?gpr fcfc I J i L H-r 20 THE WAT TO WEAR CLOTHES. As Jnncli or More Depends Upon TL1 ns Epoo Ibe Slake Up of the Garments ldena Drawn From the since The !?u gesiirrness of the Suit. IWRITTZJJ rOB THIS DISPATCB.1 Arter all that has been said and written In regard to individual style; in seeking ont that style, then selecting to suit it (and -this theory has had up to date, no more earn est supporter than Tours Truly," yet, is there not quite as much in knowing how to wear one's clothes as there is in knowing how to se lect them? Is it a certainty that one style is more becom ing than any one of several others could be made to be? If so, let some one please "rise and ex plain" how it is actresses can adopt any stylp with equal grace and becomingness. Have we not all Been such an one in a cast of character re quiring a slender, clinging, long-waisted, long-trained toilet, a la Bernhardt, upon one occasion; and upon another, repre senting a living exponent of a Holbein sub ject with ber waist relegated to her arm-pits, lier dress short, full, nngored, undraped, nnd as opposite to the first fairy-like creature as pictured tyDes of beauty depicted by an artist of a modern French school are to the old Dutch masters? The wonder of it all lies not in the spec tacular effect of these styles (lor we women know form is more made than born, softly be it spoken), but in the manner of wear ing; in the infusion of that subtle, intangi ble, indefinable element which makes the material a part of the wearer, giving to it life, character, influence. A LESSON EBOM BEBNHABDT. Those of us who have seen the incompar able Bernhardt will always remember how much a part ot her graceful self seemed her train. How alive, sinuous, and instinct nith reason appeared those yards of inani mate material, never under loot, never more The Tailor-Hade Gown. of an impediment than were her expressive hands; but, like them, largely assisting her significant eyes to translate intelligent French into intelligible English. This art belongs to the profession, you sav. Well, is it not the degree we may take? Would such study be a waste of time that could be more profitably spent? I think the game would be well worth the candle, for where is the profit in buying expensive clothing, then making a deed for our house and lot to a conscienceless modiste with a foreign name to get it manufactured into fashionable shape, if we don't know how to wearittothe best advantage? I tell you more women look like caricatures of the ideal than is realized, (more is the blessing!) so many eeem to have gotten into clothes belonging to someone else, so at variance are they. It is no unusual sight to see persons who Eeem to be trying to get away from their clothes, and sometimes the clothes seem to be making a determined effort to keep up with the wearer and to keep on; bnt, again, clothes and person seem to be at logger heads, pulling in opposite directions, es pecially at the waist line, where the basque should" fit so snugly over the skirt as to leave no line ot demarkation, unless this effect be a part of the plan, in which case trimming is adjusted so as to tell where the one leaves off and the other begins. HOW CLOTHING SUGGESTS. In the suggestion which a dress conveys lies the charm. There are several equally attractive ways of dressing and each if con sistently carried out, attracts in its own way by its peculiar suggestiveness. To enumer ate: There is the close fit with everything trimly buttoned up; the little stiff shirt fiout, collar and cuffs; the nobby hat and tightly furled parasol which would scarcely be hoisted when occasion required, since that would be a departure from the original idea of primness. This whole toilet suggests a precision which a touch would imperil, and guarantees an unhandled, nuapproached and provokingly self-possessed personality. Such a one is the tailor-made girl of our illustration. Her dress is made of blue and brown shell and plaid, the back is pleated and the front laps well over to the left side The undershirt is of brown camel's hair serge, the jacket has a vest of white corded pique, tie of white mull, bat a brown derby. For gowns after this model the present sea Son's supply of cloths, flannels, and suitings, in checks, plaids, stripes, figures and bor ders, is much in excess of any season pre Tious. In sharp contrast to this precise style comes the careless, lopped on, who-cares-how-it-looks toilet. The blouse waist is donned for comfort, and the straight full skirt tor convenience. The round full throat is bared that breath may not be fretted. The akles are untrammeled by a long skirt that the wearer may move with perfect free dom. Everything about this costume sug gest! a warm, vigorous, well-put-togtther -7i .N Swrm f .ft". -. Mi mmwk being; the sort of wholesome humanity whose COURAGE AND STBENGTH are sufficient adornment. An ideal suit this, in which not merely to exist, but to live, move and have our being, during a summer out of doors; alike suitable for rowing, tennis, shooting or rambling. For such a utility gown the regular outing cloth is recommended, though legion are the all-wool materials equally durable and pretty for such makeup. Still another style in equal contrast to both these, and more bewitching than any. What the Season Calls For. is that adapted to soft clinging draperies which follow the natural outlines of the form; the hair worn loose or half caught with a drooping flower, as represented in the old-fashioned picture marked "A Lady," the shoulders hardly covered by the lace drawn over them. No exposure, but everything denoting unstudied grace. The charm lies in the seductive self-conscious insecurity about it all. Appar ently at a touch the draperies would un wind; a kiss would bring down the hair. The fact that both hair and drapery hold their position is assurance that neither touch nor kiss has been given; but it would be so easy. Ah, well! All so very attrac tive, isn't it? "Meg. COST OF "WOMEN'S DRESSES. The Little Angels Thn t Always Look Pretty on S300a Year. New Tort Sun.! There are plenty of women who dress and dress well on 300 a year, but they don't wear tailor dresses, or, if they do, one gown in the course of two or three years is indeed a great luxurv. They are rather the tasty, observing, deft-handed little women who trim and dye and mate and remake their dresses, with the aid of a seamstress, and trim their own jannty little hats from models seen in the shop windows, and they don't have their shoes made at all, but buy them at the cheapest place they can find. And those women are remarkably well dressed and genteel-looking individuals, for they usually have that happy knack of wearing their clothes well, which is indeed a gilt of divine Providence quite as much ns is a voice like the great diva's. Five hundred dollars will give a woman of good taste and judgment a handsome dress each season, with its requisite accom paniment of gloves, bonnets and boots, and enable her to look like a lady born on all occasions if she has the laculty ot lending a hand in the fashioning of ber cheaper gowns, remodeling the old ones, and direct ing the less expensive mantua makers in the construction of traveling and street gowns. And such a woman, despite her reputation for extravagance, could give any man points on economy that would make his head swim. The Thins; for an Oatlnc A cool, pretty, and becoming hat for the athletic out-of-door girl of the season is herewith reproduced from the Ladies' Home Journal: THE FSTENDSHL? BIND. Latest Fad Among the Beauties of tho City of the Straits. Detroit Free Press. Your Detroit maiden encounters a friend on the street, in the stores, at church, in her home anywhere, everywhere and imme diately prefers a request for a penny. "A pennyl" you exclaim. "My dear Miss Dorothy, why, yes of course. But w-what in the world do you want of a penny?" Then the merry maiden laughs and ex plains that when she gets around' to an even 100 friends and extracts from each one of them the coveted penny, she darts into the nearest jeweler's and buys a friendship ring. And what is a friendship ring? Merely a ring of fine gold wire with "friendship knot" attachment. It sells for $1 and every one of them that you see on the Detroit girls' fingers represents 100 friends who have been assessed 1 cent each. It won't do to accept 10 cents each from ten friends, or 25 cents each from a quartet of friends. Just one penny only this and nothing more is the indispensably "swag ger" essence of the fad. 4 THE A HAHDSOME WEDDDHx GOWK. The Latest Is Somettiinc or a Novelty bt Certainly Pleaslnr. Here is the latest thing in a wedding gown, which, despite the multiplicity of nuptial toilets, is indeed a novelty. The materials are of satin, and poplin, of course, in the conventional color and the trimmings rare old lace of priceless worth. The court train 3 yards in length to be carried by pages is of poplin lined with satin, and has one corner turned up, on which reposes a huge bunch of orange blossoms. The bodice of poplin has high sleeves and Medici collar of the same material, the lat ter lined with lace. Across the front of the bodice fell a drapery of lace and a wreath of orange blossoms, while the exquisite lace petticoat, lined with satin, fell over a ruch mg of orange blossoms. Handsome Leather Belts. The costumes that will be all the rage this season need belts, and the furnishers have designed some pretty ones. Here are three reproduced from Harper's Bazar: TBUTMPH OF THE CATERER. Nowadays He Can Send a Bleal to Yonr Flat and Hire It Fresh. Brooklyn Eagle. The caterers have now advanced their business to such a point that they can serve an admirable dinner in a flator apartment at any hour's notice and the diner cannot tell that the meal was not cooked in the bouse. Oysters are opened, packed in ice on plates, precisely as they are to be served, clamped in flat tin boxes and delivered all ready for the table. Bouillon is also sent packed in ice and so are the creams and salads. Ter rapin or lobster is delivered in a chafing dish, so that all it needs is a lighted match. Then it can be set on the table and served exactly as it is at Delmonico's. Game is prepared for the fire with a card attached giving instructions to the amateur cook lor warming it up. The caterers have in a word solved the problem of housekeeping made easy but not cheaply. Their prices are enormous and the premium on laziness is in propor tion. Russlan Leather Gloves. Ladies who rejoice in the pungent per fame of Russia leather will welcome a glove made of this odorous kid. The leather works up well for the rhevrette style, and makes a soft and elastic as well as a de lightfully perfumed clove. The latest even ing glove is made in pale lilac suede with stitching of black French cotton. Biarritz gloves for children, made without buttons, will be found uselul, as they draw on and off with ease, and fit with the loose comfort that a child enjoys. Malting; Gowns for tho Judges. One woman has made the silk gowns of the Justices of the United States Supreme Court for the past 40 years, and she gets $100 for each one of them. They are all made alike, the only difference being in the mate rial, the Chief Justice wearing black Chinese satin, while his associates are robed in black silk. The Chief Justice always wears a new gown when he swears in a President. A Pretty Jet Bonnet. The following is one of the latest desiens in jet for early summer wear. It is taken from Harper's Bazar: Women of the Supreme Court. Miss Carrie Burnham Kilgore, of Phila delphia, has just been admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court. She is the fourth one of ber sex who has sought for or obtained this distinction. The other three women practitioners are Mrs. Belva A. Lockwood, Laura De Force Gor don, and Mrs. Ada M. Bittenbender, of Ne braska. HOW TO TAKE STIMULANTS. It Is Always Store or Less Inlarlons to Tnke Liquor Without Food. New York SUr.J Any honest physician will admit that the primary action of alcohol, the incitement of body and mind to make their best effort, can not be prolonged; in general the first dose ex cites mentally and quickens the circulation; then follow relaxation and depression. If vitality is so far exhausted as to require this sharp recall, combine with the spirit some ab solute nutriment which will not tax the or gans of aigistiou. Several are well known. The gravy of beef cooked rare: a thick beef steak broiled rare, deeply and closely scored with a snarp Km;e on both sides and then squeezed between two platters or in a lemon press; the juice of clams, fresh oysters, broiled, roasted, or even raw; a cup of cocoa, or a glass of milk containing a teaspoon ful of phosphates, a glass of cocoa extract or wine, some fine raisins or fresh grapes, some chocolate eaten with fruit As soon as possible follow this with a substautial meal of beefsteak or chops and some bread aud fruit, and rest as soon there after as possible. Unless there is entire col lapse it is unwise to depend upon the action of stimulants. When it seems impossible to avoid their use take also some digestible bread, a cracker or simple cake, and eat a plain, nutritious meal as soon after as can be received by the system. It is always more or less injurious to drink liquor of any kind without eating some substantial food. . SHE WAS A MASCOT. Extraordinary Fortune of BIrN. Bllllals, Ex Wlfe of John Raskin. Mrs. Millais, wife of the famous artist, and ex-wife of John Buskin, is said to be the happiest woman in all France. By the painter she is regarded as his mascot, his luck having changed almost immediately after her divorce from the art critic. Her hus band is worth over 51,000,000 and the model aud inspiration of bis pictures lives like a royal princess, followed by a staff of artistically dressed servants and sur rounded by every luxury that money and skill can devise. In face and figure she is still beautiful and ber manners and accomplishments are most captivating. There are Oriental couches in all the apartments, and so beau tiful are her Greek dresses and so graceful her poses that every one is an artist's study. Flectbio Portrait Copying Company, 10 and 12 Sixth st, copy and enlarge photos in crayon, water colors, etc.; best work; lowest prices. wsu I PITTSBURG i DISPATCH, 'SUNDAMAT 11, IRISH RURAL MAIDS. The Duchess Sketches tho Typical Heroine of Her Novels. A SLAVE TO THE FARMER'S WIPE. Diversions in Church on Bnndajs Dancing on tha fioad. and FE0M BIG HOUSE TO LITTLE CABIN IWEITTXH TOE THB DISPATCH. The Irish peasant woman I allude to the laboring class is, as a rule, an almost fixed one, distinctly respectable, both in mind and conduct. While still a little slip of a girl, say 13 or 14, she begins life that is, work. She is then draughted from her mother's cabin into-the house of the nearest firmer, there to learn how to milk cows clean pans for the dairy, feed pigs, see to the poultry and the eggs, boil potatoes, cab. bage and, bacon, and learn besides to wash and dress the "gossoons" (little boys) and the "colleehs" (little girls) of the family; and, in fact, do all that has to be done in the house, helped, of course, by the mistress the farmer's wife, who works as hard as her maid. For this our little enterer into life receives but poor,, wages, or, perhaps, no wages at all for the first year, her keep and houseroom and permission to learn being accounted equivalent to a salary. Of late years, however, the latter arrangement has fallen throngh, the salary, however small, being always demanded, and with justice, too. Barefooted and with the short blue flannel skirt that they weave themselves with a small handloom, and that reaches barely up to the knee at first, and becomes considerably above it as youth asserts itself and the inches grow, our little heroine scrambles through (a long day's work in a slipshod fashion at first, no doubt, and with many an angry word.from the mistress and often an indignant push. But time rounds all things, even the hardest pebble, and after a while the small, insignificant creature becomes somebody "The Girl." At first she was only Biddy, or Kitty, or Maggie; now she is "The Girl" a great distinction. All through the week she labors cheerfully, merrily, with a jest for every one and a sweet word always tor the babies. IN SUNDAY AEBAY. And now comes Sunday, that blessed dav of rest, without which surely the world of toil could not have lasted. In its institu tions lies an infallible proof to my mind of the divinity that shapes all our ends, that rules the earth, and reduces the sea to its limits, aud guards and regulates each movement of each pigmy who struts his little hour upon our human stage. Well, this Sunday is the onerecreation of the poor, both in town and country. Bnt with the country only I am dealing now. Our little'heroine with the first streak of dawn rises, flings aside the toil-worn gar ments she has worn during the past week and will wear for so many weeks again. and dons a new skirt, of the same texture and hue, however, and (this is the crowning glory of her toilette) encases her feet that for six long days have run uncovered in stockings and laced shoes. To appear in chapel without shoes and stockings would be indeed a disgrace. One must save, starve, scrimp to go decent to mass on Sun day! And surely there is much to be ad mired in this regard for decency, this de termination to appear in one's best bib and tucker on the Lord's day, to do honor to Him. And now arrayed in Sabbath clothes, away to the parish chapel a bare, bald edifice, situated close to the little village that hangs over the sea on a picturesque spot that is dear to me lor a thousand rea sons, that I was born there among others. Up over the trees of the schoolhouse rises the spite of the church, an ancieut cathe dral dedicated to some old Irish saint whose name was St. Faughnan, and whose image carved in stone is sunk in the wall beneath the belfry. The crows caw all day long in the schoolhouse trees, and the two bells, chapel and church, commingle as the Prot estants and the Roman Catholics all stream down from the hills that adorn the little seaside town on all sides to their several places of worship. THE HAPPENINGS IN CHUBCH. Onr little heroine, now a pretty "colleen bawn" of 16, makes her way, accompanied by throngs of friends, all Koman Catholics, to the chapel, there to hear Father Jerry, or Father Michael, or Father John, as the case may be, mnmble through the Latin prayers, that not one member among his congregation can understand. She kneels, she sits, she glances round her, she works through her "beads" most systematically and earnestly. and having done her duty, rises to go out intoJthechurchyard,where,having before ser vice sprinkled herself with theboly water in the stone outside, she now feels herself free to receive the attentions of the "boys," who, if she is pretty, as many of the peasants are, will surround her, and pay her extravagant compliments. At times, however, the service within does not end thus tamely. A "great divarsion" occurs that fills all hearts with a delightful expectation, As, for example, when the priest is known to be abont to denounce from the high altar some culprit among his flock. The unlucky or guilty one has dur ing the week forgotten to pay his "dues" (money collected irom the parishioners ac cording to the amounts of their several in comes, which with fees in weddings and funerals make up the priest's stipend), or else has defrauded his ueighbor, or stolen somethiug be is determined not to return, or otherwise broken the law. Breathless is the excitement as the priest arrives at that point when bis denunciation may be ex pected and cold grow the hearts of the cul prit's friends and relatives. The culprit himself has generally a bad cold or a head ache on these occasions and is confined to his own house or cabin. THE CULPEIT WILL HEAB IT. This fact, however, does not stay the priest's wrath. He well knows that every word he utters will be carried home to tbe criminal by his neighbors and will rankle there until remorse and the fear that his spiritual pastor and master will refuse to attend bis death-bed when his last hour arrives drives him to make confession and pay what is stolen or owing. After this de ligntful excitement our colleen will prob ably wend her way to the place where the nearest "Pattern" is taking place. This spot will be named "The Cross," or "Sam's Cross," or "Fitzgerald's Cross," or any other "cross," according to the traditions ot the neighborhood where it stands. It means a square spot where four roads meet, and the "pattern" means simply a "dance." Here all the .young people meet on a Sun day or a holiday, and, a circle being formed by the onlookers, trip it to and fro upon the hard aud dusty road with all the deter mination and twice the gusto that oue may see in a polished and fashionable ballroom. Of late years this custom, -that was very pretty and harmless and innocent, is dving out; but I remember my father telling me of a very celebrated old peasant (Flaherty was his name) who was roaster of this cere mony for miles round; who used to attend every pattern to direct the proceedings, and who on week days was what might be called the dancing master of tbe entire district. All odd hours, minutes, moments even, he was attacked on all sides by men and maidens filled with a laudable desire to emulate Terpsichore. His method of teach ing was a novel one, and as it may be ot use to modern and fashionable teachers I give it here. a piciubesqte dancing masteb. It was simple as it was elegant and effi- cacions. nouna tne rignt blue-stockinged leg of his male pupil he would bind a small rope made of hay and then commence opera tions. He would first tune up the bagpipes he invariably' carried under his arm, and then bid bis pupil step forward. The first notes of the jig were played; the pupil, filled with ardor on hearing the beloved pipes, would begin a grand and no doubt picturesque war dance all his own, but he is stopped by a stern reprimand from Flaherty. 'No; he must conform to rules. "Now, thin, me boy," savs Mr. Flaherty, "ye'll do as I bid ye, or I'll be off to Kitty Maboney's house, "who's dead bate for the want o' me this minnit, an' the palthern to be at her cross next Sunday. Whin I play the fifth note ye'll rise upo'n 'sougaun' (hay rope) an' at the seventh ye'll sink upon 'gad;' and now begin, an' to the divil wid ye if ye can't doit before one-half hour is up." And now the screech of the pipes begins. The famous "Eakes o' Mallow" is in full swing, but above and over all sounds the voice of Misther Flaherty yelling at his Pupil: . , "Rise upon sougan, sink upon Kd. "Och murdher, was there Iver sich a fool I 'Tis throwin' away me talent upon ye I am. Arrab, look at him, Mrs. Moloney, I ask ye now. an' tell 'me can he be the son of a clever woman like you? 'Kise upon sou gaun, sink upon gad.' Well, there, I'm off now, and fegs maybe ye'll be as good as the rest of 'em some day." The meaning of "gad" I have never been able to discover; no doubt, however, it had its had its meaning in Flaherty's time. PBETTY PICTUEE IN THE EOADWAY. Well, you must make a picture for your self of our Irish peasant footing it gaily to aud fro on the hard road with her partner opposite to her, and a little crowd surround ing them, making a ring, as it were a crowd consisting of men aud women for the small part and of pretty, sturdy urchins, male and female, for the great such hand some, healthy little beings, rosy-cheeked and bright-eyed, the outcome and the carry ing on of the foinestpisantbryin the world;" and olten, driving past them, have I wished that my own children, carefully nourished and fed on beef tea and chicken broth, could look like these cosy rogues, running about half naked and with nothing in their pretty, round little stomachs save stirabout (a coarse porridge) and boiled potatoes. However, to get back to our heroine. When she has learned all she can from her first mistress the farmer's wife that is, how to boil and wash, and how not to break plates and dishes, her mother instantly looks round her to find a place for her in some gentleman's family, where the wages will be higher and the work less. It sounds terribly ungrateful. The farmer's wife has had all the trouble of breaking in that little, wild, and ignorant specimen of humanity, and when the latter has absorbed all that she can learn and when her mis tress has become accustomed to her, and might reasonably be snpposed to expect some comfort from her, the girl calmly gives her warning, and, aided and abetted by her mother, leaves her "to better her self." So the poor farmer's wife is left to commence all over again to take in an other girl, who will undoubtedly take her iu in the same manner a little later on. AT THE LANDLOBD'S HOUSE. It is, in fact, a general "merry-go-round," and being expected on both sides, is seldom resented by the farmer's wife. The landlord's house is the one chosen by the girl's mother lor her next venture, if by any chance an opening there presents itself "the big house," as the tenants usually call it. Here our heroine begins as kitchen maid, grows (if she proves a good girl) to under housemaid, from that in process of time to upper housemaid or parlor maid, or perhaps is given over to the young'ladies of tne lamuy it sue proves handy with her neeaie ana develops a good appearance. As a rule, however, their servitude en dures but a short time. The laborer's daughter, happier than the daughter born in the grade above her nimely the farming class can marry as fancy dictates, and long before yonth has ceased to be a joy she gen erally meets her mate, a stalwart laborer, in all probability, on the landlord's farm, and marries him. She leaves her comfortable quarters as housemaid to be mistress and wife, and, as "Artemus Ward" would have it, a very "numerous mother" in a small, comfortless cabin there, indeed, to rule supreme, if that is any amelioration of the discomfort that awaits her to her life's end. If the Irish peasant woman, however, mar ries into absolute poverty, she has assuredly such compensations as accrue from a good and faithful husband and a quiver full of those small creatures who make lire blessed to the wedded. The Duchess. CHINESE SUPERSTITIONS. Why the Mongolian Persists In Sleeping; With Ills Ilead to the East. Ladles' Home Journal. It has often been a matter of conjecture why a Chinaman .should be so particular in sleeping with his head toward the east. When at home, or traveling, or visiting, the Celestial, if among strangers, exercises no little care to avoid sleeping iu any other position than the one which he has been brought up to look upon as the most correct and healthful to his mind. According to tbe Chinese superstition it is exceedingly dangerous to sleep with the head toward the setting sun. The sleeper might justly fesr darkness, unhappinessand death; that is, of course, if be is a believer. Ifrom the north comes coldness, loneliness and barrenness, and to sleep with his head in that direction would be to brine down upon himselt and family these products of the pole. The south signifies passing glory; a limi tation of wealth, health and happiness. Therefore, that is extremely undesirable. But to the east the source of the rising sun in all its splendor is where the Celes tial looks for all his good gilts. From it come (so he believes) light, lite, wealth and happiness. No misery, or wretchedness, or want can come from the glorious east, so he must sleep with bis head in that direction in order to get the full benefit of the good gifts which will come to him. Often, in traveling, Chinamen carry a mariner's pocket compass, in order that, when the time comes to retire, thev may dis' 'cover wfiich way to point their heads. If they make a mistake and sleep the wrong way, they are likely to lose just so much health and happiness. With a dead China man this is reversed; for we believe'that after death the body has nothing to lose and the head, therefore, is placed before the west. THE CHINESE INVENTED IT. Like Civil Service Reform the Xylophone Cnine from tho Celestials. New York Mall and Express. "The xylophone is generally looked upon' as a modern instrument," said a Brooklyn musician yesterday, "bnt the Chinese 'fang hieng' corresponds with the instrument we now use. It was made of 16 slabs of wood of oblong shape and of equal length, bnt of different thicknesses, laid on a wooden frame. As long ago as 2000 B. C. th'e Chinese had an instrument made of 16 pieces of 'yu,' a peculiar kind of stone which polishes easily, is of a beautiful color, and gives out an extremely sweet sound when struck. These pieces were hung on a frame aud toned to Chinese inter vals called "lu," of which there were 12 in the compass of an octave. The instrumeut was called a "ikang," and was played by striking the stone with a wooden mallet. It was only used in religious services, and was considered sacred. "The modern xylophone is now quite com mon. Formerly they were to be heard only in some of the theaters. Now you find them everywhere, most of them being ot a cheap frade. I get $15 for jhe instruments I make, ut you can buy them for as little as CO cents." Horrid Torture. This is often felt in every joint and muscle of the body by turns, by people who, experiencing the earliest twinges of rheumatism, neglect tu arrest the malady as they may easily do with Hostetter's Stomach P'ttera, a professionally authenticated remedy for the agonizing com plaint. Recollect that rheumatism unchecked often lasts a lifetime, or abrnbtly terminates it when tbe malady attacks the heart. The Bit ters also remedies chills and fever, dpipepsla and liver complaint. 1890. BEAUTY ONHOKSES. Gay Equestriennes of Washington and Their Daring Feats. MRS. CLEVELAND'S PAPER CHASES. Biding Habits and Eosj Cheeks That Come With tbe Exercise. WHAT IT COSTS . TO KEEP A STEED tCOBBBSPONDEKCl OV TBI DISPATCH. Washington, May 10. y HE equestriennes of flZ the capital are num "T1 III hered by hundreds. Ton see them in par ties on every country road about Washing ton, and their fresh young faces glow as they ride across coun try, leaping hedges, jumping ditches and following the wild paper chase. The last administration set the fashion for out-of-door jrts. Mrs. Whitney and her husband pat ronized the Country Club, and the diplo- mates joined in with her in the encourage ment of long rides about Washington. At one of the paper chases Mrs. President Cleveland distributed prizes of diamond horseshoe scarf pins, and nearly every mem- Mrs. Davit. ber of Cleveland's Cabinet rode. Secretary Fairchild had a good horse, and took a turn in the country daily. Secretary Whitney donned a riding costume every afternoon, and even Justice Lamar, who was then Secretary of the Interior, pottered around Washington on a pot-bellied horse. The President mounted a horse now and then, and Mrs. Cleveland took some rides from her country seat. Bayard was an ardent horseman, and his daughters accom panied him in his rides across country. I remember seeing Kate Bayard dashing around the ring at the race track one sea son and leaping the hurdles and ditches of the steeplechase. SENATORS' WIVES 'WHO BIDE. The craze started then has since steadily grown, and there are now 600 thoroughbred saddle horses in Washington and fully 200 maidens are out riding every weefe. It seems to me that the girls have "better com plexions than they nave ever had before, and the sallow, doughy, pasty faces ot Washington society are fast disappearing. You will find no better complexion in the world than that of Mrs. Senator Davis. Her lace is a beautiful one. and its skin is as soft and fair as that of a baby, and her cneeEs snine with tne roses of tbe fairest maidens of Dublin. She has so much color in them that people have charged her with painting, but this is slander. She uses no rouge and ber only cosmetics are horseback riding, good walking and a love for oatmeal porridge. She is one of the finest looking equestri ennes of the capital, and her tall, Juno-like form, perfectly rounded, shows to good ad vantage in her riding costume of black jersey. She has her own ideas about her clothes, and her riding habit is made a la princess, with a double skirt, audit fits her form like a glove. She does not wear riding trousers, like many of the girls of Washington, but she has a costume of ber own under this skirt which ends in high top boots. She is a good rider, and she has a number of sisters among the Senators' wives who sit their horses well. Mrs. Sen ator Hawjey learned to ride in England. She has ridden after the hounds, can jump as wide a ditch as any woman in Washing ton, and orten rides out with her soldierly husband. OFFICIALS IN THE SADDLE. Mrs. Senator Spooner is frequently seen riding alongwith the Honorable John. A horse is no new thing to her, for she and Senator Spooner have ridden together for a score of years and they enjoy their gallops just as much to-day as when they were mar- A Historian on Horstbacfc. ried. Senator Edmunds frequently rides out with his daughters. He has good horses, and sits erect whatever be the gait. He wears a slouch hat when he rides, and even his white beard cannot give hfm the dignity on horseback that he holds in the Senate. Senator Sherman rides occasion ally, and there are a number of Congress men who get their open air exercise on horseback. Tom Bayne is a good rider, and both Mr. aud Mrs. Bepresentative Hitt loye the saddle. Mr. Hitt has seven fine thoroughbreds in his stables, and Don" Cameron has a number of good horses and both he and Mrs. Cameron ride them. Mrs. Cameron is a good rider. Her figure is trim and she sits a horse well. I have not yet seen. President Harrison on horseback, and President Cleveland, thongh he was a member of the riding school, took bnt few horseback rides. Arthur rode every day, and James Buchanan used to go dash ing abont Washington on horseback with Harriet Lane. Uncle Jerry Rusk, the Sec retary of Agriculture, has a tall Kentucky horse whiclThe rides almost daily, and he sits his steed like a Centaur. The Vice President's daughters are all fond of horses, and take their regular riding lessons. Vice President Morton frequently rides out with them. Secretary Blaine's daughters are good riders, though I doubt whether they can manage their steeds as well as the Bayard girls did. Blaine himself I have not seen on horsebacc lately. Postmaster General Wanamaker has a mouse-colored mare upon which be sometimes accompanies his daughters in their rides. SOME NOTED STEEPLECHASEBS. Two of the most daring equestriennes of the capital are Miss Ethel Chase Sprague, the daughter of Kate Chase Sprague, and Miss May McCulIoch.' Both of them sit their horses as though they were a part of theci, and both of them can ride faster, jump further and dare more than any girls in Washington. Ethel Chase Sprague learned to ride when sne was in short clothes. Her father had a number of Shet land ponies at his home at Karragansett, and she was one day discovered sitting on the back or one of these astride and riding it withont a bridle after the other ponies in the inclosure. She has had a number of good horses since she has been riding in ' t, at f HI fl )IIlyp Washington, and she is not afraid to ride anywhere. Her favorite horse at present is a big bay named Star, which Senator Fair gave to her, and which she thinks is one of the finest horses in the world. She knows all about a horse, and she sometimes takes care of Star herself, even to currying and feeding him. Miss McCulIoch sits a horse equally well and sbe rides out daily. A number of our Sonthern girls are fond of horses. Miss Iiulie Fustis, the heiress of the Corcoran estate, is a splendid rider. She is a blonde, with red-gold hair and eyes of turquoise blue, and she has ridden over the long steeplechase course at Ivy City, water jnmp and all. All of the Eustis family are fine riders, and Senator Eustis could if be would equal many of the younger riders of the Capital. Senator Yance rides horseback frequently. A ONE-LEGGED EIDEE. Senator Butler, though he has but one leg, is a good borseman, and his daughters are noted for their riding. The Butler es tate in South Carolina is iu the country and the Butler giris spend a great part of their vacations in the saddle. Miss Annie Ayer is a South American girl who looks well in the saddle and is perfectly fearless. Upon two occasions the horse has fallen with her in jumping a rail fence, but she kept a tight hold on the reins aud kept her seat each time. The little tots of tbe saddle are more nu merous than ever this season. You see some little miss of six or eight perched on a high horse, with a groom in livery riding behind her. There is a score or babies un der 10 attending the Washington riding school, among them little Marion Thurber, daughter of Mrs. Jeannette Thurber, an ex cellent horsewoman. John Hay's daughter is another eood rider, and Colonel Hay has a boy of 14 who can sit a horse well. Sena tor Hale's sou, though he Is still in Bhort trousers, likes his horseback ride, and there is a little girl of six named Folsom who brings down the applanse of the school when she rides. She goes out with her maid and she is perfectly 1 earl ess. Tbe Misses Pot ter, the granddaughters of Bishop Potter, of New xork, are other good horsewomen. A SASHING BABY EIDEE. As I was going down P street yesterday I saw a little figure descending from the steps of the Blaine mansion. She was in charge of a maid and was starting out for the riding Two Gay Equestriennes. school. It was little Daisy Leiter, the daughter of the millionaire Chicago mer chant, who is barely 12 years old, and who is one oi me Drigntest baby riders of the Capital. She wore al light gray habit, and beneath ber jaunty riding skirt and falling over cute little boots were a pair of close fitting trousers, at which she peeped with great complaisance. I dropped into the riding school as I went by and I saw her whirling around the ring with the instructor at her elbow. She sits her saddle so well, however, that she does not need any assist ance, and as she flew around the tan-bark turf her hair streamed out behind her, and she created applause from the spectators. She is a very pretty girl, and she will be one of the lively companions of future paper chases. Mr. Bancroft has not been riding much this year, and the long rides which he and Librarian Spofford used to take into the country have been discontinued. The old historian has been confined to his bouse all winter, and though it was only a vear ago that hetold me he could ride 30 miles with out tiring, he has for this year given up riding entirely. Mr. Bancroft sits a horse very well. Mr. Spofford now rides out with his daughter, and Miss Spofford is a very graceful rider. One of Chief Justice Fnller'a daughters is learning to ride, and she prom ises to oeoneoimegooariaersot the Capital. DIPLOMATIC EIDEES. 9' All of the diplomats ride more or less,and Alexander Gregor, of the Russian Legation, has probably done more to encourage horse back riding in Washington than any other man. He is immensely wealthy, has large estates in Russia and has plenty of money to spend in Washington. He has managed a number of paper chases, and it was he In connection with Mrs. Whitney who started them. The Chinese Legation has no riders this season, but Dr. Yow, of the fast Lega tion, was a good rider. He wore his costume of Chinese silk in the saddle and fastened his queue by pinning it into his coat before he mounted his horse. He would grow wild ly excited during a paper hunt, and he was more picturesque than any woman who rode with him. The Baron de Struve, the Rus sian Minister, rides a good horse, and Mr. Levery, of the Danish Legation, is often in the saddle. Colonel Jerome Bonaparte, while he was here in Washington, frequently rode with Madame Bonaparte, and the two made a striking picture as they went along the country roads. Jerome Napoleon looks very much like Louis Napoleon, and he wears in the saddle high military boots and sits his horse as erect as a statue. His horse was a dark bay of large bniid, and his wife gal loped along beside him on a similar animal. Mrs. Bonaparte is quite as good a rider as her husbaud, and the two sometimes went along at an almost reckless cait. It costs something to own a horse in Wash ington and since riding has become so fash ionable it takes a rich man to learn to ride, The rates at the riding school when the thins. opened and President Cleveland was a member were $100 per season and you fur nished your own horse. A good riding horse costs 200 and upward and it takes just S25 a month to board him at tbe livery staDie. Jit ne is a nigniy Drea animal you have to be very carelul of him and there is always danger of killing a horse in paper basing or hunting. EASILY A THOUSAND A TEAE. The riding outfit, including the pigskin saddle, an expensive riding costume and other little etceteras run the bill very close tu $500 for the season's fun, and if you are an aristocratic young maiden with a desire to be conventional, you can add another $300 for the expense of keeping a groom to go out with yon. In this case you have got to have two horses, and yonr groom mnst be clothed in a costly livery. "They come high, I know," said a mill ionaire's daughter the other day to me, "bnt we have to have them." You cannot have much fun in this world without paying for it, and if you get the fun aud have the money to spend, it is worth it. Girls who have incomes of $5,000 a year for pin money can easily afford $1,000 for horse back riding, and the chauces are that their fathers will be allowed to pay these bills and the money will not come out of their pockets. Some of the Washington girls have enough confidence in their judgment of horses to buy their own steeds, and .the Bayard girls can tell the weak and sound points of a horse as well as a jockey. Miss Alice Maury, one of the fashionable riders of the Capital, has a mare that Mr. Cbilds, of Philadelphia, gave her when it was a colt. She broke this horse and trained it herself. Miss Maury is posted on horse flesh, and there is no danger of her making any mis take iu a purchase. " Miss Carlotta French, the daughter of ex-Congressman French, is another good judge of horses. Sbe is a fine rider, and though she is small, has a good right arm aad i not afraid ot a tumble. Miss Gbdndy, Jb. K0SES THAT PLEASE. Varieties That Are Beautiful, Fra grant and Easy to Grow. THE ART OP FLORAL DECORATION. A Good Bi Onion in the Bed Makes ths Flowers Smell Better. SLEEFIKO IU A BACHELOE'S i. QABDEN WBirrET ron the dispatch.1 A small garden should at least contain one rosebed, and for those who have not even a small garden there still remain the pillar varieties, which can be made to climb over every spare fence and trellis. No plant yields a better return for the labor aud cara bestowed upon it. "A stiff, loamy soil," says the head gar dener at Hampton Court, near London, "it what they need. You must stir your soil often, keep it free from weeds and insect?, place them in the full sunlight, prune thera closely after they bloom and when they sprout in the spring, and you'll find roses the easiest ffowers in the world to raise." We all love roses. Unfortunately, the insects love them also, and not wisely, but too well. This is the greatest drawback to their culture. The green fly, the rose slug and the rose bug are the greatest nuisances, and they require eternal vigilance. This it the price of success in the cultivation of roses more than that of any other plant. Tobacco smoke kills the first most successfully; dose the second with the following decoction: A tablespoonful of white hellebore dissolved in two gallons of boiling water; let it cool, and then apply to the leaves with a paint brush or whisk, bathiDg tbe upper and under parts. The remedy for tbe third is to pick them off by hand. Iu a cold or uncertain climate, with out a hotbed or conservatory, the only satis factory roses are the hybrid perpetuals.some ofthemoss roses and several varieties of tbe climbing roses, thongh the ever-blooming roses will, with proper treatment, keep on renewing their blossoms until nipped by the frost. SOME EELIABLE VAEIETIES. Among the dark red are: Prince Albert, Louis Philippe, Count Bismarck and George Washington. Alfred de Rougement and Coquette des Blanches are pure white, and La France, La Reine and La Norman die are bright pink. Q hese flowers are all hardy, rich in coloring and very sweet. You can rely upon their blooming early in the season, and at intervals through the sum mer and autumn. Do not feel disappoint ed if they are chary of their buds the first year of planting, since they gener ally reserve their strength for the second spring "opening." Nothing can equal or eclipse a moss rose bud. She always has been, she always will be, the prime favorite in poetry and art. She best interprets the language of youth and beauty, "half wrapped in her mossy envelope." In En glish gardens they are planted between the gooseberry and enrraut bushes or under fruit trees, aud seem to thrive wonderfully among almost all vegetables. They are favorites for boutonuieres. With us they are of slow growth and somewhat difficult to raise. In Southern Germany during the month of May the woods, fields and meadows are full of turquoise-hued forget-me-nots. The peas ants make exquisite bouquets by massing; them around a vivid pint moss rose bud, and then edging the blue with white generally the delicate elder blos somsometimes lillies of the valley, and finishing with a fringe of small ferns. France is the home, par excellence, of the rose. In both their cultivated and savage cooditions they run riot all over the beauti ful land. The Gioire de Dijon covers many a house with its creamy, pinkish-white petals and buff center, and its rich, glossy green leaves. SKILL IN DECOEATIONS. The slacks of flowers with which many fashionable people decorate their tables are coarse as compared with tbe artistic, skillful use of a few blossoms combined with beauti ful foliage. I once attended a wedding where asparagus tops and hyacinths were the only decorations. The effect was so pretty that it called for the heartiest praise. You will probably smile wnen I inform you that an onion, a good large one, too, planted near your rose busb, close enough to touch its roots, will increase its fragrance and the size of its blossoms. Nevertheless it is a fact. I have before alluded to the magnificent gioire de dijon. It is perfect as a climber, has a continual succession of bloom and withers very slowly. Moreover, it grows rapidly and is perfect both in the half- opened bud and the full-blown rose. It can be trained to covtr the side of a house a southwestern side is best or it may be planted in tbe center of four posts about a foot apart, training the branches to grow outside the interlaced wire, and twine all over both stakes and chains. The gloria de rosamond is a lovely scarlet, and most de sirable for pillar training. So is also sol faterre, which is yellow, and the Washing ton, pure white. Tbe lamarque is an old fashioned climber, beloved by the dames who figured in the Dirertoire period. The buds oten shade to a pale, pale yellow. You remember Josephine's love of roses and the hours she whiled away in her rose garden at Malnidiaon? No doubt she found a certain charm about her flowers which soothed her in her loneliness and grief. Poets have long ago sung this queen of flowers into favor, and man has always found a fascination in its cultivation. I be lieve all womanly women and young girls have a passionate fondness for tbe flower, and consider it worthy ot their greatest care and devotion. FILLING A BOSE JAE. Every lady should have a rose jar. When rose petals are dry place them in -layers in your jar with alternate layers of salt, sprigs of lavender and a (er drop3 of attar of roses. Spices.wbich are recommended in the usual formula, give an unpleasant smell after a little time, unless the damask rose is exclu sively nsed. Keep the jar tightly. Do not make the mistake of using odorless roses. The damask rose is grown by the acre in its own Asiatic home, solely for the purpose of manufacturing attar of roses and rose water. One bush iu your garden will give you satisfying fragrance throughout the month of June. A little 3-year-old whom I once knew in timately lived next door to an old bachelor, who prided himself on his rose garden. The small maid and the genial old gentleman were excellent friends, inasmuch as he al ways allowed her to pick as many of tbe pretty flowers as she chose and could reach without aid. Oneafternoon she was miss ing. Mother, nurse and relatives all be came anxions. PerhaDS she had been stolen, for she was a lovely little witch. At last someone suggested her being hidden in the rose garden. Sure enough, though, she did not answer tbe repeated calls; after a persistent search throughout the little paradise, she was dis covered fast asleep between two tall, thick, blossoming bushes. Her white pinafore was full ot lovely red, pink, white and yellow roses, her dark curls were strewn with them, and her flushed cheeks were enshioned upon them. A pretty baby asleep among the roses 1 It was the most charming sight imaginable, just such a picture as poets and painters love to draw. F. K. E. Wade. For Fifteen Tears I have been subject to headaches, and have suffered such tortures that at times I had to resort to hypodermic injections of morphine. I tried Kranse's Headache Capsules, and they have not failed to cure or prevent all attacks. I weigh eight pounds more than ever before, and it is because I am free from those terrible headaches. Joe Saeges, Traveling salesman forW.F. Youngermaa's wholesale cigar house. For sale by druggists, Thaa skMAibdMtim