LOST IN THE NUBIAN DESERT. AN ADVENTURE J AFRICA. UiiiiiwUiiliiiiiliiiliiiliiUiii - Colonel Damrell, the clubman and traveler, has Just returned from the Boudan, etc. Society Journal. Seeing the above 16 a metropolitan weekly and being desirous of renewing acquaintance with an Interiwtlng old friend, for he always had a tww ex perience of thrilling Interest to exploit, 1 hastened up to his favorite club, and, between puffs of Havana perfeotos, I obtained the following account of a wetttf predicament, which I give as nfearly verbatim as my memory allows me: "The desert!" exclaimed the colonel, rapturously. "Ah, my boy. standing on the brink of the great Nubian sand seas, one is transfixed. The sun' iwas just peeping over the barren cliffs beyond the Nile, tipping them with a dull fire, when the order came to start My heart leaped. I forgot all dangers, and thought only of adventure, of new sensations. The chief guide gave the word, and we mounted, giving civiliza tion, home, the very world itself, it seemed, a single backward glance. "There were five of us, with guides and men; and it was the third day of last March that we started over the difficult trail from Korosko, taking the southward trail toward Absoh, leading through the very bowels of the Nubian sands. Our objects were di verse. My own was to discover some rare antiquities of which I had heard rumors, but the principal interest on the part of the others was to rediscover the abandoned gold mines of Absoh. Knowing that the Nubians are con firmed In their indolence and utterly unacquainted with the modern methods of prospecting, the two experts of the party one a Callfomlaa and the other an Australian both thoroughly famil iar with gold-bearing regions, felt con vinced that with patient effort, there was a possibility of unearthing a for tune, and the exciting experiment was at least worth the trial. "For four days ' our little caravan mailed along the barren sands, pass ing EI Murrah, or springs of bitter water, and all went well. Then the Journey, which for the first day or two was full of varied novelties, began to grow painfully monotonous. To make matters worse, the geerbah skins, which were used to carry fresh water from the Nile, were daily growing flat ter. The wells of El Murrah were sa line and heavy with brackish sediment, and, though the camels drank of the water without suffering ill effects, the men who Indulged freely were seized with intense griptngs. Two days south ward from the wells a strange Incident occurred. "Our way led over the beaten camel trail, centuries old, and yet every month the tract was obliterated by the drifting sands. Now and then we scarcely knew our way save that the route was pointed out to us by the wreckage of former caravans which had shed the sick and exhausted by the wayside, both man and beast, leav ing them to the merciless sun and the prowling jackals till death relieved them. There Is no place on the face of the globe where the survival of the fittest means so much as here on the Nubian desert, where the caravan nev er stops; and if the poor native cannot plod on, no halt Is made for his recov ery. The consequence is, that the far ther one progresses, the more skeletons of men and beasts point the uncertain way through the drifting sands, and the sight Is surely most depressing. "My camel was not a particularly tast one. He had a habit of lagging behind, so that once or twice a day the caravan was compelled to halt and wait for me to come up, line a lost vertebra of a skeleton reptile. On this occasion, while somewhat behind the . party, a fine young gazelle crossed my path not a dozen rods ahead, dashing with sudden fright Into a little ravine which appeared to be closed at the farther end, so that apparently he was made a prison er. Rlile in hand, I leaped from my camel. Eagerly I made my way through the hot, ankle-deep sand to the little ravine, following it up some distance, ready to bring down my game. To my surprise however, I found that there were several turns beyond, and soon saw that my chass was bootless. Dejectedly I made my way back to my camel, which had not stirred, and seemed only too glad for the little respite from the racking toll of the march. Taking a good draught from my geerbah of water, and also filling my canteen, I- drew the beast to his knees, as is customary When mounting, so that by placing my foot upon his neck, by his up ward movement of the head be would raise me, enabling me to step into the cushioned seat 'between the humps. As I was fixing my foot on the camel's necR, however, the sudden raising of bis bead caused a knife to slip from my belt in such a way that it grazed the beast's flanks, giving him a slight but stinging flesh -wound. Up he started, and so suddenly, with that quick up ward throw of the body, that I was pitched cloan over his humps, and fell aidforemost in the sands. Then, to my consternation, with a queer snort of rage, the camel made a little circle, and with his bead thrown up like an ostrich pursued by a hunter, he bump ed along at a rapid paco over the trail In the direction- of the caravan. "In vain I shouted, in vain I shriek ed ail the Arab coaxings and impreca liona that I knew. The, o,ulte sxhaust- iiiUiiiiiiliiiiUiUiluUiUiiUi ed, I squat ted In the sands, alone, pant ing, enraged and desolate, watching my mount fade to a speck on the horl in. I grew resigned, however, feeling that within three or four hours at most my comrades would be returning for me. I shall never forget the first sick ening sense of loneliness that op pressed nie there in the great desert, apparently abandoned of heaven and earth. I had no food and only a little water. I knew that it was days and days by camel journey from any succoring hand, ana that I was now completely at the mercy of the noma dic bands ct robbers which Invest the rocky ravines, and would, moreover, be beset by the jackals and vultures the moment I showed signs of faint ing under the scourging sun. The strain grew maddening. For a long time I bore it; and then, no longer able to fight with the demon of si lence, and haunted more than ever now by the presence of human and ani mal skeletons half burled in the drift ing sands, I arose and plodded on. But little did I dream that there was yet a more dreaded enemy than vultures, leopards, or even the predatory rob bers soon to encompass me. "The first warning that I had of Its terrible approach was the soft ob scuration of the sun, which stood so straight overhead that it cast my form in a circling shadow about me just to the tips of my toes. A sort of silken mist floated before the coppery sky. Then this thin cloudiness swmed to descend, the wind arose, and the sirocco grew heavier and more op pressive. I bowed my head, pressing forward with increasing difficulty now. Up from the limitless southwest the dreaded scourge was closing down upon me. 'My God!' I mummured at last, losing courage at the sound of my own voice, 'It is a simoon!' "The wind was rising In a gale. I heard the roar of the sand blast from afar. These gusts of hot, white atom grew sharper and fiercer now; and it I hod worn a King Arthur coat of mall, I scarcely think it would have been proof against that volley of dead ly dust. It penetrated my clothing till I felt the layer of It chafing the flesh at every movement. My nostrils were clogged so that breathing became more labored and painful. My ears were stuffed up so that It deadened the in creasing whistle and roar; and though my eye were almost closed, the aw ful volley seemed to penetrate the very lids. Then I finally succumbed, falling to my knees, and at last prone upon my face, covering my head with the ample folds of my burnouse. "For a long time I lay there In the thick, drifting mounds, the monoto nous shriek of the simoon lulling me to sleep. It was not a refreshing re pose, but one filled with frightful nightmares and monitions of evil. Once In a while the shrill cry of a lost jackal or a desert bird broke the abhorrent spell, but the sound brought no cheer. After what seemed to be a dangerously long time, I awoke, recov ering from this sort of daze rather than sleep, and looked vaguely about me. Shaking the sand from my bur nouse, I took my watch. It bad stopped, the dust having penetrated it and clogged its delicate machinery. I stood up, and brushing the sand from my eyes, peered over the trackless plain. Nothing but a dead grim waste of whiteness; but, thank Heaven, the storm was abating. I vaguely remem bered the direction of my course, al though the trail was now wholly ob literated, and started bravely on. But so chafed and faint was I that I soon found all effort torture, and at lost sank in my tracks with a moan. "For a long time I lay in a sort of stupor. Then I heard a voice. It was more human than any I bad heard in the loneliness of the desert, although it was a moan of anguish rather than a call of rescue. I rose and turned sharply in the direction of the sound, and soon perceived a kneeling, sway ing figure at some distance. The thought of a human belug, let him prove whatever he might bo, made my poor heart leap. I came closer, and was amazed to discover that the sway ing figure was that of a half naked and more than half-blind slave boy. There was a moveless shape half burled in the drifting mound before him. I uncovered it, amazed to find that it was a Nubian sheik lylug upon his face, quite dead. "When the slave realized the pres ence of another human being, be fell groveling at my feet as if I had been an angel come from heaven. His mouth and tongue were swollen with fever, and I pressed the canteen to bis Hps, but he could not drink. He was chat tering wildly in a language I did not un derstand, raving, and more than half de mented. The sheik had been robbed of everything worth carrying away, the scoundrels leaving him only his bur nouse and a small skin of water, which was already flat and dried into a chip. The poor traveler must have died from exhaustion, for there were no wounds upon his person save a few scratches on the wrist where the slave boy had tried to suck a drop of blood from his dead master to keep himself from perishing. At the slave was more used to the tortures of the desert, naturally the sheik had succumbed first. "Meeting with such companions In misery, tor a little time I almost for got my own perils anj suffering. Slow ly ths slave lad revived under my simple ministrations. Than I got some what of his story. The sheik's caravan had successfully resisted attack upon the march, but the two had become separated from the company, and be ing overtaken were robbed and left to die. All this had taken place more than three days since; and the slave had kept up the lonely and maddening vigil by his dead master with almost sublime heroism. Knowing that my comrades would soon be retreating to recover me dead or alive, as soon as the slave was able to walk we took the burnoiiRe from the dead sheik and started back toward the trail. The way was very difficult and slow, and I was compelled almost to carry the ema ciated lad bodily. On we plodded till the darkness settled about us, and then making ourselves as comfortable as possible, we lay down side by side and watched out the night, "The next morning, although the slave boy was In much better physi cal condition, I felt that I myself was fast succumbing. I arose once or twice and tried to make a little circle over the sand mounds to get my bearings, but soon gave up the enigma. I figured matters out with the calculation of a physician. I had water enough .to last us another day or, for myself alone, two days. I almost wished I had not happened upon the slave now, for It might be that my own life would be sacrificed In this deed of charity. Then I drove the selfish thought from my heart. If one perished, we should both perish. He had been a godsend, giving me companionship, and bow did I not know that he had not saved me from something worse than death from madness. With brotherly care I divided the water drop by drop water more precious than blood. The slave was grateful pitifully so at what he per ceived to be my sacrifice. When he saw that I was going to pieces, how ever, he not only refused to lap up three precious drops of salvation, but actually thrust out his arms to me with the offer of his own blood to fave me. This touched me very deep ly. I had opened my canteen and saved his life for a little while, and now he was ready to open his veins to save mine! "On the morning of the second day I gave up hope, and began a rambling letter to my friends in caso they should ever And me. Even this little exertion overcame me; and after a few scrawls I gave up the task. Hours of complete unconsciousness In the broil of the sun came oftener now. Again the slave lad's long suffering on the desert served him well. I realized that he would survive me by a day, or perhaps more. I gave him my effects, weapons and all, making him understand that In case my friends came my belongings were to be turned over to them, and that the slave himself should be re warded. Then I sank In my dust bed falling Into a sort of coma. "I was aroused by the crack of a rifle. The lad had used my weapon well, bringing down a small antelope with a single shot. Too weak to rise, I turned my head and watched the boy crawl over to bis prize. After what seemed to be the struggle of his life, he dragged the deer toward me. Then I closed my eyes with a prayer of thankfulness, and soon folt the warm blood of the gazelle, dropping from the bullet wound on its breast, bathing my swollen Hps. The effect was magi cal, I revived I lived again! The slave was now saving my life even as I had saved his. The gratitude he showed gave me renewed courage. "But, strange as it may seem, the happy Incident of the shooting of the young deer exercised rather a depres sing than a hopeful influence upon the spirits of my staunch champion. The poor little lad refused to partake of the saving grace which he had vouch safed me. Hourly he grew weaker. De lirium followed, and I was compelled to use my poor strength to force the raw food into bis mouth, and all to no purpose. Can any one realize how my heart was now pricked by a conscious ness of the heroism of this Nubian slave during these terrible hours? Ah, the vigil was long and bitter through torrid days, and nights black as only Nubia knows them, with death and desolation encompassing us on every hand, the prowling jackals and the starving tigers calling fiercely to one another at the smell of blood, only awaiting my sinking into sleep to plunge into the carnival which should end all for me. In order to rob the night of Us terrors and the day of its madness, I strove with my poor pa tient, who was fast ebbing into the last slumber, with none to Buccor, none to restore. I felt that with him gone I should lose ell hope, all wish to live. We seemed like .the last two surviving human beings of earth, and I chose that he, the child of Nubian darkness, and I, the son of Western day, might go hand In hand together. "On that last day of my desolate watch the sun was sinking over the limitless sand ocean, and I thought to see it no more. I tried to pray. Ah, what had all these bitter days been but one living, blood sweating prayer one cry borne tip as from the pits of deepest Topbet into the responseless heaven! I became prophetic now. The past seemed to become clear and un clouded, the future transparent and Mind with loveliest visions. I knew this to be the beginning of the end, and so sank back resignedly, even welcoming now the cup 1 had so long shrank from with weak and waning terror the blessed hemlock of obliv ion. "Suddenly, along the borders of ths afterglow on the horizon, I saw a dark object stealing up like a phan tom, bathed In the glory of celestial twilight. The sight was so supernatural that it stirred ma strangely; but I soon perceived that it was no phantom of my wasting mind, but a reality a blessed truth. Soon that moving ob ject took the proportions of a serpent moving toward me on, on, slowly, solemnly like penitent's procession toward a pagan temple; and then real izing at lant, I moaned aloud, 'It Is ths caravan! Thank God, It Is the cara van! ' and so sank back unconscious. "When I revived long after, there was the cool mouth of a flask pressed to my Hps and strong, tender arms were about me. I opened my eyes, 'Comrades' was all I could murmur; but they heard It and there was a shout of triumph. "'My God! We thought you dead long, long ago,' I hnard them crj brokenly. 'What could have saved bin till nowT It Is a miracle a miracle!' "I tried to speak, but there was V breath within to give my heart uttet anoa. I turned and drew the burnou from the brow of the still figure at., my side. 'Save htm!' I cried, though, my voice fell In a whisper. 'Save him; for It was he who saved me!' "But they only shook their heads. One glance told the tduth. My poor slave lad, my rescuer, my solace, my one joy In darkness and sorrow bad moved out on that long, bleak pilgri mage through the Unknown Desert that knows no return path, yet with the glory of departing day wreathed about the still ssben forehead the saintly halo of a hero and a brother." New York News. TOLD BY 8HAPE OF FACE. Ths Oblong snd ths Round ss Indica tions of Character. The physiognomist divides the faces Into three so-called grand classes the oblong face, the round face, and the pyrlform or pear-shaped face. The oblong face Is one which would fit more readily Into an oval than a round or ppar-Bhaped diagram. For mere phy sical beauty the oblong or oval face has the highest standing, and the ar tints who paint youthful beauty en deavor to get what Is called the pure oval to the face. Individuals with an oblong or oval face are naturally of a strong and active nature, with keen powers of perception and much Imag ination. They are self-reliant and per severing. They are not, strictly speak ing, highly Intellectual, although they are often talented. They are constant In friendship, and strong In their affec tions. The round face belongs usually to a subject whose neck Is short, should ers broad and round, chest full, and In whom a tendency to stoutness In mid dle life Is Indicated by the plumpness of youth. The round-faced woman very often has small feet and hands. In character the round-faced subject Is lively, amia ble, impulsive, and frequently fickle. She lacks persistence, and she loves ease too much to do any serious and patient plodding, which we all know Is necessary to attain good results. The pyrlform face Indicates the in tellectual type. The woman with the pear shaped face has a high, broad forehead. Her features are generally delicate and finely modeled. Her neck Is Blender; she Is tall rather than short; her chest Is not broad fre quently, on the contrary, it Is narrow. She has intelligent eyes, and she nev er appears to have great physical en durance. Philadelphia Inquirer. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Australia could do with 300,000 Brit ish wives, Canada with 90,000 and the Cape with 80,000. There are said to bo nearly 1.000.000 too many women in the British isles. A bacteriologist recently made mic rofcoplcal examination of washings from a woman's train worn on the streets of London, and found it to contain 110,672,000 microbes of dis ease. . Lord Amherst of London collects crowns, and has a cabinet with a number of fine specimens of discarded skypleccs, including the crown worn by Charles II at bis coronation, the crown worn by George IV, and the one niad-o for Queen Adelaide. A man arrested for theft in Lyons, France, was found to be tattooed In the most extraordinary way. He had a perfect picture of the assassination of Honry III., by Jacque Clement, on bis chest, and an equally good one of the death of Carnot on his back. The value of the coal mined In Jipnn is almost equal to that of all otbermln eruls combined. It varies from the hardiest anthracite to peat, but the quality Is usually Inferior to that of American coal. Modern machinery aud methods have been Introduced In the operation of many mines. A musician at the Cambridge City hospital recently succeeded In calling two cows from the far end ct a Meld simply by producing a peculiar note on to strings of a violin. They first stopped grazing and lonkod toward him; then came to the fence and put their heads over It, and finally an swer e J the note of music by short lowing, accompanied by uneasy e tamp ing of their feet. The mango, which is now being cul tivated in Florida, Is said to have orig inated in southern Asia and the Malay Archipelago; it is now found wild in the forests of Ceylon and In regions at the base of the Himalayas. It was Introduced first In Brazil, on this con tinent, and thence was taken to ths Barbados In 1742, At the present time It Is common throughout the tropics all around ths world, but Is finest In India. There are over SOU varieties. , Tennessee has a larger debt Uiaa any other state f 16,200,000. OF THE CITIES- DEAD IN Burial Near Populous Town Should Be Prohjblted. Our barbarous custom of burial was Initiated by the belief In the resurrec tion of the living body. The conse quent, natural desire to save It from destruction was strengthened by a prejudice of early Christians against the Roman pyre. But even the won derful Ingenuity and lavish expendi ture of the Egyptians have boen un availing to preserve mummies eternal ly, and if we could. It Is questionable whether we would make the dross ws leave behind after a slow death the permanent habitation of our Immortal souls. The prospect of remaining In a body tortured by disease or decrepit with senility Is not alluring. Yet we set aside valuable tracts of land for the stowage of such bodies; until, regardless of the sacred promise of their perpetual "rest" and Inviola bility, municipalities seize the room when needed and fling the remains up on a dung neap. Almost every page of the records of London and Paris contains examples of the desecration of abandoned graveyards, and there Is hardly a city in the old world that has not disturbed at least one of tlieso resting places of their whilom Inhabi tants. In our towns of rapid growth the cemetery of today becomes the heart of a metropolis tomorrow; the demolition of graveyards In Now York snd BoBton has been a Trequent occur rence until It falls to attract attention. When the Colon cemetery of Havana became overcrowded, tho Cubans found It necessary to clear It of skulls and promiscuously shoveled them Into a common boneyard. It presented an aspect so ghastly that General Wood concluded to cover the pit and to re open It only for the next overflow of skeletons, expected In about five) years. In cortaln cemeteries In London corpses are burled In standing pos ture because no room Is left to lay them down. Bodies of the poor gen erally are packed over each other In tiers, and the trench Is kept open un til filled. In the poverty corner of Calvary cemetery this has been the" customary treatment of the remains of paupers. Newtown, where Cal vary Is sl.ua ted, harbors 80 corpses to every living Inhabitant. The con venient villages of Corona, Elmhurst aud Wocdslde, once parts of Newtown, which now are annexed to New York, and constitute the geographical centre of the enlaigcd city, might Increase In population If it were not for the prox imity of vast and dreary charnel fields. A law relating to public health pro vided 40 years ago that no grave be dug or opened south of 8Cth street, and that no cemetery be opened In any part of the city and county of New York. This law should be enforced and applied, not to greater. New York alone, but to the territory within a ra dius of one hundred miles around every populous town. People who In Blst on their Inanimate bodies remain ing Inviolate should have thorn car ried to a distance where they can neither Inconvenience nor Injure the living, who need the room and are nat ural heirs of the departed. Famous lntermural cemeteries, like Mount Au burn, Boston; Greenwood, New York, and Laurel Mill, Philadelphia, could bo transformed Into admlrablo parks. Monuments of architectural beauty might remain undisturbed. Others might be replaced by trees, with suit able tablets to mark the spot of thoso upon whose dust they grow. Tho Turks, loth to desecrate the grave of a Mussulman, havo. adopted a similar cuBtom, and thereby havo made tbo cemeteries of Constantinople attrac tive to strangers. Two hundred city lots are now required to bury in the old-fashioned way the seventy thou sand persons that annually dlo In greater New York. We probably could save more than a hundred and fifty of these precious lots If ashes of the seventy thousand were placed in urn cemeteries, preserved In niches of a Columborlum, or strewn on the waves of a river. As cemetorles are exempt from taxation, the municipality would derive an income from the lots, which the living then would use, and from the Improvements they would make upon them. Another Important advantage would accrue to every needy mourner, in saving him from useless extravagance. He Incurs at present the expense of $50 at least for a plain funoral; land values in the suburbs of cities preclude a reduction in the cost of burial. The expense of cremation Is only $25, and could be largely reduced If the cus tom became more general. Lot our intelligent population set the example, as It does In San Francisco, where al most a thousand bodies are annually cremated, and the ignorant masses will be euro to follow. Considering the marvolous progress we havo made In every otner direction. It is strange that we have failed to adopt the most rational means for the disposition of dead bodlos. We hardly are abreast of Homer's contemporaries, who real ized that, however well a cemetery may be managed, corpses can do harm, but ashes never can. True religion does not and never can teach that it is godly to injure those we leave be hind when we die. Municipal Affairs. A Blow at Duelling, A student named Ruff has just been sentenced to three aud a half years' confinement In a fortress for shooting and killing a fellow student in Carls rulie. It was proved against the con victed man that he deliberately picked S man of another student corps, who was very young and bad bad no expe rience with a pistol. The conviction Is generally approved, although some of ths German papers complain that it Is not severe enough. The majority of them are willing to accept It as a CI8P08AL nor la ths right direction, ml JL New York City. Long shouldered ef fects are among the distinctive nnd notable features of the pennon nnd ore found In ninny of the new shirt waists Alt ELABOBATB MODEL. s well as In the more elaborate mod els. The very smart May Mnnton waist Illustrated hns a novel yoke or shoulder strap effect, that Is cut In one with the tucked fronts and can either be made to extend over the shoulders or be cut off at the seams as shown lu the back view, and exem plifies both the drooping shoulders and one of the ninny forms of the bishop stock. The orlglriul Is made of French flannel In crtftun white stitched with pale blue cortlcelll silk, but alt the BLOUSE season's waist materlnls are appro priate. The foundation lining Is snugly fitted aud Is In every way desirable where wool or silk Is used, but can bo omitted whenever it Is not desired. The fronts of tho waist proiier are tucked for tlielr entire leugtb aud are extended to form the yoke or BUouldcr straps and are joined to side portions that are tucked for a few Inches ouly below their upper edge. The buck, however, Is simply pluln, nnd the closing Is effected through a regulation box pleat at the centre front. The sleeves are In shirt stylo with the straight narrow cufTs closing at the outside Unit ure the favorites of tho senson. At the neck is a stock elongated at the front to give a bishop suggestion. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is four and live-eighth yards tweuty-ouo lucbes wide, four ami one-fourth yards twenty-seven Inches wide, three and one-eighth yards thirty-two Inches wide, or two uud live eighth yurds forty-four Inches wide. Woman's lllou.e Juckul. Blouse Jackets make tlio favorite wraps for general wear and are seen lu all tho lutest models both for suits aud separate couts. The very stylish May Muntou model Illustrated lu the huge drawing shows tho new Hat collar and trimming, but can be left plain uud without the busques as shown iu the small sketch when preferred. The orig inal is made of flecked cheviot In grnjf and white, stitched with cortlcelll silk and trimmed with pipings of dark gray and drop oruameiits nnd makes part of a costume, but all suitings aud jucket materials are appropriate. The Jacket consists of fronts nnd back and Is fitted by means of shoulder and uuder-arin seuuis. The buck Is plain, but the fronts are gathered and blouse Bllgutly aud becomingly. The little capes are attached to the strap trimming and ure arranged over the neck. The sleeves are full nud finished with becoming cuffs, out the straight, narrow ones can be substituted If de sired. The basque perilous and triple postillion are Joined to the lower edge. Tb quantity of materlul required for The . LATEST HO "YORK, r&MI0N3 the medium slse Is sit yards twenty one Inches wide, two and three-fourth yards forty-four Inches wide, or two snd one-fourth yard fifty-two Inches wide. Apron la the front. Apron effects are very modish and quite usually becoming. Though they have the look of an oversktrt they are In reality the skirt proper, being eked out with graduating flounces. As often as not the apron Is of some strong ma terial, while the flounce, which Is pulled on as well as fin red, Is of ft light and olry-fnlry texture. When It Is heavy the fabric must be of the rich est a trimming of Itself. If It be plain It may be adorned with appliques not too far apart. A very pretty one, how ever, Is entirely of black net. Inch wide rows of black gros-graln ribbon follow the shape of the apron, pointing downwnrd at the front. Five rows are at the foot of tho very full flounce. Rows of ribbon are on the full blouse and the Sleeve milieu, the blouse being further eiiliimced with an applique of yellow lace. This Is nn attractive model, too, for a shirred dress. Adorned by Handwork. Handwork Is always a fenture. Just now It Is more thnn ever so. While the choicest embroideries fnlrly cover some robes, there are others, delight fully attractive, which aro nllvo with French knots and faggoting, the two friends that are still with us, despite Iconoclasts who have declared them done for since some months. French knots are charmingly attractive, whether they emphasize other designs or are strewn by the hundred In massed groups. As for fuggotlng. It and any sort of ajour stitching Is very much the thing. Long Illubon Saaha. A pretty Idea Is to wear broad nnd long ribbon snsbes with evening toilets. Some of these are tucked and the ends are fringed. The sash may be the JACKET. color of the gown or of contrasting color, us preferred, and still be modish, but the silk lining of the gown must bo the same shade as that of tho sush and whatever flower Is chosen to be worn on the corsage or In the hair. AUenarted Fad. The fad that prevailed so long of wearing a black hat with a white or a light gown no longer flourishes. M Threa-Plaoa Skirt. Flounced skirts are much in vogue for young girls as well as for their elders aud always are graceful and comfortable, as the ample flare pro vided at thu lower edge means freedom of movement. The very stylish May Muuton model Illustrated Is shown In nut brown etauilue, trimmed with a baud of satin faced cloth stitched with cortlcelll silk, but all ultlug nnd skirt materials ore appropriate. The skirt is cut in three pieces, und is titted at tho upper edge by means of hip darts and luld In Inverted pleats at the centre buck. To the lower edge Is attached tho circular llouuco, tho seam belug covered by the stitched band. The up per edge can be finished with a belt or cut lu dip outline and uuderfaced or bound. Tho quantity of material required for medium slip (fourteen years) Is M 18888' THRBB-PIEOB SKIBT. Ave' and one-half yards twenty-seven Inches wide, three and one-halt yards forty-four lucbes wide, or three yards titty-two inches wide. ( lJ.