A woman who, as the mother of several sons, has many young men as guests at her large country house, says she can invariably judge a man from the care he takes of his room. A young man who has been well brought up, she says, never fails to turn back his bedclothes upon arising in the morning. If the clothes, sheets and all, are turned back smoothly over the footboard and the pillows placed near the open window in a convenient chair, she decides that the young man's mother instilled into him that good breeding which makes neatness and cleanliness and care imperative to his comfort and that of his hostess. She further adds a few remarks on the " fine husband that man is going to make " who remembers the little things, but they would be out of place in a bachelor book. Many there are, however, who never pay attention to such details, but leave the bed rumpled and tumbled as they jump out of it in the morning. The well-bred young man always airs his bed with the same care in which he takes his morning tub, putting the pillows, if possible, where the sunlight may fall upon them. Failing this, the air at least keeps the feathers fluffy and light and the ticking fresh and clean.