FOR THE FALLING LEAVES. Cotamrs Thnt Are in Harmony With tho Season hen Xnture Prepare Tor Her XjOn Rest Novelties for In and Oat Door 'Wear T-ato Fnik Beauty is looking to the East for the gowns in which she trill welcome Jack Frost And the East is profuse in its offerings. From across the sea comes a demi-scason toilet br Worth.illustrated from Harper's Bazar. The very chic mante Jet of this costume is sati am a rWs33 mm w t'.K !J a model for autumn wraps designed alike silk rM'OM l&M&j&V.'fll'i for driving or walk- for country or ;fePcit.T city use. It is a large wide cape, gathered below the collar, and falling thence in full folds without being raised on the should ers; it extends to tho wrists of the hanging arms, and is of even lencth all around. Demi-Season Ttiilet. Tho i-nrment illustrated is of deep blue vigogne, interwoven with gold. A broad band of black velvet borders the entire cloak, and is overlaid down the front with heavy gold passementerie. "Wide white lace forms deep ruffies around the neck and covers the front below. The small capote is of black i el vet. embroidered with gold, Mid trimmed with black feathers and a pale blue aigrette. Another illustration shows a new autumn mantle reaching almost to the knee. This Is from 77i Stascn which says this length is beinj preferred. The stufl used for such mantles are ol a rough, long-haired texture. The model was made of coarse, bluish-green diaeonale trimmed with dark velvet, and the vofce lined with satin the same color, a stripe of satin being sew n inside the front eCges of the mantle. The wide mantle part is mounted with pleats on the plain iront voke and gives also the pleeves. The Medici collar can be turned np or down, as prefened, and is therefore lined with t elvet. IX CASHJIEKE AND VELVET. A prettv costume for fall wear is shown in this column. It is called a cashmere and velvet crstume, and Iscomposed of atkirt of light beige-colored wool, ornamented witli cmbroiilerv on the front, and a coat bodice ot bronze vel vet with full sleeves of the luht wool. The skirt is without a foundation skirt but lined through out. The coat opens on a full plastron of the wool, and is ornamented with metal buttons and belt buckle. A pretty apron is one of the first requisites. The one here shown is just the thing for afternoon wear. It is made of flowered organdy muslin with a light ground. A breadth of muslin 1!0 inches long forms the apron, to which is added a gathered flounce 13 An Autumn JTantle. inches deep, finished with a hem and two narrow tucks, and gathered on with a head ing. Tw o scarfs, seven inches wide anu a yard and see:i-eishths long, form the bre telies; these are attached to the corners of the apron at a yard Jrom the end, this yard forming the strings; the other end of each is then crossed to the opposite shoulder, the two being tacked where they cross, and is pinned to the shoulder and finished with a bow of loops. A novelty in fans is herewith reproduced from the S-ahon. It is made of gauze on which rests a gigantic liowcr with ample foliage, and a second, which will doubtless be an acceptable mod-l to thos, who are skilled in the use of brush and pencil. The broftdish staves are each adorned with a cardboard niodaillion on which small views of any favorite spot may be drawn or A Hovelty in Fhm. painted, as remembrance of a country tour or the like. The views can be just sketched fiuring the journey aid afterward painted at leisure, and will either way be a wel come t-ouvenir to the owner, or an accep table gilt to friends at home. WHAT FJtANCE IS S.EKDIXG VS. Trench dresses imported for autumn and early winter are new-versions of the elab orate corsages and very plain skirts now in favor says Harpers' Bazar. Seamless waists, fancilul coats, princesse gow ns with corse lets, and bodices trimmed to suggest sus pender, or with a vest, yoke, plastron, or guimpe. all reappear, each with some fresh touch that makes a difference between the old and the new. Collars arc again cut high, and are close rather than flaring. There arc many laney sleeves softly bouffant at the top. and oild sleeves of velvet or silk are again seen in wool gowns. Hut the leg-o' mutton tdee- es still prevail, whether match ing the wai t or of different material; and bishop sleev es are made wider than ever, to droop over close cuffs that are usually richly trimmed. The skirts of many new gowns are with out a foundation. Thev are fitted plainly at the top, are fnll and long at the back, and are lined throughout. The French fkirt ell in one piece, with a bias seam down the back, is most often Eeen. There are also many cloth skirts with the back oreadth set in cornerwise, w-ith a point at the lop, making a ccam on each side, and leaving very graceful bias folds down the back. The newest borders lor the foot of g I i Ml i fyJ PS skirts are widest in front, narrowing gradu ally to a point in the hack, and tins ac centuating the appeaiance of length an effort which, sad . to say, is still sought alter. Tailors continue to make Louis coats and the habit-bodices with postillion back, which it is 'heir mission to fit with absolute perfection. "With these are Snede leather ests in a single piece, fitting as if molded over the bust, and fastened invisibly. Leather buttons in barrel shape, or in fiat disks with metal rims, are on tailor gowns. AJf AETIST'S LATEST MODEI A striking new model by Felix is a "corselet princesse" gown of cloth, with guimpe ana sleeve puffs of beng3line dotted with span gles. The corselet comes up high on the bust and is even all around the waist; rr-ft side invisibly, and is apparently continu ous with the skirt in princesse fashion, but is reallv fitted separatelv.and where joining the skirt is concealed bv em broidery of silk, gilt, chenille,and jet done on the garment. Lengthwise rows of this embroidery ex tend to the foot of the Bkirt, with ep- , plique vines and WT5 Meaves of Astraktui R .V .'lv f F .WV.W or velvet, ana the if foot is finished with abandofthe fur or a puff of velvet This Cashmere and Velvet model is handsome in black cloth with black bengaline guimpe but may be brightened by a red guimpe spangled with iet The lining of these gowns closes in front, as also docs the guimpe, which is gathered at the neck in front and back and justlielow whera it dis appears under the scalloped top of the corselet. The sleeves are of cloth fitted easily up to the elbow and half way above to meet a puff of the bengaline at the top. A mouse-colored cloth gown of this design has a bright red bengaline guimpe spangled with gold. Tiie embroidery is in darker shades with fine gold threads, and a wide velvet puff borders the skirt A graceful gown bv Baudnitz has a very novel coat bodice showing no seams but those under the arms, and draped diagon ally'over the lining both in front and back. The opening begins on the left shoulder, and extends bias to the waist line, disclos ing a puffed vest of silk. The front is short and in continuous pieces, with pleats on the shoulders, but perfectly smooth below. The back has longer coat pieces pleated on, and is the reverse of the front, being smooth at top, and laid in bias folds below the arm holes. The skirt is bell shape with silk lining. AX ADJTTSTABrB HOT7SE DI5ESS. An adjustable house dress is the latest noeltv. It is the invention of Mrs. Jen-ness-jfiller, the dress reformer. The design is intended to cover the practical needB of a woman w h o looks after her own household. It is made up, says a dressmaker in the St Louis Globe-Democrat, of aprons and jackets in such a way that a woman can be washing one minute and sitting in the parlor entertaining company the next It is of rather short length so that a wo man can skip up and down stairs thref steps at a time, and by letting down some aprons re versing them as it were and taking oft a jacket, a neat house dress, fit for parlor, is obtained. "The dress can be made of calico, gingham, cambric or of any of the cheaper goods. It is one ot the best Flowered JtaHn Aporn. of the many good ideas that Jlrs. Jenness- Miller has ever conceived. "Women have needed such a thing for a long time. I think it will become popular at once, and it ought to. The idea is as simple as it could possibly be, and will practically give a woman two dresses with the use of very little more material than was formerly used in one. SIEIf MIEEIXEES OP VTEXKA. In describing the men milliners of Vienna a correspondent of the Baltimore Sun says: Attendants salute you and wave you up stairs. Here yoa will find a suite of apart ments, with divans and easy chairs scattered all around, and mirrors of all sizes, large and small, so adjusted that your image is always reflected, no matter where you sit One set of customers will be waited on in one room and another set in another. Cus tomers, unless so disposed, have no occasion to come in contact with each other. Men are alwavs the principals. They take your orders, they measure you and they lit you. In each room screens are provided, behind which the customer tries on her dress, while her husband or her lover on the other side of the screen can talk or joke with her to his heart's content It is really the thing for the men to go, as there was scarcely a lady who did not have an escort In every room great numbers of morning and evening dresses and wraps ol all Kinds completely made up re hung on hooks. "What to a man is but one of the least enter taining incidents of the routine of the busi ness as it is carried on in "Vienna is the tor ture to which the "models" are not infre quently put by their more favored sisters, the customers, and the spiteful resentment which they cannot sometimes help exhibit ing. The "models," of whom every estab lishment of any pretention has from 6 to 12, ate selected for their symmetry of figure, and must be the possessors of slender waists, sloping shoulders and finely developed busts. For the selection of the patrons they will display on their figures any partic ular costume which may be requested. As you can understand, a patron who has no idea-purchasing will oiten say, "I should like to see how that gown will look.'tetc, etc. The unfortunate model will, in the course of two or three hours, have to put on and put of morning dresses and evening dresses, be turned around and round, be punched in the ribs until her patience is completely exhausted, and she certainly will look daggers at the woman who is do ing all this. She is not unlikely, also, to give vent in audible tones to her displeas ure when satisfied that her persecutor does not understand. COHNS ccrmancntlv and nnirfclir rnred by Daisy Corn Cure. 15 cents; of druggists. I 13 Mt& .PA Ufliffi m: V M'l VrT-V ;iw W j GUESTS OF A CHIEF. Fannie B. Ward and Party Btorm Bcrand With the Araucanians. LIVED ON THE FAT OF THE LAND. Trinkets and Tinsel Hade Them ForereT Friends of the b'avajjes. SOME EEMABKABLE TRIBAL CUSTOMS tCOXnBSPOSnENCB OF THE DI8PATCH.1 Vaebivia, Chile, Aug. 2T. Our camp in the Llanista village was arranged with the ladies' sleeping tent in the center, the five other tents set close around it, tha mules and horses tethered at a little dis tance, where a wooded hillock served as a break-weather all under the shelter of a splendid grove of pimento (pepper) trees, whose drooping branches, covered with feathery leaves of darkest green and long bunches of pink pepper-corns, nearly touched the ground on either side. A guard of armed servants and muleteers was posted night and day, and the gentle men took turns in overseeing the watch. But our precautions proved to be entirely unnecessary. "We were never safer In the midst of civilization than here in the heart of Araucania, in the unsurveyed wilds of this distant country; and had any outside danger menaced us, I believe that the Indians who considered us their guests and therefore under their special protection would have defended us with their lives, if need be. COMPELLED TO CAMP LIPS. It happened that a storm came on a tnrce days chilly drizzle, common In this latitude at any time of the year, where a wet season and a dry, which prevail nearer the equator, are not'so distinctly defined. Horseback traveling in the rain, through an uninhaoitcd district, would have been extremely uncomfortable; so we were easily persuaded to remain in camp until the skies cleared. I have camped in many climes, under diverse circumstances and picnicked with all sorts of people but have never enjoyed such a real "camping out" (the in tended spirit of which is a return to ab original life), as here among one of the most warlike tribes on the face of the earth, whose ancestors for centuries successfully resisted civilized arms and Spanish cruel ties, and maintained their independence in tact, while all the other nations of South and Central America fell under the sway of the conquerers. The squaws insisted on taking entire care of the animals, and kept us plentifully sup plied with cool water from a distant spring and brushwood for cooking purposes; and every morning the carcass of a young sheep, freslily killed and dressed, was brought as a gift lrom the chief. Knowingthat money was one of the least desirable things we could give these kind-hearted barbarians, as they had no use for the currency ol civiliza tion, we "got even," to their unbounded delight, by presents of trinkets, such as toilet articles, hand-mirrors, buttons cut from our clothes, sewing materials, silk ties and handkerchiefs, etc. DELIGHTING THE SAVAGE HEART. The articles that appeared to give most heart-felt pleasure were a mouth organ, a jewsharp and an accordion, which we pur chased for the purpose from the muleteers, my silver snapcase (which the chief im mediately filled with tobacco and hung around his neck by a string), and a rose colored, be-ribboned Jersey undervest, which thenceforth served his highness' favorite daughter, a child about 12 years old, as a costume complete, reaching from shoulders to knees and being the only gar ment she wore. We noticed that when the storm first be gan, heralded by skurrying clouds and muttering thunder, the Indians appeared to be greatly excited, for they knew there was foing to be another great battle in the sky etween their dead ancestors and the Span iards who had killed them. Believing the thunder to be the latter's cry of fear and distress, they turned out en masse in the pouring rain to cheer the wraiths of their warriors. When the storm began to abate they watched the skies with utmost anxiety, for "they have one sure sign by which to know which side has won the'ghostly battle; if the clouds move toward the village, the Indians have been victorious, but if they move from it, the conquistadores have won, and everybody is sorrowful. In this in stance the clouds swept gloriously, full phalanx, toward the town, and all were happy. A feast was spread, to which we were bidden, and dancing and singing (or rather howlibg) were kept up all night A FEAST WITHOUT PLEASURE. I may mention, en passant, that though we attended the feast, for to remain away would have been construed as showing sympathy with the defeated Spaniards and given deadly offense, are appetites were not voracious. Chicha, home-chewed of course, flowed far more abundantly than water, and stewed puppy figured promi nently among the delicacies. Thanks, how ever, to the horde of living canines that prowled around the squalling circle, and to our awkwardness both real and simulated we managed to dispose of all objection able viands, unnoticed amid the general hilarity. The worst time came with the ceremony of drinking from those human skulls. Happily, "squaws" of any color are exempt from the horrible duty, the sex being too insignificant to be allowed such familiarity with the lords of Araucania. Wc saw the gentlemen of our party grow pale and paler as those time-worn craniums ap proached, being handed from mouth to mouth around the circle; but subsequently everyone of them assured us that though they lifted the skulls and pretended to swallow with gusto, their lips touched nothing. All the Araucanians are extremely superstitious and attach a signification to every dream, confidently looking for its fulfillment inn dead nr the sunset land. The Castinoes believe in the literal resur rection of the body that the dead pass at once to happy hunting grounds in the far West where the sun sleeps, and there each happy Indian has a large tract of land and all the wild animals he can slay and cat for ever. When one of that tribe dies his favor ite horse is killed to accompany him and all his weapons, utensils and trinkets are buried with him for use in the Sunset Land. The friends of the deceased put food on the grave every night for weeks and when foxes, wolves and other wild creatures de vour it during the hours of darkness they believe that the dead man has eaten it and is refreshed on his long journey. The Llanisto are firm believers in Cici a mythological personage who takes the place of the Christian's satan a real, living, walking and talking evil one, as when in the Garden of Eden he assumed the form of a serpent and conversed with Grandmother Eve. It was Cici that caused the ocean at one time to rise all over the earth; and the Indians prove it by shells and the bones of marine animals which may be found high in the mountains. It is Cici, too, who induces people to steal and lie and murder. A Llanista accused of theft is always granted a hearing. Hearsay evidence or circum stantial won't do; there must in every case be two eye witnesses to establish the guilt of the ott'ender. STORY OF A MISSING MOUTH ORGAN. During our stay in the camp the precious mouth organ changed hands. The Indian to whom we gave it in return for some ser vice, and who prized it as the apple of his eye, missed it one morning from among his treasures. His transports of grief and rage induced the entire village to join in the search. At least it was discovered hidden nnder a pile of skins in the hat of another brave. Circumstantial evidence was rather strong against the latter, but as nobodysaw him steal it during the hours of darkness, it was taken for granted that Cici had per petrated the mischief. In a case wheic the two eye witnesses are THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, forthcoming, the thief is not puniseed but is required to return the stolen articles un jured; or, if that is impossible, to pay their full value to the injured party. If te thief is unable to pay, his friend must pay for him; and if they will not or cannot do so, then the friends of the looser may 'take it out of the culprit in deadly combat He is challenged to fight the strongest man among them; and if the thief should happen to kill his adversary he is completely vindi cated, his success being conclusive evidence that he is not guilty and that a mistake has been made in accusing him, and if he seeks revenge by murdering the "eye-witnesses" nobody interferes with him. SOME ODD DOMESTIC CUSTOMS. It is lawful among all the Araucanians for a man to have a many wives as he likes, and the established rule is that each day every wife shall give her husband a dish of food, prepared at her own fire. Therefore the number of fires in each hut indicates the number of wives, and the polite way of ascertaining the size of a warrior's harem is to ask him the number of fires in his house. A woman about to become a mother is com pelled to flee to some place where is water and strict seclusion, and there to endure her time of trial entirely alone. When she starts on this journey she flings a stone at the sun, if it is shining, or at the moon or a bright star, if it be in the nizht time, pray ing, "May my child be as bright as thou art, and may my suffering be as swift as the flight of this stone." Soon as the baby is born she bathes it and herself in the cold stream.no matter how inclement the weather, and then returns to her home. But even then her trials are hardly begun, for, instead of finding friends to receive and care for her, the house is de serted husband, mother, everybody, hav ing gone elsewhere. Even the furniture. such as it is, the cooking utensils, food everything except some skins for her to lie on, and a new suit of clothes have been re moved. For eight days rhe must remain there alone, to live or die, starve or feed herself, as best she can, when her friends return. Then there is great rejoicing, and the baby is named with ceremony gener ally after some bird, flower or animal and a perioa ot leasting ensues. HOW CHILDREN MUST BUFITIB. The ice-cold bath which the infant has re ceived in the stream upon whose banks he was born, is an appropriate commencement to his carerr of hardships He is firmly bound to a board, so that he can conven iently be set up in a corner, and his oold bath continued daily, without fire and with but a scanty allowancs of clothing. In order to make him hardy he is compelled through put babyhood to sleep out of doors in all kinds of weather, and is never given a mouthful of meatr thongh the dogs may sneak into the fire and are generally well fed. Should the lad become too fat of his vegetable diet his friends at once take him in hand He is sent on a very long errand, on which he if required to be fleet, and if he does not run fast enough he is pursued by trained runners, who prick him with sharp thorns and bits of bone, to let the blood out so that he may run faster. He is then de nied salt, as his parents believe it is that which makes him heavy. If the poor child diesof exposure or this ordeal, the relatives rejoice that he has so soon become a happy bumble-bee, which is infinitely better tnan to have grown up a sickly Araucanian. It is the survival of the fittest, and the urchin who thrives under such harsh treatment (and most of them do) soon commences his education. The great school-master is the mischevous Cici. When the lad arrives at the proper age he is taken every day to some dark recess, and there the Evil one teaches him the art of public speaking. This exercise is kept up until ho becomes a man and has learned how to appear well be fore an audience according to Araucanian ideas and to entertain the wise men with a fine flow of language. The education ends here. TBICKS OF MEDICINE MEN. It is believed that all sickness is due to witches, and sometimes, when the afflicted is rich in squaws and ponies, and the medicine mau dejiresa fat fee, he decides upen a wonderful surgical operation. The doctor, bending over the patient, with a blanket covering them both and shielding them well from view, proceeds to remove the sick man's stomach, heart, Jungs, liver and bowels, in search of the poisen adminis tered by the witch. He always finds it af ter a long search, and shows to the patient and his astonished friends a lizzard's tail, which is considered the most deadly poison, and which he claims to have found secreted in one of the vital organs. Then he calls upon the friends to witness the fact that, though he "has just cut the man open and turned him inside cut, as it were, not a trace of the wonderful operation remains, so that the man is not only free from poisen, but perfectly healed and as sound as before. In Araucania the evil one teaches doctors many skillful tricks In slight of hand, such as changing noses with people, taking out the eyes and vital organs without pain, and of thrusting a sharpened stick clear through the stomach of any individual. The last named trick is said to be performed in full view of all the people, to their unbounded admiration, and the man who has learned to do it is a complete graduate from Cici's col lege, and an honor to his tribe and genera tion. Fannie B. Ward. UP, GTJABDB, AND AT THEHI A Stirring Appeal to Bleeding; Kansas to Wield the Tar and Feathers. MoWlsEcglstPr. Bise, ye Ocalaltes, rise in your might and wrath and revenge the indignities offered in Kansas to your great head-center, the puis sant Folk of North Carolina! Appeal to Adams to boycott the telegraph which announces that President Polk has gone back on his Confederate record and has sustained the cotton-picking proc lamation of the Negro Alliance! "Up at once and form your brigades to march to the rescue of your chief, who is in immi nent danger of being tarred and feathered by citizens of the great Alliance State, the battleground of old John Brown, the home of Peffer and Simpson 1 What Is Brother Adams doing while red re bellion stalks thrhugh Kansas? Let him go at once to the rescue and burn his arm off close to his heart in defence of his anointed lawgiver. Where is the valiant Kolb? Is there no arm raised, no voice heard to intercede against the bucket of tar and bag of feathers? Now is the time Ocalaitcs, to show your grit Your great chieftain is in danger of being tarred ana leatnerea in tne home ol nis friends. O, Kansas I bleeding Kansas I lovely land of Ossawatamie Brown and Quantrell, we hope that you will tar 3nd feather every mother's son of them who forgets thai he is a Southern man and regrets the patriotism which urged him to honorable action I Upon every apostate head of them, pour your bucket of tar and ornament their degraded bodies with the down from the Kansas goose ! Teach them that when they league with negro bandits, and when they fawn upon political enemies and make apologies as traitors, that they can receive no respect from the meanest of mankind. Teach them that there is no safety, no decency, no respect, no honor for a Southern man except at home and in the strong arms of the Democratic party, that noble old party whose shield has covered the heart ot the South since the day we fell at the foot of the conqueror. FORGIVENESS. My heart was galled with bitter wrong, Revengeful feelings Area my blood; I broodod hato with passion strong "While round my couch black demons stood: Kind Morpheus wooed my eyes in vain, My burning brain conceived a plan! "Itevenge!" I cried. In bitter strain. But Conscience whispered, "Be a man." Tortfve!" a gentle spirit cried, I yielded to my nobler part Uprose, and to my foe I hied Forgave him freely from my heart; The big tears from their fountain rose, Ho melted, rowed my friend to be; Tl.at night I sank in swoet repose And dreamed that angels smiled on me. Coimv, Fa., September 12. O. Joires. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 27. BEAUTY IN THE HOME. Fads and Fancies That Are Just Now the Eage in Decorations. HEW TRIMMINGS FOE WINDOWS. Architects Will NotFinish Woodwork TOen - - tie Good Time Comes. THE WHIMS OP WOMEN AND BUSINESS PTROM THE UFBOLSTZnXB.l The new things which are being shown this fall are full of surprises, although most of them are reproductions of quaint old things that have been used for ages past. The demand for accurate styles has encouraged manufacturers to employ discriminate de signers, who have evolved all that is unique of past epochsj but while these pieces are delightfully fashioned, it is pitiable to note how improperly and inappropriately they are utilized. Baccarat tables can be bought In common place shops, by commonplace people, who do not understand anything more dense than casino; English teatables are poked into corners of rooms where tea is never drank, and jewel cases are displayed in par lors more's the pity. A girl with hysterical art tendencies got married last week. It was one of those long engagements that usually leaves a girl Between Bracket for Brte-et-Brca. withered and peevish, and the man worse a bachelor than ever, but which fortunately in this case wound up in a splice. When they went to housekeeping the young bride had her bedroom papered with envelopes that Jim had addressed to her, and there were enough of them to cover all the walls. For a frieze she used a deep blue blotting paper, spattered in all colors of ink. The man doesn't live who has the hardihood to upbraid a woman who keeps ever before him such reminders of all he ever said and promised her. In most old-fashioned houses there are plenty of unsightly corners and nooks, the result of additions and changes; and these to the decorator are frequently the source of delightful whims. An alcove we recently noticed was reduced in height by fretwork, side and top, and provided with a corner divan. The walls were treated with a paper, different entirely from the contigu ous room, which was cream with touches of brown, for the alcove showed its walls aglow with deep pink, as thongh from the reflection of a heavy, red-shaded standard lamp. The effect upon entering the room and getting a glimpse of this alcove was very pleasing, and at first sight was attrib uted to the lamp. Folks have become surfeited of late years with cornices and curtain poles, and it is a relief to this conventional form of window treatment to discover anything like the sketches here reproduced. One very clever arrangement is effected by the curtain rod between two brackets which are utilized for displaying bric-a-brac. Another form is by simply applying io the abrupt corners a simple scroll design in brass or wood as shown. The old-fashioned way of hanging a pict ure is by cords or wire; but the new way of doing it is by introducing trailing vine ef fects made in wire and metal, much in the Carnen Dona in Scroll. same realistic way that some years, ago the women folk made wax ivy vines. The wire instead of being harsh and metallic-looking, is colored the green of verdure, and on shooting from it are leaves and buds. Muslin curtains are now being shown with blaok'lace insertions in the open' bor der. A novel thing also is an ecru net em broidered over in silk. Chenille curtains instead of being of solid fabrio from top to bottom are now relieved by a broken net work pattern in the form of a dado or frieze.- Someone has said that "nature abhors a straight line, except in morals," and things decorative would seem to justify that ob servation, for the prim little brass or iron bedstead is not put now with its head to the wall and its feet in the center of the room, but, on the contraryit is pushed into the corner and over it is fashioned a tentlike canopy of chintz or muslin or cretonne. It seems a pity to paint over the hard oak work of a room, but that this is becoming a common custom is shown by the fact that manufacturers of curtain poles are now furnishing them in tints from the palest and softest of rose hues and cream to the deep olive greens. The time wil,l come be fore long when architects will realize that they should no more finish the woodwork of a house than they should finish the walls, for folks are becoming impressed with the propriety of having things harmonize and yellow woodwork certainly does not com bine, to the best advantage, with any or all colors which may be found in a new oc cupant's furniture coverings or draperies. There's a lot of humbug about this anenlo agitation. An importer of English cretonnes sold some niece eoods to a Boston "firm at the time when Boston was dancing in white fury over arsenical horrors. In a few weeks the goods were returned to him, i I 189L having been analysed by a Boston chemist, who found that "they contained arsenic. The New York man promptly sent them to the Columbia College, where Prof. Chandler decided that they were entirely free of arsenic. Now what con one think? A very pleasing wall treatment that is an absolute novelty is nothing more nor less than, silk cord fringe suspended from a molding which runs around the wall at the base of the frieze. A startling effect in wali treatment was shown recently in a room 30x30 feet and 14 feet high. Where the ceiling and walls met they merged in a cove, unadorned simply a curved meeting of walls and ceiling. The coloring of the en tire room, sides and top, wa? in ivory, the ceiling was of a lighter shade, and the only decoration was the decoration of this cove, whicli had a detached design of scroll work running about 2 feet up and 2 feet wide, and applied at equal distances around the room, separated by about a yard of space between each. "Do you know," said a dealer, the other day, that it it were not for women's whims, the trade at large would be at a standstill? There is novreason 'in the world why a woman should feel a shock at the sight of last winter's garments, but nine out of ten of them do, for they all know what's old Etyle; especially if they live in cities and mingle with the shopping throng. We sell over the counter thousands and thousands of yards of stuffevery season, not because what we sold last year is worn out. but because it is 'old style;' in other words, the woman is tired of it' Andevery year, if you've noticed, you'll recollect they develop' some new industrial whims. You can remem ber you are not so old when every woman in the United States was at work on wax flowers, they took a pride in being indus trious for what woman is contented with being simply supported and wax flower decorations were, for the time being, their whim. You can remember, too, when they jumped into the 'God Bles Our Home' sort of work on perforated cardboard; then they all took a turn in gathering ferns and tieing them with ribbons, or making card cases of lamp lighters or braided paper; then all hands made macrame tidies; enamel paint ing was one of the latest fads, and now they are all buying plain wood cabinets to daub over and 'decorate.' "I got an order last month,"he continued, "to make a frame for a chair. The woman who wanted it had seen a picture of it some flace or other, and wanted one just like it charged her 522 for the framo, and she paid it without a murmur; Bhe then started in and covered part of it herself and got part of it covered by an unholsterer, and now, no doubt, the piece is exhibited as 'the chair mamma made,' but which cost mamma about four times as much as she could have bought the same thing for in regular stock." THE GAME OF LtTBB. AJfeif Pastime That Is the Fad Amonjc the Young People In England. Pan Mall Budget "A Traveler" describes a new game for the benefit of those who do not wish to be unconscious players at it It is played, the correspondent says, in railway trains or any public place, "and I can best explain it by giving my own experience. I was alone in a first-class carriage when two young gen tlemen and their three sisters, as I suppose, entered. I learned from their conversation that they supposed we should pass a certain station where they intended on their way to leave a parcel. 1 thought it would he civil to tell them that we had already passed it They thanked me most courteously, and the gentleman who had first mentioned the parcel made a pencil mark on his cuff. Shortly after that one of the young ladies asked her brother the time, and as none of the party seemed to have a watch, and were very much out in their guesses as to what the hour was, I again ventured, though a man of few words, to tell them what I thought they really wanted to know. Again I noticed that the young lady who had first asked the time furtively made a mark on her cuft "My fellow travelers seemed to know so little about the route we were taking that, out ot pure kindness, I interposed several more times; and whenever I did so they thanked me most profusely, and I observed that some one either wrote on his or her cuff or scored something down elsewhere. Presently they divided some money among themselves. I have since discovered that I was the victim of the game of 'lure.' The game is a simple one. The players take it in turns to start a conversatson strictly among themselves with a view to inducing a stranger to break into it Tho points are any sum agreed upon. If the lure takes effect, all the players pay the starter. If it fails the starter pays the players. If the lnrc takes effect, "but the person lured answers wrong, the starter is paid double. All the players are bound to support the starter. I learned this afterward." WHAT TEE PALLIUM IS. A. White Woolen Band Blade From the Coats of Two Sacred Lnmbs. Mllwnkee "Wisconsin. The pallium, such as was conferred on Archbishop Katzer, is a white woolen band, about two inches wide, and long enough to be worn around the shoulders and be crossed in front It is made at Borne from the wool of two lambs which the sisterhood of Santa Agnese offer every year on the occa sion of the feast of their patronal saint, while the Agnus Dei is sung at mass. The pallium has crosses worked upon the white wool in black, and ornaments are attached to the ends. It is sent by the Pope to every newly appointed Archbishop, and the origin of its use for this purpose dates back to a very early time in the history of the Church. It is mentioned in an ecclesiastical document of the time of Pope St Mark, who died in the year 336, and an eighth century mosaic represents Pope St. Leo in the act of re ceiving a pallium almost like the one con ferred upon Archbishop Katzer. BOILING LOBSTEBS ALIVE. A Cruelty Worthy or the .Dark Ages That Is Still Practiced bv Gourmets. St Irfjnls Globe-Democrat. It is singular how the cruel practice of boiling lobsters alive continues. Our fore fathers and, indeed, our parents let calves bleed slowly to death, on the theory that in no other way could white meat be secured, and later on calves were bled one day and killed the next Now every one knows that a calf can be killed in a human manner, and the veal made just as good. Hogs are largely killed by electricity instead of by the old barbarous method, and, generally speaking, animals killed for food have been put out of the way in a much more humane manner than formally. But lobsters are still tortured out of ex istence, the only difference being that, while formerly they were exclusively boiled to death, now some are boiled and some broiled. Which process causes the most agony no one can say. A HOVEL WOEK BASKET. The Pretty Trifle Mrs. Georgo Gould Made of Handkerchiefs. Syracuse Star. I had a peep into Mrs. George Gould's work basket last week, and she was busy making pillow cases for the little white silk-covered pillows on whichher baby, Marjorie Gwynne, nestles her little brown curly head when the sleepy time comes. I never saw anything so dainty as the lit tle 12-inch-square covers, and what do you suppose they were made of? Cambric handkerchiefs, exquisitely embroidered,and with the monogram M. G. G. wrought in the corner. Each cover was made of two handkerchiefs, joined on three sides with a narrow lace insertion, and the fourth side, which formed the bottom, was frilled with deep lace to match.. Mrs. Gould originated the idea, and her baby was the first to own a set of handkerchief pillow cases. AGGREGATE BEAYEET On Lake Chautauqua's Shores Differs From Individual Bravery. THAT'S WHTDEESS EEFOEM FAILS. Importance of Putting Art Works of Merit Before Youthful Eyes. NEW PADS AND FANCIES FOR THE SEX fwuiriM rou Tire dispatch. 'Evidently the Chautauqua dress re formers are not yet ready to make their concerted movement The enthusiasm of the gathering by the shore of the pretty lake in Western New York was probably lump enthusiasm; now that it is broken into pieces and scattered it will not again solidify. Certainly no smallest bit of the leaven seems to have got into New York or Pittsburg. The theaters are filling up with home audiences, and there is no hint of austere reform in the pretty and elaborate toilets seen in box and parquet. In point of fact it is going to be an ex tremely difficult matter which these ladies of Chautauqua have undertaken. Granted that they are able to persuade womankind en masse to adopt the nniform costume sug gested, in a week the blondes would be adding "a touch of blue," the brunettes just a suspicion of red; the tall would dis cover a need for a "hint of drapery," and the short some lines to increase their height," the stout would want "this altera tion" and the slight "that addition." In a brief time all uniformity would be gone and the dress reform costume, if met by its mother, would not be recognized. You see women have been cultivating their love of millinery and fine effects in clothes for a number of generations, and the instinct is too strong to be eliminated save through an age of suppression. And that "age" is going to be a very trying time to the reformers. This view of the case is in regard to the extreme measures suggested by the inaugu ratord of the new crusade. TheTe has been a marked and valuable reform in woman's dress within the past quarter of a century. Women dress with much more regard to comfort and hygiene than formerly. Our grandmothers minced along in paper soled shoes and skirts that were balloons in cir cumference from enormous crinoline; they knew nothing of the advantages of the union suits of fine wool and silk which now clothe most women ifrom neck to ankles; skirt supporters were not in vogue; the cor sets of olden days were cruel, ponderous things as unlike the supple, feather boned stays of to-dav as possible, and short skirt3 for the street were simply unheard of. Every woman's gown trailed all around, and when, some 20 years ago, some modiste originated a suc cession of stiff little festoons about the bottom of dress skirts, like lambrequins in upholstery, that kept the garment clear of the ground, everybody thought the mil lenium had come. To-day short skirts are almost universal; they have invaded the ball room as well as the promenade, and trains yards long are confined to brides and dowagers. Women wear broad-soled, low heeled stout boots, with splatter dashers for stormy weather. Many of them have al ready discarded corsets, and few women who wear them lace with the zeal with which they are accredited. Fashion and good taste have set their paces against the wasp waist It is in two ways not "good form." Mrs. Jenness-Miller and Mrs. Bus sell have done much good work for their sex in the matter of dress, but' it is a very open question if we need to make frights of ourselves as these last reformers are trying to persuade us. Originality runs riot in these days. There is such an effort to secure or invent a nov elty that everything, artistic sense, the fit ness of things and divers other virtues are sacrificed to it. Open work plates,perhaps, are not atrocities in their simple form; in deed some of them are very pretty, but when they become complex, L e., combined with ribbon, they cease to attract At a re cent dinner the soup was served In plates through whose open border ran silk ribbon, a bow plumping itself where the ends met! Shades of propriety and consistency, where were ye? Bicycle fashions are becoming a distinct department A golden rule for women 'cyclists is that which is rigorously fol lowed by a thoroughbred horsewoman: Al low no loose ends. Have everything about your toilet secure. Loosely done hair,flying nbDons, unnecessary iarueiows oi any sort are to be tabooed. The new "enclosed" skirt is specially adapted for wheeling. It is a petticoat with the lower edges sewn together. An opening is left to slip the feet though. The gar ment is put on a shirr string at the waist and is a complete protection for various athletic sports, rowing, tennis, mountain tramps and bicycling. It should be men tioned that this skirt requires considerable more fullness than an ordinary petticoat, as, being held at the knees, there must be room for free movement of the limbs. No other skirt is worn over this, and its exist ence is not suspected from appearances. The gathering in at the knee is allowed for by extra length, and the effect is that of an ordinary skirt with the bottom loosely turned up. o The use of ropes of flowers winding in and about the table service and garlands festoon ing from statuettes or candelabra seems to be a distinctive feature of dinnerparties at the present moment The low center pieces had become monotonous, high ones are stiff and unsightly, screening the company from one another the present style seems to be a happy medium combining the advantages of both designs. How many house mothers say at spring and fall housecleaning times anent some shabby, broken down bit of furniture: "Oh, take that up into the nursery," or "it will do for the children's play room." It is such a sad mistake. It is educating the children A FACT true fruit, free from ethers, poisonous oils and strong, 'rank taste. They are natural flavors, obtained by a new process, which gives the most delicate and grate ful taste. Insist upon having Dr. Price's. Substitutes are often recommended because they afford a better profit 13 to be untidy, careless and unappreciatlve of the beautiful. Make your children's room the daintiest in the house even if it is very inexpensive. If putting n sreat " f1 pensive picture on the walls of your parlor means having none on the nursery walls, by all means leave the parlor bare, or at least divide the price between the two rooms. The nursery should be sunny and cheerful; it should be scrupulously neat and whole some; it should have matting instead of caroets, or better still, a hard-wood floor. There should be a window box of bright hued, easy "rowing flowers, and above all there should be pictures, good pictures, too. A child's taste is very tractable; he will soon admire graceful outlines if he seems them constantly. An ideal nursery seen recently was a sunny room with a hard-wood floor on which wersj gay rugs, easy to keep frea of dust, this walls painted a delicate tint, with a wood dado three feet high running around the room. Into this at intervals were inserted behind glass to keep them from prying lit tle fingers pictures artistically drawn, repre senting the familiar Mother Goose rhymes. A less expensive method for a most satis factory nursery gallery is to take the often fine copies of noted originals that are con tinually found in the best illustrated week lies. Such mounted on a sheet of bristol uuaru wiiii nie margin giiueu w icii. v " or neatly tacked unmounted on the wall with upholstery tacks, make an effective showing and admit of frequent variety. o The three-quarter capes, so popular in tha spring, arc rather resigning their placs among the cloth garments, but they are dis tinct fall novelties in furs. This is a blow to the long triumphant fur shoulder cape, which ought to be hailed with delight by every friend "to woman's fine appearance. Those wretched little coachmen's capes wera convenient, and that was alL The'y wera never graceful, and never suitable for a winter garment Physicians agree that they were really dangerous overheating the neck, chest and shoulders, and leaving the lower chest and back unduly exposed. These new deep capes, circling the figure just below the hips, are extremely hand- some and graceful, and are suitable fur gar ments, affording ample protection. Women often complain that the velvet strap and bow worn under the chin with the small capote or cottage bonnet dis colors the throat The best modistes lin velvet with thin white silk. Something of a novelty for a child's party seen recently was a wooden frame. It looked like one fold of an old-fashioned clothes horse detached and mounted on two small pieces of wood for foundations gilded all over to add to it3 effect, upon the cross piece of which were suspended by cords of unequal length and about 18 inches apart, four or five prizes done up in tissue paper. To each child was given a pair of scissors, and it was instructed to make an effort to walk in the direction of the frame and snip a prize. About 15 prizes were providedfor a company of 45 children, that proportion, it was decided, would achieve success. At the same party the bonbons were npt served with the supper, but were put in llttla white boxes, tied with blue ribbon for tha boys and pink for the girls, and passed to the children as they let; the house. o Bound dinner tables are finding favor again. Bonbons for dessert, cream wal nuts, crystallized apricots and cherries are served in tinted paper cups which match tha table decorations. o A real prayer rug, one which has beea actually knelt upon by a devout Mussul man and an actual Japanese hari-kari sword, mako a pair of spicially desired relics to the fashionable bric-a-brao hunter. Makgarbt H. Welch. HOW HZ CAME TO DIE. A Tombstone on 'Hhlca the Dead Is rto tared In tho Act of Suicide. rWRCTTEX TOR TITE DISPATCH. There is a remarkable tombstone in Bound Grove Cemetery, sevenmiles east of Dwight, 111. It marks the last resting place of Enoch, son of James EL and Charloot Mor ris, who died August 9, 1807, aged 19 years and 3 months. The tombstone is of white marble, about five feet high, three feet wide and half a foot thick. Oa its front is the figure of a youth in the act of blowing out his brains. It it brought out in relief, and below it is tht following inscription: Beneath this stone the ashes lay or him that was my darling boyi Alas, alas, his race is run, Caused by a douDle-barrel gun. Bereavements sure my heart will break. Show pity. Lord, for mercy sakel Oh, let me to Thy will resign These two unfortunate boys of mine. Remembers nil Wire Was an Actreu. There is a bit of romance about the nam ing of the last Gould baby. Tho other two children are sturdy little lads of 5 and 3;Klng don, the eldest, bears his mother's family name, and Jay is called for his grandfather. When the brown-eyed girl baby camo George Gould claimed the-privilcge of nam ing her, and he called her Marjorie Gwynne, for the character which his wife personated the first time he ever saw her. I Off i I It is an established fact that the only natural flavors in the market are Dr. Price's De licious Flavoring Extracts. Each flavor "is made from the - .& -va n fi. . iMf - II 1 1 1 liiiliiiiMnt jMffiMiVn'frir 'Itfii aisl ... - a31fa