. Traomas H. WiLsoN, First Lieutenant, Second Infantry, U. S. A.—Harper's Weekly Per Capita Wealth, According to the census valuation of real estate in the United States the per capita share of each man, woman and child in the country is $1,039. This is an increase of 49,02 per cent. in ten years. In 1850 the total valuation was a little over $7,000,000,000, or $308 per capita of population. In 1860 it was $16.000,000,000, or $514 per capita. In 1870 it was $30.000,000,000, or $780 per capita, In 1880 tt was $43,500, 000.000, or $870 per capita, while in 1890 it was $65,037,091,000, or $1,039 per capita, as before stated. New York is the richest State in Union, with a valuation of $8,500,000, 000. Pennsylvania is second with $6.000,000 Illinois is third with $5,- 000.000 and Ohio next in rank with nearly $4,000,000. The next in rank after Onio are in order as follows : Massachusetts, California, Missouri, Iowa, Texas, Michigan, Indiana, Wis- consin, Kansas, New Jersey, Nebraska, Kentucky, Colorado. In mines and quarries Pennsylvania leads the list. Colorado is second and California third. In machine shops and mills New York stands at the head, Pennsylvania second, Massachusetts third and Illinois fourth. In railroads New leads, Illinois is second, Kansas third, Pennsylvania fourth, Texas fifth, Towa, sixth and Ohio seventh. In farm lands and improvement val- uations, Illinois stands at the top, Oh-0 comes next, New York third Pennsylvania fourth, Iowa fifth, In- diana sixth, California Seventh, Kan- sas eighth, Michigan ninth and Mis- soari tenth. In live stock, farm implements and machinery Iowa leads, Illinois comes second, New York third, Missouri fourth, Kansas fifth, Ohio sixth and Pennsylvania seveath. A Garden of Irises. The Most of these Flowers in Japan Are Grown in a Suburb of Tokio. Among the comparatively small number of plants to which the Japanese have devoted themselves with a yiew of increasing the beauty of their flowers, the iris certainly represents their great- est achievement, says Garden and For- est. Other plants, much cultivated in Japan, and greatly changed by cultiva- tion from their original forms, like the peony and the chrysanthemum, are of Chinese origin, and were cultivated in China for centuries before their intro- duction into the Mikado’s empire. But the iris is a Japanese plant ; and if the species (Iria levigata) that is cultivated in Japan grows also in China, which is probable, it is not, so far as we have been able to learn, a favorite garden plant, like the pwxony and the chrysan- themum, in that country. By perfect- ing the flowers of this iris, and by rais- ing the splendid varieties with which we have become familiar here in Amer- ica during the last ten years. the Japan- ese have made a distinct and valuable contribuiion to the wsthetic equipment of the world, which should in some measure, at least, atone for the horticul- tural monstresities with which they have inundated us. Tho great centre of iris cultivation in Japan is a comparatively small garden It is situated in Horikiri, a suburb of Tokio, largely given up to smull florists’ establishments, and reached by the avenue of cherry trees in Mukojima, which in April, when the trees are in flower, is counted one of the chief sights in Japan. The iris garden occupies an irregular shaped basin, surrounded by artificial mounds planted with evergreen trees, and affording at different points oppor- tunities to look down upon the towers from open summer houses. Near the middle of the garden stands the tea house Which is found in every Japac- ase garden, large or small, where visi- tors are refreshed with small cups of straw colored tea and sweet cakes. Near the entrance is a large shed, where the workmen live and plants are packed to send away. The remainder of the level surface, perhaps half or three-quarters of an acre in extent, is divided into irregular- shaped small beds, divided by narrow walks, raised about 18 inches above the general surface of the ground. The plants are set in beds in straight rows, 3 feet apart, and are arranged according to the colors of the flowers, each row be- ing made of plants bearing flowers of the same colors. The rows are also ar- ranged in the beds according to the col- or of the flowers, from the one with the lightest-colored flowers at one end, to that with the darkest-colored flowers at the other. The sunken beds permit the flooding of the plants during their period of active growth, and during the sum- mer the surface of the ground, which is covered with a thick layer of night-soil, is kept so wet that it would be 1mpossi- ble to walk dry-shod through the gar- den without the raised paths. It is not improbable that the limit of perfection in the flowers of the iris of this particular species has been reached in the Horikiri garden. Certainly none of the varieties which have been raised in the United States or in Europe equal its standard types in perfection of form or in brilliancy and delicacy of coloring. Mira, The Wonderful. A Variable Star That Is Now Brightest and Most Interesting. Low in the west, half hidden in the evening twilight,. there may be seen just now a star that 300 years ago earned for itself the name of “Mira,” the Wonderful. And its behavior at at present seems to justify its name. It is in the constellation of the Whale and is known to astronomers as Omi- cron Ceti. It is only visible now for a brief period after sundown, when it way be seen hanging just above the verge of the horizon, under Jupiter and the Pleiades. Its red color dis- tinguishes it, although higher up there is another reddish star in the same constellation, Last winter the spot which this star occupies was absolute- ly vacant to the naked eye. But a telescope showed that a faint star was glimmering there. Since then that star has blazed a thoa- sandfold in brightness! Now it shines with a ruddy hue, suggestive ot a vast and fierce conflagration. What renders this wonderful varia- ble star particularly interesting at present is the fact that it is now bright: er than 1t usually is at its maximum, and that the period of maximum has been delayed for several weeks. Ac cording to the calculations of the ae- tronomers, it should have been at 1ts brightest on February 17. But it hae continued to grow more brilliant since that time, until it has become several times as bright as it was then. Mira is a sun, and when it blazes up, as it is now doing, it must sudden- ly pour forth a quantity of heat that if concentrated upon the earth at close quarters would melt it and turn it into a hot cloud. When Mira is faintest it is of less than the ninth magnitude ; when brightest it bas been known to equal a star of the first magnitude. That happened in 1779, when it was brilliant as Aldebaran. At such a ‘time it emits 2,000 times as much light as it does when at a mivimum ; 2,000 times as much heat, too, probably. Now, when it is near the third magni tude it is 300 times as bright as it was two or three months ago. The com- plete cycle of change that this wonder- ful sun runs through averages about 11 months. But for more than two- thirds of that period it remaius faint and invisible to the naked eye. Its brightening begins suddenly, and it usually gains light faster than it sub- sequently fades. A probable view of the matter would seem to be that Mira is an expiring sun, surrounded with a partially cooled envelope of metallic vapors whose absorption al- most extinguishes its light except, at intervals, when there comes an out- break of the pent-up forces within, or a heat eruption, which bursts the shell and fires the surrounding gases to a dazzling incandescence. If we knew just how faraway Mira is we could tell how it compares in size with our sun. We do know, how- ever, that it is probably a larger sun than ours. We may lairly assume that its parallax is not more than one- third of a second, which would make ite distance from the earth over 550, 000 times greater than the distance of the sun. Ii it really is as far off as that, then, when it flames with the brightness of a first magnitude star, it must be pouring out eight times as much light as the sun gives forth. But when it is at its minimum its light can be only one-two hundred and-fiftieth of the sun’s light. And in either case the intensity ofits heat probably ac- cords with that or its light. Surely we cannot suppose that there are inhabited worlds revolving around such a sun a8 that. But worlds may be there that were once inhabited. Did any prophet forwarm them of a time when their day-making sun would be- come 2a destroying furnace, and their elements would dissolve with fervent heat ? —Do you read the WATCHMAN, ea SAR Ny SE SE TT ES A XT I EE COLOR Mother of Washington. Dedication of the Fredericksburg Monument. On Thursday Mav 10, the President. and Vice President, the Cabinet, the Chief Justice, and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court, many Senators and Representatives and other dignitaries assisted in the didication of a momu- nent which has been erected at Fred- ericksburg, Va., by the women of the United States in hones ot Mary Ball, the mother of Washington. The Gov- ernor of Virginia delivered an address of welcome, to which President Cleve land responded and at the request of the Board of Lady Managers, he presided over the subsequent proceedings. Law- rence Washington, the son of Augus. tine Washington, the favorite nephew of the father of his country, who inherit- ed Mount Vernon and sold it to the as- sociation which owns it now, made an address in behalf of the family, and John W. Daniel, United States Senator from Virginia, delivered a formal ora- tion. The more distinguished guests were entertained at luncheon by the ladies of Fredericksburg, in the house in which Mary Washington lived during the Revolutionary war, and in which she died August 15, 1789, while her favor- ite son, upon whose character she had exercised so much influence, was attend- ing to his presidential duties in New York. At6 o'clock there was a ban- quet, given by the Mayor and citizens, of Fredericksburg, in honor of the visit- ing officials, and afterward a ‘‘colonial ball’’ at the Opera House. The monument, which was made at Buffalo, is a plain monolith of granite 50 feel high, and stands upon a base 11 feet square. It bears this simple inscrip- tion : the Mother of Washin gton. The monument was erected by the patriotic and persistent efforts of two women—Mrs. Amelia C. Waite, the widow of the late Chief Justice of the United States, and Mrs. Margaret Het- zel, of Clifton Station, Va.—and was paid for by contributions from almost every State in the Union. Mrs. Waite is president of the Mary Washington Memorial Association, as it is called, and Mrs. Hetzel is its secretary. The monument, says the Washington correspondent of the Chicago Record, is the result of a suggestion made by Mrs. Hetzel, who lives on her plantation down in Virginia during tbe summer time and comes to Washington to spend the winter. She is the widow of an offi- cer of the United States Army. Who was killed in the war with Mexico, and is over 78 years of age ; but, like Dor- cas in the Bible, she continues to go about doing good. One day in the summer of 1889, while visiting Mrs. Waite, she spoke with indignation of a scandal just then raging at Frederichsburg over an at- tempt to make the burial place of the mother of Washington the sabject of a real estate speculation, and expressed her regret that the grave was allowed to remain unhonored. The organization of an association to remedy this disgrace with her hostess as president and herself as secretary, was the result. AEA SABI Letter Boxes Will Not Go. The report that the letter boxes at the railroad stations would be removed created considerable excitement among business men in this place, who felt that the removal would be taking away one of the greatest conveniences they have in the line of postal facilities. Many of the merchants and business men do the most of their correspondence with city firms in New York and Philadel- phia after the post office is closed and mail their letters through the letter box at the station on the 10:10 p. m. train. This is the last box on the line of the P. R R. between here and New York that the rail way postal clerks are required to get off the train to op: n, and they have lenty of time to distribute the mail. It would be well to have two boxes at the station, one for the eastern and another for the western mail, as the postal clerks are often required to hold a passenger train until they get the mail out of the boxes, which sometimes contains 500 letters or more. The Altoona Tribune of Monday says: In response to the request of many citizens Postmaster McDonald wrote to the first assistant postmaster genera! in regard to the report and re- ceived the following reply : WASHINGTON, May 5. ' Postmaster, Altocna, Pa.—Sir: Yours of the 1st instant, enclosing a clipping from one of your daily papers stating that letter boxes are to be discontinued at railroad stations and asking informa- tion in relation thereto. has been re- ceived. In reply you are informed that the postmaster general has not issued an or- der discontinuing these letter boxes, they are regarded as a great convenience to the public, and there 1s no disposition to discontinue them. Very respectfully, Frank H. JoNgs, First Assistant Postmaster General. Dying of Hiccoughs. A Colored Skipper is Slowly Wasting Away. Captain Dempsey Hill, an aged boat skipper, colored, is dying at Wareham Mass. from an attack of hiccoughs. «Qld Dempsey” has been infirm for some time, and troubled severely with | dyspepsia. Wednesday morning he was attacked with the bicconghs and he | has been hiccoughing incessantly since ! until his body is so weakened that life is | despaired of. ! Old Demps is the authority on cur- | rents, shoals, fish and their abiding places in Buzzard’s Bay waters, and | each year creates a sensation at the Bos- | ton State House with his quaint but common-sense statements before the I'ish | Committee. Oo —— SRE. ! The Next Thing. ' Miss Single. “It 1s all very well to say that a woman's place is by her own fireside, but suppose she has no fireside ? Mrs. Fangle. “Then she should stay by the radiator.” ——Belgium has the deepest coal mine. For and About Women, Mrs. BE. D. E. N. Southworth, Ella Wheeler Wilcox and Marion Harland do not want to vote. Young girls of 16 will hold in favor the Marguerite coiffure. For this ar- rangement plait the hair very loosely, then turn it up. bringing the end to the tep of the bead, finishing it there with an Alsatian bow of black velvet. If the hair is waved the effect 18 more graceful. The plait is caught down to the other hair by two shell pins. We are becoming slaves to the big bow. It has been encroaching more and more during the past few weeks, and its power is really becoming alarm- ing. It will not be able to hang round our necks much longer, for it prevents us from turning our heads, and this alone apart from any other considera- tion, would be fatal to its continued popularity. But it is taking possession of the backs of our heads, it is fastening upon us like a vampire : we are grad- ually being eclipsed by it and from the rear we have entirely lost our identity and become even as monster bats, What are the new spring styles 7—I think I can truthfully say that every third one was a fine che2k of some des- cription or other, in either cloth or silk made with the inevitable bolero or Eton jacket. Skirts were much oftener plain than draped, and there was littlechange: in the skirt, four yards full, with fur godet folds, of the early spring. The most conspicuous novelty seemed to be the mull and illusion vests, the latter finished with fluffy cravat bows of 1llu- sion or with full Pierrot ruches. = One Jovely costume was on fine black and white checked taffeta, made with a bol- ero trimmed with fancy ball fringe. The Jacket bad a round fitted back, ex- tending to the belt and straight there, while the fronts were laid in rather wide side pleats, loose at the bottom. They reached to the waist at the under-arm seams, and sloped up gradually to the end just above the bust in front. Un-- der this was a loose baggy blouse of white mull, finished with a threeinch ruffle down the front. With this dress was worn one of Car- lier’s latest creations, the “snowball” hat—a black toque hat almost entirely concealed in front by three of the most. airy-looking great balls of tulle, from the centre of each of which were appar- ently flying away a black wing and an. aigrette, with the same black wings at the back. The common laundry table is much used for ball and piano settles, and: when stained and cushioned it bears no small resemblance to the antique: “monks’ benches” which have been re-- vived of late. A table of this sort may be purchased for $4 or $5, and by past- - ing strips of lincrusta along the edges and applying cak stain a very good ef- - fact of carved oak may be obtained, but it must be well polished to give a satis-- factory result. Mirrors are sometimes set in the high back, which add much to its elegance, and with a cushion of dark green corduroy for the seat a really effective piece of furniture may be se- cured. These benches are often orna- mented with poker-work, which is eas__ ily mastered ; but nail-head decoration is the simplest and most showy of all, as no skill whatever is required, only mathemtical accuracy in drawing the pattern and a certain regularity in driv- ing nails. For piazza use this settle is very popular, but treatment of the sort first mentioned would be too elaborate, . and a eimple application of dark red Pelt with a cushion of corduroy or inen to match, is all that is necessary. Turned down white linen collars are very fashionable for young ladies, par- - ticularly if they have clear enough com- plexions to admit of the severe plain- ness. The very newest thing in London for a walking dress is black speckled with white, making an iron gray. Both coat and skirt are made quite plain. with the back of the collar faced with dark grey velvet. The new coat is not too long, with very full coat skirtin the back, and cut off in front to leave a round waist. The skirt flares conveniently at the foot’ and the back is laid in box plaits, which spring outward at the bottom. The average woman, from not know- ing how tostand prcperly, is troubled with her skirts “dipping” in the back, . one of the most ungraceful features of a bad fitting gown. The best way to cor- rect this would be to learn how to stand erect, but that 1s a work of time, so it is easiest to make the gown conform to the - deformity. If you make your own gowns, or if you do not, see that your dress maker makes your skirts at least an inch shorter in the back than she does in the front. Make the dress long enough to touch in front and when you put the binding on it will be just about right length all around for a street dress. 1 A lady never extends her hand to a man whose acquaintance she is making. She may or may not shake Lands with a lady who is introduced, but she wmust not give her hand to a strange man. A low bow is the elegant form of saluta- tion. A cultivated woman will not shake hands with any man, no matter how long she has been acquainted with him, unless she respects and admires him. A gentleman never extends his hand to a lady first. To do so would be presumptuous, and would subject him to a snubbing. A man sbows his breed- ing by the wey he eats his dinner; a woman shows her breeding by the way she receives people. Lace has now gained such control over affections that it is woven rightin the summer material—in fine insertions’ or in broad stripes, Such flimsy mater- ials are made over a pale color of fine sateen or thin silk; and silk of the same shade is introduced into the belt, the collar and the bodice front or yoke. The sleeves are generally puffed to the, elbow, where they end in a {full rufile. Sometimes they are slashed to show the silk beneath. Queen Victoria will be 75 on May - 24th. ” ,