m THE SCBiLNTON TBKUl-SATtJBDAT MOEKnici.7 OOTOBER 2G. 18a. 4) A Ht - . Facts ' of Interest T6:oMetf 'Readers. Symposium of .Partly Gossipy THE WIVR9 AT HOME: ' ' ' u Not alone In Ilia's low stations, Eoothlng poverty's red smarts " ? Net alone In heathen missions Are the women of 'brave hearts! . But at home In endlea tolling, And Immured In Ufa's humdrum. There are (aerifies noble Uy the little wlyea at home! Tolling patiently with weakness . Moaning- children's plaintive cries, They are Dialing out the pathway . From the earth to Paradise! And while others laud the vot'rles That In foreign countries roam I will save my sweetest praises For the little wives at home I , - . -Will T. Halfe. II II II It Is possible that there la a good deal of shrewd philosophy In The Ameri can's semi-humorous observation: "Singing; Is highly recommended as a nerve tonic, utd Justly. It Is noticeable that 'birds are silent when they are sad, - and unless ithey can be coaxed to sing they pine away. . Human will and rea son can rise superior to Inclination, and force from the very talons of distress that with which to conquer It. When the world looks blebk, and affairs go wrong, sing 'The Star-Spangled Ban ner' at the full compass of your voice. If you sing It every morning the neigh ors will become used to it. Plaintive songs are not to be encouraged unless one has surplus vitality to get rid of, but no matter how much or how little voice you have, let it out In a ballad or choral now and 'then, or Join the church choral' society ito Improve your spirits both by the vocal exercise and the so cial Intercourse with healthy and ac tive persons. All social gatherings where early hours are kept are benefi cial. If. as a great psychologist de clares, 'happiness is health,' we need to go where enjoyment is and catch some of it wftien we feel like Immuring our selves In solitude and nursing our mis ery." . II II II HER GREAT ACCOMPLISHMENT: She has mastered Greek and Latin, She has read her Huxley through;. She can sit In silk and satin And discourse on Trilby, too; She can argue evolution. She can bake a luscious tart; , She Is up In elocution. And a connoisseur in art, . She's the fountain-head of knowledge. And at tennis she can play; She came riding home from college On a bike the other day; . But I've heard of something better Since with her I plighted troth; She can draw upon her papa For enough to keep us both! Truth. Mrs. Edward Fridenberg, president of the Wednesday dab of Harlem, an or ganization of forty women who desire to educate themselves upon current Issues,- tells the Sun: "It is a great pity that the newspapers are exaggerating the women of today as they are. The . serious woman of today is modelled on ' old lines. She is the outgrowth of all that was best in her grandmothers and great-grandmothers. She has larger ' and wider and more liberal views than her more conservative predecessors, and she Is prepared to forego a great many prejudices that hampered the woman of the past. The mothers of sons and the wives of husbands have waked up to the fact that their career in life is a complicated one, and so Is that of the vast wmy of single women who are entering the .(trades and professions., Mothers 'of today realize that .they muet not only ' know what their chil dren are studying, but must be able to help them; wives see that they must keep up with everything that Is going on; that they must be versatile In argu ment and conversant with the ques tions of today, and one sure sign of woman's progress Is that she has learned that other women can have views different from hers, and yet be right, I am glad to see women enter ' Ing the trades and professions, and I .j sincerely 'believe that they will raise their status until the woman who does ' the tame work and does it as well as a wan will receive the same pay. I think the reason tfhey do not receive the same pay now Is that they have neglected their opportunities, and consequently are not fitted to do their work so well. I am a woman suffragist, although I am not identified with any suffrage so ciety. Individually I believe that wo men will not receive the same oppor tunities and pay that men do until they get the franchise, and they will never get that until they want it. When all women want the right to vote and ask for it, you may be sure they will get it. The reasons urged against woman suf frage are puerile worse than puerile," added this leader of women, with a stamp of (her foot and a flash of her eyes. . "Women can never be men's equals until they have the same rights. When they do demand and get the same rights they will look on life more se riously, and will attain a degree of perfection which they cannot possibly unless they are fitted to meet life In the same way.'.' - -II II II . WHET FOLLY SMILES: When Polly smiles the grayest skies Take on a heavenly blue; , ,- And O, the light In Polly's eyes How bright it 1st How true! 'And from his perch, on her sedate Toung shoulders, you can see Love shoots his arrows swift and straight, When Polly smiles at me. But O, my soul! when Polly frowns, ' How black and fierce the skies I And,, oftentimes, a raindrop drowns The light in Polly's eyes. But when I kiss her all the rain And storm clouds quickly flee . And happy skies are blue again, For Polly smiles at me! Anna Toiler, in Truth. ' 'II II II -bThese women, who affect mannish clothes and mannish ways, who walk , with a swagger, and smoke cigarettes, these women that the newspaper are so fond of talking about." added Mrs. Vridenberg, "are not representative of woman's progress. They may make a scratch as they pass through the wcrld, but they won't make any mark that will influence the generations to come. The serious woman of today who Is leading womankind has a wide hori zon. She perceives the needs of her sex and comprehends the relative im portance of events. She thinks as well as fuels, and acts from reason and In telligence. She lives for something higher than mere .personal concerns, and the path of advancement should be made easy for her, ut it Is not. For Instance, If she wishes to get into a medical society, she cannot, because there are -societies In this state so nar row that they will not admit women. I mention this merely as an example be cause young woman recently told me ef her experience along this line. But the doctors are not the only narrow minded ones. - It is to in all professions and trades. I repeat most emphatlcal ; Ijr. that there la no such thing as the , new woman. The creature that exists ..In the minds of newspaper men and ' ca lost urlsts no more exists in actual life than do the wonderful mermaids that some of the magaalnes and weekly papers print as representations- of the girls who go In bathing at the sea shore." When staked what she thought -,' of bloomers. Mrs. Fridenberg replied) -I do not aprove of them, even for cy elmg, and think them sU together unheo ,i fcry and ungraceful. I do approve of Women rldlns; the bicycle, however; and ; fl sre.that .It Is one of the most - I. aiai sports In the world, destined t t L..4 up stronger race of men and - Information, Partly Qrave, and Partly Qay. women, but as for bloomers, I detest them." . , ' Mrs. E. B. Grailnis, of New York, has done a clever thing. She has discov ered a New Man. 'His newness con sists of the fact that he is palpaibly dif ferent . from the conventional male homo, as this Incident, told by iMrs. Orannls in the Sun, will illustrate: " 'I went to call on H. the other evening, and what do you suppose I found him doing? a young man said to me last week, in reference to this New Man. I Inquired what, and learned that B. was discovered with a big white apron pinned about his neck, wiping the din ner dishes, while his wife washed them. 'He didn't seem one whit disconcerted,' explained the Invader of this domestic scene. -He simply said that the hired girl had not shown up and he was help ing Jessie get through with the work.' Now I am quite convinced," Mrs. Oran nls went on, "that the Old Man would have taken himself off Into the sitting room, where the noise of the clattering dishes ;ould not reach him, and there would have read and smoked while his wlf performed the irksome task r.f cleaning up. Ten chances to one he ml gM even have gone off to the club or theater ana lert nor aitogetner in tne lurch. 'I art-, not any more fond of that kind of thing than other men,' this New Man told me once, "but If there's any sweeping to toe done, and it lies be tween me and Jessie as to which shall do It, I think I am much more able to sweep than she Is. Sweeping is hard work.' In justice to the New Man In this case, I must state that he Is a like ly young fellow, six feet tall, and that he Is possessed of more than the aver age amount of brains and mental ac quirements." . "CHARITY" AS SOMe"sEE IT! ' ' "What a charitable woman Mrs. Gabber ly Is." "Isn't she? Why when the Hlnkley fail ure came on she sent for Miss Hlnkley and gave her all her summer sewing to do and paid her SO cents a day for It. It was very nice of her, I think." "Very; she'll get her reward some time." "Yes; she's had some reward already. She caved 76 cents a day on all the work Miss Hlnkley dld.j'-Harpefs Bazaar. Mrs. Orannls, by way of rubbing it In on 'the Old Man, of whom it Is plain to be seen that she Is by no means over fond, asks us to consider, for a mo ment, the other side of the question. "A minister, lawyer or physician," she said, by wiay of Illustration, "marries a well-educated country girl, and they start out on an even footing. As time goes on he spends' the major part of his time In his study, deep In books and absorbed in everything that tends to broaden his ideas and elevate him ment ally, and she looks after the house and the servants, if they have any; makes the children's clothes, which means un remitting labor; worries and contrives to make a .small Income lit a large de mand, and dally gets further and fur ther away from him in ideas and senti ments. The age of forty or fifty finds him seeking Intellectual companionship among other women, and finds her old before her time, still grovelling In the commonplace, making the boys' trous ers, which a seamstress of no particular mental ability could as easily do, plan ning for the girls' winter jackets, and otherwise pursuing 'the unrelieved mo notony of 'her way. The children of a woman so cramped and sordid are not overd bright, one may have a harelip, another a defective palate. The New Man would, 'In this husband's place, have thought occasionally that his wife needed recreation, change of Ideas, and, last but not least, some money in her pocket. There is always an attitude of embarrassment between husband and wife when the husband is the exclusive guairdlan of the exchequer and the wife a petitioner. If the husband's salary is not sufftolenit to comfortably supply his wife with raiment and appurtenances such as she desires, he should have no objections to her making money on her own account with which to supplement the family purse. The old-time chival rous Idea that a man should support his wife entirely Is all nonsense. Men and women are equal In ability and re sponeiJblHty, and I see no reason why the burden of rife should not be shared equally between them when they agree to live together after God's ordinance." JUST A FIT: " " " Jagsley Why are you In such a rush to get your bathing suit out of your trunk? You can't us It this fail. Jagsley's Wife I want to send it up to Maud she's just putting her baby In short clothes. Truth. ' "The New 'Man," adds Mrs. Orannls, "Is, first and last, far more generous In heart and sentiment, toward the wo men of his own family, and to his femi nine acquaintances as well, than the chivalrous gentleman of the past, who placed all women on a pedestal, .to be the ornaments and playthings of the home, and to be supported and provided for by the head of the household. The New Man desires that every avenue to progress should be thrown wide to wo men and every line of employment be opened to them.' A real conservative Democrat from the south, an ultra-exponent of bld-tlmo chivalry, who brought up his family in New York, has given evidence of this 1n his own household. One of his daughters was recently graduated at the Normal col lege, a bright, spirited girl, alive to all the questions of the day. She was speaking of woman's rights one day a't the table, when her brother, two years older than she, said enthusiastically: Well! Why shouldn't Ida vote? She Is better fitted to do so than I am. She has devoted more time to the subject and gone .Into its Whys and wherefores more thoroughly, has been regulariy trained for It. This Is my first time to cast a ballot, and I would be glad Jf she had the same privilege.' -The Old Man under the same circumstances would say i 'It makes no difference what she knows, or how studious she Is, or how thoughtful and capable of judg ing wisely; she to a woman, and con sequently It is highly improper that she Should vote. As It Is In politics and public affairs, so Is the New Man's atti tude1 toward' women In religion. He recognizes her power and her Influence for good; and Is ready to welcome het to all ecclesiastical councils and eon ventlons, realising that she Is a po tent factor. As an offset to him Is the narrow-minded individual, ever ready to prate about woman's true sphero and assert that when she, according to Ms Interpretations, steps outside of that sphere he will no longer take off his hat to her, or give up his car seat to her, or rise when she enters the room, or make any concessions of that sort. The New iMan will bow to the New Woman with additional reverence be cause he will recognize her Increased capacity for usefulness to the race." ACCEPTED:- " '! '! '.' ". She (coldly) I hardly know how to re ceive your proposal. You know I am worth a million, of course. , He (dlplomatlcally)-Yes, worth a mil lion other girls. i She (rapturously) Oh, Jack I Truth, ' ELECTED ft EC I Chopped Potatoes Fried. Chop cold boiled potatoes end 'season thsm with a little pepper. - Fry a slice or two cf pork erlsp in a spider, than take out and put In the potato and brown it. i Vcvset Pudding. Five eas. beiten Sera rately, one coffee cup of white sugar, four tablespoonfuls of cornstarch dissolved In a little cold milk, added to the yolks. Boll In three pints of milk, and-pour In the yolks while boiling. Remove from the fire when It has become quite thick and flavor to taste. Pour Into a' baking dUh, beat the whites of the eggs to asuu torexa wall a half-cup of while sugar, than pour over the top of the pudding. Keturn r;th oven until it is slightly crown. Klce and Cheese Croquettes.-Twe ups of oomI, soft-boiled Hoe, one oup of grated cheese, pepper and salt, form Into lltus cakes, Oip in beaten egg, roll In cracker crumbs and fry net butter to a light brown. Mock Cream Toast. Melt two ounces of butter' and' rub In one large teaspoonful of flour. Pour one and one-half pints of hot milk over the butter and flour. Re turn to the stove. Beat two ggs light and turn the hot milk over the eggs and beat a few mnlutes; strain the cream through a fine hair sieve. Dip the toast and send hot to the table In a gravy-bowl, the cream not taken up by the toast Roll Coffee Cake. Two cups of bread dough when ready for the baking pans, four scant tablespoonsful of butter, two of sugar, the white of one egg beaten, a saltapoonful of soda, dissolved In a little water, and one-halt teaspoonful of ground cinnamon. Mix and roll out one-quarter of an Inch thick and spread with a paste made by stirring two-thirds of a cup of sugar into one well-beaten egg. Roll up like Jelly-cake, cut transversely Into pieces one inch thick. Sot on end close together in shallow tins. When very light bake In a rather quick oven. They are excellent warm or cold. Nut Cream. Put one pint of milk In a saucepan over the fire. - Moisten two table spoonfuls of of oornstaroh In a little cold milk; add to hot milk; cook until thick; add four tablespoonfuls sugar and a tea spoonful of rose water and pour It Into the center of six breakfast plates. Cover the top with chopped almonds, and put one drop of orange blossom water on each. When cold serve. Molded Farlna.-u?ut one pint of boiling water In a saucepan, add half-teaapoonful salt, then stir In sufficient dry farina to make a thin gruel. Cook slowly twenty minutes. Turn Into small molds and stand out to cool. Serve cold with fruit and milk or cream. Very nice garnished with strawberries and whipped ' cream, and served with powdered sugar. Frlzsled Beef with Horseradish. Take half a pound of smoked beef, cut it in thin shavings. If you buy the beef shaved remove all the tat and stringy parts and pick up the beef in small pieces. Put one tablespoon ful of butter Into a small frying pan when hot, add the beef and cook four or five minutes, stirring constantly with a knife. Sot the beef over the teakettle, where it will keep warm, while you make the following sauce: Put one tablespoon ful of butter Into a small saucepan; when hot add one tablespoonful of flour and stir quickly until It Is well mixed. Be careful not to brown It. Add gradually, a cup of warm milk, 'stirring it constantly until smooth and free from lumps. Then add a teaspoonful of pickled horseradish, thor oughly drained from the vinegar, half a saltspoc-nful of sugar and a dash of ca yenne pepper, and, If you like, half a salt spoonful of made mustard. Let the sauce cook slowly ten minutes, add the beef and serve at once. The beef ought, to make It suit enough, but It Is better to taste it af ter adding the beef, when more salt can be added If desired. A Veal Pot-pie with Dumplings. Take a scrag of breast neck of veal and cut it into thin slices ,an inch thick. Fry out several slices of salt pork In a kettle. Re move the pork, flour the veal and brown it on both sides In the fat. Add hot water Just enough to cover the meat. Let It simmer about half an hour,, then season It with pepper and salt and dredge in a little flour. Let It cook gently till tender. Dumplings Ona cup of flour, one even tea spoonul of baking powder,' half a tea spoonful of salt and sweet milk to make a batter stiff enough to drop from a spoon. Drop by the spoonfuilnto tlie boiling stew. Cover closely to keep in the steam, and cook fifteen minutes without lifting the cover. Take out the dumplings, put the meat Into the center of a hot platter and the dumplings around the edge. -Cradled Eggs. For cradled eggs mln?e very fine soma cold chicken, turkey or duck, and add some melted butter, pep per, salt, chopped parsley and two beatun eggs; moisten with some stock put In a saucepan, and place over a Are and cook about eight minutes; turn on a hot platter and make It smooth across the top, form a ridge all around, and build a fence of tri angular pieces of toast on the outside; have ready and place in this meat bed is many poached or drotDed eggs as it will hold; garnish with parsley at each end of tne platter. A NEW PERIL:" " " "Yes," sold . little Jim to his juvenile menu, "i in goin ter run away from home.'. ' "And fight Indians?" -"I don't know about ' that. But I'm goln' to get away from wbot's comln'. I've had paw s trousers cut down to fit me. an' never found fault. But since maw got a wneei anu is wearin -bloomers, i n takln no more chances." Washington Star, HEALTH HINTS1:' " " For the cure of catarrhal affections there Is no medicine equal to salt 'water and salt water baths. To prevent the hair from falling out It Is a good plan to comb It dry. Wash It twice a month with warm water and oas- tile soap. Brush It carefully twice a day, at least fifty strokes each time. Many doctors now prescribe creosote, or oil of smoke, made by burning the wood of the eucalptus tree, as a preventive of disease. In the forest of resinous trees the air Is filled with the odors which Come from decomposition of slow burning. Thus the great Dismal swamp of North Caro lina, though filled with stagnant water, Is remarkably free from diseases that owe their origin to miasma and malaria. In cases of sickness It Is a help, .to guard against Infection, to burn small pieces of resinous wood and allow Its smoke to mix with the atmosphere in the house. Dr. H. M. Biggs says In the Journal of Hygiene: "A person suffering from pul monary consumption may be absolutely free of danger to his most Intimate asso ciates or his Immediate surroundings, If oniy tne sputum is (imposed or with scru pulous care. The sputum, and the sputum alone. In some way Is the source of dan ger, and common sense, good sanitation. humanity and even tho requirements of simple cleanlinets demand that this should be destroyed or rendered harmless." An English army surgeon has found that the best way to treat blisters on the feet Is to Insert the point of a needle or other puncturing Instrument In the sound skin about an eighth of an Inch beyond the edge of the blister. Then pass the needle horizontally into tne Diister ana ir raised the Mould will run out beneath. When the raised outer skin qnly Is pricked It is apt to be sore and troublesome. After the liquid has disappeared flatten the blister and cover it. with absorbent cotton or something equally soft. Persons who have to be on their feet much of the time or those obliged to walk great deal will find It a relief to change shoes every other qay and stockings each morning, . . , CHANGED CONDITIONS: Wlllle-'Paw, what does the paper mean by talking of the "softer sex?" Mr Mllligan When- I was your age It meant the women, but thev have changed so nowadays that I guess It means the dudes. Cincinnati Enquirer. II II II HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS: ' ' To remove the odor of parafflne from sf tin vessel wash it ' thoroughly with vinegar. ' An almost Invisible cement for medlng glass Is mado'of Isinglass boiled In spirits of wine. -To preserve old furniture that Is becom ing worm eaten pour a little carbolic oil on to It, and rub well In. This will Im prove Its appearance. .' Chloroform will remove grease or paint from the carpet. When a material has Deen stainea ana ammonia is used to clean It the color sometimes appears destroyed. The application of chloroform will restore mis. Bread destroys the smell of onions and if water with a piece of bread In It be boiled In a nan smelling of onions It will thoroughly clean It. The water should be allowed to noil tor about an hour, then be emptied out, and the pan well dried. To-cleanse glass bottles from oil put a few ashes In each bottle and stand them In cold water, which bring gradually to the boll; let them boll for one hour, and then stand In the water until oold. Wash the bottles with soapsuds and rinse with .Insn WBtt. To destroy mice Oil a bucket With water ana scatter; oaia over tne top so mat tne water la quite hidden. Then put the bucket near a table or chslr. from which the mice can Jump Into It.. They will be attracted py tne oats, jump into tne water and be drowned. - I ; -' ' - II 'II II r :.'!, ' ' ONE OBJECTION: , . , "Why don't you marry -that girl? (she Is a' real pearl.'.' "Ah; ye: but I don't Ilk the mother of pearl. -Chicago Inter V il IMI LEAKS IN THE KITCHEN: . - Scraps of meat are thrown away.' ' '' ' Brooms and mops are not-hung dp. ' : Cold potatoes, are left to sour and spoil. Lights are left burning whetr not In use. Vinegar and sauce are left (Standing in Dish towels art used j-t ilih cloths, '; - - 'V';-', ''..f ;" 'v' napkins for dish -towels, and towels for noiqers. Silver spoons are used for scraping ket tles. ,.-.",,'.. The tec canister and coffee box are left pen.-' ' " ' -Soap it left to dissolve add waste in water. Apples -are left. to decay for want of sorting. - Good new brooms are used In scrubbing bare floors. . . Woodenware Is left unscalded and' left to' warp and crack. Dried fruits -are not looked after and they become wormy. Pickles are left to spoil by the leaking out or evaporation of the vinegar. Pork spoils for-want-of salt, and beef because the brine needs scalding. More coal la 'used than necessary by not closing dampers when the fire Is not used. 'Bones of meat and 'the carcasses of tur-' key are left to be thrown out when they could be used In making good soup. ' In cooking- meats the water is thrown out without removing the grease, or the grease from the dripping pan is thrown away. .. , ;. . .. These may seem small leaks, but in the aggregate their loss is considerable. Hang the list up near tan 1'. tchen sink and look at It every now and again so you won't forgot It. Plttsbu-g limes. ONLY-A SERVAN There are occasional displays of blissful Ignorance even on the part of dwellers In the Harlem district, as the following Inci dent witnesseth: A happy pair at leost, If beaming countenances went for any thingwere having the nuptial knot tied at church In the working class part of the district, when the officiating clergyman, addressing the bride asked her If she was a spinster. The young woman was some what mystified by the question, and dis cretely observed silence. A blushing bridesmaid at hor elbow, more ready of speech, volunteered the Information readi ly, remarking: "Oh, dear no, sir; she's a domestic servant." New York Journal. PRAIRIE FARMING. Mr. Richmond Describes the agriculture Methods Which Are in Voguo on the Gront Plains of the Far West. Written for The Tribune. . .' The cultivation of the soil In prairie country la In some of Its processes very different from the methods pursued elsewhere. The farmers use two tech nical terms, known as breaking and back-setting. The virgin -oil Is usual ly free from roots, vines or other ob structions, and Is turned over like a roll of ribbon from one end of a field of several miles to the other, , a fact, which we Eastern people, who are ac oostumed - to plow among etones, stumps and roots, can scarcely grasp. The sod 'thus turned is so knit together by the sturdy rootlets of the rank prairie grass that a clod of large. size will not fall apart even when suspend ed In midair. To break or plow this mat they-use a peculiarly constructed machine called "breakers," as no . or dinary plow could endure the strain. They cut the mat at the width of the furrow, and. also underneath the sod at tbe thickness desired. . Usually three horaes abreast are em ployed with -a-tihln steel circular 'coult er, called "rolling coulter." This is sharpened a few inches above the point of the plough. . A furrow Is broken sixteen "Inches wide by three' inches thick, and the sod, as a rule, is com pletely reversed or turned over. Each team 'Is expected to break plxteen miles of cod, sixteen Inches wide and say three Inches 'thick for a day's work. As many as one hundred teams are used at one time. In line on the "Bon anza farms" an interesting sight. By breaking - the sod only three Inches thick, .the roots of the grasses under the action of .heat and moisture rap Idly decay. : .' Cost of Breaking the Sod. The "breaking season" begins May 1, and ends .July 1, and costs about $2.75 per a ore. This includes labor. Imple ments and supplies.- But the srround once broken Is ready for continued cul tivation, and Is regarded as having added the. cost of the work to Its per manent value. The broken land is now with propriety termed a farm. "Back eet'ting" begins about July 1. Just after breaking Is finished, or after tlhe grass becomes .too high, or the eod too dry, ' to continue breaking with profit. Thla process consists In follow ing the furrows of the breaking and turning the sod back with about three Inches of .soil. Each plow worked by two horeee will "'back set" about two and a half acres per day, turning fur rows the wtdVJh'Of the sod.' Next comes cross-plowing, h!ch entered upon as soon as threshing is over or during threshing season.- A team will accom plish as much cross-plowing In a day as was done In back stilting 'two nnd a 'half acVes at a cost of $1.50 per aore Seeding machines will sow twelve acres' a 'day. PlftyJtwo quarts of clean, "Scotch Fyfe" seed wheat, are used to the acre, at a cort of seventy-five cents for mowing. - Following the sowing, a pair of harrows fallow each eeedor, going over tihe ground from one to five times, as is needed to cover the teed evenly. ' . Western Harvest Mothods. ". . Harvesting commences about Aug, 1. This process Is partlcualarly Inter esting. For- every . 160 acres, a .self binding harvester. With one driver and two shockers, Is required. The work on a wheat - field only occupies a few weeks In a year. After . the plowing and. seeding are flnltihed, the farmer can look on and see nature grow and ripen his crop until the harvest time comes, and by 'the end of August the year's work is practically done.. Ex pensive . farm building are not re quired for the grain may be threshed In the field and. hauled Immediately to the -meairtst Tuillroad. station. Very little fencing is needed on a wheat farm. Only enough of wire fence Is put around the panture lot to secwe the cattle. The, outlay .Is light 'for, the country Is open and ready for the plow, 'and the settler makes a crop the first year, and. Is tolerably Independent from thetftartl. . The wheat of .North Dakota has no equal for milling purposea.. It Is pre ferred by the great millers of 'Min neapolis and: Duluth to any other va riety, being, as they cay. adapted to the modern methods of making flour. Tt is raised from he hardy Scotch Fyfe seed," Which brings from ten -to. fifteen cents per bushel over the soft varieties. - The extent of the wheat fields of the Northwert cannot now 'be estimated, nor its future productiveness foreseen. It Includes nearly the whole of North and- South- Dakota, east of the. Mis souri river, and a considerable portion of the western half. ''The rich lands of he Red -River valley of the north, and the vast rolling plains' of Dakota and the. Pacific Northwest must ulti mately be 'the permanent wheat fields of he continent. J. E. (Richmond. '' , SCIENCE RESPONSIBLE. ' From the London Truth. - Here Is an authorised dictionary of dis content) -,' ' v What Is creation? A failure. . ' What Is life? A bore. . : What Is man? A fraud. What Is woman? Both sr fraud and a bore. What Is beauty? A deception, j What Is love? A disease. '.-'... What is marriage? . A mistake. ,-. ! What Is a wife? A trial. What Is a child? A nuisance, . What is the devil? A fable. . What is good? Hypocrisy. r What Is evil? Detection, j What Is wisdom? Selfllshness. What Is happiness? A delusion;. t ' What is friendship? Humbug. . , ' . What is generosity? imbecility. - What Is money? .Everything. , , ' And what is everything? Nothing. , - Were we perhaps not happier when we were monkeys? ''' ; . ' . . , ' ' j-, ' Be Hot Deceived. , ! The experience of the Speer N. J. .Wine Co. after a continuous career of more than' forty; years In Grape .Culture and Wine making has resulted In the produc tion of Grape Brandy that , rivals ,Hen nessy and Martell of Cognac. A fine, dellr cats fifteen year q'd Grape Brandy Is rare; their Climax y of MM Is becoming celebrates - Europeans who apre elate a pure ... Drugti lalli,, .',"'-.:, -'.',' ..'. ' ' S : On the "'Other Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the Queen of the London Stage Her Charming Home Life. London,' Oct. . The most talked-of woman on the English stage today Is Mrs. Patrick Campbell. She Is known to her calleagues as "Mrs. Pat," but this familiar appellation Is by no means Indicative, that they feel for-her the smallest degree of that - familiarity which breeds contempt On the contra ry, the secret ' of her .Influence In the theatrical profession and outside of It lies largely In the reserve, the aloof ness, of her social methods. She - Is rarely seen In fashionable . drawing rooms or driving In Rotten Row. She does not stoop to any of the vulgar tricks, by which the common herd of public entertainers seek to distend reputation.' She lives two lives the life of the footlights and the life of her home. These existences never overlap when she can prevent lt. I have often heard 1t said that Mrs. Patrick Campbell, at home In Ashley Gardens. Is as unlike the Mrs. Patrick Campbell of the stage as one could weH .Imagine. A recent op portunity was given me to make a per sonal tesfof the difference. '. She Is Strikingly Unconventional. ' What struck me most forcibly about her is her unconventionally. This trait for Mrs. Campbell's unconven tlonallty ls something more than a mannerism Is as pronounced in her as In -Bernhardt, Eleonora Duse, or Ellen Terry. It Is this, more than any other trait, which piques the curiosity of the student of her character. The first question asked as to .an actress is the one George Elliot asked as to Gwendo len Harleth In "Daniel-Deron'da": - "Is she or Is Bhe not 'beautiful, and what Is the secret of the dynamite power of "her glance?" If we are to take the opinion of women newspaper writers as final, 'Mrs. Campbell Is not beautiful. Every body knows that a plain woman Is In variably flattered' In a photograph, while a pretty woman la belied. Some such odd perversity controls the repu tation of actresses for personal beauty. When Mrs, Campbell burst upon Lon don as Paula In "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray" the critics referred to her as "gifted," "fascinating," "bewilder ing," but never as beautlful. . lias a Pistnresquo Beauty. Yet- beautiful, she undoubtedly is in the picturesque sense. . 'How old is she? Well as Paula Tanqueray or Ag ness Ebbsmlth, you might give her 30 years, as Kate Cloud 20, as Juliet Capu let 17 from the last row In the Lyce um pit. But her exact age is 28 years and 7 months. You would think her ten years younger than that could you see her tearing around her rooms In chase of a pup that rejoices in the name of "Humperdincka" or romping like a child 'herself with . her two children, "Beo" and Stella, Interesting young sters, who regard her as their big sis ter, or rallying in her own gay fash Ion the somewhat grave gentleman of perhaps 35, whom she calls "Pat" and acknowlegdea as lord and master. Lips red with vigorous health, coal black eyes and hair as dark as ebony, complexion pale and smooth as polished Ivory, figure tall, lithe and slender, with long clinging arms, a throat that Marie Antoinette might have envied and a hand which literally speaks these are some of the physical characteristics of a woman whose remarkable Individual ity has been for three years the talk of London, .- '. ' . She Affects Aesthetic Draperies. She affects aesthetic draperleH a'bout the house and on her person. With an innate love of beautiful things, she does not neglect old laces. A piece of Vene tian point, more often than not, Is wound about her neck or worn straight across her' bodice. Of Jewelry she Is very fond not with the usual mania of aft actress or society datne,. however, for diamonds, for thebr flash and dis play. Her tarte runs to turquoises and emeralds. She dotes' on a certain clus ter of greenyrblue. turquoises In a green antique setting. On slender chain around her neck she wears a huge uncut emerald night and day. ;'At home or at the thea ter, there Is one chain she wears as an amulet a row of strange looking stones, of various colors, strung on a cord of gold. I do not know whether she Is the vic tim of any of the. traditional super stitions of the stage, but this particular amulet 1s worn "for luck." She has a faddist's weakness for clasps. Several In her collection are of wonderfully In tricate workmanship. Her intimate friends who know her fondness for an tique patterns, keep her well supplied. As to her style of dressing It needs a woman to deal with that .but even to the rr.'ascullne comprehension - this at least la plarn. IMrs. Campbell's private gowns are as unconventional as her stage costumes. The""so-caIIed tailor made dress amd the fashionable skirts of the period are not to be found In her wardrobe. They would not be becoming- to her fourteenth century person ality. . 1 In an Atmosphere of Art and Letters. Mrs. Campbell's home In Ashley Oar dens is exactly what such a woman would make it. - She lives in an atmos phere of 'art and letters, with her hus band and children, her books and pic tures and mucflc, her birds and dogs. Mr. Campbell Is his wife's most ardent admirer which means something in these d'ays In the artistic world of Lon don and thiy "Indulge llri. the felicity of unbounded domesticity." He super intends. her business arrangements and derives am adequate Income on his own account from a salaried position In the city atxl from literary work. "Show me a woman's room." said some one, "and I will tell you what she Is." There Is force In the observation. Judge IMrs Ompbell by her rooms and you will pronounce her In. advance a cultivated and Interesting woman. The pictures on her walls are 'for the most part photographs of Burne-Jones and Watts' paintings. For both these cele brated artists she feels the liveliest ad miration. Her eye flashes with enthus iasm as H resits upon ."The Golden Stair case" or "Love Among the Ruins" or "Ganymede." Watts' mournful,, mys tical "Ophelia!" i her favorite. It stands upon the piano, an Instrument, by the way, which she plays with no little skill and at whloh she sometimes accompan ies herself when alofie or with her fam ily, In singing the simply old English :iUMll!UG'"St. - MTJNYOITS Rhramsthira-.Cara nevci falls to relieve in three hours and cart lu three davs. . ' . t MUNYOS'S Dyspepsia Cure is guar nnteed to correct constipation and cure oil forms of indigestion, and stomach trouble. '' - MUNYOFS. Catarrh Cure soothes tnd henls the afflicted parts and restores them W health. No failure; a cure guaranteed, MUNYOK'S Kidney Cure speedily cures bains in the back, loins or groins and all forms of kidney disease. . . , , MUNYOJi'8 Nerve Cora cures nervous. bhs and builds up the system. . - MUNYON'S VitslUer imparts new life, restores, lost powers to weak and debilita ted men. Price $1.00. ., : r No matter what the dlkesse it or how many doctors have tailed to cure you, ask your druggist for a SS-etnt vial of one of. Monyen's Cures, snd If you are not tape, fltedyootaooey wlUberefuaded, Side. ballads to the soul of a woman with an Introspective tempeiiament. Her voice Is a contralto. Among -her treasures are a fantastic portrait of herself by Phil Burne-Jones and a ca'iUcature of Mr. Flnero hi col ored chalks, the work of Max Beerbohm, the clever, brother of Beerbohm Tree, who accompanied the actor on his re cent tour In the United State. An Inveterate Keador of Emerson. Her book shelves tell the same story of good taste and good Judgment. "Do you And much time to read, (Mrs. Camp bell r "Oh, yes," was the reply, "or I make it. You see I suffer greatly, per sistently, from Insomnia. So I am apt to do most of my reading at night. I turn on the electric light and read, read, read for hours, books of every sort, plays, novels, poetry and Emer son. Emerson Is my favorite prose au thor. I have read everything he has left In published form again and again, and could repeat you whole, pages. I never tire of Emerson." A closer glance at the library showed the owner's fondness for editions. Her favorite poems and prose authors ap peared there In all sorts of bindings. Here, too, was the first copy of "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray," which Plnero gave her; It Is literally covered with notes 'In her own handwriting. Another tone of curious interest was gift from Cobden Senderson a volume In white vellum, etenclled In gold, oound by him self. ' - . It Is while she talks of these things and others near her heart that one realizes the peculiarly caressing quality in her voice,, which charms the. auditor In her gentler moods upon the stage. She has then the light, spontaneous laugh of a child. Her Theatrical Career, -- Her theatrical career has not been a long one. Pour years ago she was an amateur. Her appearance In private theatricals at Wilton In the. role of Rosalind, was the flrBt occasion, on which she attracted attention. London saw her first in Adelphlan melodrama, about ifour years ago. It was her im personation of Paula, In "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray," in the spring of 1893, which placed her 4n the front rank of modern actresses. . Her conception dif fered radically .from Mrs. Kendal's she made (Paula Tanqueray a thorough ly lovable womam, refined and seductive In every movement and tone. The mor alists took sharp exception to this in teirpretatilon; they charged the actress with painting a "woman with & past" In too attractive colors. ' It was Mrs. Kendal's ,deslre to avoid a elmllar criti cism which led her to padnt Paula as essentially coarse. IMrs. Campbell has since "created" the roles of Kate Cloud In "John-a- Dreams" and Agnes Ebbsmlth In "Tha Notorious Mrs, Ebbrmlth." Her latest impersonation is of Juliet, which she Is now playing to Forbes Robertson's Romeo at the Lyceum. With her dusky hair and '.moonlight eyes, eyes that haunt the spectator, and. withal, with YuiT thoroughly Italian "feeling," she looks the part of the . daughter of the Capulets. however much oplnlonsmay dilff er as to the merit of her reading of Shakespeare. Sho Will Play Tcss. Later on she will play the heroine of Thomas Hardy's "Tcss of the d'Ur bervllles," a, raft peculiarly suited to her. Just now her fancy is much taken by "The Pelleas t Mellsande" of Maet erlinck, which Is being translated for her by that accomplished scholar, John Mackall. She ought to 'be a success In the role of 'the mystic heroine. Mrs Campbell has had extraordinary praise and extraordinary oensure. By some cil.tics rhe Is regarded, like Irv ing, as a.bove criticism; 'by others as, like Irving, open to it at every move. She seems quite unaffected by the blame or commiseration of critics. Bhe appears satisfied with the fact that she magnetizes the public; If she has a mental weakness it is perhaps that she takes herself too se riously. Time will probably, remove this, end ,with it a - certain youthful austerity arising from tt. In the field of her art sha betrays occasionally a giant of prejudice. But it is impossible not to admire her devotion to her Ideals, If her voiloe does not fall her It re quires constant watching a very bril liant future is assured to Stella Oamp- nen. . - o) AD. 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