IS INTER MOUNTAIN: BUTTE, MONTA is a .

not have the ear points of the house ' que. In many and many a wavy design. but an Inventory ot the firearms on board . It is high and tall and straight The Princess Is o f black satin cov­ showed thorn to be limited to a thirty- and it fastens Invisibly. The very new­ ered with a tracery of white silk braid two caliber revolver in the captain's est ones curl slightly at the and are with tiny white snow-flowers stuffed and pocket. He discharged the weapon a « edged with a stitching or trimming almost appliqued to the material. T he tunic Is great many times at the snake. Those THE as severe as the stock itself. sable. This elegant gown Is a reception manifestations of hostility were greeted Her neck is made longer by the style dress and the tunic has a , exactly by hisses and the snake clutched tighter of cutting the neck of the dress low, thus one yard long. Ah me, th a t a debutante making the collar as deep as possible. should be so burdened! ■ ; to the spar. They are aitnching these stocks to The glrld of 1900 is getting into the long Captain Smith was In a quandary. gowns of a contrasting color and are as fast ns she can. She calls it Sailing day had come and he had to go. BEATRICE making many stocks to wear with one The crew weighed anchor a,ml started to her automobile. It is three-quarters long gown. I it is loose, almost baggy. And they 1 get up sail. Then a. new difficulty pre­ The stocks are fastened on by hooks whisper that one girl wears her brother's sented Itself. Sail could be made all which are invisible. tan colored spring for her auto-j right on the other masts, but not on the C A S T O R I A At the root of her throat the girl wears mobile . AH are double-breasted and ' one where the snake reposed. So tightly that very latest of neck ornaments, as it button with big pearl buttons. ! had he wound his colls about it that the is the oldest, a brooch pin. How she gets rigging refused to run through the She Is a novelty, the new girl, because ! it. now one knows, unless she has been there are so many new things for her to ; blocks, for Infant« and Childrens down into grand-mother’s chest in the at­ wear! BEATRICE. I The men were afraid to pull too hard tic or has been permitted to take her I for fear of bringing the reptile down on choice from the family jewel cabinet; but their heads, so the novel spectacle was LETTER she wears it. ÎH E SEASON S SNAKE STORY. afforded of the Resultado sailing away The Kind Ton Have Always Bought They are s. fling these miniature ' on her homeward voyage without a rag brooches at very low cost but there is Occasionally a sailing vessel' malJcs a I of canvas set on her mainmast. BEARS THE SIGNATURE OP The girl of 1900. something about them which seems lack­ slow voyage because something gets 1 The Resultado. unable to get up all She is the debutante of course. ing. Sentimentality and all those things wrong with her sails or spars. Then her mainsail, made a slow run. The You will know her this season by her that go with a miniature can not be again she may have adverse . •Winds. or captain said that the presence of the wide open eyes, for it is not the fashion bought so cheap. be for a long time becalmed. Ifr the reptile cost him at least ten days’ delay. to be fat and the thin faced girl is alwajs There is a pretty custom in some fami- ! strange experience of the brig’ Resillta- For two weeks the crew despaired of the girl with big eyes. | lies of allowing the debutante, on the day j do, however, lately In port from Port ridding themselves of the reptile. Occa­ You will know her by her shiny hair for, of her debut, to take her choice of one ! Spain, neither of these conditions wàs to sionally they would pull a rope on which having just emerged from the nursery, jewel from the family jewel chest. Fori blame. From the time she weighed' an­ his body rested and he would respond in speaking figuratively, she has had time months before, the girl studies her selec­ chor on her voyage to Philadelphia1 the a manner that showed he was very much to groom and brush and brush again, un­ tion. Which shall it be. th at bangle of weather was good, and stèadV trade alive. His muscular contraction almost til her hair shines in her'first season ^s it old silver with the turquoise set so cun­ winds prevailed from a favorable tjuar- cracked the spar. Deliverance was at In Use For Over 30 Year«. will never shine again. ningly in a pendant to dangle over the hand, however, and from an unexpected You will know her, too, by that trails- ' fingers and afford a study at an embar­ It Is a very lovely part of Trlrftdad quarter. TM« CrWT^UW OOMWMHP, TT «Mm»»* .TAICT, NtW IM H 6ITV- parent red in her cheeks. Kouge is never rassing moment. Or shall it be that quaint where the Resultado received iher cargo. transparent. It has a thick look put on old brooch, with its three rows of semi­ A wild coast afforded scarcely h safe'har- October 19 a tremendous snowstorm ever so artistically. precious gems, around that odd old agate. bor for the Resultado even during the arose. For some days the weather had You will know her by her manner, for She will probobly decide in favor of the; few days the weather remained ‘good. been growing colder, and the snake the debutante is not nervous, and she is bangle. Natives stored the coeoanuts in the Jiold seemed to be in a torpid condition. When woman of the world enough to keep her1 I know a woman who each season looks' the cold weather began he weakened, and and the crew had little to do. when the first flakes fell on him he sud­ 100 tons. Is conical and will not be dress- ! poise. She has been drilled for years over her finery, selects the trinkets she no I On October 1, one day before the Re­ cd other than to have Mr. Howard’s name1 for In both the steam acts directly upon for just this one supreme moment. i longer wants, cleans them carefully and i sultado weighed anchor, the first man on denly unloosened himself and fell with a carved upon it. fans, Instead of through a p’inton. In In a crowded room you will know her, lays them snugly away in her jewel cabi-1 d:ck in the morning made a singular dis­ mighty splash into the ocean. glass ornamentation several processes by her gown. The regulation first sea­ net for the next generation. That which; Captain Smith says he had a good op- The decedent built Mossley Hall, the known in Roman times, and subsequently they lack in intrinsic value she is sure covery. He hurried back into the ­ petunity to observe the snake before it finest villa in Bar Harbor, some years ago, lost, hvae been revived under patents son dress, this early part of 1900, is round­ and w a 3 the most lavish entertainer of h s ing in the neck with shoulder straps, ‘ they will gain In interest, by the time! tain’s cabin and informed him that there struck the water. He thinks that its within this century particularly the art they are wanted. was a snake on the mast. Captain Smith length couid not have been under thirty time. He was a contemporary of the brought up broadly over the arm ami; accused the sailor of being drunk and or­ late John DeKoven, and was one of the of incrustation, rediscovered In France by fastened on top with a buckle, or with Among the new tilings which the girl feet. It disappeared instantly and was first railroad builders of the west. a manufacturer who used It in executing will wear there may be mentioned fringe, i dered him out of the cabin. But the medallions of the first Napoleon. The windmill bows. The is straight sailor stuck to his story and the skipper seen no more.—Philadelphia Times. v and long as for a beanpole woman; the No Indian squaw ever gloried in the fringe 1 PATENTS GRANTED. method of fixing paintings by an applica­ is straight but it stands out with a which will be worn by the girl of 1900. i went on deck to investigate. BOWLDER MONUMENT. tion of§tlaB8 was also known to the Ro­ He found twined around the main­ fullness of its own created by that which And she will wear ruffles: many and | Hero of Alexandria, in his “Fenumat- mans, and has been repatented since 1800. is underneath, by the ruffles, the many many of them will twist and curl around; mast an immense serpent. Captain Smith Chicago Chr-nlcl?; An add monument i, s ” describes In the third century before In excavating the Roman town Calleoa, falling over each other, and the rip- 1 her feet and upwards to her knees. j thinks that the reptile must have been will be sliipp d from Bar Harbor, Maine, : Christ, several applications of steam as in England, recently, an iron screw of pling . Her latest diess for day or evening will i about a foot in diameter. The crew to this city soon, win re It will be placed a motive power, some of which have form­ undoubted Roman origin wa* found with Her sleeves-may be long the debutatne’s be petticoatcd. The tunic will part in j quickly assembled on deck and gazed at above the grave in Rose Hill of William ed the subject of patents within the last thread and point similar to a well-known and if it is her first evening out they will ! front and the petticoat p°ep out. But! the monster with fear and astonishment. B. Howard, who was one of the pioneers j 100 years. In particular, his "Eeoloplle” modern patent. probably be so. Miss Wilson, one of, such a petticoat! The Miss TVilson of - It was apparent that it must be dis­ of Chicago and a millionaire. ! Is on very much the same principle as those famously pretty Wilson girls of, whom I spoke has one of white satin, j lodged. ar.d how to do it was a puzzle. It The memorial is a bowlder taken from j the steam turbine, which is the most re- Have you subscribed to the Lawton London wore a diaphanous dress of tulle j abundantly traced In black braid appii-i was suggested that the reptile be shot, the Mt. Desert Hills. It weighs about i cent development of the marine engine. fund? and mousseline de soie. The corsage was! draped. The skirt trimmed with draped! ruffles. From the shoulders to the ! thumbs the sleeves swept down in one long beautiful unbroken line of taffeta over which was gathered the tulle. Around her pretty, neck hung a string of pearls. Tears for a debutante. Strang* choice! Miss Rothschild who was to have come out in London In a magnificent way made her debut in a plain little derss of blue crepe de chine, that soft material they are always trying to supersede with their newer ones. It was of turquoise blue with a decorous little ruffle of white chiffon at 'J\ the neck. The sleeves were knuckle long m 9 and pointed at the thumbs, inside the wrists there showed tiny ruches of chif­ fon. She wore no jewels for she has brothers’-in-law and cousins in' the Boer war and the Rothschilds are patriotic. Siie wore not even piarls so that ihe time V honored custom of presenting each girl of the family with a pearl upon each of \ r lier birthdays, in order that she may have 3 a string to wear at her coming out, was violated. . At the debut of Miss Parsons, one of the new beauties of New York's new season, one of the guests, herself a debutante, wore a bodice of snow-white Liberty sat­ in. The skirt was of mouss: line de soie. Around the foot of the skirt was a deep lir ruffle of white lace with roses set In. This s ttirig In of flowers in lace Is a r \_ 1 3 J proiess which is not as difficult as it sounds, but which produces an effect that 5 * 0 is wholly beautiful. The flowers! are made of silk and slightly stuffed t > make them fU \ T | C \ in relief. It red .1res some art to make civ j a' siik rose f 'om plain silk. This can t done in a very simple way! by choosing lace with roses in pattern. Piters of silk, in pink and red are «-t under the lace ms ■*. making wem stand out apparently in relief. There is another way to sew roses in a f o o gown. Ruses of velv.-t are slightly sta ­ ^ ' i f 1*? led ar.d arc sewed fast to the silk or vel­ vet after which th material is cut away J -» \ underneath making the rests a part of, the fabric. ' ! Wherever you see the debutante she will look like a flower. Goethe’s exquis­ ite “Thou art like unto a flower” is ex­ emplified in real life for the fair new girl! of 1900 looks exactly as though she were! picked off a bush. It may be a rose, or! it may lie a gladiolus or it may be a vine' V of which she reminds you, but you will; surely sec the flower in her. ï k .,, The pretty fashion ef sowing colored silk! under the flowers in a lace pattern is saidi to be entirely new. New York dress- i :•» nV makers, who know so much, declare that! O K. it is new to them. It would be interest­ ing to know if it has ever been done be­ fore. If you wish to experiment buy a piece of lace with big roses in the pat­ tern. cut out pink satin, exactly the size and shape of the lace roses, tack it un­ derneath in an invisible way, and the flowers will look exactly like natural ones. At Miss Crocker’s debut one of her as­ V&Eß sistants chose a very charming way of raising a neck which, to ner mi no. unac­ 'K customed, might have seemed too low. m H er gown was of pale gtwan satin crepe, with long sleeves but low cut corsage. The corsage was bordered with pale silk fringe. Around her neck the preity de­ butante had drawn a of chiffon edged with fringe and had knotted it at the bust front, allowing the ends to fall almost to the floor. As her figure was tall and slender the long hanging ends added to her h .ght and style. Tulle is striped with baby ribbon for the debutante. The beautiful shade of yel­ low tulle which is made up over white Ü taffeta is striped by running the narrow­ est of white baby ribbon through the tulle, in clusters of three rows each. The bodice is trimmed in this way, and the skirt. You would declare it to be a UM- new and beautiful kind of satin striped j a « diaphanous material. '■«ANK Ribbon, too long neglected, plays an '■% Important part in all evening . You see it gathered on both edges and sewed V \ £ in pattern-shape upon dresses of panne velvet.. Stuffed rosis make a ponderous and impressive, but becoming trimming U- for panne. The roses are appliqued to the material and are stuffed to make them $ 0 , set out in relief. They are caught down slightly in the center to make them look more natural. You picture the debutante us always fl) dressed in a , ever wearing a \ > conventional smile, ever at her mother’s side, with the eternal bouquet in her j y hand. Yet she has other guises. & There are times when, her pretty neck, or » all curves. becomes very long and rigid. Encased In the armor of fashion cf 1900 it is a different neck from the one you had scarcely dared to admire on that :7 evening when, fresh from , it was adornahle. The neck of the girl of 1900 is cloth­ ed with a stiff stock, which, if she be a tailor-made girl, exfend right to the ear*. It is a great concession to softness If It roll a little at the top. The stock of the tailor-made dress does