S ii J MVr Good Koatls Iaj Conditions such as recently existed in a small town in New Jersey twelve miles from Philadelphia form a fit ting object lesson of the profit of good roads In consequence of the had roads the wagon makers thereabout constructed four horse vehicles to car ry fifty live bushel baskets as a maxi mum load vhich was regarded as heavy hauling Ileal estate had gone a begging for years there was no pos sible market for it It had been im possible to settle up estates because no purchaser could be found for the land But a few years ago the people of the community woke up The town issued 310000 worth of bonds and applied the proceeds to better roadways As a re sult Xew Jersey wagon makers of the vicinity of Philadelphia are making 1wo horse vehicles to carry not fifty live bushel baskets but loads made up from ninety to 121 bushel baskets and still the loads are not regarded as heavy Two horses are able to do more work than four horses and with much more ease On the old roads two men and four horses with a wagon weighing 1900 pounds could take two and a half tons of produce to market and bring back an equal amount of fertilizer making one trip a day Now on the good roads one man with two horses and a wagon weighing 23U0 pounds makes four trips to market bringing back an equal weight and making four trips a dar Jersey City Evening Journal Good Roads The Lake Charles Echo taking Trout wines tests as the basis of its calculations estimates that it costs Louisiana 3210000 a year to move its crops and that two thirds of this could be saved if he had good roads Traut wines tests show the number of pounds of pull required to move a ton on different kinds of roads to be as follows Plank road o0 to 10 cubical block brick 32 to 10 macadam 02 to 75 gravel 140 common earth 200 to 300 The pull on earth roads in dry seasons is from six to eight times as hard as on brick and three or four times as hard as macadam and in wet seasons much greater and in Louis iana with its heavy rainfall we have longer wet seasons than any other part of the country and as a conse quence worse roads The United States Agricultural Bu reau figures that it costs the farmers 3 per ton to haul their crops from the farm to the railroad or market With a total production of 1750000 tons of corn cane cotton rice etc the haul ing costs Louisiana farmers 3250000 now which cost can be reduced 3 500000 if the roadways are made bet ter If therefore Louisiana spent 3 400000 a year on its roads it would be better off financially their cost being less than they would be saved in haul ing The expenditure of such a sum of money would put our highways in splendid condition in a very few years but such an expenditure is not dreamt of nor would the people favor it The best course in Louisiana would le that which has met with such suc cess elsewhere to build just enough miles of good roads to enable the peo ple to see and appreciate their value and how much they can save by them If this were done as in Massachusetts Xew Jersey Pennsylvania and other States it would not be long before the people demanded better roads in ev ery part of the State It is proposed to bring the matter before the Legislature at its next ses sion but it would be well to inaugurate a preliminary campaign so that there will be popular backing to a good road law when it comes before the General Assembly Xew Orleans Times Democrat Widows Tor Sale Of all the matrimonial trafficking in the age of chivalry the ways of widows says a writer in the Gentle mans Magazine are at once the boldest and most comprehensive As si rule their methods seldom resort to blandishment it is remarkable when tenderness is an item in their bargains Speed was their maxim it was one that King John honored for he profit ed by it Yet one of the rarest exceptions in the way of delicacy to these commcr cial negotiations has evidently been prompted by a widow who had quite an exceptional lover In 1200 William do Landa either one of the most fa mous of the Crusaders or his sou offers 50 marks and a palfrey for hav ing to wife Joan who was the wife of Thomas de Arescy if he may be pleasing to the said Joan the sheriff is Instructed to ascertain the widows wishes and if the said Joan shall be pleased to have him for a husband i then the sheriff shall cause William to have seizing of Joan and her laud both of which he obtained in the name of gentle love and the faith of a true soldier It is lilting that ie name of one of the men who led the assault of Acre should be preserved in such a rec ord as the above He was in truth n very perfect knight One of the most rampageous of the northern English borderers manifested the like delicacy Young Walter de Vmfraville son of GillHrt Lad left a widow Emma presumably in the very blush of her charm Peter do Vaux bad fallen at her ftt but he declined to obtain her in border fashion nrt this fact is the earnest pledge of the chivalry of his love K he would uoz seal her ie was bound to Ifuv her and coin with the De Vaux was always a scarcity So he offered the king live palfreys for hir if she wished it and with Ahat would read as a graceful rtcknowledgmeit of the borderers pure chivalry John absolutely drops the commercial from his reply and sim ply orders Itobcrt Fit Roger the shew iff to permit ii to be done Victorias Descendants A laborious genealogist announces as the result of years of minute labor that the Queen has had nine children of whom she has lost two forty one grandchildren of whom eight have died and twenty three great-grandchildren all of whom are living She has therefore sixty three descendants living seven children thirty three grandchildren and twenty three of the next generation Her eldest great grandchildthe Princess Feodora of Saxe Meiningen is now nearly 17 so that in all probability her Majesty will live to see her grandchildrens grand children Few English sovereigns be fore Queen Victoria have seen grand children grow out of infancy and none ever saw a great grandchild Hence her Majesty had to determine the ques tion of precedency in the case of the Duchess of Fifes children and oho wisely decided that they should rauk only as daughters of a duke This decision was in accordance with a House law decreed earlier in the reign by which the title of prince and royal highness is limited to the chil dren of the sovereign and the children of the sovereigns sons the children of the sovereigns daughters taking prece dence only according to the rank of their fathers Thus the Princess Hel enas children rank as children of Prince Christian only while the Duke of Conna ughts are royal highnesses and Trince Arthur of Connaughts son and successor if he has one will be the Duke of Conna ught as an ordi nary duke taking precedence merely by date of the creation of his duke dom This is now tiie case of the Duke of Cumberland on the roll of the House of Lords though ho is styled royal highness as sou of a king of Hanover Broke a Big Gold Coin One of the most puzzled men in town is a Montgomery street restaurant keeper who recently took in a 920 goid piece which filled all the ordinary re quirements of genuineness so far as a superficial test could reveal the true facts But a few days ago a banker stepped into his place and saw the 20 gold piece which the restaurant man had received only a short time before The banker had a queer look in his eyes as he took the- coin and rapped it sharply with his knife and the restaurant-keeper had a stranger expression as he saw his supposed 20 piece break into two pieces IIoav is this he demanded The banker answered It is the same old game I had one of these pieces myself and since that I haw tested gold pieces of the 20 demonina tion very carefully If that had been genuine my test would not have bro ken it Then the restaurant keeper and the banker carefully examined it together The outside of the gold piece was all right seemingly when the dissevered parts were placed together Tlie mill ing seemed to be up to the standard The weight was correct But the inside of the piece was half filled with a composition which was not the customary gold and alloy Still closer examination revealed that the gold had been sawed through with ex quisite care and skill just inside of the milling Then the milling had been removed and from the interior of the piece some of the gold had been ex tracted and the baser composition was made to take the place of the more precious metal Then with equal deft ness and skill the milling had been replaced and soldered in some way and the trick was done San Francisco Call Stringent Food Ijaws France knows how to protect the rights of her people Anybody who doulus the genuineness of an article of food that he has purchased from a Parisian tradesman may take it to the municipal laboratory for analysis It will cost him nothing to have it an alyzed and the fact determined wheth er it is unadulterated or adulterated and if the latter the law deals with the offender without further action on the part of the purchaser The shopkeeper is liable to be heavily fined and impris oned and has to display conspicuously in his shop window or on his door for a year a large placard bearing tho words Convicted of Adulteration The Sack Tree From a species of trees the genus which includes the celebrated upas tree sacks are made in Western India by the follOAving singular process A branch is cut corresponding to the length and diameter of the sack Avant ed It is soaked a little and then beat en with clubs till the fiber separates from the Avood This done the sack formed of the bark is turned inside out and pulled down till the AAood is saAviK off Avith the exception of a small piece left to form the bottom of the sack These sacks are in general use in West ern India Does ft Trust 3Ian A naturalist says tfaat in captivity elephants always stand up Avhen they sleep but Avhen in the jungle their oaa ii land and home they lie doAAn Tho reason giA en for the difference betAveen the elephant in captivity and freedom is that the elephant never acquires complete confidence in his keepers and always longs for liberty Vye have noticed that married Avomcn who are kept occupied dont excite as much sympathy as th2 idle ones for the reason that Ihey dont have time to pine and do jusuce to it OLDEST BANK IN THE WORLD Naples Boasts a Financial Institution Founded in lolf Mr Xeville lLolfe British consul at Naples gives an i interesting account of the past history and present position of the Bank of Xaples which is he says the oldest bank in existence for the Monte Vecchio of Vendee and the Ban co San Giorgio at Genoa both founded in the twelfth century have ceased to exist as has also the Bank of Bar celona founded in the fourteenth cen tury The Bank of Xaples was found ed in 1539 and is a State baaik with a considerable capital to which no one lays any claim in other words it is a joint stock bank but with no share holders When Charles V went to take possession of the kingdom his new sub jects desired to receive him with be coming magnificence and therefore contracted vast loans wdtn the Jews against valuable pledges These loans they were unable to repay and to get rid of the difficulty his Majesty banish ed the Jews from the kingdom The Jews managed before their departure to sell the pledges to two Xeapolitans at very easy prices The now holders offered them to the original owners at a small profit and they also offered further loans without interest on the old security Seme philanthropises stepped in and gave considerable gifts to the new enterprise pro Aided loans Avithout interest were made In 1573 the bank Avas established on these lines and was in fact a charitable pawnbroker But by degrees its scope enlarged into tliat of a bank doing an ordinary commercial business In lGM it had an income from Government so curities of 7S00 besides the capital necessary for carrying on its business In I0Sr in a commercial crisis the GoA crnment forced it to lend 13000 for two or three years certacn without interest The result Avas a loss to the bank and in a 1eAv years it Avas de clared to be 0000 iin debt In 3091 it had recovered its position but a series of frauds and losses amounting to near ly 100000 crippled It again In De cember last Mr Luzzatti proved to tine Clumber that the bank had rccently lost 3000000 for a great part ci wMeh the branches at Genoa Bologna and Milan are responsible Nothing short of state interference can now save the bank and Mr Luzzatti Avas anxious to incorporate it into a national bank of Italy on the lines of tihe Banks of France nd England This how ever met with very strong opposition in the Neapolitan provinces It is posed to issue GoAeruaneut paper to the amount of 45000000 francs AA hach represents iho bidlion in the hands of the bank and from the interest accru ing to form a sinking fund to place the institution on a sound financial bases The interest is fixed at Si per cent net instead cif the normal rate of 4y the holder of the paper Avill thus lose si pea cent in exchange for his GoAorn ment security and the Government aaciII lose the same amount But both parties AA ould lose a great deal more Avere the Bank of Naples to stop payment Lon don Times Heir to the Ottoman Throne The Sultans heir is not his eldest son bait his eldest brother The eld est male succeeds Such is the law of Islam and the fruitful source of dynastic murders in almost ever reign since the Turks became a power The Sultan has four brothers not one only as Avas lately alleged This eld est brother is Rechad IS fiend i that is to say he is eldest after the ex Sultan Murad V who being insane is no S counted The third brother is Ware din and the fourth Suliman The Sul tans eldest son Prince Seiim has no earthly chance of succeeding his er He has too many uncles and uncles sons for that But Frincj Solim is lucky if he knows it for he is not dangerous He lives a life of freedom whereas fc heir is by the custom of the Ottomans a kind of life prisoner Recliad Effendi is rarely seen Ea- cry time he dnives out he is escorted by a troop lesi by way of an escort than as a guard The feAV who d kuoAV him like him for he is said to bo a courteous humane well inform ei man acquainted AAith current politic and keenly interested in them He is a good farmer The pretty palaeu knoAA n as the Tchcragaai is his resi dence Of course Rechads visitors arc searched before they are admitted and Avhen they are leaving by the SultansJ officials During this time of trouble in Armenia Constantinople and Crete Rechad has been more aiarrowly watched than ever for the Sultan anl his cliqu Iiiioav that Rechad is popu lar Unlike the Sultan Rechad is ono of the handsomest men in Con stantinople London Echo Olive Oil for Bruises Instead of having recourse to ap plication of tincture of arnica spirits of camphor and to strong compression of the swelling in the treatment of light bruises Dr Auger prefers tho use of olive oil both in children and in adults ne applies the oil freely to the contused parts and rubs the latter lightly with a rag absorbent cotton or AAith compress saturated with olive oil The author claims that this treat ment gives Immediate relier to the pa tient and that the formation of a bloody protuberance is often prevent ed while excoriations and superfickiJ wounds which may be present heal cry rapidly Artificial JSars The making of artificial ears seems to 4iave reached scientific perfection Avitli in the last decade Made of a specially prepared rubber flesh colored in the rough they are painted by hand in ex act imitation of -the remaining ear of the unfortunate customer and as care fully touched and marked over a3 fill artists picture TOPICS FOR FAMEBS A DEPARTMENT PREPARED FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS Farmers Uoys Should Be Taiiffht Self NRcHanee from infancy Plant Trees A Balance for the Grindstone Feeding Down Young Grain Boys on the Farm I am acquainted Avith an instance where a certain fanner brought his boy up just as you Avould train a colt He Avas never alloAved to exercise the least amount of judgmenfin anything per taining to farm matters -In fact he AAas a mere machine When the boy Avas IS his father Avas stricken doAvn with a lingering disease but still the latter persisted in pursuing the course of training his boy He planned every thing until three Aveeks before his death To day his boy knows but little more than an infant about laying out his Avork As soon as the boy is 12 years old his training should begin Show him that he is of more consequence than a ma chine that he is put here to think plan and carry out Avork Give him a piece of ground and teach him the first rudi ments of farming letting him see all the AVhilc that he is Avorking for him self As he grows older give him a colt or a cow and let him raise stock for himself Then take him into confidence as to the buying and selling of farm produce and occasionally let him man age the farm for a day or so Above all be patient with him Nothing dis courages the average boy more than fault finding which makes him grad ually lose all confidence in his ability to work Good judgment patience and self control Avill train your boy so that when at last you are unable to run the old farm you Avill have some one who can easily assume the entire manage ment in everything and do credit to his parents early training Orange Tudd Farmer Plant Trees If you happen to live on the prairie where you have no Avoodlot suppose you make the experiment of planting a feAV trees Some yards even are bare of trees Shade is grateful in the hot Avcather and you owe it to your Avife and children to at once beautify and cool the yard Avith trees Get a few thrifty young maples and set them along the road in front of the house lut in one good Avhite elm Avhere it will shade the yard and porch light ning is not so partial to the elm as to some other trees put a frame around them to protect them and in a 1cav years you Avill be surprised at the amount of pleasure you AAill all get out of it Then if you have a spare sandy loAA lying corner that is not good for much else you might put it to good use by planting a lot of cottoinvoods there You Avont miss the ground and in a feAV years the value of the Avood for light fuel Avill more than repay your trouble Of course you Avill not forget the im portance of putting out some fruit trees Three or four dollars Avill giAe you enough cherry apple and crab trees to supply your family needs in the course of three or four years and by judicious repetition of the process it Avill not be long before you Avill have a thrifty orchard Avhich Avill prove to bo the most profitable spot on the farm Select a gentle southern slope if you have one and if not do the next best thing Balance for Griiulstones One of the most satisfactory little improvements I have lately made is a balance on my grindstone I turn Avith a treadle operated by my foot and this balance not only makes the stone turn easier but also makes it run much steadier To make the balance I got a piece of iron about fn-e-eighths of an inch thick Ify inches Avide and 10 inches long Had blacksmith punch a hole in iron 2xfc inches from one end of size to fit on grindstone shaft on end opposite treadle It should be put on so that long end of iron Avould be opposite the little crank that treadle is fastened to so that Avhen treadle is being pressed ljy the foot the long end Avilt be going up and Avhen the treadle is going up tho Aveight of iron Avill be going doAvn and help raise treadle thus forming a balance Far mers Union Plaiitiiiz Cucumbers in Ridsres Instead of planting cucumber seed in hills Avhere the roots of a dozen or more plants will crowd each other avo long ago learned that it is much better to plant the seed in ridges only very slightly raised above the soil around them In the ridges the seed may be put five to six inches apart If some of the vines are attacked by the cucum ber beetle others Avill escape AAiiile it is rarely that a hill is attacked Without losing all the plants in it Cucumbers thus groAvn are much less to dry out late in the season than if planted in hills Ex Ferdincr Down Younsr Grain On very rich land spring grain is apt j to groAV too rank and its straAv aviII break doAvn before the grain is filled making the entire crop a failure It is on such cases that pasturing stock on spring grain may be a t nefit to the crop We say may be advised ly for the trampling of the plants in soft earth must ahvays be injurious hoA ever great may -be the advantages of cropping off its surplus groAvth The amount of feed that can be secured by feeding doAvn spring grain is very small It may pay to pasture Avith sheep or even Avitii calves which Avill not seriously poach the soil But bet 1r than this on very rich land is to r n over the piece Avith a mover cut fug the leaves to Avithin tAvc inches of the ground These leaves Avill not gnw again but their check while tho root beneath is rapidly growing will send up tAvo shoots for one American Cultivator KfTect of Food on Iiri A systematic series of inquiries in regard to the effect Ol food upon the size of Qa develops the fact that most feeders are Aery much in the dark upon this subject It has been found hoAvever that the grains haA e much less effect in increasing the size of eggs than meats bran and other nitrogenous foods but grains fed in excess AAill make the hen too fat and her eggs AAill either be small cr be retained until abnormally large As to the effect on the number of eggs opinions are about equally diAided Perhaps the ansAver to either question depends more upon the breed than upon any particular food The ideal food for laying hens as given by a prominent fancier is as fol Ioaats The combination of 30 pounds of corn 15 pounds ot oats 10 pounds of Avheat 10 pounds of barley and 15 pounds of Avheat bran thoroughly mix ed gives the largest number of eggs possible This is used as the morning soft food Avith 25 per cent of meat food the afternoon feed being mixed grains Quack Grass on Sandy Soil It is Aery difficult to rid sandy soil of either quack grass or of its equal pest the Canada thistle because Avhere there is no hard subsoil the roots run too deeply for the pIoaa to bring them up The sandy soil is also so porous and has so little vegetable mould that the quack roots do not die quickly OAen if not alloAved to send up shoots But on land Avholly destitute of vege table matter it is hardly Avorth AAhile to get rid of quack It will keep a sod and prevent the sand from blowing Avhich is difficult to do Avith any of tho cultivated grasses or Avith cloAer Farm Notes Toor ha 5- makes a poor feed Tlfe time of cutting and manner of curing are important items as regards qual ity While mistakes do not ahAays result in loss it is as important to knoAV Iioav to avoid mistakes as to be successful One of the surest Avays of killing out noxious Aveeds is to cut them off closo to the top of the ground as fast as they sIioav up There is a fairly good demand m market for Avell matured animals of medium size that are in a good thrifty condition It is impossible to feed cattle Avith profitable results that have been stunt ed during the early stages of their ex istence Keep up the cultiAation until the crops can be considered as made There is little risk of giving too much cultivation the opposite is generally the case South Carolinas Wild Beasts If a circle be described AAith the Charleston city hall as a center and a radius of fifteen or tAventy miles there may be found Avithin its limits at least twenty five different species of Avild animals soAeral of them in sufficient numbers to make their capture for the sake of their skins a profitable employ ment says the Charleston Xcaas and Courier The list consists of the black bear the bay lynx or Avildcat the gray fox the Virginia deer the raccoon the possum the gray rabbit the sAAamp rabbit the pole eat or skunk the mink the Canada otter the fox squirrel three Aarieties the Carolina gray squirrel the flying squirrel four spe cies of rats four species of mice and three species of ground mole or shreAws All these are found in considerable numbers AAiiile some even of the larg er and more important are very abund ant In addition to these the common seal is an occasional though rare visitor in the harbor AAiiile the panther tho beaver and the Avolf have become ex tinct in this circuit within one or tAvo generations the latter having been killed AAithin thirty miles of the city in the memory of men iioav living If avo extend our circle to include the lim its of the State Ave must enlarge our listrby eight or ten more species such as the red fox the Avoodchuck or ground hog the muskrat the ground squirrel and several others Avhile the panther Avolf and beaver may possibly be still found very rarely in the wiM regions of the Blue Ridge The Behavior of the Japanese The Japanese are as courteous as they are theatrical and artistic Their courtesy and their art are very closely allied Their keen sense of courtesy and their unflagging practice of it has I believe as much to do with the quiet ness and fitness of their funerals as has their fine artistic instinct They are as a nation even prouder and more studious I think of their courtesy than of their artistic excellence Cry it it AAill do you good I said once to a poor Japanese AA oman AAiio crouch ing beside her dying husband was con trolling herself Avith an effort that AA ould I feared make her ill She laid her little slim broAA n finger upon her trembling red lip and shook her head then Avhispered It might disturb him Cry it Avill do you good I said the next day when the man Avas dead andshe seemed almost prostrate Avith grief and over enforced self-control It Avould be most rude to make a hideous noise before the sacred dead came the soft reply Carpet- To prevent stair carpets from wear inir place a slip of paper under them at and over tho edge of every stair Avhich is the part where they Avear first The strips should be AAithin an incu or two as long as the carpet if wide and about four or five inc ies iiA breadth A piece of old carpet answers the purpose better tuav pa wr ni w W k T9A SXSc viS Trf3vflr i tc k t n5j i 1 1 irvlXv hS A V i3rrzr eZ 7 rzrJ9 a x v i Tiryrjt oi iy fce A JslIJ yViTli Makinc Soups from Fruit Fruit soups are made from sweeten fn and thickened fruit juices and -can be made from currants oranges cran berries and a mixture of currants and raspberries Press sufficient fruit to make one pint of juice Ioisten a ta blespoonful of arrowroot in a little cold Avaier add to it gradually a pint of boiling AAater add sugar according to the nature of the fruit used Let this puree stand a moment then take from the fire and add the fruit juice At serving time fill a punch howl half full of cracked ice pour in the fruit soup and it is ready to serve These fruit soups are usually served at the be ginning of a company luncheon La dies Home Journal Milk Yeast Bread One pint neAv milk one pint boil ing hot AA ater one tablespoonful ot salt one tablespoonful of sugar Thick en AAith flour to the consistency of griddle cake batter set in a moderate ly AA arm place and let it stand for five or six hours When light foamy and increased in bulk about one fourth it should be immediately mixed Add one and a half pints of lukeAvarm milk and stir in flour until thick enough to knead After kneading and placing in bread tins it should be set in a moder ately Avarm place to rise When it AA as increased to double its size AAhen placed in the tins it should be baked in a quick oven Salads a Uledcitie Each of the Aarious salads possesses n medicinal property of its own Hiim affording a possibility of absorbing n medicine and at the same time a dain ty article of food For example lettuca contains a AveH kuoAAn narcotic prin ciple opium and may therefore ba taken for insomnia Chicory has las itiA e properties Water cress is a ton ic excitant and purifier Celery stimulant will do good to the depress ed Whatever faith one may have in these marvelous properties it is easy enough to prove them The trial can be repeated daily Avithout danger and with pleasure to the palate Raspberry Souffle Soak one half box of gelatine in half a cup of cold AA ater for an hour Then dissolve in a half cup of hot water AVith one pint of raspberry juice mix one pound of granulated sugar until a syrup is formed Then add the beat en yolk of six eggs Set the mixture on the ice strain in the gelatine and beat until it commences to thicken Then stir in lightly one quart of whip ped cream Tour into a mold and pack in ice and rock halt Freeze tAA o hours American Agriculturist ronl Salad Uresainir To each yolk of n alloAv one table spoonful of vinegar Heat the vinegat to the boiling point stir in the well beaten yolks of the eggs and cook un til thick stirring constantly Season AAith salt ppper and mustard This dressing if set aAvay in a glass jar in a cool place will keep for some time When ready to use it may be thinned AAith cream or rich milk Household Hints Many physicians regard coffee with am milk as a beneficial drink Lamps should be Avashed out CAery week Avith a little soda A small brush should be Used to keep the holes dear A cake made Avithout baking poAvder remains fresh much longer than one in which baking powder was used For a simple breakfast tin patty pans may be lined with thin layers of pie crust and filled temporarily with rice baked emptied and the mince preparation of meat in sauce pnt in Kerosene is the best thing for mak ing yonr hardwood or stained floors lok bi ight and glossy The odor dis appears quite rapidly if the window is opened for a short time and any dis asrredableness in the handling is ofr viated by having a mop with a Ieic handle jest for this purpose VOr Good Form at the Table Take soup only from the side of thi spoon never sip it AAith an nudibi sound Fish is to be taken Avith a fork onrn it should be carried to the mouth witi the tines of the fork pointing down ward It is proper to eat green corn from the cob lifting the ear to the mouth with the napkin as a protection to the fingers Do not be overoflicious accept or de cline propmtly anything Avhich may be offered and regard the declination of another as final It is allowable in the eating of small game to use the lingers for handling the Avings and some of the smaller parts but all the same it is better to avoid this Avhenever possible Xo Avell bred person ever places both elbows upon the table either during or after a meal During a long dinner society people occasionally rest one q1 bow on the table Avhen conversing XeA er pross food delicacies ot drinks upon a guest by avIioiu they haA e been declined It is not to be sup- posed that a person with an average amount of brains will decline anything he really Avishes Never wsitch the dishes which are being brought to the table or plates ot faces of other guests Acquire tho habit of sitting at ease and of joining freely and pleasantly in any light po lite conversation Avhich may take a general turn -- m 4 i c ki V r W J -A 1 1 J