—— . . em, THE WOOL-C AERER, ! about half his distance had been cov- A MODERN CORTEZ A BRIL! ered, When We saw hing waver and Cape Cod Fisherman Became the “King THE fF Where has thou been in the wind and “For one comes hot-foot o'er the plain stop; Then he started on. took a single of Jamaica.” rain? And drives them hurrving back again. step, and pitched forward, shot, surely, * . “Gathering wool on a far plain, : through the heart. In th> Werld’s Work Eugene P. Subj Four shepherds keep those fhehs the yield should SIL the worlds) The mule, all its mttendants gone, Lyle, Jr, tells the rema-kable story of n pastures ee dgerow hala wk comes the wool. was still unhurt. It looked inquiring- Captain Boke: and Jamaica; how Brook ly round, as if wondering what had this gentle Cape Cod fisherman became Atontc “They give no tithe. they take : no hue, “They cast it all, those wastrel herds, happened, then started on up the the King of Great Britain's richest of the They warm their hands at no man's five, To naked stars i screaming birds. road. It cleared the group of mud huts West Indian isle. The .istery of the MacDor “When one has driven the flocks all ps makes no rug nor coat of frieze: and came out in the open beyond them. ol A. Scented Hairbrush. Venise. The draped sleeves are made conquest began thirty-five oars ago, Sunday ® At no far fold they make their s men shrouds in stormy seas.” Suddenly we saw it ihrow up its Waves are scented by touching them | of the same lace over crepe de Chine. with an armada of one lone schooner. Sanders —C. Fox Smith, in the Academy. head, brace its leg outward, sway| With a brush that is itself scented. A She haa two masis, and could carry a preache from side to side, and fall in a heap. | Scented brush is the nicest thing that| Blames Wives For Crimes of Husbands | hindred tons. Her owner nc skipper of : Jes The ammunition had not gone in.| C20 grace a woman's dressing table. It Among the points bronght out by | was Lorenzo Dow Baker, the son of a XX 4s: ce = YX Some one must try again. must he very clean, and must not be | Mrs. Atherton in her article, “The New | whaler, and a child cf the sea as well. Whose They chose a non-commissioned of-| used for general brushing of the hair. | Aristocracy,” in the Cosmopolitan, | He took a cargo to Angostura and on ae . ir | ficer of the Wei-hai-wei regiment, a Twice a week a few drops of jasmine | which has set the whole country talk- | his return trip carried a lect of banan- al smooth-faced, square-jawed, fine-eyed| can be poured upon it and the brush | ing, is one that American vives are | as. But by the time he reached New Hugom South of England man. He had won| When not in use lies in a silken box largely responsible for the forgeries | York they had all rotted. The next ter of AUR AOLBAAR AGEN ~ their officers ~nd the ? Now he was neither foragze-1 gisturbed by spit of bullat or scream and adopt the Mrs. if the change of } naoging, force men to reach out for | and moreover the yellow kind from Ja- iT among their observers, were pe : Zo I areas, Instead of of chell. Al the Chinese in Tientsin | fitie is ro D> effected without tae pres- re money. at any cost. Sometimes | maica was comparatively unknown. imper Jumped : 1 in one class by the ros 2 chained to two team: mates, with were shooting at them. ent gratifying ceremony. e result is the defrauding bank clerk, But he succeeded. Xe revived the probie perienced can soldiers. ai oe one ariver Jor th: three, he The Englishman turnad off the roal rent with whom we are all so familiar: {island from econoraic prostratiin, and our f: nominated Sykes,” part] ms with two men to guard | t4 go across tos his own men at the : A Mother's Care of Herself. wlien there more distinguished | it is flourishing. He did it by making Age must : amazement. part! amusement. the preniag oad he bore. Lashed 10] right. By the first ditch the second If the children are to be kept free gifts to develop, ~maller fry than banks | the janana irade. want ly in co: Hempt—ihe fools Hght pac Sanddie, one on each Side, man went down, and the Englishman from colds, the mother must net per-} are annihilated to swell the individual Captain Eaker still lives at Port of the so many me. feel for what vo cases of ammunition. Dul-| was hit himself. It must have been mit herself to catch la grippe and sim- | fortune; and, :n the present ~ondition of Antonio, which is not only an Ameri- pip and not understood. = 2oing into the fight. in the shoulder, for it spun him quite| ilar ailments to hand c¢own to them. | American laws, stripes are avoided. | can town, but a Boston town. In the: ag To Uncle Sem’s fighting ; special ; ghitenongent and I}round. But he gathered himself to-| Since almost all colds and influenzas | But that among latter-day millionaires | summer he goes back to Woallfleet, Aiilh any ougz of the tail, ines up ong the mua wall to come gether and went on at a smart trot. are contagious. The careful mother’s | there is a large majority of criminals) there renews intercourse with May- q I Non shankel, ¢ isx in shend or Ing Soiumng ain at the Dulloo followed. He scemed to know first thought should be to provide her- | ng one pretends to deny.” flower descend:nts like himself, tries more coverad soldiers a \ rontorn poms of goncen ration. : all about it and understcod just why | self with adequate flonnels, warm —n—— periodically to wring an appropriation lived was a * ~yke,” and Dulloo 1 § Up to this time the morning quiet there was need to hurry. stockings, ana (no matter how she has She Trainu Boys and Girls. froma Uncle Joe Cannon for the Pil- point kind were simply “them e mutes. had only Leen punctuated, as it were, Perhaps he knew, too, that even af-| always hated them) with stout rub- Mrs. Harriet Taylor Treadwell is the arin entwmant at Provinc-town trace Any one cf the Missouri six-footers | by the slow firing of ti:e guns. But] ter the ammunition Thad been delivered | bers for use in wet weather, ' successor of Margaret Haley as the Suteily looks after wis charities and indic: who hauled the heavy American escorf | DOW, as the head of the marching col- up to the men there in the ditch, there It is every mother's duty and right | bead of the Chicago teachers’ united puts hic sturdy shoulder to a enters pride wagons about as easily as .f they were [unin came within range of the Mann-| would be no cover that he could take.| to be a healthy. con‘ented, cheerful | movement to win pure democracy for prise for the beautifyias of life along palte 1Le little red wagons of the mud-pie |lichers, the parapet of the city wall gut se Just kept his head down and| person, free from all aches and pains | the schools, and thereby to make bet Cape Cod. Port Anfond fics the ih bakers would have made almost as|Dbroke into a retiling roar. A sheet of | hig ears forward, and trotted along as| and discomforts of her own, in order | ter and nobler citizens of the boys and Avericen Seg withongh it is a British & u much in weight and surely did as | flame flickered along its front. fast as he could. that she may be strong to minister to | girls of the city. For the past year ORSOLSION, “Fhe originei Yan was io hay much in . ork as Dulloo and his whole Then the word was given and our Can jou realize how it felt to lie| the trials and tribulations of the less | she has ably served the Chicago Teach i the flag ee coolic's by team. attack was delivered. Japanese, Brit-| pehind the 1iud wall and watch that?| fortunate members of ber household. | ers’ Association, having been elected | jyciness to i em.” Captain Bake not Undoubtedly in appearunce Dulloo [ish and Americins went in together. | can you understand how we prayed | This is not selfishness, it is prudence. | president in April, 1903. I ex Aained Ym Afar does evil. was just a pain mule, of the small Gaily they trotted through the gate! for man and beast? They were al-| —Carro:l Waison Rankin, Mrs. Treadwell is a native of New Cot Sp 11s business Yor well.” Know Indian b.eel. His color was a dingy | Of the mnd wall, the swords of thelr | most a+ the goal. Surely the man would York State and a graduate of thé Os Bn Taf Him brown. 1t locked as if tiere once |ofiicers flashing in the sunlight. Oncel win, He could not be knocked ‘down Iceland Suffrage Paradise. wego (N. Y.) Normal School. Her w adh the Market eithe might hive Leen elemenis of bright- {in the open, the long lines of skirmish-| pow, There are clubwomen in town who | teaching career has exiended over a . ne - iE EE armet is th ] ness in it which had long ago faded |ers spread out. and then all together But ue was. It took him apparent-| say that America doesn’t deserve to be [long period. She was married in Ie iy anise evident that Some hoyrens ran away uader the fierce onslaught of his | they went forward. ly straight in t'e head, through the| called a paradise for women and that | 1897 to Dr. Charles Treadwell. but aid | &F¢ born for a business career. That Bon native sun. His mane was “duly Instantly it yas os if a new Chinese | brim of his helmet, for the big sun-| the only country in the world which | DOt give up her professional work. Her | 1S demonstrated 18 S0Me CAN0S very, fod roachel: but his tail, instead of being | Army had re-enforced tie thousands al-| guard flew off in front of him as his| merits praise is Iceland. Women who | record as an educator began at nine Oty life; The other day Dps. cond the i cropped like a paint-brush, the inalien- | ready Lehind the parapet. The fire that | hands were thrust forwarc, and he rage against their inability to vote ou [teen years of age, when she commenced | SW Jie ten-yearold son Poyaed going thro able and distinguishing decorative feat- | had swept the field before was doubled | went down on his face. great questions in the United States | teaching in the Chicago schools, ad: out ihe gate wilhia Deiglibor 3 bey of ¥ ure °f the mule the world over, was |2nd quadrupled. The special cor-| Qaly Dulloo was eft. The men] should start at once for the northern | vancing steadily to the post of instruct Miers aro; you goiner] Fie cole Th bushy, with long, coarse hairs. responcent and I. looking over the top | stood up in their ditch fitty yards ahead | land. Miss Jessie Akermann, who | OF in English at the Forestville School, | from fe wingoy: : the Moreover, the light, sun-dried brown of the mud wall and watching the [of him and waved ther arms, and we | has been living there, says the women | Which she held for eleven years, until| ~Were going down to have Ba il Rho of his thin little legs was striped at magnificent bravery of the advance, | knew they were calling io him. Not a| have more civil rights than their sis- | She was made principal last year of the tures taken at the ihiype piace, an We regular intervals with the broad dark | Saw men fall in appaliing numb rs, al-| ctep did he falter, even when the! ters in any other country in the world. | Joseph Warren School. Bvored hee boy, tossing » ton-cont Diece = bands that suggested irresistibly some | though the line went steadily forward. | guiding hand left his lead-strap dan-| “Their right of franchise is exercised | Mrs. Treadwell is a specialist in chil | iB the an : witl relationship to the zebra. He had| The generals thought they could take | oling Letween his feet. At the same] in all civic affairs save that of election | dren’s reading, and has instituted a| Mrs. Cobb liad been wondering what wit] soft, contemplative, blue-brown eyes, | the city by direct assault, and their | staady trot he went ahead. He could | of members to the Danish Parliament,” | “Book Review Day” in her school, [Queer train of thought had awakened the in which the traditional mule patience plan of attack was the result of that) hear the men telling him he was a says she. ‘They manage to get around | When teachers and pupils listen to re. | {RIS vain desire when suddenly she decl mingled with a wisdom as subtle as the | belief. They had agreed with the Rus- | good mule and should have a D. £. O.— | that difficulty and sustain their politi- | Views and discuss the worth of a book | leard once more the click of the gate. Spot East where he was born sians, whose work was on the east, | Distinguished Service Order—all his| cal status by forming themselves into | and its writer. The right direction is | “00King out, she saw Edward coming nox But even to the casual observer Dul- | to Lave their flags hoistec on the City | own; and then the Chinese got him.| a political league, which has 7000 [tactfully given to children’s reading. [in alone, munching a banana. : stax loo was something more than simply | Walls by eleven o'clock thet morning. | One step he took, and was all right; | members and is a factor the real voters| “I never say to a boy, ‘You shawt| Was it too cloudy to have the tin- lay one of Lis class. To be sure, during{ It was a bold, daring plan, with Jit- | the next he was down on his knees | are not able tc ignore.’—New York | read this book,’ or ‘it’s horrible to read | type taken?” she asked. tho! the first two weeks of my acquaint | tle to commend it besides its audacity. | and rolling over. Press. dime novels; but, rather, I suggesi| NO, ma'am.” ah ance with him I saw nothing extraordi- | but urged by the Japanese, because| But his work was done, the ammu- ema various good books, until at last he is| ‘What was the matter?” fixi nary about Lim except the spectacular | they knew their old enemy could least | nition was delivered. It was only a Invalid a Charity Worker. spoiled for the improbaple. the false | “Wel,” said Edward, “Tommy bad Goc part he played the day 1 first beheld | successfully resist such a move. few steps to the line from where he| Even illness of a nature that makes | the vulgar and the vicious,” she says | his taken, but I didn’t. I found out cla him, when, chained to his two team | But just when the line should have | fell, and almost before he was down |a woman a permanent invalid need| Mrs. Treadwell is deeply interested | that bananas had dropped to three for blo mates, and loaded with a bundle of Teached the crest of the attack, it fal-| the men had run out to him, unlashed| not necessarily prevent ke: doing work | in 2ll things that tend toward the ad (ten cents. So I bought ‘em. You Jes forage twice his own bulk, atop of | tered and stopped. There it hung for | tse boxes, and were rushing back to| in the wo.la. A case in roint is af- | vancement of women; and is enlisted | Dever can tell the price of bananas, this which his driver sat under the shade | an hour, and then men began to strag- | the cover of their little ditch. Surely | forded by Miss Mary Merrick, daugh- | among the active workers for suffrage but tintypes is always the same.”— He of a huge umbrella, he led the little | &le back from the front with tales of | Dulloo had earned the D. §.. O.—| ter of a Washington luwver, She Las | in the State of Hineis. Youth’s Companion. pre procession through the tangled maze of bitter losses, raging at the dreadful| youth’s Companion. suffered from spinal rotnle since Ties ia hos soldiers, equipment and camps. folly of assaulting in such fashion an ss — sixteenth year, and sie les of an aie RE caren leg | Head she wasnt going to live long and}, SL. LU °C Sa foe) 8 as 8 5 as chil * > S 3 hi il to he The salvation not ol us. ans 2 J Jo fhe ones she wanted all her relatives unto her i Mian por oe Mis i nie Sign oo Miss Holt tells us, is ihe most popular we but of the sorely heset in | of danger, with their valuable loads. third and fourth cousin to have some- York Tre oy Sonia Pew or i wg need bo 2 yey Eastern rug in America. Certainly it an Pekin. : He was a fine. upstanding Pathan, | thing by which to remember her. She : ] ros Sa my moment for the | is one of the most readily recognized po . Tht: Utes mir et eid Bony colin: Bring Yorsolt 10 TUS 6 sot of rimming of hats, in bows, ruchings and | when once known. The octagonal fig Jo Pekin! It was very from | bis huge grizzled beard curled back yt rosettes. wy ally of whit ivore. laid st us then, and someti e in-|of his ears, and a great buff turban | false teeth, however, and her mouth Tha Empire Waist. ar 3 : greyis ugha e Yeo voit. at 0 clined to wonder a little if we should | topping his tall figure. With his hand | fell in woefully without them. Many women seem to imagine that ans 52 ih latest fous 1s the Wearingjion § sell veil dv old Zone field; orange, su : 3 late s : : “I was despairing of making an at- ee Ch, ,. :. | of white lace sleeves on sheer black | blue and green are often seen.—New ever got there. For between us and | on the mule’s bridle, and one of .:s : was est ge s dress of which the waistline is| __ ils NL : Engl i ea that dearly desired goal there stretched | mien following on each flank, he walked | tractive picture of her, when she sud- htly shorter than in the ordinary Sveum sueh 281 those of (31 | Bnglage Magazine. €3 nearly a hundred terrible miles, and | through tne gate and out on the hard | denly produced some crusts of bread dress belongs to the Empire style. {or mousciine dose. Kitchen Utensils ta i right in our front lay the great walled | yellow road, where the builets spat-| from her handbag and stuffed them This is, of course, a mistake, and A new color in coral beads is a shade It is AONE Ts singular oversights i city of Tientsin, swarming with its | tered so thickly it seemed not a spar-| into her mouth. When she'd put in| the result obtained from following that | Petween mahogany and rich crimson. of odo Ws civilizagion that Kiting yé . e Ya Iv + tonitv af 13% y e her li a sacl i 2 r "0 TO: “OT i= & 5 th thousands of trained scldiers of the |row could live. All 1~~ dignity of his | enough to make ber lips and cheeks fill | notion cannot be anything else than a | The beads are real coral, but unlike utensils are meade by millions or bill Imperial a-mies and its many more | fighting race was in his bearing. andj out she explained to me rather thickly, | decided ‘ailure. There are actually |3DY Previously seen. A necklace of ions without the slightest regard to % thousands of Boxers. Also it had |Do contemptible Chinese should hurry | that the crusts would do just as well| two types of waist—the long, rounded, | $raduated omes costs $75. Sficlency without Sdentific ose of e Wareho »f the best rifles | his gait. as false teeth. And the strangest|and clearly defined waist ius For a girl who prefers gr _ i es pure : huge warehcuses full of the best rifles | bis gait : : 1s false teet : g nd clearly c Uist just above orag © prefers green to coral | without thought of culinary economy. al the Jermans and the Austrians could They walked steadily through the] thing was that they did do very well, | the hips, and the frankly short bodice, | beads there are the jade strings. If Half the ranges sold to househedlers in make, inexhaustible supplies of ammu- | hail of bullets that fell round them, fand I got a good picture.”—New York | stopping below the bust, as in the Em- | she will wear a string not quite up | sre frauds. - They waste coal. Most T nition and guns. First, then, we must | and .t made us wonder, watching them | Press. pire fashion, the skirt being either quite | to the mars as to color, she will have of the rahi Foes ar the chimney, The il take Tientsin. from the top of the wall, of what stuff : = loose or full, or cut .o as to slightly | to pay only $125 for it. From that fig- ovens ra te cold to toast tread in. it It was eleven o'clock of a June | their hearts were rade. : Curlous Coincidences. suggest the outlines o¢ the figure. ure the prices run up to almost any Why should a saucepan have a half- Z night when I first pasa through Fifty yards in the op. they wenti The late Lord Acton for many years But in no case should the waistline | amcunt. rounded bottom? Why choad it re- Y here fites . reede rtharmed. The Chinese bad their | kept a record of coincidences. A very | come half way, possessing neither Tr Rive] : 5 ws : oe > 3 streets here fires burned unheeded on j Uniarmec 3 kept a re C € very | come ha possessing neither the The Empire style bas brought the | quire twenty minutes io boil water? t! both sides and reached he sdquarters. | range, and it seemed as if every man strange one occurred in his own ex-|oviginality of the Empire style nor the plain skirt into favor; for the long, | Give me the old fashioned “spider” and 8 “To-morrow afterncon.” said the ma- on the paiapet was firing at them. An-{ perience. ; . harmonious proportions of the long-| slim effect does not allow of ruffles or ‘skillet” for goed cooking at home. b jor, “we are going to take the Walled other fif yards then the man at the A rumor Spread that his wife had waisted bodice. This applies to gowns | elaborate trimmings, although it does | What a different taste they give to the S City. Will you come?” left thuew up his hands, staggered for- drow ned he self. She had done noth-| only. as coats are enjoying a large demand embroideries and applications food!—Victor Smith, in New ‘York c But rl through early July the al-| ward = Bien or iwo, and went down {ing of the kind, but it was quite true | amount of fanciful mitigation in their | {hat trim without inter.ering with the | Press. r lies wee still prepaiing to take the at the 1c side. that a Baroness Acton had drowned] facon. sipping nem > PF so Fy ; Walled City, and day by day, as the ades seemed not to know {| herself at 'Tegernsee 1ere Lord and A remarkably attractive teagown There is almost a barnyard of coral Novel Danger Signal. 9 preparations went on, we saw {rom gone. They did not even § I Acton were and had|of ihe short-wais sted persuasion is in animals the at Con Ga use 2 s charms, | « A romuripble invention for prevent: . our house near the mud wall Dull ) but went ahead in ike] dro swiicd hersel f under ir window. |ivory crepe de Ch line, a wide band of | ° ’ oF thi. "az CHATS, | no railway accidents has been tried < setting orth atter vith a old s iv. Twenty yards more 1 t of all coincidences 1 applications of althoug A Ci = 3 with success on the Weslern railways ! : the man at the right v Lord Acton concerned Sir Ed- the skirt. There is Wry a a ar Dig, of ¥rance. The invention is placed on ) full length in the Godfrey, who was mur- , obtained by a large drawn Is the Si an engine. If the driver for any cause I “non-com” went for vard bottom of what is now wetian lace, outlined on steulls, iE hn { passes an adverse danger signal the ap- 3 Hnke the mi 1 iti n known as | rrow depassant of] CO 2 2% Ih uh wi 0 paratus blows a whistle on the engine 3 fis pre 1 Ii don. | l decorated with 3: | continuously, and also thr 1 The need for the mur-| 1e ne material. n « | small light under eng ! parted ] n q the cover thei umes respectively, were IS also of panne, with in 1 { ghrouch ud huts beside the roa reen and Hill. lace { 1