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BICYCLE GIRLS AND THEIR SUMMER ROAD GOWNS NEW YORK, May 27.— The bicycle girl of '9S will be a beauteous creature. ' •.•:'*' Last year she was new; the year before she was newer; and . the year before she was newest. This year she is settled and she knows how to dress herself. Bicycle dresses were bizarre two years ago and last season they were not much better. But the bicycle styles this year are all that can be desired. They are really beautiful creations,, such as one would not hesitate to wear anywhere. In traveling: through New England last fall I was surprised to notice how many women wore bicycle dresses. On the cars, on the boat and journeying by stage and over land, the bicycle dress was the rule and the long skirt the exception. It was really refreshing to note how these New England ladies stepped on and off the railroad trains without getting entan gled in a long skirt. It was delightful to see how easily they handled their bag gage without cumbersome folds to bother them. After a little practice with the . iort skirt one becomes really grace ful, and it is safe to say that the long traveling skirt has been banished from New England forever. Would that this might be the rule in other parts .if the country. In August on a Lining hot day what is more refresh ing than the Bight of a young woman in trim bicycle skirt with natty low shoes and comfortable blouse waist? And what is more enjoyable to the young woman herself than such a. traveling garb? I noticed last week on a train going to Lenox, that fashionable Mecca for wealthy New Yorkers, a young woman in a traveling suit which caught my eye at once. It was so "fit." The skirt was made of a very light weight wool goods with a fine dot .scattered over it and through it.' The waist was of the same material with straps and belt of thin white patent Wther. The hat was a Tarn of leather and cloth with plumes stuck in one side. But the neatest thing was the adjust ment of the skirt. This consisted of a row of large smoked pearl buttons set at In tervals of three inches ■ around- the hips. Connecting the buttons and the belt was a little silver chain. This chain on being pulled atone side would lift the skirt un til it was of convenient bicycle length. I saw another, later, which had links in- Ftead of buttons, the silver chain running through the links. This struck me as be ing more reliable, as the chain could not slip off the rings as easily as it could off the buttons. \ The bloomer bicycle gir! is almost gone; but not quite. You still see her. She wears very large bloomers which are so arranged that when she stands you would scarcely notice that they were not skirts. Indeed, you would hardly" notice that fact even when she rides.' The bloomers are each two yards around and are brought up and hooked around the leg in Turkish trous.;r fashion. They are gathered around the belt with gcdet in the back so t.iat really you would not be conscious of the bloomer. The divided skirt and bloomer tfifter from each other only in tn , a .t T - L e b mer hooks around the knee while the divided skirt falls open. The suk shirt waist will be worn largely V ,£ Whee V, \° 1J can get a quality of silk that really does wash. It is a china si:k. such as is used in men's neckties It launders perfectly. The shirt waist is :::ade with large sleeves and rather close £»£$ n°C\ Se - Avold makln a shirt waist with full blouse for the wheel. The wind inflates the blouse and produces a most ludicrous effect, similar to that of a bal loon on a bicycle. Have the waist as blouse as you please, i«Sm?m« c '° se at < the sides and back and JetUt blouse only In the front. There is a very trim skirt for the cen tury rider or for those who like to spend a grrat deal of time upon the wheel It buttons at the side, concealing a volumin pus.pocket. This skirt is very Bhon and is of a dust color. Quartz gray is an ex cellent shade for a bicycle skirt, sis it pos-' Itlyely does not show mud or dust This fckirt is lined with a bright scarlet which ?w™~ very rnumental on the wheel. uidaN T tJ Scarl<lt show as the bicyclist pedals, her way along the roads. *•'': tV\ say what you will about the 'oth^-PkotT o^-. but after all. there is notWng hke the shirt waist. A little jack bars lk*hl ™lll l Ca:i be tied on th e handle bars to be put on in case of shower or if a cool breeze springs up. But for regular cycling nothing will do except the shirt wafst. fciuri The newest things in bicycle suits are the dresses fn which more attention is tSa'-RTh? UninS than , t0 the dress?^ terial. liis is positively true of all the imported suits, and all those that are row attracting attention in Central Park. These dresses are the very acme of style and are so chic in effect that you could not help (topping to admire them. Their length i.s about to the calf of the log- and their color is a dull shade of brown or gray or blue. Nothing very brilliant Is worn. But when it cornea to the lining it is a BCerent mati • ■ One of these dresses seen that sun- Bhiny Sunday a week ago was of new' leaf green goods, lined with violiene near tilk. A .irt waist of violiene China siik was worn, and over it set a little jacket with a very short ripple around the waist The ripple was lined with violiene taf feta. The hat was of green, with a scarlet bird with purple tall-feathers. The gloves were white. This tume, while not at all startling in effect, was very becoming, and was one of the prettiest seen that Sunday in a long array of fashionable riders. Tt is quite the thing to have your stock ings match your dress skirt. This, if the match be good, is a very excellent idea, fis it gives the appearance of leggings without the cumbersomeness of the same. With a steel gray skirt and steel gray stockings the young woman can cycle in black tics without attracting half the at tention which she would if she wore black chocs and stockings, as the contrast be twern stockings and skirt is very great. Taffeta linings in bicycle skirts are a plague. They tear so soon and hang in long fringes around the feet. And here a COMPLEXIONS FOR THE SUMMER GIRL SUMMER is coming, girls, and with it some fine, beautiful coats of tan \\ and any number of freckles for <2i == >7 the girl upon whom Old Sol casts his loving beams at the seashore I and in the mountains. And now is the time— right now— for the summer girr to lay in a supply of cold cream and harm less lotiona, with which to down these abominations, that cause so much un happiness to the feminine heart. \v<- all of us adore beauty, and seek as siduously ways and means of acquiring It. We always have and we always will. We may to.s.s our heads in a superior, toploftical sort of way and say that if we had our choice we would rather have- in tellect than beauty, but we don't mean it, and, bless your heart! every one knows we don't. Why, even Mme. de Stael com plained that "the ancients evinced no preference for women except for thoir beauty," and confessed that she would give half her knowledge for personal charms; and Mohammed, that shrewd observer of human nature, held out as a chief inducement to the faithful that in his paradise would be found only the most perfect beauties. , And so, girls, it behooves you all to be as beautiful as you may, and to be beau tiful you must in the first place be healthy The blood must be kept, in a perfect condition of purity, which can be j done by paying strict attention to the diet, exercising as much as possible in the open air and keeping the skin abso lutely clean. But I could write a column lion each one of these subjects. " However, to return to the summer girl. In the first place, let mo warn her against all patent devices for- the improvement of the skin or hair. Nearly all hair dy.es are poisonous and dangerous, and most face powders contain bismuth or lead. _ Every fvoman should have upon her dressing ta il* a. jax at KQpa^ £ux« oelA cream* X «&qJ word of caution must be spoken. Should these silk iinirigs ever show a tendency to catch in the pedals or in the wheels, push hard and you will find the silk will {rive, and so you can save yours- If a fall. It is much better, however, to take the ounce of prevention than, the pound of cure, and before you start examine your facings to be sure that they are firm. It would be pleasant to say that the sailor and the Alpine were as fashionable as the Tarn, because the sailor is so natty "and the Alpine is so comfortable; but, when all is told, you must admit that the Tarn is seen fully three times as much as the others put together. The secret of the Tarn's popularity can be traced to its economy. Anybody with a grain of ingenuity con make- a Tarn out of a "wheel" of cloth and an old brim. It requires no trimmiti- exc< !>t a nuill at one side, which can be stuck smartly forward. A dozen Tarns are not too many to carry a girl through the bicycle season, onf> to match every shirt waist. It is de lightful that those hats can be so easily and cheaply made, for a hat certainly sets off a "face and figure better if it harmonizes with the waist in some way. * * • (^ TAXDIXG all day on her feet N where her work must be done Is C^-J) one of the hardest tasks a working woman encounters. Unless she is dressed properly this position may cause rioua trouble. Lame, acning ankles and feet are oftener the fault of a tight corset than of tight shoes. The corset dislocates the organs in the pelvis, caus ing them to press upon the great nerves and blood vessels which go to the feet, making them most painful. There Is a shoe which can be bought for $4. with very low heel and broad, square toes, which is called the "nurse's shoe" and is much worn by nurses in the hospitals. It is not a "thing of beauty," but it is a "Joy forever" in its proper place. The heels and soles of this shoe are made to stand upon, and the body Is balanced with this in view. When the wearer cramps the. foot or raises the heel till all the weight rests on the ball of the foot, the entire body is out of balance and must be kept upright by using up the muscular and nervous force intended to be usf-<l for such work, hence the consequent fatigue. The round-toed shoe has not come to stay; the new shoes from the East grow more pointed. There is a brown patent leather shoe having brown cloth top, which is rather expensive, but which has good style. If you cannot live without a corset, the very short French ones are less harmful and give a better figure than the long ones. There Is a girdle which worn with shirt waist and skirt is quite as satis factory. The waist ends in a stout band with buttonholes for the tapes, which button on to the girdle both back and front. The skirt has corresponding buttonholes. Euttoned neatly under a belt there is no -danger of showing safety pins and slipping skirt. A lady recently from Japan brought home some most delightful shirt waists give you a recipe for one than which there is none better. It was given me by a wo man in whose family it has been used for years. Here it is: Pure white wax •....■ >& ounce Spermaceti I*4 ounces Oil of sweet almonds I*4 ounces Rose water...: % ounce Go to work, girls, and make it your selves. It's a bit troublesome, but with care there is no reason why it shouldn't come out all right, and it's" lots of fun fussing over these things. Take what housekeepers call a farina boiler— that is, one kettle- within another. Take the inside one out and into it break the white wax and spermaceti. Add your oil of almonds and set- the kettle back inside the other, which should contain boiling water. Don't let them get too hot, and stir with a silver spoon ' until the three ingredients are thoroughly . in corporated. Remove from the fire and add the rose water drop by drop, while the mixture is hot, as the rose water will not mix after the oils begin to cool. Boat briskly un til it fluffs up like tne white of an egg. Then put it into small porcelain jars, which nave been warmed, and put it away to cool. This is both a skin food and cleanser and will keep it soft and smooth. For sunburn there is nothing better than sweet cream. Bathe the face with it several times and the' redness will soon die out and the soreness disappear. Powder the face well with fine starch or pure powder before going out. This will prevent sunburn. Be careful not to bathe the face In cold water immediately upon coming in. For the removal of tan- as good a meth od as any other is to bathe the face in a wash made of glycerine diluted with lem on juice. Be careful while using to avoid exposure to the sun, as the skin is made more sensitive by its use. Next week I will give you another recipe for tan, also one for freckles. Jliia. JIXOEI A* j THE SASi FRAXCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 29, 1898. of the Japanese silk. The* waists were laundered and starched, cuffs, collar and all, just the same as a cotton waist, but they have a gloss and beauty no cotton or linen will take. The silk can be bought in Chinatown here for from 20 to 50 cents. It is 23 inches wide and in almost any color, check or striped and plain. A blue one to be worn with a white pique skirt had a box plait with two inch ruffles down the front of the same silk in white, with a stock and belt also of the white. One yard of silk will make the ruffles, stock and belt. The stock should be made double and lined with double-faced cotton flannel. Pass it twice about the neck and tie in a four-in-hand knot in front. The belt is also double with the joining in the middle of- the under side and not at the edge. Make it long enough to go twice about the waist and end in a large bow, ■which should be sewed to the end of the belt. Pin the free end of the belt under the arm, covering the pins as you pans the belt over the end. The bow may lie pinned in the front, back, at the side or brought up t<"> where the top of the first dart would be. When wearing a white pique skirt, and they are quite as much in demand this year as last, the waist should be rather dark. The belt should be the same in color as the tie and the band on the sailor hat. The organdies with white background and large natural flower patterns can be made into very pretty, inexpensive bureau covers and sofa pillows. Cover the top of the bureau with white felting or cotton flannel. Let the organdie be the exact size and finish all round with a four-inch ruffle. Fancy stitch the hem of the ruffle with heavy silk of the principal brightest shade in the flowers of the organdie. It must be care fully washed by rubbing between the hands, as the threads easily slip out of place. Dip it In milk to stiffen and iron wet on the wrong side on a well-padded ironing board. • * • HOW that spring is fully upon us and the lovers of outdoor sports are beginning to realize that pro crastination at this time of the year is doubly the thief of time, cyclists are securing their wheels from the dim recesses of the garret or cellar and are oiling and polishing them for immediate use. The mind of the bicyclienne is occupied these days with the eternal conflict be tween the short skirt and the long skirt and she is trying hard to make up her mind whether 'twere better to wear leg gings or gaudy golf stockings. In the East last season the leggings and bicycle shoes were almost entirely discarded. ■ In place of these the golf stocking and laced shoe was used. It is claimed that the stocking does not wrin kle over the dainty ankle of the rider as do the leggings. Besides, they are very much cooler and give a prettier shape to the leg than the wrinkling legging gives. Golf stockings conducing to a more grace ful effect will, therefore, probably have the call. The popular materials for bicycle cos tumes this season are Scotch tweeds, tailor cloth Jn gray and black checks and tan, navy blue. serge, and for use In the heat of summer denims and other cotton materials will be In favor. Skirts will be worn shorter than last season. The bloomer will not be worn thjß season. The, koJckfirbQckqrfl will xepiftCKk It op, tiie common sense ground that they are more comrortable and cooler. A becoming bicycle dress for a slender woman is made of tan tailor cloth, the divided skirt, short, circular and very j full. The jacket Is made With the blouse ef fect in both back and front. A blue shirtwaist and an ascot tie are worn with this neat costume. A sailor hat with several quills will "go" best with the cos tume. Golf stockings of tan and blue plaid and tan lace shoes compose the footwear. The reign of the Norfolk Jacket is not yet over. It has been worn for several years, but is still as popular as ever. The skirt to be worn with the Norfolk jacket is a short kilt. This costume is most effective made of gray tweed or gray and black tailor cloth. The most fashionable material for both men and women's bicycle costumes is navy blue serge with a fine hair stripe of white. This cloth is best for the cool spring days. The full divided skirt is made very short. The jacket is short, with a tight-fitting back and a fly from. A white shirtwaist is to be worn with a white collar, and a tie of white silk com pletes the natty costume. For warm spring days and summer cos tumes of denim and cotton goods will be in great demand. A dainty way for these to be made is shown in the pic ture. . ■ The skirt Is wide and divided. The jacket is made with a tight-ntting back and a loose blouse front. It is trimmed with several rows of white buttons. A white linen collar is worn with this ana a belt of white leather. Oolf stockings of a shade to match the dress should be worn, and shoes loose and comfortable. The hat is a white sailor with a band of black velvet around the crown and & large loop of velvet on the left side. The style of the boulevards of Paris may ba adopted at the fashionable sum mer resorts this season, the knickerboc ker to the knee and the leg bare from the knee to the top of the dainty half hose. It is not probable that the cyclist in fashionable society in the Unitr-d States will copy it away from the sea ehore. Sweaters are no longer worn by either men or women. They are negligee ana wretched form. Male riders will this year be seen in negligee ehirts with low turn-down col lars and soft ties. They will wear tho orthodox bicycle cap or the new style of felt deerstalker. Otherwise their costume will be unchanged. WHEN a woman must spend six days a week at work in the city, it is a duty she owes to herself to get out into the country on the seventh. It is a matter of small expense, and the change of air and scene ; and thoughts will give an added zest to the work a day a week to make up for the cost. Be sides it is better; to spend a little money in recreation than to give It to a ; doctor or spend it for tonics. kuj. Xa Eesx iv Uia CQmitry, i& a .yea- Important question If one would have any real pleasure in a single day's outing-. Whatever is best adapted for rough wear is most appropriate, for though you may look very nice indeed before you Mart out you will not be properly dressed for the jaunt unless you look quite as well when you return home. For general wear a suit consisting of skirt, coat, skirt waist and sailor hat is always presentable, and never more so than for a one day trip. These dresses need not be expensive.,, but must be well made and neat and plain. For from $20 to $25 they can be bought ready made in blue serge, which for wearing and com fort have no equal and i.s becoming to any woman from 15 to 50. In such a dresa you can w;ilk in the dust or fog or Bit on the ground and not feel your trimness disappearing. Noth ing can be more absurd than the costume one so very often sees — a woman walking along a dusty country road, and most California country roads are dusty, wear in? a "Sunday dress" shoes and hat, which have cost her many an hour of hard work and many a sacrifice of good food to purchase. One such day's wear will destroy most of the beauty of such attire, make the wearer cross f and un comfortable to her friends, and she must spend all her time taking care of her clothes, and have no thoughts for tue beauties around her. An almost indispensable article for one who goes much to the country is a small handbag. It will hold the lunch and book, a comb and some hairpins and a small mirror, and afterwards the flowers and ferns to brighten the city room and keep the remembrance of a happy day. Such a handbag can be bought for from 50 cents to a dollar, and with care will last a long time. ' For vacation wear a pretty change can be had in the ginghams, which are with in reach of very slender purses. If the bodice is merely a skirt waist it will be doubly useful, and can be worn much oftener than \he skirt. A very -pretty wash dress can made from the 15-cent chambray, and ten yards will be all that is required beyond a clever hand almost any one can own one. Make the skirt quite plain- with gored front, and ' for a belt satin folded and sewed in place to a firm lining. Make the bodice a skirt waist with adjustable cuffs. "When worn with the cotton skirt a stock with a bow tied at the back of the neck and cuffs with small bows at the top made of : the same satin or ribbon as the belt aro very pretty. A bow of the same may be worn in the hair. ; Fancy - hand ; stitching in white or col jaxai Uaeu floss makes .very. Jprettc trim-. ming on plain cotton dressed and while It requires more time and patience Is much less expansive Rufnes can be used, too, on cotton dresses. A very pretty one has ten-Inch ruffles from the belt to the hem. The founda tion skirt must of course be made very narrow. NOW that the season for bicycle riding is well under way a great many people are reviving with deep personal interest the old question of the effect of wheeling upon, the health. Dr. John H. Girdner, who is one of the best known medical authorities in Amer ica on matters having 1 to do with the ther apeutics of exercise, says on this subject: "Bicycle riding is certainly not harmful when indulged in to moderation. In every case bicycle riding transforms the mus cles of the body into kidneys— that is to say, it causes all of the muscles of the body to perform exactly the same func tions as the kidneys, namely, the work of eliminating poisonous and other waste material from the tissues of the body. "None of the muscles of the legs are In jured in any way by bicycle riding in i moderation. All are strengthened to some ; extent, but particularly. the muscles of the J thigh, and it is the enlargement of these j muscles on each thigh that gives that odd | appearance of unusual fullness to the legs of athletes just above the knees. "The muscles of the lower part of the i leg which are chiefly developed by pedal- ; ing are those called the tibialis anticus, j the externus longeus. If you will, look up , your school text book on anatomy and turn to the- diagram showing the location of the muscles s of the legs you will per ceive just how the development of these muscles gives that rounded appearance to the fore part of the leg of the bicycle rider to the side of the central bone. "None of the muscles of the rear of the thigh are particularly well developed by bicycle riding, as none of these muscles perform any other office than merely con- i tracting and expanding with the move- ■ ment or the leg. ■ "In the hind part of the leg the muscle ! that receives the greatest development is \ the calf muscle. This muscle is developed j more than any other in. the;legs, with the exception of the'vastus internus and the j rectus. The other leg muscle that devel- I ops so much as to give a rounded appear- I ance is the soleus, which Is responsible for the bumpy part of tho leg about the ankle ! of a wheelman. . - " "And while it is chiefly the muscles of i the leg that are developed in so marked a j mnTinp^ by. tlia ridioK c£ a wiieoL jxavar- i theless there is not a single muscle In the whole body that it is not brought into healthy action for some purpose by the person who rides a wheel." ALL SORTS OF HINTS. Bites of insects, auch as fleas or mos quitoes or bees, will be relieved by rub bing with a menthol pencil. Ten minutes' callsthenlc exercise, fol lowed by a glass of hot (not boiled) milk, to which has been added a teaspoon of lime water, will relieve sleeplessness caused by fatigue of worry. Both must be taken directly before going to bed. A liberal use of salt in the food will destroy the odor of perspiration. In Australia, where the "blackfellows" are employed as house servants, they are required to eat a certain amount of salt in their food every day. Before exposure to poison oak, or imme diately after, poisoning may be avoided by a hot bath in which has been dissolved two tablets of bichloride of mercury. Relief may be obtained after poisoninr has occurred by washing tho infiamp? part frequently with a strong solution of green soap. After bathing • dust with formaline. A cross baby Is cross for some good rea son. Let it lie or play as many hours a day as possible in the warm, dry sand or on the earth. The effect will be im mediate and better than medicine. Indian babies wear few clothes, live on the ground and never cry. Long skirts collect disease germs along: with the dust and expectorations of tLe street. During sleep the entire system is re laxed and much more liable to receive the germs of disease than during the waking hours. A. diet composed as nearly as possible of strawberries, cherries or grapes is the rage in Europe at present as a cure for dyspepsia. The diet is effective for the same reason as semi-starvation, usually prescribed, namely, the noxious germs in the bowels do not thrive on fruit juices. A celebratedhjienlth expert, after many expc-riments, advises the use of .blanched almonds regularly for brain workers in place of moat more than once a day. He also says apples, when they can be dig* sted by the eater, rest the brain. Prunes and juicy fruits feed the nerves. THE ORIGINAL STAR SPANGLED BANNER PRESIDENT McKINLEY has ac cepted an invitation to deliver ah oration when the monument erected to Francis Scott Key at Frederick, Md., is unveiled. Almost every one knows the words of the "Star Spangled Banner," and many are well acquainted with the history of the author, but comparatively few kno# anything concerning the where abouts of this famous flag, which is now owned by the grandson of Colonel George Armistead, historically known as the "Defender of Baltimore." He was in command of Fort McHenry in 1814 and owned the star-spangled ban ner that floated over it and the sight of which inspired Key to write his im mortal lines. During the bombardment Key was a prisoner on one of the at tacking British vessels. The bombardment began on Tuesday, September 12, ISI4, at 7 a. m. and lasted twenty-five hours with but two brief intermissions. Colonel Armistead, although but 35 years of age, had so great an influence over the men that they bore the attack with great patience, but at length a bombshell dismounted one of the twen ty-four pounders in the southwest bas tion. This killed Lieutenant Claggett and several soldiers. The confusion caused by the work of the bomb was promptly noted Ly the commander of the British fleet, who immediately or dered three of his bomb vessels to move nearer the fort. Colonel Armistead was well pleased at this move of the enemy as his guns had thus far been useless owing to the fact that they did not carry far enough. He waited patiently for the vessels to come within r. nee and then ordered a general cannonade and bombardment from every part of the fort. So successful were his tactics that all the ships were injured and the Ere bus so severel ■ t'..z~ it required quite a fleet of small boats to tow her be yond the reach o f Armisteads guns. It was estimated that between 1500 and 1800 shells fell during the engage ment around the fort, and yet. strange to relate, but four men were killed and the twenty-four who were wounded all recovered. . During the first part of the assault a shell fell into the magazine but did not explode. The fact that the maga zine was not bomb-proof was known only by Colonel Armistead. Had the soldiers been aware of this they might have refused to have remained in the fort. The citizens of Baltimore were enthu siastic in expressing their admiration and appreciation of the bravery of the young colonel whom they styled "the defender of Baltimore." They present ed him with a great punch bowl, with cups, ladle and salver, all of massive silver. This gift is now owned by one iof Colonel Armistead's grandchildren. The bowl is as large as the largest ball that fell inside the fort. It was a glorious victory, but the young hero paid for it with his life, for ; with numerous chance 3 against him he faithfully sustained the siege and won a I victory and a name. But the fearful sense of responsibility during those long hours left him with a fatal dis ! ease of the heart, from which he suf | fered for three and a half years. He was buried with all possible military and civil honors, the procession that followed him to the grave being the largest ever seen in Baltimore, and all mourned the "defender of Baltimore." The people of Baltimore erected a monument, on which is inscribed: Coftmel George Armistead, in hon or of whom this monument is erect ed, was the gallant defender of Fort McHenry during the bombard ment of the British fleet, Septem ber 13, 1811. He died universally esteemed and regretted on April 25, ISIS, aged 39 years. So great was James Lick's admiration for this hero that he erected to hia memory a fine equestrian statue in Eu ! taw Square, Baltimore. After his death Virginia presented to ; his son, Christopher Hughes Armistead, ■ a sword, on which was inscribed these words: "The. State of Virginia to Col onel George Armistead. Honor the I brave. Presented to the son of Col | onel George Armistead (late of the i army of the U. S. A.), as an evidence I of the high esteem and admiration en tertained by his native State for the courage and soldier-like conduct of Colonel Armistead at Niagara, and In | the gallant defense of Fort McHenry I September 14. 1814." The flag that floated over the fort during the engagement and now so famous as "the Star Spangled Ban ner," was the private property of Col onel Armistead, having been presented to him by several ladies in Baltimore. After his death it was given to his daughter, Georgiana Armistead, who was born in the fort. She married a Dr. Appleton from Boston, Mass., and five years ago the banner was placed in a safe deposit vault in New York City by her son, the present owner, Mr, Ebenezer Appleton. 27