I THE. , lA.IR Chatelaine Trinkets. One of the newest of the many little trinkets into which leather is being fashioned is the chatelaine. Hanging • from a leather book by narrow leather straps are leather covered vinaigrette, tiny case with scissors, and a little blank book and pencil and equally small coin purse. Another manifesta tion of the leather chatelaine shows a pendant pocket book of orditjary size to the bottom of which are attached a tiny vinaigrette, scissors and blank book. These chatelaines may be bad In various lovely shades of leather, such as soft sage green, heliotrope, bright green and blue. So the up-to date girl may have her chatelaine y match her costume, whatever be its color. Oar American Women, There is a charming blond young woman well known to Philadelphia as well as Baltimore and New York City, who laughs when you call her "Sen-ora." A woman friend gave the story away, says the Philadelphia Press, and as she takes it good natur edly, there Is no use keeping the joke from the public. You see, young as she Is, she elected to marry a man who was a grandfather, or, rather, he be came one soon after his marriage to her. She has that deceptive, innocent type of beauty that gives the owner the appearance of being about eighteen. She was looking at the Cuban curios and souvenirs for sale at a bazaar with a woman friend, and the old woman behind the wares called her "Senorita." "No, no," said the friend, "she is Senora." The old woman shook her head and declined to believe. "No. senorita," she said. "She is a girl," she continued in broken English; "she too young and pretty." "Yes, she is a senora." said Mrs. G , wishing to tense the younger woman, and, rentein being the birth of (lie grandchild, she added: "She's not only married, but she is a grandmother!" "Dios! But these Americans are so progressive!" said the old Cuban. To Maintain a Good Complexion. Here are certain plain, simple bints for the securing or maintenance of a good complexion, which can lie carried in mind and practiced by the woman who can afford neither the fees of beauty doctors nor several hours a day for grooming. Wash the face carefully, never with very cold water. A At night it should have a warm soap bath to clean it, rinsing the soap off thoroughly, and drying thoroughly, with an upward movement. Learn al ways to rub up and never down, to counteract droopiug lines and sagging muscles. Take at least one bath a day, rubbing the body vigorously. Re member that liot water is necessary to cleanse, and cold water to invigorate, and set the blood to circulating. Rose water and elder flower water are bene ficial in softening the skin. Lemon whitens the hands. Any good, cold cream, sold by a reputable house, is ex cellent for the face. It should lie rubbed in, not hard, but thoroughly, after a warm bath. A little on the tips of the fingers is sufficient. It softens and freshens the skin. Remember that all rich foods are enemies of a delicate skin. The roseleaf skin of the baby comes from Its simple diet. Avoid < pastry, pickles and pie. Candy is as bad as anything can be, and makes one fat, besides. Ten and coffee ate bad, but cocktails are worse. Study the nose of the man who lias imbibed for many years and sec. Eat fruit and simple food, and ilrink plenty of water at any time except mealtime, es pecially on getting up in the morning, when it rinses the system of the mucous that lias accumulated on the coating of the stomach and other or gans during the night. A good com plexion comes from the same sources its health—fresh air, exercise, correct food, bathing, sufficient sleep and proper activity of the internal organs. Women Wear Order*. The number of women—especially American women—wearing orders at ihe recent coronation ceremony was a matter of much remark and has awakened interest in the subject of , orders in general. The American who is entitled to wear the greatest mirn s her of orders is Mrs. George Corn i wallls-West. She lias been decorated with the Order of the Crown of In dia, the Royal Red Cross and the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. The last named honor she shnres with a number of her sex —some of the better known being Baroness Burdett - Coutts and Lady Chesham, who was one of the chief organizers of the Imperial Yeo manry Hospital iu South Africa, about which so much has bene written. The Order of St. John is the oldest of ihe four English orders to which women are elegibie, having been instituted In the twelfth century. The three others are the Royal Order of Victoria and Albert, founded by Queen Victoria in 1802; the Imperial Order of the Crown of India, instituted fr> commemorate her assumption of the \ title of Empress, and the Royal Red Cross, founded in 1883 to reward serv ices rendered in nursing the sick and wounded of the Imperial Army. One of the latest recipients of the decoration .of the Imperial 6rder of the Crown of India, which has the sovereign as its head, was Lady Curzou. the insignia consisting of Queen Victoria's cipher In diamonds, pearls and turquoise, encir- cled by a border of pearls and strfc. mounted by a tiny jeweled and enam eled crown attached to a bow of light blue water ribbon with narrow white edge. The decoration of the Order of Vic toria and Albert, which is of four classes, consists (for the first and sec ond class) of a medallion of the late Queen and Prince Albert set in dia monds surmounted by a jeweled crown, the ribbon used being white moire. The third class has the medallion set in pearls instead of diamonds, and the fourth bears only an Intertwined "V" and "A" in pearls. To this order be long the Empress of Germany, the Em press of Russia, the Queen of Itou mania, the Queen of the Netherlands, and many well-known women of lower rank. The Queen of England is the only lady of the Order of the Garter. The oldest of all orders instituted for women is that of the Slaves of Virtue, founded in 1002, by Eleanore of Gon zagua, widow of Frederick 111. of Austria, "to encourage in the women r " her court the sentiments of wisdom and piety." The Bavarian Order of Ellzabetn, founded in 17U0, and the Order of Queen Marie I.oulse, insti tuted in 1792, each had an exclusively charitable raison d'etre and imposed bnbits of kindness and helpfulness upon their royal members. But perhaps the best-known foreign order to which women are eligible is the French Order of the Legion d'Hon neur, of which Rosa Bonheur was a member, as was also Mma. Dieulafoy, the well-known explorer, who is the only woman permitted by the French Government to appear in men's clothes. An interesting fact in connection with this order is that all wearing the little crimson ribbon are entitled to a mili tary salute, women as well as men.— New York Mail and Express. s§rreovdoiV Miss Ethel Smyth, composer of the recently produced opera, "Her Wald," is the first composer of her sex to have a work produced at Covent Garden. Mrs. Mnriah Vance, a colored woman, who was for years Abraham Lincoln'n servant, is still living at Danville, 11L, and is learning to read, at the age o£ ninety-one. Miss Duchemln, of Boston, has in her possession some china more than 200 years old, which was given to her grandmother by the daughter of a maid of honor to Queen Anne. Princess Victoria, the Kaiser's ten year-old daughter, is said to be the haughtiest member of the German royal family, never for a moment for getting she is an Emperor's daughter. Mrs. Elizabeth Silsbeo Archer, who died in Salem, Mass.. the other day, was an eye-witness of the great naval fight between the Chesapeake and Shannon off Salem during the M'ar of 1812. There are said to be excellent open ings for American dressmakers in Japan, where all the high class women are donning Occidental dress, with which tiie native modiste struggles helplessly. Five daughters of one lowa family are practicing physicians. Alice Ilrnuu warth Ilalstead, I'll.it., and Drs. Jen nie S., Emma L„ and Jessie A. Braun warth are established in Muscatine, lowa. Dr. Anna M. Braunwarth is as sociated with Dr. Ileury T. B.vford, of Chicago. A fifty-acre farm in Indiana has for the last ten years been successfully conducted by Miss Abble Peffer, a niece of former Senator Peffer of Kan sas. Miss Peffer was for some years a teacher in the public schools. She has a thorough knowledge of agricul tural pursuits, and all the work in fields, gardens, orchard and stable is done by her own hands. 3 -tFiADS\ Siberian squirrel is made into charm ing hats. Tyrolese crowns, it is whispered, will follow the very flat effects. Few dross silks have figured stripes of velvet running lengthwise. Sashes or wide girdles break the long lines of the newest princcsse models. The ultra-smartness of squirrel fur Is attained when a touch of ermine is added. Many matrons have taken up the ear ring fad, confining themselves to pearls. A handsome chatelaine bag is of golden brown walrus skin with frame and chain of plain gold. Wool laces are very much used on cloth gowhs, and the grape pattern in clusters of rings is the favorite. Crushed black velvet is artistically combined witli green polut venlse col lar and cuffs to form a swell garment for a twelve-year-old girl. Iluge clusters of raised grapes and leaves outlined with black tracings are the decorations of a dainty white chiffon scarf for afternoon or evening wear. Puff bags for carrying about powder puffs are in pink or blue satin, and gather up with dainty "baby" ribbon draw strings, or with silver cords and tassels. "Moleskin brown" is one of the novel shades for wool dress materials, which tints, advices front Paris state, may be appropriately trimmed with the skin of the namesake animal. Nothing is smarter for the woman with a perfect figure than one of the new tight Francis coats. These are full three-quarter length and match the skirt when for promenade wear. The Two Roads. Oh, the road to healthy, wealthy and wise Huns by night through the gates of sleep. Straight over the slumberland beach it lies, Where the sandman gathers the sand for your eyes, That he shakes when the sun has left the skies And the gray evening shadows creep. But to reach this land by the road of morn, You must rub the sand from your eyes. When you leave the country of drowsy yawn, Just follow the path that the sun has gone, And pass through the gateway of early dawn Into healthy, wealthy and wise. —Youth's Companion. Miss Moiisie (to liersolf): "Dear me! I don't like the looks of things at all. 'Come and play puss in the corner and stay to tea,' they said. But I'm afraid they mean me to be the tea, and I'd rather not. I know what I will do. (Aloud): Please, Miss Puss, may my three fat little brothers come and play, too, and may I go aud fetch thorn?" "Certainly, my dear," Mrs. Puss said, "only be quiet as you can. We should like you all to be here for tea. (Then there will be one apiece," she whispered to the others). "Hooray!" "Which would you rather—have tea now or wait till you get It?" Miss Mousie inquired as she vanished into a : hole. i "Now, what could she have meant by that?" they asked each other, but no body knew. And they waited ail that ; afternoon and evening, getting hun grier and hungrier, but Miss Mousie aud her fat little brothers never came. "She must have remembered sbe bad BOXING (illlL PUZZLK. This athletic girl has two boxing instructors. Find thou;. another engagement," tliey said to each other as tliey went sadly off to bed. The way Miss Mousio got out of her scrape was very clever—Chicago Rec ord-Herald. Tlie Little Stickleback. It seems as though the little stickle back otten suggested for aquariums was really created for that purpose only. It Is not good tor food. Even the other and larger inhabitants of the water do not relish It, as, unless they happen to catch it at just the right angle, the little spur with which its hack Is nrrned, and from which It takes Its name, catches In their throats and, being exactly perpendicular and very hard, quite takes away their ap petite for the next stickleback tliey see. The hones and prickles with which most fish are armed all slant hack ward, and that is why big fish swallow their prey head foremost. But the stickleback found in salt water, where its enemies are most numerous, has developed the straight, sMff spur. It loses much of its hardness if its owner Is kept in an aquarium, where lie grad ually forgets his fear of attack. Sticklebacks make unusually onier tnlnlng pets. Those brought from Lower California build nests. Tliey are also pugnacious and will try to light their own reflection in a mirror held near the side of the aquarium. One doughty little fellow was allowed to view himself in a concave mirror. Where lie appeanjd many times uls real size. But he was not daunted, and made straight for the eyes of the big flsli be thought he saw coming to de vour him. Atlantic sticklebacks are I smaller, but Just as interesting as pets. They are also easier to feed than their Western cousins, enjoying eorninoal mush, house flies—lndeed, almost any thing seems to agree with them. How to Mako a Wliipbow. This graceful anil powerful weapon is like an ordinary longbow, with the exception that the bowstring is made X (T \ fast to only one end, after the manner of the whiplash: where the whiplash terminates in n "snapper" the bow string ends in a hard, round knot. The arrow is made like any other arrow, cither with a blunt end or a pointed spearpoiut. Iu one side of the arrow a notch is cut: the bowstring being slipped into this notch, the knot at the end of the string prevents the string from slipping off until thrown by the archer, who, talcing the butt of the whipbow in ills right hand, holds the arrow at the notch with his left hand; then, swaying his body front side to side, lie suddenly lets go with his left hand, at the same time extending his right arm to its full length from his side. This not only gives the arrow all the velocity it would acquire from the bow, but adds the additional force of a sling, thus sending the projectile a greater distance. In some sections of the country the whipbow is a great favorite among the boys, who throw arrows up an amazing distance. Ar rows can be bought in any city, but most boys prefer to make their own, leaving the "store arrows" for the girls to use with their pretty "store bows." A simple whipbow is made by any boy in a few minutes out of an elastic sapling or branch, and the arrow cut out of a pine shingle with a pocket knife. This cnu be improved upon as much as may be desired by substitut ing a piece of straight grained, well seasoned wood for the green branch and regularly made Indian arrows for the crude pine ones.—New York Tribune. Field of Crygtullizcd Salt. In the middle of the Colorado des ert. a Utile to the north of the Mexi can border, and 204 feet below the level of the sea. lies a lleld of crystal* ized salt more than 1000 acres In ex tent. presenting a surface as white as snow, and beneath the noonday glare of the sun so dazzling that the naked eye eanuot stand Its radiance. It stretches away lor tnlles and miles about Saltou, CM., an ocean of blazing, blistering white. / LATEST "YORK. New York City.—Simple shirt waists made with the fashionable princess closing are much in vogue and suit young girs to a nicety. The very MISSES' SHIRT WAIST OR BLOUSE. pretty one shown is made of novelty silk in shades of blue with collar, cuffs aud shoulder straps of plain blue, the combination being smart as well as novel. The May Manton original is worn wllh an odd skirt but the design suits the shirt waist gown as well as tlic separate waist and is adopted to many materials. The foundation lining is smoothly fitted and closes at the front, but separately from tile waist Itself which consists of a plain hack, drawn down iu gathers, at the waist line, and fronts that are gathered at the neck and at the waist. The front edges are tucked and brought together over the hems through which the closing Is made invisible to give the princess effect. The sleeves are in bishop style with novel cuffs that match the stock. Over the shoulder seams are arranged straps, cut In points, that fall over the sleeves but these may he omitted. The quantity of material required for the medium size (fourteen years) FASHIONABLE BLOUSE JACKET. is three and a half yards twenty-one inches wide, three and three-eighth yards twenty - seven inches wide and two and a quarter yards thirty-two inches wide, or one and seven - eighth yards forty-four inches wide. Woman's Mouse Jacket. Short double-breasted blouse coats with fitted basques make a notable feature of the season and are more generally worn for walking and the affairs of life than any other sort. The stylish May Manton model, shown in the large drawing, includes the fashionable slot seams at the fronts and the plain sleeve with roll-over cuffs that is so much liked. As shown it is black zibeline, stitched with corticelli silk and is worn with a skirt of different material, but the design suits the costume of cloth, cheviot, zibeline, velvet and velveteen and the odd coat of all the season's fabrics equally well. When preferred the basque portions can be omitted and the blouse finished with the belt. The blouse consists of a smooth back, under - arm gores with slightly full fronts and side fronts, which ex tend to the shoulders and are stitched TO an under strap to form the slot seams. The right front laps over the left in double breasted style and the neck is finished with tlie fashionable coat collar that meets the fronts ami rolls back to form lapels. The basque portions are joined to the lower edge, the seam being concealed by the left. The coat sleeves are two-seamed and finished with roll-over cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and a quarter yards twenty-one inches wide, two yards forty-four inches wide or one and three-quarter yards fifty-two inches wide. K nick-Knack*. Very pretty buttons made in china, oval, round and square, are to be bought following the designs of dif ferent kinds of china, Dresden, Sevres and Staffordshire. Crystal and paste ball buttons are effective, and these often form the tassel to narrow loops of ribbon which have been run through tiny paste buckles, and replace the small flower tassels, which have been & good deal worn one way or another. Knots tied in ribbons and in stocks require an education. A series of three or five chains festooned between bars is a fashionable form of necktie, not to wear tight round the throat, .but to rest on the neck. Brooches are worn very small, and some are beau tifully painted. Some of the pearl brooches have very pretty pear-shaped pearl drops. Peacocks, with diamond tails, are new, and a small feather in diamonds makes an admirable brooch. A Useful Costume. A young lady who set out on lier travels had a combination costume thac really seemed immensely comprehen sive; she seemed to have everything in one garment. She bad gotten herself a tailor-made of one of the liner serges, and to it had a long eape, and all these were worked in with one another in the most scientific way. The long skirt and the eape had in common a decora tion of graduated military braids with a note of white cloth lightly embroid ered in greeu and mauve where the coat turned back. This coat was of the open or closed formation, so that when closed, the embroidery being concealed, the coat looked quite severely simple, which arrangement had to do with the fact that the short skirt was also se verely simple as far as an adorning element was concerned (having just three two-inch tucks at its base). It will be evident on thinking over the matter that this inventive girl had quite a repertory of frocks iu this os tensibly single tailor costume- Mouse or Shirt WuUt. Slot scam effects are seen upon tlie latest waists and gowns and are ex ceedingly effective. The very stylish May, Manton blouse illustrated sliows them used to advantage and in con junction with tucks at the shoulders and tlie princess ctosing in front. The original is made ol' reseda peau de cynge, piped with black and stiicbed with black oorticelli silk, but all waist cloths and silks and many gown ma terials arc appropriate as the design suits both tile old waist and the cos tume. The lining is snugly fitted and closes at the centre front quite separately from the outside, but can be omitted whenever au unlined waist is desired. The waist proper consists of fronts and back, which arc laid in inverted tucks that are stitched to give the slot seam effect from the shoulder to the waist line, the fronts also includ ing additional tucks at the shoulders, that are stitched to yoke depth, and the front edges being laid in wide tucks that meet over the hems through which the closing is made. The back is finished with a novel stock and at the waist is a belt with postillion straps in centre back. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and three, eighth yards twenty-ofie wide, four nnocsti oit SHIRT WAIST. and one-eighth yards twenty-seven inches wide, three and seven-eighth yards thirty-two inches wide, or two and three-eighth yards forty-four inches wide. In France Sti. 17-1,000 is spent every year in the improvement of horse breeding.