THE WOOL - fflhete ha thou been In the wind sad "Gathering wool on a far plain. "Four shepherd keep those flock afar Ja puture where no hedgerow are. "They give no tithe, they take no hire, They warm their hand at no man't (ire. "Wlien one ha driven the flock all day, At no for fold they make their tay. DULLOO OSOAFt (gro-tfECAUSE he ctme from In- K 5 dla anu because our Knowi- BS edg. of tlmt far-away land 9 n-na virv little. And we MixXXXjl peopiea it wuo tne men nml beast cr sir. Kipunjs stones, we called him Dulloo. Dtilloo seemed to be v. good Indian name, oud In the general topsyturvy of conditions and things lu the settle ments at Tientsin ihat summer It mat tered very little whether names or clothes or r.uythlng else fitted their wearer. He was attached to p. teglment of Indian troors, one of those strange ag gregations of Sklhs, Patbans. Afghans, Punjabis, it.-.jputs and even Bengalis, which, although they bore differentiat ing names, pud could be told apart by their otllcers. end the country -wise among their observers, were perforce lumped i d In one class by the Inex perienced American soldiers, and do nominated "them Sykes," partly In amazement, partly lu amusement, part ly in contempt the foolish contempt so many me- feel for what Is strange and not understood. To Vncle Sam's fighting nephews any one of the tail, thin, spindle slinnke.l, grlzzle-whlsicored and turban covered soldiers of the WUte Empress was a "Syke," and Dulloo and all his kind were simply "thera Syke mules." Any one cf the Missouri six-footers who hauled the heavy American escort wagons about as easil a if they were tl.o little red wagons of the mud-pie bakers would have made almost as much In weight and surely ' did as much In .'ork as Dulloo and his whole team. Undoubtedly In appearance Dulloo was just a p.aln mule, of the small Indian b.eed. Ills color was a dingy brown. It locked as if there once might have been eleme.v.s of bright ness In It which bad long ago faded away under the flfrce onslaught of his native sun. His mane was duly ronehec"; but his tail, luttead of being cropped Hue n paint-brush, the inalien able and distinguishing desoratlve feat ure ef flic mule the world over, was bushy, with loug, coarse hairs. Moreover, the light, sun-dried brown of his thin little legs was striped at regular Intervals with the broad dark bauds that suggested irresistibly some relationship to the zebra. He had soft, contemplative, blue-brown eyes, lu which the traditional mule patience mingled with a wisdom as subtle as the East whore ho was horn. But even to the casual observer Dul loo was something more than simply one of his class. To he sure, during the first two weeks of my acquaint ance with him I saw nothing extraordi nary about him except the spectacular part he played the day I first beheld him, when, chained to Ills two team mutes, and loaded with a bundle of forage twice his own bulk, atop of which his driver sat under the shade of a huge, umbrella, he led the little procession through the tangled maze of soldiers, equipment and camps. Grlm-vlsaged war dealt bitterly with the settlements at Tientsin In those days. The Chinese realized that their opportunity lay lu surrounding the harassed allies before help could come up the tortuous river; and they strove to win the settlements. But through shell-fire and "sniping" alike, morning and afternoon, calmy in different to his disturbing surround Ings, Dulloo led his team mates at the bead of the little column that passed through the Taku gate In the mud wall and plodded out Into the .green country after the forage that wus to be the salvation not only of us, but of the sorely beset legations In rekln. Pekln! It was very far away from us then, and sometimes we were In' dined to wonder a little if we should ever got there. For between us and that dearly desired goal there stretched nearly a hundred terrible miles, and right In our front lay the great walled city of Tientsin, swarming with Its thousands of trained soldiers of the Imperial a:niles and Its many more thousands of Boxers. Also it had huge warehouses full of the best rifles the Germans and the Austrian could nia'te, inexhaustible supplies of ammu nltiou aud guns. Flr.it, then, we must take Tientsin. It was eleven o'clock of a June night wbeu I first passed through streets . here fires burned unheeded on both sides and reached headquarters. "To-morrow afternoon," said the ma Jor, "we are going to take the Walled City. Will you come?" But r l through early July the al lies we e still preparing to take the Walled City, and day by day, as the preparations went on, we saw from our house near the mud wall Dulloo setting .orth after forage, vlth a man on l is tncl:. There came at last an evening when the'.najor sali agalu, "To-morrow we take the Walled City," and this time uis prophocy wa true. The curtains of ulsht had hardly parteu cnougu ror dawn to peep turouth when the fearful work began, As usual, the Chinese commenced It Their fire had hardly bezun before all along our lino the batteries lifted tbelr hoarse voices lu auswerlug challenge, a tie column formed to march out to tho direct attack on the great walls of the Chinese citadel. Simply and iwitu few words the mea took Hielr places. I'bfc occaslo lal orders came clear, hut lu lowered tone. The special correspondent and I stood on the mud wall by our bouse and watched the preparations, finally the men uc,c forward. Tl.ree columns British, Japanese and American swung ci't through toe grave-dotted GATHERER. "For one eome hot-foot o'er the plain And drive them hurrying bank again. "Though the yield ahould fill the world'i 1 wain full. Never to market come the wool. "They cat it all, those wastrel herds, To naked star and creaming bird. "It make no rug nor coat of friete;' It make men shroud in stormy sens." C. Fox Smith, in the Academy. D. S. 0. KINQ DAVIS. level plain, toward the point In the mud wall whence tbe main Attack was to be delivered. And as they filed away, there -was Dulloo. Now he was neither forage gatherer nor water-carrier. Instead of being chained to two team mates, with but one dr'ver for th; three, he marched alone, with two men to guard the precious load he bore. Lashed to the light pack-saddle, one on each side, were two cases of ammunition. Dul loo was going Into the fight. The special correspondent and I turned up along the mud wnll to come in ahead of tbe columns again at the western point of concentration. Up to this time the morning quiet had only been punctuited, as It were, by the slow firing of the gum. But now, as the head of the marching col umn came within range of tbe Mann llchers, tha parapet of the city wall iroke into a rattling roar. A sheet of tlame flickered along Its front. Then the word was given and our attack was delivered. Japanese, Bru sh and Americans went In together. Gaily they trotted through the gate of the mud wall, the swords of their officers flashing in the sunlight. Once In the open, the long I'ncs of skirmish ers spread out, and then all together they went forward. Instantly it was as If a new Chinese army had re-enforced the thousands al ready behind the parapet. The fire that bad swept the field before was doubled and quadrupled. The special cor respondent and I, looking over the top of the mud wall and watching the magnificent bravery of the advance, saw men fail In appalling numbers, al though the line went steadily forward. The generals thought they could take tbe city by direct assault, and tbelr plan of attack was the result of that belief. They had agreed with the Rus sians, whose work was on the east. to have their flags holste. on the city walls by eleven o'clock thtt morning. It was a bold, daring plan, with lit tle to commend it besides its audacity, but urged by the Japanese, because they knew their old enemy could least successfully resist such a move. But Just when the line should have reached the crest of the attack, it fal tered and stopped. There It hung for an hour, and then men began to strag gle back from tbe front with tales of bitter losses, raging at the dreadful folly of assaulting In such fashion an impregnable position. They delivered their messages for help and went hack to their work. Ite- enforcements went In, one company, then another, then a third. Soon all were gone, and there were hardly men enough behind the mud wall to take care of the field-hospitals established there, which were filling up with des perate rapidity. Then came a call from some of the British for more ammunition. There was a laconic command to a non-com missioned officer of one of the native regiments, and he turned to the mules huddled close In behind the wall, out of danger, with their valuable loads, He was a fine, upstanding Patban, his huge grizzled beard curled back of his ears, and a great buff turban topping his tall figure. With his hand on the mule s bridle, and one of Ms men following on each flank, be walked through the gate and out on tbe hard yellow road, where the bullets spat tered so thickly it seemed not a spar row could live. All t"i dignity of his fighting race was In his bearing, and no contemptible Chinese should hurry his gait. ' ' They walked steadily through the ball of bullets that fell round them, and it made us wonder, matching them from tho top of the wall, of what stuff their hearts were made, Fifty yards in the opi they went unharmed. Tbe Chinese had their range, and It seemed as if every mm on the parapet was firing at them. An other fifty yards then the man at the left tb.ew up his hands, staggered for ward n ttep or two, aud went down at the roadside. His comrades seemed not to know that he was gone. They did not even look round, but went ahead lu the old steady way. Twenty yards more they made, and the man at the right was hit. He fell full length In tbe road, but the "non-com" went forward with the mule. The ammunition was going in. It was an order, that was all. He had almost reached the cover of a cluster of mud huts beside the road; about half his distance had been cov ered, when we suw him waver and stop. Then he started on, took a single step, and pitched forward, shot, surely, through tbe heart. The mule, all its attendants gone, was still unhurt. It looked inquiring ly round, as if wondering what had bappeuec', then started on up the road. It cleared the group of mud huts aud came out In the open beyond them. Suddenly we saw it throw up its head, brace its leg outward, sway from side to side, and fall In a heap. The ammunition had not gone in. Some one must try again. They chose a non-commissioned of ficer of tbe Wel-hal-wel regiment, a smooth-faced, square-jawed, fine-eyed South of England man. He had won the notice of half the field that morn ing by bis steady bearing, and wo felt when we saw him that if any man could take the ammunition in be was tbe one. Tbey gave him two men of bis own regiment and Dulloo, He took tbe leading-strap of oar wise little friend In bis band, and with a sharp call to bis men. went through tbe gate and out into the open on tbe run. The Chinese teemed to bare waiting in expectation of bis coming. - Tbey filled the road with bullets, and al though we saw that all along our line the fire had Increased to terrible rap idity to check the Chinese until the ammunition came, wo knew the men were doomed. They got tbe first one almost at the beginning. Uis legs doubled under him and he went down with his arms crossed In front of his face, and lay quite still in the road. The Englishman. was running swift ly, and Dulloo trotted easily along, un disturbed by spit of bullat or scream of chell. All the Chinese in Tientsin were shooting at them. The Englishman turned off tbe roaJ to go across to bis own men at tbe right. By tbe first ditch the second man went down, and the Englishman was hit himself. It must have been In the shoulder, for it spun htm quite round. But he gathered himself to gether and went on at a smart trot. Dulloo followed. He sremed to know all about It and understood just wby there was need to hurry. rerhaps he know, too, that even af ter the ammunition had been delivered up to the men there In the ditch, there would be no cover that he could take. But ue Just kept his head down and his ears forward, and trotted along as fast as he could. Can von realize how It felt to He behind the nud wall and watch that? Can you understand how we prayed for man and beast? They were al most at the goal. Surely thj man would win. He could uct be knocked down now. But ie was. It took him apparent ly straight In te head, through the brim of his helmet, for tbe big sun guard flew off in front of him as his hands wore thrust forward, and he went down on bit; face. Oi'ly Dulloo was left. The men stood up In tbelr ditch fltty yards ahead of him and waved the.r arms, and we knew they were calling to him. Not a step did he falter, eveu when the guiding hand left his lead-strap dan gling between his feet. At the same steady trot he went ahead. He could hear the men telling him he was a good mule and should have a D. f . O. Distinguished Service Order all his own; ana tnen tue ciuneso got mm. One step he took, and was all right; the tiext he was down on his knees and rolling over. But his work was done, the ammu nition was delivered. It was only a few steps to the line from where hn fell, and almost before he was down the men hud run out to him, uulashed the boxes, and were rushing back to the cover of their little ditch. Surely Dulloo had earned the D. S. O. Youth's Companion. Knrly Career of Charles T. Yerkea, I mean to begin with the career and personality of the late Charles T. Yerkes. For about fifteen years he was the largest and most conspicuous figure in Chicago traction matters, aud when he went away with his heavy sack of loot he left a tradltloli that re mains, to this day, an Important factor In the situation. He . came to Chicago In the early eighties, from Philadelphia, where he had a brief though romantic career, He had flourished there during the regime of the gas ring, had been the friend and associate of Elkins and Wldencr, had finally made a disastrous failure In speculation, felt the bite of the law and gone to prison. This last act, to my belief, was more to his credit than otherwise. He owed the city money and refused to make It a preferred creditor, and under a statute, this refusal became a technical embez zlement. It was for the protection of tils other creditors that he refused, and he was almost immediately pardoned. He afterwards cleared the slate by paying all his creditors In full. He was by instinct and by training an .adventurer, but much shrewder, more patient, more intelligent than most of these gentry. He spent his first two years in Chicago lu the bro kerage business, looking around, sizing up with wonderful skill and precision tho men with whom ho must deal. H. K. Webster, in American Maga zine. CrnsU Made Plump Cheek. A young man and his best girl, evi dently from the country, had Just fin ished sitting for their "engagement picture" after a lengthy discussion with the Knight of the Camera as to the best position to assume. After they had gone the photographer made some smiling comment about country patrons In general and added: 'I think the funniest experience I ever hod was with on old lady of sev enty years. She wanted a good-looking picture, because she'd got it Into her head she wasn't going to live long and she wanted all "ier relatives unto her third and fourth cousin to have some thing by which to remember her. She couldn't bring herself to buy a set of false teeth, however, and her mouth fell In woefully without them. "I was despairing of making an at tractive picture of her, when she sud denly produced some crusts of bread from her handbag and stuffed them into her mouth. When Blie'd put lu enough to make her lips and cheeks fill out she explained to me rather thickly, that the crusts would do Just as well as falso teeth. And the strangest thing was that they did do very well, and I got a good picture." New Yorl; rress. Curlou Colueldeuoes. The late Lord Acton for many yrari kept a record of coincidences. A very strange one occurred lu his- own ex perience, A rumor spread that his wife had drowned herself. She had done noth ing of the kind, but It was quite true that a Baroness Acton had drowned herself nt Tegernsee, where Lord and Lady Acton were staying, and had drowned herself under their window. Tbe strangest of all coincidence noted by Lord Acton concerned Sir Ed mund Berry Godfrey, who was mur dered at the bottom of what Is now Primrose Hill, but was then known as Greenberry Hill, In London. Three men were banged for tbe mur der; tbelr names, respectively, were Green, Berry and Hill, San Francisco Is tald to contain the largest families in the world. It boasts of having thirty-nine families each having more than fourteen children, and sixty-five families with more thun eight children each. A LITTLE FRIEND OF TKE ROSE st s. nuts ao. tOJV HE flower -loving Ingpets S.. V are all friends In need: but I 8 the unlioiioyod flowers nl if )t so have their Insect T0OH friends, not agents of fer tilization only, but protectors and champions that fight the battles of those that must depend on the flower stems and leaves and buds to survive, says American Homes und Gardens. But though '.he flowers are voiceless, they toll us with none the less elo quent o what their enemies are and how they suffer by thrm. Ask the rose. The withered, skeletoned leaves proclaim the enml;y of the saw-fly slug: pn ton leaves nnd others folded ove:' tell of the larva t of the golden winged tortricld moth: while canker ous, eaten buds and flowers denounce the rose bug. the nphldes. that crowds tho green stems and loaves of the new er growth and swnrtn all over tbe ten der btlds. Annihilate the aphides upon a dozen Steins of a thrifty bush and keep others off; then let a dozen others go full of the lice, and watch resul j. The num ber and the beauty of tho blossoms will be the answer. Now, Nature gen erally makes a wise effort to strike n proper balance, nnd though we hare heard this deuled concerning the po tato beetle, yet It lo true, more or less. Thus she has furnished several anti dotes for the aphides; If she did not. the little pests would become a nuis ance IcJeed, past nil calculation. This salutary purpose is effected by the suv ernl larvca of the s.vrp..us fly, the lace wlnged fly, the lndybug i ml a number ot very small Il.vmeuopterous para sites. Of these latter the most Inter- ?stiii'T end the most common Is the prct t.v little fly known to the scientists as l'i'iion. which may be called the eo-cooii-mnklng parasite of the aphis. Any one with shi.i-p eyes tuny discover this lit tl 3 friend of the rose nt work, and may follow, with a little care, ts complete life history. At the time when the plant lice are thickest n small Insect resembling a miniature wasp, or nn Ichneumon fly. which It really Is. may be seen mnk ing its way among the fat aphides, moving leisurely nnd with a dignity quite beyond Its size, for K usually is not longer than an eighth of on Inch, It approaches one of the larger nphldes MlMATL'ltK PIG STICKING, AS SEKN TI1KOIGII MAGNIFYING GLASS. The fly of the rose aphis parasite stinging and laving its egg in the body of a rose aphis. The idnmp little plant lice look like hybrids between a verdant gout und n green pig und they get about much like oveiiat swine. Their inactivity permits them to he readily attacked, and their only attempt at defense is in wagging their bodies from side to side, which sometimes for a moment disconcerts the parasite fly. and touches It with its antennae as n means of certain identification, scent far outranking sight In such mutters among Insects. If this were an ant the aphis would respond with a liberal supply of tho coveted honeydew, hut knowing friends from foes It now sllius its body from side to side, quite violently Indeed for such a lethargic creature, and the little fly is pushed aside. Not liking this It moves on to another or smaller aph d with a less vigorous movement, or pausing a mo ment attacks the same aphis again, with perhaps better results. Choosing its position deliberately nnd carefully, with Its slender, stlltllke legs lifting it high, It widely straddles Its victim, its fore legs often resting on tho aphid's buck, Its sleuder body and long anten nae much jostled hy the agitated plant louse. But now the tiy Is not to he dislodged. Its keen, swordlike ovi positor protrudes from itj sheath, and In n monieut Is thrust deep Into tbe back of tbe plant lot.se, nnd Is held for just .mother moment, until an egg, so tiny as to pass through tho slender organ, Is deposited luto the very inte rior anatomy of the rose pest. Then withdrawing, the fly 3traCdles off and proceeds at onco to convert another aphis Into an Incubator, aud so on. until on doubt the egg supply, perhaps fifty or more, becomes exhausted. DEVICE TO AIDJTHE SWIMMER A recent tuveutlou of caniulluii VII bo of interest to tl:oso who delight in swlmmlnp-. It Is un attachment which, belnp worn by a twimmcr, will facilitate his progress lu tho water by affording him an eulr.rgod area with which to push himself forward. In the lllustratlju it Is tuowu attached to the leg of a swlmme., although It can be modified to lit the arms also. Tho operation will be obvious. The device consists of an open rec tangular framework, withlr. which are suspended a series ot light vanes hinged along oue edge of the open framework in such a manner as to be susceptible of setting themselves with the current, of water going through them as tbe legs are drawn forward or bent for tho stroke. During the back stroke or thrust tho vanes will close and form a plane normal to tho movement ot the limb A framework of vanes of this kind 1 supported from each limb of tho swimmer, to which It Is secured by Of courso the aphis so treated does not die at ence, else Nature's plan would miscarry. It 'lives and goes on feeding and maintaining the same stiff and seemingly contented nttltuit for a little while. Meantime the egg hatches a minute, white, mnggot-llke larva, and this at once begins feeding on the soft muscular tissues of Ms THE FAHASITE OF THE HOSE APHIS, MUCH MAGNIFIED. The upper figure is the fly ns seen from above; the colors, black, rufous, red and yellow, have almost a metallic luster, and the delicate, transparent wings reflect a beautiful iridescence. The loner figure is the cocoon of the parasite heneutli the dead, dried and distorted shell of a plant louse, t he inside of which have been eaten by the parasite larva while attaining its growth, alter which it makes the cocoon. host. Some little time Is required for the larva to complete Its growth five or six days during very warm weather, longer when It Is cool. With an In stinct that has ever been a mnrvel to the naturalist tho littlo larva does not touch the digestive orgutu, the vascu lar system of the more Important nerves for a period, thus permitting the aphis to live and feed until the appetite and growth of the parasite warrant it to eat all before' It. Then the aphles dies, of courso, and rapidly becomes only an outer skin, with head and legs attached. For some strange reason the aphis, not long before dying, forsakes Its place unions Its fellows. As If ostra cized for its condition, although Its disease Is hardly catching, It crawls away to one of the larger leaves, fast ens up It lu exile and thus remains. It Is obvious that this benefits the para site; the aphis here Is far less apt to be found and attacked by numerous other enemies that would endanger the life of Its guest. Hut what can In fluence It? It (lepirts from Its habit, for It Is altogether social aud nou uiigiUtory. It remove3 to a less desir able pasture ground. Normally, If dis lodged from the stem and falling on the leaves it crawls back as fast ns Its In dolent legs penult to tho stoir. again. The parasite Is nlono benefited, but it Is out of the world, so to speak; it can not get at Its host's locomotory ap pendages; It is a legless, eyeless crea ture that at best would mako a poor guide If It should get out and take tbe hands or straps, certain portions of tho frame being made buoyant to an ex- Help For the Swimmer. ) .eut suftlcleut to sustulu tbe weight lead. But tbo little thing, as unintelli gent as It looks, maggot-like, bas per haps a irlnd of Its own, as we have seen. Tbe habit Is almost Invariable; tho Victims crawl from their usual places nnd position themselves on the leaves. Out of seventy-one parasitized plant lice I found two on the stem and one on the tip of a thorn, as If It thought a leaf ought to grow oul there, but that was too far gone tc search elsewhere. Upon attaining Its growth the para site larva cuts open tho aphis skin un derneath and squirms part way out, so as to have full swing with Its head end. Then It begins the construction of Its cocoon, made, ns with mogt In sects, of Its saliva, and eventually be coming, after a few hours' work, a silken, parchment-like, bulging, tent shaped affair, upon which the now shrunken and distorted skin of the aphis rests as on a pedestal. The par asite enters the completed cocoon and becomes an Inactive pupa or chrysalis, and lu a few days thereafter. If It is warm, the perfect Insect, the itlny fly, emerges aud takes whig to work more mischief among the rose pests. The Illustrations fully elucidate the facts set forth in the text. They pre sent a wonderful Insight Into a small natural force, not the less masterful because of Its mimic scale. Scientific American. SELF-PLAYING ZITHER. Inventors nre quick to attempt any thing that affords a chance of reward. Why they do not tackle musical In struments Is u query hard to answer, but the fact still remains that prac tically no new musical instruments are patented. Improvements on those al ready lu use are occasionally recorded, one of the most recent being the solf playlng zither, illustrated here. This Is an attachment for zithers or similar stringed Instruments to produce a con tinuous vibration of the strings. Jour- Self-playlng Zither. nnled In the centre and at one end of the zither are rolls to receive a long strip of perforated music. Between the rolls nre a number of holes which connect with a wind bag beneath tho Instrument. Tho passugo of tho roll of music over the holes operates a se ries of pickers, the latter vibrating tho strings. Tho action throughout Is simi lar to that used in pianolas and eollans. Philadelphia Record. Vhnt Is but an Imperfect science which studies a world of effects nnd neglects their cause. of the device lu the water. This con stitutes tho primary element of the attachment, the form and manner of attachment being modified to the re quirements of nrm and leg. To supplement the leg movement with tho Instep action of the foot, tho vane frame Is pivoted to the leg at tachment by a system of parallel links, which link motion Is connectod by a light rod to the too of a sandal or shoe on tho foot. The feet, Instead of act ing merely as paddles, are utilized to Impart considerable muscular power to propel the body forward, the legs being kept merely far enough apart, to avoid striking tbe frames together. Philadelphia Itecord. RmokI of KUrt Vole. Dr. K. W. Scripture, who has been making researches In phonetics under a Smithsonian Institution grant, has secured a gramophone record of tho voice of Eniperor William of Germany. It will be proserved by tho National .Museum at Washington and, of course, will not be used In any public way In the Kaiser's lifetime. tfouseVM Borfnototrif IT Cp Toar Coal Put. Housekeepers frequently find a fllf flculty in using coal dust so as to avoid waste. An excellent way is to place pieces of paper about ten Inches long and about six inches wide, pile coal dust on it, lift carefully 8ud place gently on the fire. The corner of the paper will, of course, catch fire, bul the part under the coal dust will re main, says Home Chat. If left undis turbed this will gradually- burn throngh and Improve the fire, Instead ot caus. lng tbe usual dendness that results from burning coal dust. Qnolnt Old Wall Paper In Vt. Mural decorations of a bygone day, when folk didn't dabble much lu so called decorative art, are forming a quaint background for polished mahog any and rare china. The scenic wall piipers found In the few old mansions that have not been "done over" to suit modern notion always have been of In terest to lovers of old furniture. Now. certain seekers after odd effects are having the old wall papers reproduced. The hunting scene, the Impossible cas tles on cliffs and other subjects are being turned out, but the reproduc tions, say persons with critical eyes, "lacit the venerable atmosphere of th 'really truly' antiques, no matter how closely It follows them In deslgu." New lork Tress. Water a a Medicine. A strip of flannel or soft napkin,, folded lengthwise and clipped In hoi water and wrung out r.ud then applied around the neck of a child that bal croup, will surely bring relief In a few minutes. A proper towel folded seV' ei'al times and dipped In hot water quickly wru.ig and applied over tbi site of toothache or neuralgia will gen erally afford prompt relief. The treat ment for colic has been found to work like magic. Nothing so promptly cuts short a congestion of the lungs, sor. throat or rheumatism cs hot watet when applied early lu the case and thoroughly. Hot water taken freely half an hour before bedtime is an ex cellent cathartic In case of constlpa tion, while it has a soothing effect up ta the stomach and bowels. This treat ment continued a few months, with tha addition of a cupful of hot water slow ly sipped half nn hour before each meal, with proper attention to diet, will cure most case of dyspepsia. Ordi nary headaches almost always yield to tbe simultaneous application of hot water to the feet and back of the neck. The Epitomist. Omelet Tan and Its Possibilities. If omelets are frequently desired, for breakfast a special omelet pan should by all means be provided. A French cook always keeps a pan exclusively for this purpose, and, however it may sound to lovers of soap and water, the pan Is aever washed. After the omelet Is cooked the pan is wiped as clean as possible with crushed tissue paper and put in a dustless cupboard. Choose a perfectly flar pan, for if It has n bump in the middle the omelet will uever come out well. There are almost as mauy varieties ot omelet as there are weeks in tho yeur, and ouce oua learns how delicious a stuffed omelet is there will be a new use for left-over oysters, ?hicken. fish, and vegetables. Fried hacon cut lu tiny cubes, minced ham r chicken, minced herbs, grated cheese, nil are good. If a fetv spoonfuls ot to mato or oyster sauce t-ippeu to be left over from dinner thy may also he used. Cold curry, asparagus, shrimp, Ulster. Minced and stirred In thick saace, are verj good. If no Letter sauce is at hand, mn'.:e this one: A tablespoouful of butter stirred into tho samo quantity of flour, ihe yolk of an egg, a full tablespoouful of Par mesan cheese, n littlo sweet milk, nud Beaconing of salt and red popper. Stlt this together ever the fire anfl add minced meat, fish, or whatever is to go into the omelet. J 1st ns the omelet ii ready .o bo folded, drop the uiixt In. New York Post. Salad Dressing rai'tu-ularly nice ou vegetable salad. One pint of whipped cream, juice ot ouc-half lemon, one tablespoouful of chopped parsley, pep per and salt to taste. Gelatine will help set tho cream If for uny reason It will not whl? pioperly. Cream of Corn Soup Put ono pint of grated corn or ono can of corn into u double boiler; ndd a pint ot milk nud one tublcspoonful ot butter and one of Hour rubbed together; add a level tea spoonful of salt, a dusji of pepper aud a tenspoonful of onljn Juice. When boiling hot serve. Apple Cake-Place a thin layer of short pastry ou a round baking dish, pinching up Ihe edges wllh tho ttngors so as to mako u little ledge round the cako. Teel and cut !u two some large apple, carefully taking out the cores. Slice tlieiu mid arrange. In a circle around tbe paltry, one slleo overlap pins ilu other. Sprlu.tle wllh ground cliiuimou nud sugar and bake for three-quarters of au hour In u tcady ovou. When cold sift powdered sugar over the top. Clear Soup Purchoso a shlu or a leg of beef; cut the meat from the bone, then cut It luta smull pieces; put the bones lu the bottom of a. soup kettle; put on top the meat; to each pound of moot allow ono quart of cold water; briug to boiling point and skim; sin incr gently three hours; add nn oulou. jne carrot, a little chopped celery, a bay leaf and twelve cloves. Simmer gently oi.e hour and strain. Stand aside to cool. Remove tbe fat and It Is ready to use. If the soup is not per fectly clesr. clarify It with bu whites tf thrss eggs.