Another fancy dance that is more. than, pretty was taken from the Spanish. It Is called the "Vienna Waltz." The "numer ous mannerisms and customs that have come into being with our new possessions are all there. It is distinctly the 'bolero movement and the waltz. The dancers Now that the waltz and two-step are on the^wane the really old dances that have been practically forgotten are picking up their heads and. wondering, how much chance they would have If they tried • it again. Probably the gavotte will be in strumental in bringing the five-step into popularity. , • „ The two-step is then added, and after several steps the same positions are gone over and over again. The dance is then conquered, and it only remains to keep it up and to do it gracefully." ' While the "Florodora nod" is somfr thing not so very new, it is sometnihg very catchy and intensely fascinating. The "Twentieth Century Gavotte" if also the old and the new. It is the old military schottische and the rollicking five-step. The dancers take the first popi tion that suggests the kick, and after several steps in the fashion of the grand march they change to the second, which is exactly like the pose taken by children in playing "London Bridge." With this the side step seems to be taken, although it is difficult to find out exactly what it is. The dance finishes in the ordinary waltz' position, and the five-step again adds vivacity to it "Florodora nod." And when this nod ia given by a particularly fetching girl j it • works havoc with the heart strings of the partner. The turn is the difficult part The par - ticipants dance toward each other, ? join hands and the man turns the girl under his arm exactly as Is done in some of the games that children play. After the first few steps the couple sep arate and dance away from each other and over their shoulders giveHhe pretty little salute so commonly known as the This "Unique" was suggested by the eertet in their famous turn. If you re member how the sextet left the stage you will know exactly what the first position Is. Each man offers his partner his arm, and they take a few steps after the fash ion of the six. It looks easy, but it is not If you think it is whistle the music and try it There !s : a kink in it that defies the first attempt at mastery. Time and time sxain the same little hitch occurs until on* is ready to give up end shout "I don't want to dance the nasty thing yjCnyway." And then it comes all in an instant and you wonder how* you could ever have been stupid enough not to have caught on Instantly, For when once mas tered it is the most simple thing imagin able. Perhaps the most popular of all the new ones is the unique dance. Everybody and everything went "Florodora" crazy, and the costumes and then the dance it self was borrowed in the whole or in bits just as the fancy willed. But don't neglect nor entirely forget the waltz and two-step, for they are not to be relegated to the past That could positively never be; for they have won for themselves an established place. Strange as it may appear to old dancers that place is now distinctly in the back ground, and the new dances have prece dence. * These days children commence studying graceful movements almost as soon as they can toddle, so these new poses are in a way not new nor difficult to them, but to the average girl who swaggers about with two feet of silk sweeping the floor these frills seem something new and more than difficult There is one 'bad thing about this sud den change. People who have been whirl ing about in waltzes and two-steps much longer than they care to or can-remem ber would better hire a hall and a compe tent instructor and work hard and furi ously. For you see to know only the old dances, unless they date as far back as the minuet, is a most dreadful give-away of your age. And if there is one thing a girl hates to tell more than another it is that all eventful date, unless there are only summers. The two-step and waltz held sway so long and so exclusively that when the tide turned it swept the standards more than half way out. The picturesque came in with a rush and a bang. Pretty fig ures and odd combinations are the dis tinctive characteristics. Our good grand dames .would have thought we were all going to perdition if they £ad known that dances would take such a hold on the fancy that the styles would be as eagerly" looked forward to as are the latest fashions ln,clothes. Such has been the case this year. The time has come when it keeps an army of men and women busy evolving something new and something striking enough to take the youthful fancy of our fastidious light-steppers. DO PEOPLE look askance at danc ing these days? Even the most staid churchgoers no longer frown on it as an amusement, if the dancers are graceful and the steps are not too fancy or too high. The Waltz anil Two-Step Are Now to Have Rivals in Their Race lor Public Favor— Freakish Dances That Are the Direct Out come ol the "Florodora" Craze— New Combina tions ol Old Dances- Novel Fancy Dances. T TL K. S LTNT.H A Y ' C A JLL. 6 the sets' are formed in it. _ . , *«« the : ordinary ones and it is danced to the ordinary music. , Many of the ideas have been borrowed from the figures of the german. Sleigh bells and driving figures, where the many colored ribbons are used,? are the prettiest and are the gayest looking. •'" . But" whether the lancers 'will-be as popular as the german remains to be seen.: The ' same '. partner must suffice through-*" out the- dance. There is none of that - de lightful running away with, another fel low's girL There Is no chance for-flirta tion r and no chance to /dance half .the evening away" with some chosen one in an other set And again there are no favorsf which has gone a long <. way toward mak ing the german the. pretty a sight \ that it is. ; But nevertheless the lancers are com ing in to take Its place. Many of the invitations that have been Issued to' dancing parties lately have had "assembly" Ijnstead ' of Vgerman" in the corner. That'plalnly shows that the round dances, are : coming 'Into favor again and 'Chat the german has lost some of its sud den popularity. ;;A"pretty; dance, but not oh the fancy or der," is the three-step. -It" is a" regular half aid half affair, Just between the two-step and the five-step. Another one not , tm- Hke It is the redowa. It has been danced for several seasons with more or less success, but it promises to be a leader of the really new ones. The, Wanbausee is another new dance. The gentlemen commence with their left foot and the ladies with their right one. Then there are two steps taken forward. The gentleman places his left hand on his hfp and places his right around th* lady's waist Then two glidlnj tt»&« ar» taken with the right foot and two with the left. This is repeated over once again and finally, they break into a waltz. It Is pretty, but I fancy will not be as popular as some others. The , stage has been re sponsible for the new dances coming in to a certain extent. A graceful dancer Is al ways duly admired. The parlor dance was Introduced as a novelty— and from that has come - the desire to make the ballroom seem a little more picturesque. Girls see how wonderfully graceful and charming a pretty dancer is and they straightway make up their minds to ac complish that feat or die in the attempt For society girls are ever after something new and when they find something that presents both grace and amusement it is a combination hard to beat' stand almost back to back, and in this position take several steps backward.' Gradually they, face more andimore'slde ways and finally, finish by . waltzing', in or dinary position. " : -f '':":' The. german has a 'quick second also, and; that is the old-fashioned lancers, xnn funny old dance that invariably reminds us all of country dances; f where the lonej lorn flddler/saws but ' the' tune'and shrieks madly, "First couple down the i center" and "All * hands round.'' ' . These new lancers have. a" name, and. It is quite as 'fancy ." as . the dance . itself. While the Worcester landers are all new, Jfow to forecast the isdeaiher THE ordinary person makes no dis tinction between one_ cloud and an other, though by some meteorolo gists they are divided Into four dis tinct groups; the heaped up cumu lus; the delicate, feathery, curling little clouds, named cirrus, so high as to be frozen, often, into minute needles of ice; the wide-spreading sheets of cloud named stratus, which, seldom more than a mile above the earth, often come down to'en velop qs in fogs of mist; and the dark, un mistakable nimbus, very toon causing the water that left the earth as vapor to bo restored as rain. The clouds owe thf ir different forms to different physical states of the atmos phere, to which are also due the aerial currents, which often flow in directions other than the currents or winds prevail ing close to the earth. ' In weather forecasting no clouds are worthy of euch attention as the cirrus clouds, which attain a greater elevation than any others, averaging in summer a height of five or six miles above the earth. Their sudden appearance In a clear sky is generally a. signal of foul weather, espe cially when their streamers have an up ward tendency, for this indicates that the clouds are falling. After, heavy rains, on the other hand, the formation of these clouds Is often a sign of improvement. - When cirrus clouds appear In summer, the assumption ii that rain will appear In two or three days. They are seldom seen In winter, and never for long:. When cir rus clouds assume the form of stratus* at any altitude of four or five miles, 1 their persistence is an almost certain ;¦ sign of rainy weather. If, on the ' contrary, they remain of small size, and quickly disap pear, no change is to be apprehended. 'Among the most significant ; of the cir rus formation of clouds Is that delicate white veil called cirro-palllum,-, which is gradually drawn across ¦ the sky. -< This, with Its accompanying lunar and solar halOB, almost certainly foretells rain and bad weather for the next day. Cumulus clouds vary enormously In size, but so long, as they remain of mod erate dimensions, In fine weather, they in dicate a continuance of brightness. But when, in hot 'weather, they grow excep tionally large, they give warning of storms, with high temperature— and with great certainty when they assume a dome-like shape. - . The ordinary stratus, the fog of the sky. Is common In all seasons,, but is generally observed in the morning or ; evening; It causes tin© rain, seldom of very long du ration. *¦ None can mistake the nimbus forma tions, those dark, heavy-looking, masses, with clearly defined outlines; the certain precursors of immediate rain.' They may attain the size of immense mountains of vapor, the base less than a mile above the ¦ ground and the summit as • high as nve miles. Some nimbus clouds have been calculated to contain as much as 200 cubic miles of vapor 1— Pearson's Magazine, THE LATEST FASHIONS IN DANCING