IfSTCflPTSl ESHBBni f?T5S THE KEJG OF K&BEA. Frank G. Carpenter Meets His Majesty " in the Bojal Palace of Seoul. HOW HE LOOKS, ACTS AKD TALKS, The King's Positive Character and His Pro gressive Ideas. v EE BEADS AMERICAS KEWSPAPIES tntOa OCR TIU.VXI.IXa COItKESPOXDEST.3 SEOUL, Korea, November, 188S. JubUOO years before Columbus dis covered America, geucrations before Shakespeare was born, more than 200 years before Luther stirred up Germany with his preaching, a hundred years be fore the first Bible was printed, when nil England was sleeping on straw, and when pins had yet to be known, the present dynasty of Korea &at upon its imperial throne and governed its cream-faced, almond-cjed subjects. The blood that flows in the veins of Li-Hi. the present King of Korea, is of the same con tinuous roral stream which has flowed over the Korean throne since 1392. During that time 29 kings have reigned, and the power of each has been more despotic than that of the Czar of Russia. The royal blood has not weakened in its flowing, and His Majesty of to-day has the best qualities of his an cestors, and is one of the most progressive of the Asiatic rulers. I had an audience and an interview with him to-day. It was at the royal palace and I was presented by our minister, Mr. Hugh A. Dinsmore. "Ve rode to the palace in state. Our conveyances were two Sedan chairs, each borne by eight big-hatted Korean coolies, and the whole escorted by 12 of the King's soldiers. "Winding our w ay through the narrow streets of the capi tal we were carried out into the broad ave nue which leads to the palace and which runs through Seoul from one end of it to the other, dividing it almost in halves. Groups of white-clad, almond-eyed, yellow-faced men squatting on the streets stopped their smoking as we passed. A EOrAL PROGRESS. Women with green cloaks thrown over their heads scurried along to get out of the way, and a noble or two propped upon his horse by Ins feudal retaincrs,told the groom leading the beast to halt and did us silent .honor as we went by. "We stopped amoment Wall of City of Seoul. by the two mammoth stone lions, which, on pedestals perhaps 20 feet high, guard the front entrance to the palace inclbsure. And our kesos all the while yelling out in Ko rean to the people in the streets: "Get out of the way, you villains. Don't you see these great men coming?" At least this was Minister Dinsmore's translation of the cry and it was irom him that I learned that the admiring worUs of "vans banl yang ban!" uttered by the men as they ran signified that they considered us as belonging to the nobility. "We were told that we would be received at the other gate of the palace and our escort carried us "by what seemed to me more than a mile of palace wall. The palaces of the King of Korea, in which he has now his residence, cover as much ground as a good sized farm. They comprise about 100 acres and a high, well-built wall of stone tiled with bine Korean tiling shuts them out from ordin ary gaze. The gates to this wall are of fine niasonary. They have roofs large enough to cover a good sized cottage and upon these are figures of Korean gods, or of the sacred animals. Each great stone gate has three entrances and the central one is never used, except by the King himself or by the repre sentative of royalty. Minister Dinsmore is perhaps the only American who has ever gone through the great front central gate. He did this when bearing a letter irom President Cleveland to the lung oi Korea, and was thus accorded an honor which in this cauacity as Minister he could not have. THE KING'S PALACE. Leaving our chairs and our soldiers at the outside, tor no one rides into the palace grounds, we were ushered to-day past the gorgeous royal guards, and escorted by the two greatest Generals of the Korean army, were taken into what might be called the hall of foreign entertainment. It was a long, one-story, tiled building with great overhanging roof upheld by massive beams, which showed in all tne natural beauty of the.wood. A brussels carpet covered the floor, tables like those you eat from at home were ii the center of the hall and upon 'these were plates of cakes, which might have been made at at American baker shop, and ranged around the table were glasses of champagne. Here I was introduced to the King s Prime Ministers, and I drank wine and clinked glasses with the Secretary of State and the Generals of the Korean army. I talked with them through our interpreter, who, by the way, was one of the best in Korea, and I found them both intelligent and polite. " "They were all clad in their court dresses and the head of each showed a top-knot, shining through its fine Korean cap of Horse hair, with great wings napping out at the sides. They had gowns of fine ma terials of various colors, which fell from the neck nearly to the feet, and their feet were shod with great Korean boots, which made each look as though he had the gout and had wrapped up has feet for the occasion. The most striking feature of their -costume, however, was a stiff hoop-like belt which ran around the body just belowthe armpits, and which was so big that it came out about six inches irom the dress. These belts are emblems of rank. They ware about three inches wide, and they were plated with a great number of small squares, fastened by joints. On some of the belts these squares were of gold, on others they were of silver, and on others they were of green jade or other precious stones. Each quality had its significance, and Mr. Ho, the American in terpreter, who is of noble blood, had one of these court emblems about his person. AJT EMBLEM OP BASK. Another emblem of rank was the button behind thcright ear, which fastened on the hats of the Ministers. This was of irold in some cases, and I noted also that each of these royal dignitaries had a square piece of embroidery about as large as a lady's lace handkerchief sewed to the front and back of his gown. These squares rested between the shoulders and on the breast, and the figures upon them were tigers, inthe case'of the xnilitarv officers, and storks, in case ot high civil officers and Ministers of state. The hats were especially fine, and as we sipped our champagne, I was told that the big flap ping wings at the back of them, which look like ears, represent the quick receipt of the orders ot the King and the desire of the own ers to fly in response to them. As for the Minister and myself, we were of course in full evening dross, and I had a gentle hint before we went to the King that I must re move my eyeglasses as spectacles are in Korea an emblem of rank, and no one pre sumes to rank beiore the King. Oar audience hid been fixed for 4 o'clock in the afternoon, an especially xearly hour, on account of a stress of business and of my desire to depart for China on the morrow. The business day of the King of Korea is, to use an -Irish expression, at night. He be gins his work at 3 o'clock in the afternoon and closes at about 3 in the morning. His most important consultations are now held under the rays of the electric light, and his hours are practically the same as those of a hard working new'spaper man. It was promptly at 4 that our procession walked out ot the Foreign Entertainment Hall, and with measured tread and sober faces, solemn ly moved on toward the audience chamber of the King. The royal palace is a laby rinth ot passages and massive one-story buildings. WVwalked 'through long pas sage wavs, walled with stone by red capped, red gowned servants, past soldiers in gor geous uniforms and on to the gate of a large court vard. As we neared this, the yellow laces of the ministers grew more solemn; their heads were bent over and their eyes were cat upon the ground. "We had taken oil' our hats and walked behind. "We thns parsed through the gate and stood in pres ence of the King. IN THE AUDIENCE CHAMBER. "Wc were still, however, in the open air. The King was in his audience chamber across the court. It was a low room, per haps 50 feet long, raised about 5 feet above the ground and reached by 3 flights of steps. It was open at the front and was not more than 25 leet deep. At the back of this room and in the center, in front of a screenand behind a small table his Royal Majesty Etood. The Ministers preceded us, their heads going lower and lower; walked up the left steps until they reached the" floor ot the room when they got down on all fours and bobbed their blaek-winged heads against the matting. They then took their station on each side of theKing holdingtheir heads bent over, for it is against the law to look upon the face oT the King, and during the whole of our interview there noble Minis ters raised not their heads once. It used to be that no ordinary mortal ever touched the King, and in the writing of his name a stroke had to be omitted out of respect to His Majesty. Minister Dinsmore followed the Korean ofneers and I walked directly behind. As we mounted the steps we solemnly bent over and bowed to the King. "We walked ten steps across the floor, then bowed again and then on until we stood directly in front of and not more than three feet away from his majesty, and here we made our third and last bow. As we talked we did not bend our heads like the Koreans, but looked straight into rovalty's eyes, smile answering smile and a Korean laugh now and then coming from his majesty uponhearing some of our sentiments which were especially pleasing to him. The conversation was carried on by means of our interpreter, Mr. Ho, who bent him self over in the shape of a right angle and thus bending, in low tones translated the words which went back and forth in the two languages during our half hour's talk. THE KING AND HIB MINISTERS. The scene was an impressive one and thoughts of the past and the present crowd ed themselves fast upon one another's heels in our minds as we glanced about us. At the right and left of the King stood General Han and General Ye, each with a great sword still sheathed in his arms, and behind the table and on each side of his Majesty, holding him, as it were, by the arms, were two dull-eyed, stolid-faced, black-gowned, flap-hatted eunuchs. Thesejmen said noth ing during our visit They arc, I am told, among the advisors of the King and are with him in accordance with a custom which comes down from the Asiatic past. They are a part of the centuries gone by,and as I looked at them my eye caught the Edi son electric light globes hanging overhead and the French cloth upon the table be neath. It was the civilization of the "West and the East coming together, and I won dered whether the Mongolian and the Christian would not soon be kissing each other. 1 wondered the more, as in low tones I talked with this ruler, the most progressive Korean in Korea, and heard him ask questions which showed that he knew that a big world existed outside his own and which evidenced a desire to know the best that was in it. But let me tell you howtheKingloooked. He is a man that would attract attention anywhere; not over f",ve feet high. He weighs perhaps 125 pounds and his bright, black almond eyes sparkle with intelligence. He has, like "most Koreans, a very thin mustache and straggling chin whiskers of black. He has a pleasant smile, good, well kept features and his face is oval and the color of a rich Jersey cream. His hands are very small and delicate and he has no pompous airs about him. His hair was combed in a Korean top-knot and upon his head was the royal cap of dark blue color. This was of open work and I did not notice that it hadthebutterflyflapsof hisMinisters. His costume was a gown of brilliant red or scarlet satin which came up clo.se around the neck and which bore upon the breast a square of embroidery, in gold, of the royal dragon. He stood easily during the talk and he did not look to be over 32 years of ace. though lam told he is S6. He talked in a simple manner, in one of the sweetest voices I have ever heard. His tones were low but impressive, and I oould see from the expressions which came and went across his countenance and from the answers which he made, that he is indeed the King of Korea, and that he is a man of more than ordinary ability. GLAD TO SEE A REPORTER. Our Minister introduced me, and the King replied that he was glad to see me in Chosen, which is the Korean name for this country and which means the land of "morning calm." He asked me how long I would stay, which route I had come, and was anxious to know the names of the coun tries I expected to visit. He complimented me by saying that he knew I was a writer for the newspapers, and had learned that my wife was with me, for he asked, was she well and was she pleased with his country. He was sorry I could not stay longer, and he asked as to the health of PresidentCleve-land-and whether I had seen the President lately. I replied that I had heen at the Execu tive palace shortly before I left; that our ruler was well and robust, and that in the grand East Room of his palace I saw the Minister from Chosen, whom the President delighted to honor. As the King heard this he smiled, and I told him that Pak Chung Yang and his suite were thought much of at our capital, and that the Ameri cans and their President hoped that the re lations between .them and Chosen would grow better and better. The King replied that this was also his hope. He liked the Americans and the peo ple of his country liked them. He had been pleased with their action toward his king dom.and the relations between the two coun tries had been strengthened since the Presi dent had sent ont such an able man as Mr. Dinsmore to be his representative. At this Mr. Dinsmore bowed, and the King went on to pay a high compliment to hiB ability and to his work in Korea, and asked me to thank the President for sending him thither. I replied that our President was well aware of Mr. Dinsmore's abilities that he looked upon him as one of his ablest officials, and it was for this reason that he sent him to Chosen. Tne King appreciated this compliment and bowed. Newspapers were then referred to and the King said that he was glad that a writer had come to his country, and then a cumber of international compliments were passed in which Minister Dinsmore paid an excellent tribute to the King, showing him self an Accomplished diplomat. .The King had said that America was rich but that A Pleasure Parly on the Water. Chosen -was poor, when the Minister replied that he thought Korea a fine country and it had all the elements of great growth. He had no doubt if the King continued to rule it and should live to carry out his ideas," it would at some time be rich and great, too. A GRACIOUS KING. The King, toward the close of the audi ence, told me that he had fixed the time for meeting me on the morrow, but upon learn ing that I was anxious to go in the morning had changed the time to to-day. In an Asiatic country where a King's mind is supposed to never change, and where such a concession would never be granted to a Korean, I appreciated the compliment con veyed in these words. After thanking the King for the audience we backed out, dow ing three times in about the same positions as at our entrance. "Wo backed down the steps and again bowed, and then with digni fied tread were ushered out of his majesty's presence. "We next took a walkthrough the palaces, going by buildings which looked like Japa nese temples, and the outside of which were decorated with carvings. The royal Cabinet accompanied us, each one of the Ministers having two servants to hold up his arms as he walked. We were taken to the center of a beautiful little lake over rustic bridges, where the King has a pagoda-like summer, house, and where the Queen and her ladies come and smoke on a hot summer evening. "We then went to an audience with the Crown Prince, whom we found in a palace more gorgeous than that of the King. He is a young man of about 16, though he is full grown and is taller than his father. He was gorgeously dressed in a gown of crushed strawberry silk, and he had two eunichs be side him just the same as the King. His face had not the strength of the King's, and as yet the young man has hardly shown? I am" told, the ability of his father. Our in terview was rather tame. The Crown Prince asked after tne President, and expressed a kindly feeling for our country, and the audience lasted but a few momenta. We did not see the Queen, but I doubt not she saw us, for I am told she often sits behind the screens in his Majesty's councils and views the proceedings through the cracks. At a dinner given to the foreign ers not long ago one of the guests ,sat very near a latticed wiodow separating the din ing room from the one behind, and he tells me that the King and the Queen sat behind this and that the Queen had punched a hole through the paper with her finger, and that he heard the King laugh at some of the jokes which he passed about the Korean omcials. THE QUEEN OF KOREA. The Queen of Korea is by no means a "figurehead. She belongs to one of the great est families of the country, and it is an open secret that she has at times her voice in the councils of the King. She is one yar older than the King, and is said to "be a very bright woman. She has an establishment of her own inside these palace grounds, and the King, the Crown Prince and the Queen have each their separate households. The Queen is never seen by men, but she has several hundred court ladies about her, and there are a number of eunichs among the regularly appointed officers of the court. The Queen dresses, of course, in Korean costume. She wears fine silks and she has bsautiiul diamonds. She carries a chate lain watch which is diamond studded, and she smokes American cigarettes by the thousand. All Korean women smoke, and the majority of them smoke pipes. The country is, in fact, a land of smokers, and the boys and men are seldom seen without pipes in their mouths. The King of Korea has but one Queen, and he his only one law ful wife. The Queen is the only woman who rules in the palace, and she has a court of her own. A PBOGBESSITE MONARCH. There are in this palace from 1,500 to 2,000 servants, and these acres of buildings comprise quite a village. Thirty palace pages attend the lving day and night, and the women servants of the Queen are a host. They have a most extraordinary way of dressing their hair, nnd by the adding of great rolls of false locks to their natural growth they make a headdress bigger than the head which it covers. The King seldom goes out of the palace, though he is by no means so secluded as he was in times past "When he does the streets are all swept well beforehand and a grand procession accompanies him. He sometimes rides on horseback, and not long ago he paid a visit to his ancestral tombs 15 miles away, which is still the talk of Korea. He is a man of progressive ideas and his relation to China, which I may further discuss in an other letter, is the subject of much talk in Asiatic political circles. Li. Hung Chang, the Viceroy and Bismarck of China, accuses him of being weak and unfit to rule. From my own observation I know this to be false, and the foreign colony at this Korean cap ital unite in saving that he is far in advance of his race". He is clogged with a feudal nobility and with family tactions which may break out in rebellion, and he has to go slowly. Still he has pushed Korea far to the front, and I see in his work the begin ning of a revolution which may in timo materially change his people. With a royal school for the instruction of young Korean nobles in the sciences of Christendom, with a line of telegraph connecting his country with the rest of the world, with his at tempted reorganization of the army and his sending out his embassies to foreign courts, he has certainly taken some steps to the front. He has, I am told, the American papers translated for him and under his directions "Wheaton's Treatise on Interna tional Law" is being translated into the Korean. Frank G. Carpenter. MRS. HARRISON WRITES POLITICS To a Little Girl Who Named Her Spaniel of Illnstrlons Descent Ben Harrison. San Diego Sun. Mabel Whaley, the 6-year-old daughter of JohnWhaley, has a keepsake that came to her on Christmas Eve which by and by she will prize above her dolls and toys. It is an autograph letter from the wife of President-elect Harrison in reply to one from Mabel, in which she wrote: "I want to tell you of my namesake for our next President, He is a beautiful brown, curly-haired, thoroughbred water spaniel, with a long pedigree; and, like our President-elect, he, too, Las a grandfather. He was born at the time of .General Harri son's nomination, and we named him Ben Harrison right off, because it was the best name we could give him." Mrs. Harrison's reply is as follows: Mlsa Mabel Whaley. My Dear Little Friend Your littleletter was received. The General and I bath have a warm spot in our hearts for the little folks. The General will, of course, be complimented that you should name your pet dog for him, as it was the best name vou had to give, I am glad you are a little Republican cirl. and Ihope you will be the means of converting jour father to the grand old party. Some day I hope you will be in Washington, and if you are I shall De glad to have j ou call. I thank you very much for your littlo Christmas card, and I wish you a Merry Christmas. Your friend. Carrie S. Harrison. Romantic Death of a JIIone. Hartford Time. A few evenings since as a young lady of Bridgeport was dressing for a party, a mouse put in an appearance and, naturally enougExcreated considerable confusion, but finally disappeared. After the lady had re turned from the party, and while disrobing for the night, what was her astonishment to find the poor mouse in her bustle, but the place of fancied security it had sought in the excitement of the chase had proved a death trap. At some time during its pres ence there it had been crushed to death. The young lady's feelings can better be im agined than described. What n Baby Has to Pat Cp With. America. 1 Did you ever think what a baby has to put up with? The father rumples its clothes and i-pitches it up to the ceiling. The mother smothers it, hugs it and squeezes it until its little face is as red as a berry, and the nurse well, the nurse, especially if she's fat and wheezy, sticks her fingers in its mouth, rams her thumb down its throat. and "tootsey-wootsevs" in its face till the poor child must wish it was where it came from. THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, DRAMATIC AUTHORS. Some Successful Writers of Plays and Their Methods of Work. BELASCO IN THE ACT. OF WEITING. Maurice Barrymore, the Athlete, and Playwright. Actor SOMETHING ABOUT BRONSON HOWABD rwHITTZH FOR THI DISPATCH.! f COVTR10nTED.-lS39, BY THE AUTHOR.! , ONCE saw David Belasco in the act of writing a play. It was an odd sight to people who have preconceived no tions concerning play-writing. Mr. Belasco's hair was touseled over his brow. He was gnawing his nether lip with-an air of intense ab sorption, his cravat was loosened, his coat cast aside, and his legs were wound around his chair with nervous sinuosity. I had run in on him unawares and did not know that he-was at work. A large table at which he sat was littered with all sorts of curious odds and ends. There was a huge sheet of paper before him covered with cabalistic signs and marks, and he held a blue pencil tightly clenched in his right hand. Ink wells, match stands, calendars, pens, books, newspaper clippings and half a dozen other small objects were arrayed onopposiugsides of the table. , . "I am tiring to work out a situation, said the dramatist thoughtfully, "but some how I can't get it right." "What sort of a situation?" "The end of the third aot." Then he went into the question more in detail, and explained to me that the match safes and other objects around the table rep resented characters in the play, and that he wns trying to group them so as to make an effective tableau for the close of the third act. I believe that the idea was subse quently utilized in "XheVife." BELASCO'S SYSTEM. Mr. Belasco explained his system of writing plays to me then and I have never forgotten his explanation. I think very likely it is original. His plays are always constructed before a line is written. He depends entirely on the situations for suc cess, and is a great believer in strong dramatic contrasts. His ingenuity in this respect has dwarfed his literary faculty to & certain extent, and his plays, though of a strong dramatic force, are seldom distint guished by literary finish. At the sugges tion of Daniel Frohman, Belasco has asso ciated himself with DeMille, and the two now make a perfect working team in the production of plays. A few years ago Belasco was in exceedingly needy circum stances, and DeMille earned his living as a private tutor, having given up preaching after a short experience in the pulpit. The firm of Belasco & DeMille is now more or less famous. Their income from the royal ties on their various plays is considerably over 40,000 a year, and their.hands are full of work. Belasco with his matchboxes, inkwells and other paraphernalia constructs the dramatic part of the plays, and DeMille fills in the dialogue and does a lot of the character writing. Then the two men get together and gradually polish the play off until it is ready for presentation. I onee surprised another dramatist at work. A majority of the people are' not aware that he writes plays at all, though he has written some remarkably good ones. It is Maurice Barrymore, ex-champion middle-weight of England, an amateur athlete, a capital actor,, and a man of varied attainments. He has had an extraordinary experience all over the world, and he is al together1 a very remarkable character. He has written one of the most remarkable plavs that has ever seen the light in Amer- produced originally at Wallack's old thea ter in New York by Madam Modjeska. The piece was revolting and horrible to an intense degree, but of such great dramatic force that no student of the drama who saw the play has been able to forget it, Bern haratjsubsequently took the piece to Paris, and kept it there for a long while. "LA TOSCA" AND "NAJEZDA." When Sardou produced "La Tosca" the play presented such a striking similarity to "Najezda" that Barrymore immediately be gan a suit against the American owner of the play. It happened that I was familiar with "Najezda," and when I saw "La Tosca" in Paris on its production I was im mediately struck with the similarity of the pieces, though I knew nothing then of Bar rymore's claim. I had some conversation with Sardou on the subject. One day short ly after I had arrived in New York I went to look Barrymore up and have a talk with him about the matter. It was about 4 o'clock in the afternoon. The actor was then living in rooms over a small restau rant in Twenty-sixth street. The boy who opened the door told me to go right up stairs, and wnen I arrived at the top I pushed open a door that was ajar, looked in and saw a pair of athletic shoulders that were humped excitedly over a table. Mr. Barrymore was writing a play. It is to be produced, by the way, in a week or two by Frederick Bryton. There were no match boxes or ink wells on his table, bnt the entire floor was strewn with sheets of paper, and the playwright was tossing off fresh leaves with a celerity that would have astonished an expert ste nographer. 1 subsequently discovered that he was writing only about seven or eight words on a page. He had just rewritten half an act, and-before I had been there two minutes, he stood up and acted .the entire play through with a vividness and dash that suggested great things. If , Bryton gives it half the lorce that the author did in his impromptu rendition that day it will add materially to his fame. People frequently ask how plays are writ ten. I give tliis illustration of two of the most successful and capable of the young Elaywrigbts of America. Probably it "would e difficult to imagine two men more utterly unlike in their manner of working than Barrymore and Belasco, and yet it is easy enough to pick out a third dramatist whose methods are thoroughly and fundamentally distinct irom both of these writers. CLEVERNESS IN DIALOGUE. Bronson Howard's cleverness lies mainly in his dialogue, His method of writing is studious and thorough. He is probably the most famous of American playwrights, and his fortune is large. He received $10,000 in cash, for instance, for "One of Our Girls." 'in which Helen Dauvray failed with great brilliancy at tne Lyceum Theater. He has written a great many powerful plays, and not the least among them is ".The Henri etta," with which Robeson and Crane made so much money. The value of a good play may be estimated from the fact that when Bobeson and Crane dissolved partnership Crane sold his half of "The Henrietta" for $30,000. Bronson Howard is bald, small, solemn and rather exclusive. When he hears a good bit of dialogue or thinks of something clever he sets it down. By the time he gets ready to write a play he has a great store of short dialogues, specimens of clever repartee and grotesque bits of conver sation, He carefully studies the actor to whom he intends to sell the play, and utilizes all his material in building the work up. The literary finish of Howard's work is invariably its most striking feature. Take a fourth instance, that of Edward Harrigan. Here is a man who writes play after play as the years go by and nearly every one is a great success. He does not construct a play after the fashiou of Be lasco, nor alter the hot-headed method of Barrymore. "No play," Mr. Harrigan said to me nearly eight years ago when he was located in lower Broadway, "can ever succeed un less it touches a man under his shirt." HAjtRIGAN'S PLATS. He laid his hand impressively on his heart, to illustrate his meaning. That was Pwvic ' JFg STJtfDAY, JANTJART 6, the theory he pinned his faith to then and it is the guiding principle on which he steadily works now. Six years ago the plays which Harrigan produced were roaring farces and nothing else. Little' by little he has man aged to introduce an element of pathos and a touch of heroism in the plays, until to-day he turns out dramas that are fit to be judged by the highest canons of dramatic art. That he slips up occasionally in the pathetic part of his pieces is natural enough, for his com pany is essentially a comedy one and he writes to fit his actors. Little by little, however, he is introducing plays oi the se rious school, and a man cannot be far out of the way who makes the prophecy that as his powers of invention and character portrayal increase he will eventually assume the place of the leading playwright of America. 1 There are no plavwrichts in America like Bobertson, Grundy, Beeves, Harris, Sims or Pettit of London, or Sardou, Ohnet, Du mas or D'Ennery of Paris. The stage is further advanced there than here in that it draws its material from its own people. Here, except in very few instances, we steal our plays from Prance and buy them fifom England. The result is we have developed very few dramatists who are not also actors. The men I mentioned above are notable figures both in London an Paris. They are perpetually discussed in the papers, are popular in the clubs and in society, and their fjaccs are so familiar to the public that if an eminent playwright takes a beat in a theater box he is as eagerly pointed out as a great statesman would bo in America. Postering native talent has had the effect of lifting these playwrights into their present eminence. With ns' the writing of plays is" a secondary matter with the whole of Eu rope to steal from. GUNTER'S SUCCESS. Probably.the American who has achieved the greatest success of recent times is A. C. Gunter, and his success might almost be called the result of a fluke. Gunter is a thick-set, neavy and sturdy sort of a man whose ideas are well defined. He has pro duced a great many plays with disastrous results, but on the other hand one or two of his pieces have made distinct hits. These successes encouraged him in the face of a good many failures. He wrote a play finally of rather a nielo-drama tinge and tried very hard to have it produced. Week after week he tramped from one theater to another only to be rebuffed, and finally the refusals were so frequent that he gave up Uie idea of doing the piece in dramatic form and re wrote the play into a novel. Then he took the novel around to a lot of different pub lishing houses, but they were quite as ready with negative answers as the theater mana gers had" been. I met Gunter frequently about this time and he talked with a good deal of feeline about the manner in which he was treated. He said he knew he had a good thing, but there was no chance for a man without a literary reputation having a novel accepted. In sheer desperation he finally scraped to gether a few hundred dollars and printed the book himself. It fell flat and staid so some months. -Then it jumped aloft like a skyrocket. Orders began to pour in from all" quarters of the globe, and up to the pres ent time more than three-quarters of a mill ion books have been printed, and the presses are still hammering away, rapidly turning out copies of "Mr. Barnes of New York." The whole of Europe is sprinkled with the book. After it had achieved suc cess, every theatrical manager in New York ran after Gunter in hot-headed haste to produce the play which had been refused by all of them, but he dictate! his terms then and probably will forever continue to do so, as his personal income from his publishing business alone is now more than $60,000 a year, and he is at work on a new novel en titled "Mr. Nobody, of Nowhere." Mr. Gunter might have designated himself by this title two years ago, hut it's "Mr. Some body, of New York" to-day. Blakely Hall. WOMEN IN WAR ,AND POLITICS. Some Historical Examples Worthy of Remembrance. London Telegraph. History is' full of the dangers that attend the interference of royal wives in their hus band's politics. Beigning Queens have been successful enough. Elizabeth, of En gland, Maria Theresa Catharine, of Bussia, and our present Queen, have shown that they can select wise counselors and guide the destinies of realms but the Queen Con sorts of history, when they have interfered with thepolitics of their husbands' Cabinets, have done a great deal of harm. Henrietta Maria exercised an unfortunate influence at the Court of Charles I. Marie Antoi nette made her hsuband additionally un popular. The last King of Naples was married to a high spirited Bavarian princess who enconraged his resistance to constitu tional demands. In 1-879 the Empress Eugenie declared to her intimate friends, "Bemember, this is my war;" and it is likely enough that the Emperor, ill, weak, andhardly'ableto mounta horse, would have deferred ithe struggle had not his impetuous and spirited consort urged him on. It is sometimes said that the influence of women on the politics of the world would put an end to war; but while they remain non-combatants we greatly doubt it. They are able to realize some of the results of war the empty chairs, the "desolated homes, the widowed lives; but they never see its coarser consequences. " They never witness a battlefield after the fight is won the wounded, the dying, the anguish of untended men, the fearful spectacle of human life trampled in the mire, and all the grim 'and disgusting inci dents of the shambles of war, from the bloodshed of the day of victory to the spectacle) later on of unburied bodies moldering in the sun. They read novels and poems that throw a halo around it ali; they hail as heroes the men who return; they listen to the rnusic of the triumphal entry; they watch jhe waving plumes and the flaunting banners, and they invest with interest every man in the victorious array. It is in this spirit of unreasoning enthusi asm that beautiful women on thrones send brave men out to slay and to be slain stinging with their taunts the princes who hesitate, and rewarding with their smiles the rash kings who stake their crowns on the issue of a day. Queen Natalie, of Serviaj is only the last of a long list of illustrious ' ladies who have burnt their fingers playing with the fires of politics and war. HER IDEA OF BUSINESS. Ten Per Cent Royalty on the Novel Not Xnoncu to Dlvido Among Fivo Authors. The Book Bayer. A publisher told me the other day a bit of business experience which is mildly en tertaining. A young woman brought him a manuscript which after due consideration he expressed himself willing to publish in a paper, 50 cents series, paying the usual 10 per cent royalty. The young woman ex pressed herself willing to accept this offer, although die frankly said that she had hoped for better terms. "But," she added, thoughtfully, "if it costs much to make the hook,' I should not think 25 cents would leave you a great deal of profit." "Twenty-fiyn cents?" repeated the publisher, not at all understanding. "Why," explained she, ''there are five of us girls who wrote this together. Ten per cent of 0 cents is 6 cents' and five times five is twenty-five. It it takes a quarter of a dollar to pay us five girls our royalty, that leaves vyou just the same amount." The naivete of the proposition so amused the publisher, that' he declares he was tempted to leave the error unexplained. Hi Baid, however: "But of course you can see that we shall not lose so much as we should if there had been ten of you, for then we should have to make the book for nothing and lose the bookseller's discount beside. Beally, though, I fear you will 1)0 obliged to do with 1 cent a piece." And his prop osition was rejected with indignation, the amusing part of the story being that the lady who conducted the negotiations de clared if there were only one author, 10 per cent wpuld do very well, but that any body could see that it would not amount to anything divided amongfive people. ,1889. CLAEA BELLE'S CHAT. She Seeks a Change of Scene in the Bowery and Finds It. A PEEP AT FUTURE CITIZENS. Mrs. William Astor to. Inaugurate a Series of Elaborate Dinners. ONE TITLED MARRIAGE HOT A FAILURE rCOKEESPOOTENCE OFTHX DISPATCH.? EW YOBK, JanuaryB. Let us go to the Bow ery for a relief from the fashionable belles of Fifth avenue. The Bow ery! What a savory word that is! Suggestive of shade trees, twitter ing birds and bubbling brooks. And the time was when birds twittered and brooks bubbled in sure enough fashion, when red and beefy Knickerbockers idled away the soft summer evenings with the green turf and foliage to set off their silver buckles and afflorescent noses. The erstwhile grassy lane should now be called the Powwowery. It is the noisiest place in the world, to be gin with, and in the matter of dirt holds a royal flush. Yoa will find no restheticism there, no low-toned greens. and dreamy music, but you will find life,howling, whirl ing, tawdry life. It is indeed a mess.. The elevated trains snort through the air exactly over the sidewalks, by windows where glimpses of a dreadful life are caught. The bare. rooms of Scent lodging bouses swarming with 5 cent humanity; hopes with halt dressed families pushing food into themselves, mostly on knives; women at tubs, women on their knees scrubbing, women spanking squalling babies, women always at work. The street cars, many of them carrying out an active impression of shantytown on wheels, use up nearly the entire surface of the street, and the awful dime museums with their hideous canvas pictures of freaks, and the diseased music roaring from the tomb-like entrances, are sufficient to drive a stranger to drink. One sad sight occasionally on the Bowery is that of pretty and innocent young girls, with perhaps nothing on warmer than a clinging calico wrapper and a bit of shawl drawn over the head, diving into smoky barrooms crowded with men .to get great wash pitchers filled with beer. The news papers directed a crusade not long aso against the practice of permitting mere ba bies to buy beer, but, while it was carried on with great force, the babies continued to get their pitchers filled, and are doing so to day. You can often see a tot of 6 get into a doorway and take a long pull at the beer be fore carrying it home to the "old woman." The Bowery is really the main artery into which some very unhealthy veins pour their contents, and without its electric lights, its swarming crowds, and its plenty of police, it would not be just the nicest place to se lect for a quiet promeqade. But uuder the present condition of things it is only vulgar and dirty, scarcely dangerous. I often see a gang of immigrants plodding up Broadway, awkward, open mouthed, looking so miserable and poor that it seems as if they and our country would have been in luck had the wretches died on the pas sage over. Sometimes he carries a trunk on his shoulder, but oftener a handkerchief, a red one, on a stick, stuffed with tin pans and bread baked in Europe. This is the new blood of oar nation. Italians, Swedes, Poles, Bussians, dirty to a man, ignorant, poorer than an American can get and exist, over here expecting to pick gold pieces off the pavements and raise children for the presidency. Well, I suppose the latter per formance is a possibility. How can we know that some" dusty Swedish boy in can vas trousers, wearing his hair banged across the back of his neck and walking with the rhythmic amble of a kangaroo, won't get a situation as a barber's assistant, stick to his trust, get a chair, earn some money, buy a shop, marry a buxom young woman, have an heir, -a healthy ambitious boy who will frow up popular, get elected Sheriff, then layor, then Governor, then President? I presume he can do it as well as any one. But the women are the interesting ones. A foreign girl is always picturesque, especi ally if she has a pretty face and figure, as she frequently has. What, I wonder alt ways, is to be done by all these women! Well, I imagine they will be like most of their sex. They will Iook as nice as they can in order to attract tne men, no matter what station they are in. They have come to quite the proper, shop. They have in vaded a land where the possibilities are well-nigh limitless, but, be it remembered, where one may live just as mean and worth less a life as he can in any crumbling mon archy in "Europe. When I see these im migrant gangs I feel like telling them that indolence, discontent and envy cannot bring prosperity here any more than such vices will in all other sections, but I am afraid they .may. not understand my language, sol just "keep quiet and study their gaits. I do not-think I ever saw a graceful immigrant. Some of them walk like ducks, others like camels, and all seem more or less spavined, rheumatic and tired. When they have cultivated pride all these imperfections will be knocked out of them. As to those, who ride in chaises, while the poor walk, the handsome and fashionable wife of the Vice President-elect is noted for the possession of the most remarkable coach man. William White, whov sits stiffly on the high driver's seat of Mrs. Morton's car riage, was once in the employ of the Prince of Wales, and was brought to this country by the Marquis of Lome while that aristo crat was Governor General of Canada. He has been in the employ of Levi P. Morton four or five years, and is a sort of example to the other family coachmen of Fifth ave nue in deportment. The manner in which he tips his hat 'upon being questioned or answering, his stifi-backed pose on his seat, his handling of the reins and wnip in everything he is taken as a model. Even the livery stable proprietors, in outfitting equipages that are meant to be mistaken for tne private turnouts or ineir customers, are accustomed to point White out to their drivers as an exhibit of what they ought to aim at. 'But Mrs. Morton's carriage has interior comforts that are not for show. A diminutive clock is set into the Bide where she can see it at a glance, and thus, in making a round of calls or keeping other engagements, she may know the time with out the bother of taking out a watch. In a drawer are compactly arranged a hand glass and a hair brush and comb, to be used in the carriage whenever the slightest mis hap of toilet requires attention. A bearskin rug contains a flat tin receptacle for hot water, and is thus kept in condition to warm the feet. Like many of the vehicles made to order for ladies of wealth, the back seat of this one is of a height, breadth and up holstered shape exactly suited to be easiest for Mrs. Morton. This carriage, although not singular in its appointments of luxury, is one of the newest in manufacture, and nothing more complete is owned by an Astor or a Yanderbilt. . Mrs. William Astor has retaken her place as almost if not quite the foremost leader in Fifth avenue society. After a partial retirement from festivities for two years, she has started in for 1889 with a series of dinner parties. There are to be ten of them on successive Tuesday even ings, and each will have 22 guests; with no repetitions as to individuals. That will figure out 220 persons altogether. Of course, that may not mean that Mrs. Astor, who has been accredited as the chief spon sor for Ward McAllister's judgment in selectinc: and restricting the "Four Hun dred," has decided that only about half the McAllisters'' are fit to put their legs under her table. Nevertheless, there are bound to be heartburnings and resentments. Of ,". . the splendors of these occasions, with the services of solid gold andsilver, the mar .velously cut glass, and the profusion of rarest flowers, society is talking ieforehand with much vivacity. But there is going to be competition with Mrs. Astor. This will occur on ihe Tuesday night of January 15, when six matrons of millionanism, besides Mrs. Astor, will give dinner parties, the guests of which will at midnight assemble in one of Delmonico's halls for a brief tall. The wives of Cornelius and William K. Tanderbilt are among, these hostesses, and it is safe to count in advance upon both of them trying to" outdo Mrs. Astor, and whether they succeed or not will be the question discussed by the guests when they get together for the supplemental dance. For blunt and direct self-assertion Ada Behan is entitled to the largest cake that the oven of any New York bakery is equal to. A version of Sheridan's "The Critic" is being- performed at Daly's as an after piece. Like the original, it consists of the rehearsal of a tragedy, turned into bur lesque by the ignorance and awkwardness of the actors. Daly has modernized it, and has made the performers address each other by their real names. Miss Behan is the actress who lately was responsible for the retirement of a pretty society debutante irom the company. She is promoted to public favor by the manager to the utmost extent. A 1,000 portrait of her adorns one end of the lobby, while at the other stands a $500 statue. AVell, in the play mentioned she is the Tilburnia, and there is no guying as to her role. She is .magnificently cos tumed; all the coarseness is expunged from the language which she has to speak, and none of the clowning is permitted to be little her. But what I set out to tell is that the supposed author of the tragedy, in introducing her to the. mimic critics, faces the audience and very distinctly proclaims, after the idealized manner of a side show ziian:. "This is Miss Behan, one of our most charming actresses though x am sure you don't need to be told that." How does that strike the reader for a puff direct? The audience is rather astounded by it. A figure at Delmonico's, and an inevit able first nighter at the theater, is the Mar quis Croisic, always accompanied by a stout and elaborate blonde lady, who is Madame la Marquise. These two constant compan ions are entirely unusual in their conduct and appearance, and during a residence here of about four years have developed into a conspicuousness never attained by people who arc entirely conventional. Such isolation from all acquaintanceship as they practice is thoroughly remarkable. While both have passed that period of their lives when the entertainment of "spooning" is food and drink, light and air, they- are so devoted to each other that they have neither words nor eyes for their fellow citizens seemingly content to exist without friends, themselves being all the world. Such odd people we are often meeting in New York, and it is'curious that they usually are made prominent by attending with complete regu larity the theaters and Delmonico's restau rant. 1 A few years ago it was observed that on the fiist night of every new play, a short, stout, florid young man, of palpably foreign air, entered the house with a matronly and good-looking lady, somewhat older than himself, and was shown to seats in the front row of the orchestra on the center aisle. From then till now not once have these two failed to occupy exactly the same seats at any imvortant dramatic performance. They never look about, recognize no one, and be tween the acts talk -quietly together in utter oblivion of the rest of the house. After the play the lonely pair can be found at a cer tain table at Delmonico's, eating the daintiest of viands and drinking choice wines, ever conversing softly in tuneful French, and entirely sufficient unto them selves, scarcely noticing their surroundings. The Marquise, whii? she is neither very lovely nor young, has a face which gains a decided charm in conversation, and her smile is really beautiful. The young Mar quis, at least, surely considers her entirely delightful, for he seldom takes his1 eyes from her, and hangs upon her words like the bee upon the flower. Across the street from Delmonico's is an apartment house called "The Croisic," built by this devoted firm about two years ago. It is one of the swellest, and, perhaps, the most expensive places in the city. The Marquis reserves the privilege jof refusing all applicants whose' social standing cannot bear the rigorous examination which will surely be applied to it. Madame la Mar quise ia the daughter of a Philadelphia chemist who left her a fortune when he died, and she brought her Marquis over here from Paris four years ago, expecting to return in a few months. I understand his house in Paris, which he left in charge of his servants, still awaits his homecoming, hut he stays on here as though Paris and New York were one so long as madame is near to lend her ample graces to the scene. And la Marquise accepts all this devotion with fascinating equanimity, and the two together succeed in preserving perhaps the mo3t inexhaustible dual appetite in New York"; for at least five hours of every day in their lives is passed at the table in Del monico's. Clara Belle. RELIGIOUS SUMMARY. Tirn Brooklyn. Church Union last year dis- triDutea ?iz,uzi among churches which needed aid. It is doing a noble work. The Jlennonites, a German religious denom ination, have decreed that no person can belong to that church If he has a life insurance policy hanging over his head. TnE Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society which had in 1871 only 7 students, andinlSSl 16, had In 1886 170 qualified medical missionaries in active service. .Within ten years the income of the society increased fivefold. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the intro duction of Sunday schools into Germany was recently celebrated. There are now mora than 1,000 Sunday schools, with 1,100 teachers and 230.U00 children, in the German Empire. Eev. W. L. KINO, of Bangalore, India, savs that nine months ago there were less than 200 in the native Sunday schools. November 5 there were 2,700, and a new mission has been started. Western Christian Advocate. It is high time that some of our largest Con gregational' churches in the oitfes colonized into new churches of 150 families or more, to grow into flourishing churches in the process of time. Religious Herald (Congregational). The money annually raised for carrying on Protestant foreign missions is a littf? short of SU.250,000, or an average of 37 cents per yrar tor each evangelical church member, or less than one-tenth of a cent a fay. Missionary Review. "- The Kaiserwerth Deaconess Home, Ger many, has 600 workers in various fields in Eu rope and Asia. Their hospital at Alexandria is said to De a model of skillful arrangement and Christian benevolence. Western Christian Advocate. T3ERE are 971 TJniversalist parishes in the country, a church membership of 38,780, a Sun day school membership of 53,205, 816 churches, and church property to the value of $7,915,756. The denomination supports a dozen educa tional institution', with 1.281 students and 111 teachers and professors. Christian Union. New Zealand, as a matter of fact, is evangelized. Christianity has not failed of suc cess in a single island. In India and elsewhere they had to gather the converts one by one.but in New Zealand a movement set in, and great numbers came forward; its advance was almost like a bush fire. The number of native clergy at present laboring there is quite three times -what they bad previously been. These are not supported by money from home, but by the contributions and endowments of their own people. Bishop Stuart, D. J)., of Wiapu. TnE communicants in China, scarcely a score 40 years sinco according to the report of the American Board, now exceed 3.2,000 and aro in creasing at the rate of 2.000 a year. TelegraDh and railroads thread the land, a knowledge of the English language is eagerly songht, and the stir of a great movement is felt. A procla mation lately issued in many provinces de scribes the missionaries as teachers of virtne, and their influence as helpful to the State, en joining all citizens to refrain from violence, ind to live with them in the relation ot hosts and guests. There is a demand growing stronger con tinually among our Christian business men in the cities for the efforts of the churches to en lighten the ignorance of the slums," which are recognized sources of public danger. The de structive Socialistic and Anarchistic teachings, and the unrest of crowded and destitute popu lations, must be met by Christian teachings and fellowship. This feeling is finding ex pression on all sides among our best men, and they are ready to support any Christian enter prise which gives promise of good manage ment and success in that work. The Interior. H ETIQUETTE OF CARDS: Some Vexatious Social Questions Answered by Mrs. Sherwood. ' THE j MOST FASHIONABLE CARD. Old Fogy Ideas Concerninj Brides That Are Being Brushed Aside. VALUABLE HINTS FOR DEBDTADTE8 tWJUTTZJf FOR THE DISPATC1I.J AED leaving is.. the " prevailing tenor ot our questions this" week, and as so many questions cannot bo 1 individually answer ed in the weekly space which we have at our command, we will write our an swers generally, to the one end of answer ing every one. One gentleman asks: "If seven or eight ladles are staying in one house, say Mrs. Tay lor and two daughters, Mrs. Brown and three daughters, and the Misse3 Sinclair, suppose I wi3h to call on them all, shall;I leave seven or eight cards, or shall I simply call on the host ess?" Simply call on tho hostess and ask for the others, wo should say. or possibly on tho two married ladies, inquiring for the others. There is common sense in etiquette as there is in everytmng else, ana a gentleman must aeciao these questions for himself, nor leave cards in packs. A card is one's self, and must bo treated as such. It is the beginning and the . end of etiquette, the alpha and the omega of social intercourse. Tho-cardis the first intro daction and the final lsave taking. These little pieces of whito pasteboard, if imperishable, will.ln their amount, their many inscriptions, puzzlo the New Zealander who disinters New York, aftor 4.000 years, as the Schllemanns of to-day are digging up old Troy. "What are they?" they will ask. "Do they represent the money of that buried people?" "John Thomas" wntes: "What ia tho most fashionable style of card?" Decidedly plain cardboara, not glazed, and the name should bo engraved in script. Some few people cling to old Roman letters, some to oldnglisb, and now and then we see a dash- ing fac simile of the handwriting. These are not in the highest; fashion, which reduces all these things to the simplest form. A lady's card should be larger than that of a gentle man. The card of a gentleman in England has almost invariably the address In the left band comer. F "Jlrs. Brownlow" asks: "In leaving cards doe3 tho lady of the house leave her own. her husband's separately, and those of, all hersocs and daughters,or can she have it all put on one card, asllr. and Jlrs. Brownlow, the Misses Brownlow, the Messrs. Brownlow?" She can. if she wishes, have ".Mr. and Mrs. Brownlow, the Misses Brownlow" on one cara, but her grown up sons should each have their separate cards In giving an entertainment a lady incloses her husband's card to all who are unknown to bim and are asked for the first time. It is equivalent to a call on his part. Miss "Cornelia Wright" asks a difficult ques tion: "I have received an invitation to a lady's ball which I do not wish to attend. I consider it an act of presumption for ber to aslcme, yet I do not wish to be unladylike. What shall I do?" First invitations should always be responded to courteously, cards left, and a proper recogni tion be made of the civility, even if we do not wish to keep up the acquaintance. Let it be manifested carefully to the lady who has in vited you that you are obliged and compli mented by her kindness, even if you cannot avail yourself of it. It will be quite easy for you not to know her. You can stay at home from the ball, but you would never forgive yourself, if you are a lady, if you bad hurt tho feelings of some one who only erred on the side of kindness. A little civility costs nothing and it goes a great way. Another difficult question from H. F.L: "I have lived in New York all my life. I know a certain lady in a fashionable set very well at charity, but not socially. Now, who should call first? There is no reason whyshe should not call on me, we are both in about the same position in society.'; We can only say that the younger should call on the elder, and the sending of a card hurt -no one's self respect, and if it is not returned no one is killed. The native delicacy of a real lady will prevent ber intruding upon a social queen whose position is known to be fashiona ble and. whose visiting list is generally fnlL Hence, people who are on the same social, plane need not fear to call first. It is generally! regarded as a compliment. The person who has self respect will have an inner monitor who will tell her. "Cicero" asks: "How soon should a card be returned?' In Europe calls are returned within 21 hours. Thercareno exceptions to this rule. Some times a foreigner is startled and wounded if his card is not returned immediately. But Americans are satisfied if they return a card fa a week. It is never too soon to return a card. Cards should be left in person on hearing' of illness in the family, or a death, or any of those troubles with which society can sympathize. Good breeding being the foundation of eti quette, and a card Detngits exponent, this at tention can never wound. The kindness of heart which is the foundation of good manners will suggest to every person oi sense nowmuca more they1 can do to assnage the trouble to which all the children of men are bora as'to an inheritance. "Marianne" writes: "1 ara to be marriedin three weeks, and my cards are ont. Can I make any visits or go to the opera during that three week3?" It is an old-fashioned idea that a prospective , bride cannot be seen in public after her cards are out. Why we could never understand. "We are glad to see that some independent people think better of this. "Count d'Orsay" writes: "I am asked to din with a family whose acquaintance I dq not wish, to keep. Now, should I go to the dinner and then cut them afterward, as some do? It seems hardly fair. Or snoum I go to the dinner' and then laugh at my hostess? Had I not better stay away from the dinner?" Decidedly. The gentleman whose name you have borrowed would tell you that when you have broken bread in a man's house you are bound to be civil to. hm and his family and to speak well of the lady at the head of bis table. Dinner invitations should only be ac cepted from those whose acquaintance you de sire to keep. Be careful to be punctual at the dinner hoar, to enter quietly, without formal ity or stillness, and if your hostess does norin troduce. enter into conversation with the per- "v son next to you. , "Harry Smith" writes: "I am a young mar ried man just beginning to give dinners. Now, which arm shalll give a lady when I take her la to dinner?" We should say the right arm if the lady is to sit on your right haad, but there is no law on thiB subject. Again bo asks: "How long shall I wait for a tardy guestf Fifteen minutes is the canonical time, but hospitable hosts wait until they come. Another question: "Where must the hostand hostess sit?'' Generally at the head and foot, bnt a round table, now so mnch the fashion, obliterates all' necessity of head and foot, and if the uumber Is , nnpnnal the host and hostess can mintrln with ' their guests. , ' not tne principal jaay guest must sit at her host's right hand, and the principal gentleman guest has the seat of honor at the lady's, right hand. "Delmonlca" writes: "This Is my first season out. and I see that many of my partners . wish to get rid of me after dancing, and yet they feel afraid to leave me alone. 1 fear I spoil their evenings. Nothing is so uncomfort able to a girl than to see that a man is talking to her and secretly hoping that some one will come along and relieve him. Sometimes, too, I desire the society of somebody else as mnch as he does.'' We should not have supposed the pretty debutantes of this season hid any such trial as this. Could she not say, "Do not startd talking to me. I beg of you. I do not mind being alone, I assure you." or there is the universal remedy of the seat and the chaperon. This lady onght to help Delmonlca out of her difficulty. If men could get over their fear of being "cornered" at ball they would be more agree able. Still less should a young man be too offi cious at a ball, or annoy a lady by sticking too closely to her. If he does, she has a right- to facilitate his departure by looking a little dis trait and allowing him to see by her manner that he is taking up too much of her time. But this is one of those delicate shades which must be left to an artist like Delmonlca to put in.f or uwoni, .,.. W.BHSKWOOB.,, i 14$ 4 t- s v Jjtf$.,AtJ"...-ii A-siEul.,.,.. Eami msiffiii