THnHi .iff! fr At aae Ki was Y i OU will cull at tho Villa Pontignnrd at noon tomorrow The duchess will herself lecelve you," said the butler, with a superb conde scension, and he paced away up the narrow winding street? of Roqucbrune, wondering, with perhaps a little contempt for the In comprehensible eccentricities of rnnk, what In the world "he duchess of Pontlgnard could have In common with a little village schoolmaster that she should be at the pains to command his presence. The schoolmaster, however, had no doubts as to the rea son of the summons. He leaned over the parapet of the tiny square before the schoolhouse, and from head .10 foot he tingled and glowed. It was his brochure upon the history of the village written with what timidity, printed at what cost to his meager purse! which had brought him this rec ognition from the great lady of the villa upon the spur of the hill. Turning about, he could Just see, as he looked up wards, the white walls of that villa glimmering through the dusk, he could Imagine Its garden of trim lawns and olean ders and dark cypresses falling back from bank to bank In ordered tiers down the hillside. "Tomoriow at noon," he repealed, and he turned back again with a shiver of fear at the thought of mistakes in be havior which ho was likely to make. How did one meet a duchess? Did one bow or did one kiss her hand? What If she asked him to breakfast? There would be unfamiliar dishes to be eaten with particular forks. Sometimes a knife should be. used, sometimes not. lie looked down the steep slope of the rock, on the summit of which the village was perched, and again anticipation got the better of fear. A long lane of steps led winding down, and his eyes followed Its descent, as his feet had often done, to the little railway station by the sea, through which people Journeyed to and fro between the great cities. His eyes followed the signal lights toward another station of many lamps far away to tho right! and, as h looked, there blazed out suddenly. Just above that station, other lights of a great slzo and an ex traordinary glowing brilliancy, lights which had the look of amazing Jewels. They were the lights on the terrace at Monte Carlo. The schoolmaster had walked there on his rare mornings of leisure, had sat unnoticed on the benches, devouring with his eyes the passershy, all worship of the women In their elegant frocks, all envy of the men for their composure of manner and Indifference to scrutiny or remark wonderful beings, with one of whom he was to speak, uctudl ly to speak, at noon tomorrow. The schoolmaster was not a snob. The visit which he was bidden to pay was to him not so much a step upwards as outwards. In this little village set apart on Its mountain side, built Into It for everywhere In tho streets the rock croppy out between the houses, and the streets themselves climbed through tunnels of rock-he was tormented with visions of great cities and thoroughfares ablaze, ho longed for the Jostle of men striving one against the other, he craved for companionship as a fainting man craves for air. Tomorrow at noon." he said to himself. The stars came out above his head; they had never shone brighter; the Med iterranean, urk and noiseless, swept out at his feet beyond the woods of Cap Martin Rut his eyes turned constantly to the glowing terrace of Monte Carlo, or were bint di rectly downwards to the little station and Its signal lights Tho duchess, an elderly lady, who had long since letlred from the world, received him the next morning with sim plicity wl ii h put him at his case. She held his brochure In her hand and she bowed to him. There was & look of re lief on the schoolmaster's face as he returned the bow. She had not held out her hand. " You are a native of Hoquebrune, monsieur?" said she. "No, madan.c," he answered, "my father was a peasant at Algues-Mortf s. I was born there." The duchess nodded In approval of the simplicity of his leply. " Yet you write. If one who Is unlettered may say It without presumption, with the love of a native for his vil lage " The flattery unlocked, as It was Intended to do, the school master's heart. The duchess made him sit' down, and he found himself, to his Intense astonishment, confiding to this gracious old lady truths ibout himself without any feeling of confusion or timidity. " It was not love for Roquebrune which led me to write the little book," said he. " Hut I have always had, I think, longings almost too vague for me to express even to myself. When I came here upon my appointment as schoolmaster t was not content with the children's lessons for my working hours and the two wine shops for my leisure. I was not content. I took long walks over Cap Martin to Mrntone, along the Cornlche road to Iji Turblo, up the hillside to wards Mount Agel. Uut still, madame will understand, I had mv thoughts, my longings as continual companions; and at last, since everywhere I saw traces of antiquity, and heard somt thing of the attacks by Algerlnn pirates. I thoinr.ii to write this history as a relief. Once 1 had begun it, I found that so mcny mistakes were current. I took a pleasure In putting them rle.ht. There are so many. For Instance, the belief that the old Roman road Is the present Cornlche, whereas" " Whereas." the duehess Interrupted gently. " the read ers of your brochure know that that la not so." She had no wish whatever to hear details nbout the level of the old Roman road over the Alps. She deftly brought the schoolmaster back to discourse about himself, and In the end was satisfied. Therefore she told the reason for which she had summoned him. " My daughter, monsieur, is now 17. It will be my duty soon to present her to the world, but I would have her edu cated first as completely as possible. It is not easy to obtain a governess proficient In every branch, and I will not part with her. I thought, therefore, that I might be able to ar range with you to read history with her during your spare hours." The schoolmaster felt his head turning. That he was the recipient of the great lady's charily he was not for an In stant aware, and, Indeed, It was Intended that he should not be. The duchess had noticed this poor, solitary youth, had pitied him on account of his poverty, and had thus found her way in some measure to relieve It. She had the firmest faith In her Instincts, she had sounded the man, she believed him trustworthy, and by offering him this work she would be augmenting his pittance nnd not diminishing, but, on the contrary, Increasing his self-respect. From that liaie, therefore, on three afternoons n week, the schoolmaster climbed up to the villa. And If he taught the daughter Felicia a little, a very little history, he got from her much more instruction tharf he gave. For In the Intervals ot their reading they talked, and generally upon the one point they had In common, their curiosity as to the life of the world beyond their village. Felicia knew no more of that woild really than he did, her Ideas of It were as visionary and as dreamlike as his, but they were not his, as he was quick to recognize. The instincts of her class, her traditions, the influence jf her mother were all audible In her words. One day she said to hirn: "You let me always talk now. Why have you grown silent, monsieur?" " You know more than I do." "I?" she exclaimed, nnd then she laughed. "Really, we both know nothing. We only guess, and guess. Cut It Is pleasant work guessing, Isn't It? Then why have you stopped?" " I will tell you, mademoiselle. It is because I have come to guess through your eyes. 1 see the world through them." Felicia looked out for a llttlo while over the Mediter ranean They were sitting on a terrace of tho garden among tho cypresses, and the whistle of a " Rapide " mount ed through the still air to their cars. " Well," said Felicia, with a sigh of impatience, " we shall both know the truth some time, and soon." It was understood, of course, that this undisciplined vil lage schoolmaster was to leave Roquebruno and carve out a career. When and by what means were questions which had not been considered. Tho schoolmaster himself might have considered them, mlprht have doubted, but. as ho had said, he locked out at the world through Felicia's eyes. And she had no doubts. With a girl's oblivion of obstacles she was convinced that somehow the thing would happen. Meanwhile the schoolm ister's longings, fostered In this way three times a week, grew and consumed him. Thus he came one afternoon to the terrace with his eyes fevered and his face drawn. "You are 111," said Felicia. "We will not work today." "It is nothing," he replied. "Two travelers came up to Roqucbrune yesterday. I met them walking by the church. ffco. f far I spoke to them, and showed them the village, and took them by that short cut of tho steps down to the railway station. They were from Paris. They talked of Fails. I have not slept all night," and he clasped and unclasped his hands. Felicia looked down nt her history and said: "Hannibal crossed the Alps. You must go to Paris. Why not become a deputy?" and she clapped her hands as tho Idea occurred to her. " A deputy?" exclaimed the schoolmastor, flushing with pride. " Of course," said Felicia, utterly untaxed that she had not thought of so simple a solution before. Hannibal's passage of the Alps was forgotten for that afternoon, and Felicia's project was dovoloped Instead. The ways and means of becoming a deputy were of course left out of the question. The schoolmaster was to become a deputy. There fore he was as good as a deputy already. They started with the premise that he was deputy, and the deputy's firtire was mapped out. Felicia was to marry, some one. of ..nnir. who loved her dearly, but the some one was t be. at. Xfn same time, n person of great Importance. Felicia Would havo a salon with weekly reunions of distinguished people, where the rising young politician, who had once been a state schoolmaster at Roqucbrune. was to be Introduced to proper notice. Felicia saw no difficulties. He must hnvo a dress suit, that was all. She even got so fsr ns describing, from hearsay, the imposing public funeral of a president of the republic. And the schoolmaster still saw the world through her eyes. Rut the time came when the history tswiks were shut, and Felicia prepared for her first season In Paris. Frocks nnd hats drove the fortunes of the schoolmaster from her thoughts, and It was with n feeling of reniotKo that she met him one afternoon In the street of Hnquehtuno and re. celved his wishes for a safe Journey and a time of much enjoyment. " Rut I shall miss our quiet afternoons on ttie terrace." she said, speaking out of her friendliness rather than out of her convictions. " Resides, I shall come back to Roquc brune," she added quickly, " nnd you are to come to Paris, too. That Is nrranged. is It not?" And so Feltola went to Tails, and the schoolmaster lost his one glimpse of the outer world. Hut he lived upon the recollections of It. He took again to his long walks on the Cornlche road, sustained by Felicia's conviction that some day, It, might be on this evening, the miraculous oppor tunity would be disclosed, and ho- would find himself trans ported to Farls. The summer came, and he heard that Felicia was at Iieppe. Paring the autumn he caught sight of her name now nnd then In one of the Riviera newspa pers, ns a guest at this or that country house. Finally, In December, he was told that she was returning to her mother at the Villa Pontlgnard. There was to be a house party to welcome her return. From the moment when he learned that the schoolmaster became an assiduous frequenter of tho platform at the station. No Raplde passed fr.im Ftance through the station on its way to Italy during his leisure hours but he was there to watch Its passengers. It was not merely his friend who was returnlrg, but his Instructor, and with new and won derful knowledge ndded to the old. So he watched with a thrill, half of longing, half of fear. And at last he saw her descend with her maid from her carriage. He experienced the relief of a man who has regained his eyesight; she was his window on the outer world. He followed her. he spoke to her, and she turned towards him. 8he gave him her hand, Bhe said easily some simple words of friendliness, and at once he was aware of the vast gulf between them. With a woman's Inimitable quickness she had acquired In those few months the ease, the polish, the armor of a woman of the world. She was of the world now, the great outside world; he was still the village schoolmaster, and he stiKid confused before her. She spoke again, asking after his school. He could barely answer her. " Rut you must come up to the villa," she said. " We have much to talk over. I have much to tell you," nnd so she Btepped lightly into her carriage and was driven up the road. Rut she had nothing to tell him. The schoolmaster stood upon the platfotm and knew. The afternoons upon the ter race, the speculations, the encouragements, these things were of the past. His window was darkened, he would never find his way out of the room, he felt It surely. Rut none tho less he went up to the villa that evening. He did not go to the house, he crept through the garden to the terrace and sat there In the shadow of a cypress. He could hear music within tho house and the sound of laughter, and all at once he heard voices speaking In the night air and drawing nearer to where he sat. He had not the time to slip away, and he sat in the shade of the cypress while Felicia and a youth walked dawn upon the terrace. The youth wore onn of those dress suits, which the schoolmaster must procure before he could figure in Felicia's salon as a rising politician, but he wore It with a grace which the schoolmaster knew, did he live to be a hundred, he could never counte rfeit. " My cousin," said Felicia, " I have spent ninny hours upon this terrace." ' "Of all those hours," replied the cousin, "I am Jealous, and the more Jealous because you speuk of them with regret." " Regret, not on my own account," replied Felicia. She was silent for a llttlo while, and the schoolmaster could see the feathers of her fan waving to and fro In the starlight. He sat still as a mouse, for he saw the world through Felicia's eyes. He had the more reason to see It now after her sojourn there. She continued : " Tho schoolmaster came up from the village to road his tory with me here. It was a plan of mother's. He was poor, lonely, nnd sho pilled him. Ho became my friend. We both knew nothing, and so we were less hampered in making plans. He was to become a deputy. Ilnw, the good God must decide. I was to marry O! not him, there was no thought of that, but some great person, and hold salonf at which my deputy would figure " "What nonsense!" Interrupted the cousin In a voice of irritation. "No doubt, 110 doubt," said Felicia, with Just a hint of sadness, "but it was pretty nonsense." The schoolmaster climbed down to Roqucbrune as soon as the terrace was empty. He still saw the world through Felicia's eyes, but now lie saw through the same eyes himself, the poor, half educated peasant, feeding upon vain dreams, nnd accepting the .duchess' chnrlty us a recognition of merit. He leaned over the parapet of the little square before the schoolhonse and thought of the singing drone of the children whom he taught. His eyes wandered away to the glowing terrace of Monte Carlo and came bnck to the little station ami its signal lights nt his. feet.- although the Mediterranean slept about the pines of Cnp Martin and tho stars above his hem had never shone brighter. Locoe Joke MAGAZINE and newspaper readers, who like to peruse stories of ranch life in the west with all Its pictur esque deserlptlveness and touches of local coloring, are usually amused by the cowboy's more or less prufune refer ences to " locoed " unfortunates, whether horses, cattle, or as sometimes portrayed by surcharged Imaginations men. It is generally understood that this " loco " craze, which furnishes material for the writer and amusement to the reader, but in finite annoyance and loss to the stock miser. Is due to a noxious plant of prairie grow th, but that It is an enemy to human and beast sufficiently dangerous to arouse the machin ery of the general government to a cam paign of extermination Is not so widely known. . Eastern people regard the loco plant as more or less of a Joke. Ranchmtn In the west do not. Costs Cattlemen 11400,000 Yearly. They art losing every year, by the sudden death of their caltle and sheep, property valued at I4D0.0UO. Blame is mostly attrib uted to the loco weed, which products In ani mals an effect similar to that caused In man by the continued use of alcohol or morphine, finally resulting In death. Some, however, think the trouble Is due to an animal para site? The bureau of plant Induslty of the department of agriculture is conducting an exhaustive Inquiry to leurn which theory la correct and to clear up the mystery surround Irg this peculiar disease. Ranchmen of the west and southwest, as rule, range themselves on the side of ene mies of the loco weed. They are firmly con vinced that It Is to blame. They say It has been taking more than Its accustomed trib ute of live stock during the last summer. The season has been wet nnd the pl.inl has flourished to such an extent that cattle have been more than ordinarily attract! d by Us freshness. A single mouthful means craalness and agony, and continued Indulgence r suits In death. It Is more feared by ranchmen than rattlesnakes or any other pest of the range. No antidote is known. "Crajr Weed" Affects Sight. The name sometimes given the h to plant " crazy weed "best describe ll effect on horses and cattle. Ranchmen call It " gen eral cusaedness," and employ even stronger terms, but here Is the description of Itseflect ns furnished In more or less official phrase ology by the agricultural department: " The symptoms of loco disease In animals are familiar to all stock raisers. Perhaps the most ohuracterlstlc are those of centra! origin, compared to a drunken condition In men. Sheep und other animals affected by d" Horse jV o to Ranchers, this disease are commonly said to be crazy or ' locoed.' " The cerebral disturbance may consist In an Impairment of the function of the special senses, or In improperly regulated motor Im pulses, which produce a more or less pro nounced Inco-ordlnntlon of muscular move ment. Sight Is frequently much impaired. In some cases the aiiimul becomes totally blind. This condition Is reached more often in acute cases than in chronic cases of loco disease. " More frequently the ntitmul sees Incor rectly, or makes errors In Judgment of size or distance of objects. These errors In Judg ment of ocular perceptions are a common oc currence, and nre often so pronounced as to become ludicrous. A locoed horse, upon be ing driven up to a gate, may either attempt to Jump over the crossbar, which Is usually placed at the height of about fifteen feet, or may lower his head for feer of striking it. Simple experiments Indicate that both sheep nnd horses In a locoed condition frequently mistake harmless things for dangerous ene mies. Die from Starvation. ' Locoed horses are often used for both draft and driving purposie. Such horses may work or travel In u perfectly normal manner for days at a time. They frequently, how ever, run away or are attacked with kicking fits. 'without any apparent external cause. " One horse, which was under continuous observation for a period of two weeks In ImiT. remained during this time upon a piece of ground about 150 feet square. The ground and vegetation were unusually dry, and the horse had no water during the two weeks. At the end of this time the animal walked about one mile to a small stream, where, In attempting to drink. It fell and was unable to get upon Its feet again. It seems difficult to understand how. underhe dry conditions of the open plain, nnlmasf can live so long without wati r. " In chronic cast of the loco hnblt In sheep, the animal becomes More nnd more emaciated and crazy. One of the iffectsof the hnblt Is the shedding of the fit t ee as a whole or In patches. The iinlmal becomes unable to take care of It st If. and unless care fully watched. Is apt to fall Into the water and be drowned while attempting to drink. The sIkIiI becomes more and more affected until the animal is un ihle to direct its course properly or to krepslong w ith the band. Fits of trembling are of freqinnt occurrence dur ing the later stages of the dlseastt, and finally the animal dies from inadequate nutrition and total exhaustion as the result of the muscular convulsions." With cattle the malady Is Invariably fatal, although sometimes the stricken creatures live for wteks. Curiously enough, wild creatures of the plains are Immune from any serious efieci of the plant. A prairie dog. after eutiii.' It, sluws all the symptoms of a pluln drunk but the effect passes in n few hours und lie is as chipper and jovial as ever again. Rab bits -ire made dizzy, but soon regain the nnliir.il condition. Coyotes and prairie wolves nibble at the plant whenever they are Inclined, but, so far as known, suffer no 111 effects. No one knows what the action of loco on S human being would be, for, after seeing its effect on uuimals, it would take a braver man than lives on the plains to make any experiments on himself. The loco weed. Itself, looks harmless, but there are five different varieties of the plant, any one of which may produce death. The two thai are regarded by some to be dead ly poisonous are the wooly and the stem less. These are the two weeds that are be lieved to have entailed upon ranchmen the loss of enormous numbers of sheep and horses. The wooly loco or " crazy " weed Is de scribed us a silvery white, silky leaved peren -nlal, eight to twelve Inches high, with an abundance of soft foliage springing out in a cluster from a short central stem close to the ground. The flowers are pen shaped and usually purple. The pod is distinctly two celled. This plant Is native to the great plains region, extending from western Texas und New Mexico, northward to South Da lota and Wyoming, being most abundant in Colorado and In the western part of Ne braska and Kansas. Acquire Taste from Alkali. Some stock raisers hold to the theory that a physiological effect upon sheep and horses similar to that produced by the loco weed may be caused by eating undue quantities of alkali. It Is said that when animals are not Killed frequently they soon discover lo calities where large quantities of alkali are found In the soli, and visit such places fre quently for the purpose of eating this alkali. It Is ulso contended by some that the In fluence of alk ill predisposes animals to tho loco habii. The failure to provide salt for ani mals on the range may tend to produce a per verted or depraved appetite for the locj weed.. Sheep and horses are more apt to cat various noxious plants where salt Is lack ing than they would If salt were fed them regularly. The theory that the eating of alkali mas have a tendency to produce a condition simi lar to the loco disease Is not given much credence by experts, however, it Is totally d.scredlled on th plains. Thtrea " locoed " horse, steer, or sheep is a common sight, and very ranchman attributes the trouble to ho ' craxy weed." that is all too common on the plains. NeW Ideas for Women. Many Agreeable Girls Are every day to be met. They smile upon us In our homes, they walk gayly down the streets, they nttend concerts und lectures, art exhibitions and social assemblies. We admire the grace of their manner, the spright liness of their conversation, the Indefinable charm of their girlhood. A quality of theirs not least to be envied Is the capacity for en joyment, they are so able to enter Into the heart of things, to sip honey from every flower that blows. How do they be ar trial? Are they cheer ful only in phu.-ai.t wealhtr or on cloudy days as well? It Is easy to fret ovi-r a slight disappointment, It is natural to complain In times of suffering, and it is not surprising when a young woman yields to the tempta tions. Yet the ability to meet difficulties bravely and to carry burdens with fortitude Is essential to a well formed character. When we look for friends to share the experiences of life we want those who will find the silver lining of the cloud. Our nearest and dearest are not those who lire a drag upon our hands but those that stimulate. It is often said that one who sustains grave trials with fortitude may find It ditlicuil tu meet the slight annoyances of every day. Still it cannot be doubted that the habit of bearing small troubles cheerfully proves to be of Immeasurable advantage when the heavy storms of lift assail. The fairest und most favored daughters of fortune need to be prepared for the Inevitable times of sorrow, which visit every hu:nun heart. Winter Flowers When Eben Rexford. the floral authority, was asked for a list of winter flowering pUnia adaoted to winter culture he said It wus easy to give a list of plants thai bloom In winter If proper care be given, but that It was impossible to name even one plunt that can be guaranteed to bloom if all conditions are unfavorable. The ubutilons, sometime-s called flowering maples and sometimes bellllower, are among Hie best winter blooming plant.-. They re aulre the treatment given u geranii.ni-good soil moderate supply of water, sunshine, and a temperature ranging In the vicinity of 70 degrees. It is particularly adapted to uma teur culture because it Is seldom attacked by Insects. After attaining some size it blooms freely and almost constantly, and while in bloom with attractive foliage and pending bells of white, yellow, crimson, or rose, show Ing among tho luxuriant leaves, is always sure to be admired. It Is a comparatively rapid grower and soon attains the dignity of small tree. For a bay window, where suf ficient room can be given It, there Is perhaps no better plant. The uchunla is similar, having dark, rich foliage, blooming the year round, and with no trouble from insects. Its flowers, which are of a rich crimson senrlel. arc i ot pendu lous like tliuse ol the ubuiilon, but are held erect and show to linr effect nmong the luxuriant foliage. This plant becomes a lit tle tree after a yenr or two and has the merit of being able to stand perhaps more pruning than any other plant. When a specimen be comes too large fur the window, the entire head may be cut back and a new one formed, thus renewing the plnnt from year to year. It requires the same care as the abutllon. The Chinese primrose belongs to every win dow garden w here merit governs selections If care Is taken to set the plants high In the center, so that the water applied runs from the crown to the edge of the pot any one can succeed with It. If this is not done and water collects and stands about the crown decay is likely to set In and the plant will rot off jut above the soil. The newer varieties of this flower range through many shades of red, rose, crimson to blue and pure white. The double whi;e Is probably the most popular variety. The heliotrope when given the care needed is one of the best winter bloomers. It likes considerable pot room and a great deal of water and plenty of sunshine. It forms a great mass of threadlike roots at the base of the plant, which water often fails to pen etrate. If the roots get dry the leaves turn brown and fall off. To prevent dryness at the roots run a wire or knitting needle through the soil at the base of the stalk frequently. This will provide a little channel for the water and moisture will be evenly distrib uted where It Is most needed. Ry cutting back the branches from time to time to half their length new growth will take place on which flowers will be product-d. The hello trope Is not a show y flower, but w hat It lacks in show It makes up in fragrance. 7ie Juliet Cap Is sure to be copied by every clever girl who sees It. It Is declared by travelers west wuid to be the pi etiUsi und most popular or nament for mi evening coiffure that bus late ly been seen in Paris. Made i f while or luiquoise culured beads. It Is of unpaia'lilcd becomingness to the youthful l.icv. and suits to pi i fiction Die present youtliful style of huircli casing in he way 11 snugly tits between the poinpudour or part, und the roll of hair us it is coiled along the nape of the neck. It Is neatly an oval, a little more rounding In the f i.i 'linn In the back, and has two little points' that come Just above the ears. The beads are strung on tiny wires which are cn.tsed in diamond shape und bordered by a simple little pointed edge also made- on wire. They are sbout as big us email peas, und a pretty effect is mude by putting the turquoise blue and while was beads together In one Although easy to make for the person who has the slightest facility in bead work, this little trifle, which is only about 4x! inches, brings the price of fa in the few places where it is possible to procure it. "Make Your Cfan Sentences" Is the summing up of an excellent criticism of existing forms of speech often used In this country, which Is found In a small but useful etiquette book. Some are criticised as provincialisms, nnd some as pure "Ameri canisms." which, though not always incor rect. It Is considered " smarter " not to use. All stilted expressions, such us the " lu ateil term," a " select coterie," and the " smart bet," are to be avoided, and even such words as guests, residence, lawn, and acht ale barred, as being upon the pretentious order. Roat is suggested us being better than yacht, while, instead of saying guest, visitor may be used, or, better still, " people staying in the house." Bureau, as applied to dressing tahle. Is classed as obsolete, and " dresser," which properly speuking, is a chest of kllclen shelves, is rapidly becoming so, in the surhje application. The term " dressing case " Is " impossible," which leaves dressing table as the only word which Is either elegant or strictly correct. The affectation of such phrases as " lie has a charming home," " I wus out with friends." " We retire early, and " Where la your good mother?" and many others which ure equally a part of our American nomenclature Is pointed out as amounting almost to a social blunder It Is the reaction against formality cf this kind which lias led to the pendulum swinging the other wsy so far that tvm well bred people do not scorn to drop their " g's " and to say " ain't." In the same way. end for the same reason, valet is always pronounced In the Anglicized form, and In piquet the " t " is sounded, with the accent on the last syllable. ' Valley " and " piqua " are never heard by those who know, though the arbitrary lines of such distinctions arc ahown by " croquet " which Is pointed out as being an example of the opposite kind. Pour into a glass, and, w hen cold, If Prussian blue has entered Into the composition, there will be a distinct deposit of Iron, Wnich will form a brown s diun ni in the bottom i f the glass-, and which will bu sufficient to ac count for a large number of rust spots II used in the weekly washing. ?he '"Devil"- la a stiong factor In the ni t of e haling dish cookery, une cun devil bones, biscuits, mcul and fish In a chafing tlish nearly us well us on the grill. Cure must be taken always to score the flush across with deep Incisions, so that the devil mixture penttrates well into tht incut. The lollowing Is the best of devil mixtures for chitting dish purposes: Mix well upon u plute a teuspoonful of mustard, the same of Worcestershire sauce und anchovy sauce, two teaspoonfuls of olive oil. und half a teuspoonful of paprika. Let the meat souk up this mixture, then heat It In a tablespoon of butter until It almost boils. Chicken diumstlcks make the best devil In the world, but biscuits dropped into the mixture ure not to be despised, and slices of cold cooked beef or mutton are excellent treated In the same manner. Any cold l!rd makes un excellent devil. The Tiny Spots Of Iron rust, which frequently defuce the white clothing when It comt s from the wash, ure more familiar than tin ure explainable. At an exhibition Of domestic science they were explained to proceed from the bluing, w hich In some cases is made of Prussian blue Instead of ultra-marine, which Is the pure. Tiny test tubes were exhibited showing the precipitate of iron in the one case and the pure indigo in tile other. The test is so simple that each house keeper may make it for herself and avoid sll brands of bluing thut do not stand It. The process consists in dissolving a little wash ing soda In wafer, mixing some bluing with this, and heating the- whole lot ovtr the fire. SMuch of the "Day Jewelry" Of this yeur,ts set with stones which, though in reality but compositions are new and pui tlcului ly attractive. The " lapis luzull " is similar to the old fashioned gold slone, except thut its streuks of fire shine out of durk blue Instead of brown depths, as In gold stone. The " vulcan " is a turquoise blue stone similar to matrix. It Is really the fac simile of the " flra stone " sometimes found in volcanic regions. Hnd has beautiful tints of green und oorul which show through the asure. There Is also the " nrgus " which is set chiefly In buckles and buttons for blouses. It is similar to the peacock Jewelry of a year or two ago. except thut It hus a red eye In a setting of gray. If the Price Of a really good handbag figures In the young woman shopper's calculations there is one which uppcals most of all to her dis crlmlnutiun und turtc. It is the flut metal kind with the long chain, which can. If wanted, be worn us a chatelaine, but which the girl who knows how will carry by wrapping the chain out or tw iceurouud her wrist in u wu lu st in scribed as curriii g it not h.nigii.g 11) on her arm. It Is the same way tint a cer;:iln c'axs of cnvi ra tional women always cuitj their parasol when it is linn n. One of the newest bags of this sort hus un opening on the I- side of one of the clasp frames, which Just admits a small round watch, leaving the fare exposed to the out side.