| on become more and more Siilicult to | | eradicate. As a matter of fact, every woman | 1 who goes to business daily can get : i showing A decided gray this winter—steel perisiable sliver shade, loth cont, with its strapped sams, is no longer in ton; H in steghgray. Gray | ur of the moment, and | a orange velvet Is the | iF idea 1s snother fd of | i gil. Whatever color she own, she is sarefel in +d of the usual s small gun-metal trin- by a short chain passing gunmetal. imped case. and when spened it ther a bit of a mirror, a we Or 8 powder-box.— Woman's {ABRIED OMENS NAMES. ¢ ft rong organized iE bas been npiade to get the ‘women on the registry lasts, ation has been caused by the r that a married woman is not | stored ir the Christian pame ; yy that name, but ew people knew her Mrs. Henry Brewster Henry Brewster Stan. : , Was In his day a h man— Milwaukee Wiscon- L] A RICAN GIRL. makes the American girl 8 : # being is her self-confi- bility and good temper. fiatterer, and I must women sre as much 1s scarce every- | : ate #08 In Call | her corsets Tt looks Hike Tie. Js FOR BUSY WOMEN. The longer a wimsn Dersists in ig. n soring the neesssity of walking. stand. ing and breathing correctly. the lean 1 able the wil be to withetand the strain of her dally work and Ye correct the faults In her figure which as time goes | erough exercise out of the enirgy whe or expends in the course of the day's | 1! aoties fo fight off (hat tired feeling { and make her healthy and physically perfect. Bhs should have Hor slesves made which gives the beholder the lmpres. sion that she Ix sctasily leaning upon The shoulders aust not be lmnehed up to the ears. or drawn Pack, Just Jat them real relaxed tink perfectly natural nnd easy posi Hon, She must avoid that injurions habit dot clinching the thumb in the palm of the hand. Anather bad habit is that of rolling and twisting either a glove | or 8 handkerchief round and round, as though trying to twist it In ball Such practices as these stan the oir When geisz up or down #raln turn the toes out instead of fn. Never for keop the spine straight Always breathe through the tote and bold ep tise chest, When sitting dowi relax as marl as possible, witheait slumping or letting the head droop forward. There we have a few siniple little things whith will not interfere with sre all excellent exertion for busy women. They will teach you to forget an about fatigoe Hew Yok Ameri Miss Helen Gonld pions a man gamed Toit to sot as her bodyguard ‘and to keep camera fends at a dis Miss M. E. Braddon, the writer, has a triple (89—for books, old chins and dogs. These three hobbies take up al her leisure time. 8 collection of mena cards for the New York Poblic Literary, has already gath- ered together 10.230, Miss Mary Andrews, of Hamilton, Oblo, Bas been installed as pastor of the First Presbyterian Church at Kan. sas City. Bbe is tlie only woman | preacher In Misonrl, “There are unly half a dozen Epglie® women In Marrakush, Morocco, and thoy are obliged to wear the garb of native women to svold being insulted by the fanatic Mobamoedaus. There are now in the United States forty-five feminine locomutive engh ‘peers and fireman aud seven female conductors. Add to these thirty-one | brakemen—or, to be correct, brake women-—ten baggage women. About five years ago a Maine woman, mountains of Arizona, was shown an i old abandoned claim by ber Indixn servant. She took it. with great aif | enlty secured $500 to work it, and. before the year was out sold it fer: % $0.00 and a fife juterest. rings, scarf pins and sleeve butions, Buckles this year are larger, hand. ee. somer and more clabarate than ever. © Green walrus and gray ose calf are two of the most fashionalde leathers for belts resembles point Qesprit sprinkled with tiny dull jet beads. Tha mootistone is In evidence as the setting for some of the newest sleeve links and fancy buttons Tabs and tails are tiie correct adorn. ment for fur muffs this year, stuffed heads having been discarded by Dame Fashion. Square eyelet Soles 4 Ave aR innovation on some of the pew leather belts to match a square harmess buckle and square tongue. The grape ornamentation has caught | the faney of the hosiery manufacturer, and white silk stockings shiyw a desigs | of fruit and foliage over the instep, Leather belts are cot so as 10 don | form perfectly to the slight dip In { front so much used pow to give the | becoming and fashionable Jong: “waist | effect. ~ The newest gold-topped viniagrette with jeweled centre ls distinguished : ved by sopbring a paste he af | pipes {all night nd brash Jt off In the morn | nd cold water, Leave it On nz A second application may pe wo | 5ibly be necessary. A NOVEL SCREEN, There's an oid ; One of the very movel fire screens Is | a Spanish leather. wood standard. and from this extend | arms jointed like thome of a stake. Bo when the screen Is not needsd thee afrs from whieh the muchengraved | Elictricity fn now eed a an y anao i thotie. A French surgesn bas prodoced during opersiions comiplete insenehin patting elirks curvenia a $17.00; the fabric prepared shaping, $14; sonting G55 latwidng and 4% packing. profi, wind fellin nian Bact can: We Cmsnile for less than #15 conta ap £13; the Sree PA ity Ly pans of alch frequency alter | A writer avidently versed in the prae. tien! mannlacture of mantles contrite § mres to a contemporary the information § that the chemicals In 1900 niantios cost | haxing, | #6 that she ean turn or ft her arme | iE high shove her head with tase. She | minef avoid the sump of the shoulders | serabibing of them In pot desirable, hut eniation of the ised throngh muscles | shat are of great fain, {hey will never again retain the beat | get to sit upright, and when standing | your dally duties in the east. They | Miss F. BE. Buttolph, whe fn making taking a consumptive husband to the "The scarab i + popolar design far Drapery net for mourning millinery | _ £rease In the British Museum. enter hangs. sre simply folded around the centre standard, pap ane ¥ carry the : fuse, god yet (he enipioy & ol t Bhrires, win : beshes dally, and handle thousands of Hoatel” the disease TRH Sn that library peaple Aa pad wer the fingers with thelr lings to turn over leaves of books and hank off sot wet thelr Sagers in the sain to count meney. A series of experiments made by Rebaible to deter: TO MSTINGUISH LINEN, 1t you are buying handkerchiefs you may make sure of their being linen or tot by a rary simple process. Mualsten the 1p of one of your fingers, and thes | pross it on the Landkershisf. I Rt wets through st once the fabric is finen, bot Hf It Is cotton soverkl sed onds will elapse before the threads ure saturated American Queen, Hp FRE : Sauk ting Hotes y i » wr Tax CLEANS ENAMELLED BATHS, Enameled baths are the trial of the housewife, who does not understand how they should be made to retiln | thelr pristine freshoess. Vigoriuw | growth and germination of plants. 1 apparatas ped is fully de Bineteated and deinils of By periments Are given 3 k shiuple way of cleaning them Is tis: rived At wore That! aw Firm wipe out the tub with a dry | similiar plants Ww loth, then thoroughly mb it with a hapmmatrie pressure 1 “loth dipped In malt snd turpentine, diminished presence than whith nothing In better for re shea oneduariee moving stains. After the tad Lay been BUDE WAR slayed- gently scoured In this manser rinse | Wy; (1 germina with elesr, warms water, dry with a 5 exerete droge © t fresh cloth, and the tub will look like | lea? surfave. ney. 3 5 pormat nde the ay se 38 FTIG0 water frags Ther The forn } Bough Africa is peepils iin reefs Ascending wn the Ai | Seliptifie Prose thew reels ag Make your fren holler of aabuites | wes } make » 1 ol erat ; ®. ZT cloth. [and] thers large or Table salt in the starch will help In | Tha mtd fs met int the iroming. Lard robbed on the | tote. ut . es 2 clothes before they sve washed will | which atre he remve stialns. ; : - Ral the irons With a cloth seske! fn | | ete o : beni agi kerosene to prevent somrching. Fre oo Fh Siete guent Tubbisg on sandpaper Will ReeD | on oy Tike a frou from stieking. 1 sect Bat : “ : Hoapy water mized with starch will | there is more | §iv¢ A glossy suriace. Ing anywhers : | Three ounces of borax and Wo ou scien by eight peands of sliced white lar scan, dis | ea {sotvesd In two quarts of hot water, will | make a splendid Jathor for wasting ciothes ” ———— sation in HINTS FOR MONDAY, To not Jet your trons get red Bet; Pg BRA GRTY The eity of Bah bo eq EipTed with gn ext electra traclion 2 so fri sohieme 3 of rie dix tale o ret ud din Walter a 0 generate the Becemary pote fo hath peodects. For these purposes t Lupe water-power plants are 1 strnetedt. The mavbhivery ” om RECIPES, Clam Friters—Drain twenty-five chem from the lguor, pour cold water over and draln; chop them Bge, senld {clam jules, remove sum when ould] sdd flour enough to makes a pancake batter and add clams: beat in two bevel teaspoonfuls of baking powder; drop by spoonfuls oto bot, deep fat, Corn Mufios-Two cups corn meal, | one teaspoonful salt, two tablespoons faols sugar, two and one-quarter cups boiling water, two teaspoonfuls baking { powder, one big tesaspoonfel butter, two eggs, one-third cup of milk. Heat the mixing bowl, mix bailing water and meal: add botter suzar, salt and eens beaten separately; Lake one-half) tour, Chopped Meat Steak-Chop one and one-half posnds of round steak: add to it ome teaspoon of onion jules and a little pepper: form into 3 steak about | one inch thick: place on the greased broiler and broll for Gre minutes over ig vlear five: HI to hot platter, sprinkle with salt and pepper, spread over a little Ymtter and cover with sweet pep Per sania Hermits~Cream one emp of hatter and one and one-half cups of sugar well together: then dd one cup of . ralsioe seeded and chopped, two ounces of citron chopped fine: three egy well besten. Add one tablespoonial each of ground cloves, allspice and cinna. mon and four sufficient to roll out Roll a Httle thicker than vanilla wa- | fers. Cut in rounds and bake iu a» moderate oven. Egg Cutiets—Bafl egrs twenty min sles; when cold retiove the shell; oud In two lengthwise: bave one Malle poo of butter nielted on 8 hot plate add to it a little salt and pepper. one egy Deaten with one ialdospaon of wa ter on another Plate and some fine crumbs on stil) apother: dip tha egei the grass. His only bope will be for halves first In the melted butter, then the new variety to escape fram enith in egg. then in crumbs and fry {in deep | vith and grow lize tap Buss fat; serve with curry sauce, thistl » by the sidewalk. B Tomato snd Rice Soup—Pnt the con thine the millionaire will dans tents of one can of tomatoes in ap] tlEbtleaved covers in bia agate pan over the fire; 34d to It one | WIV The Independent, pint of bot water: oue tablespoonful re of salt, one tablespoon of sugar, three cloves, pepper corns and sane third enp { of well washed rice. cook one slice of onlon In a ttle hot butrer fur fies minutes, being careful pot to let 1 brown: add it to the tomate and rice; when the rice is tender rab all through a straiver; add wore seasoning M needed, Canlifower with CheeseTriin off the outer leaves and soak head down wird in sated water one hour: put io 8 saucepan head upaeover with balling water salted and boil slowly notld tes der; drain; break off the branches andj put in layers on a baking dish, sprink Hog with salt, pepper and grated cheese; pour over all one pint of white sauce; cover with a thick laver of bat | tered bread crumbs and place in a bot oven until browned; serve as 8 Course with saltine waters. a De 2 Ole ae is to he Installed on the Deadh Sagar River, about 3% miles north of Bon tay, at a waterfall which ia about JE foot in Beizht IY is antici with the projected machisery Tur ils generated available thoroagbout the year—suliclent to aperste some sixty | mitew af track. The power Tor Highs asl working the wireey railroads af Bahay Is to be transmitted fram Niral abost folly miles distant from the eit EAT PO Seientifie Luex, The botanic] papers report that De Viles, the Rreat Datel experi: evoiuiionist, has hy kb sg vantingm] we ation Srednced 8 variety of cluvur which bas normally four aves Thus 11 is that selenee contribates something duily to the iperease of human Bappd ness and good fortune How many humrs we Bave spent on cur hands asd krees searching for the lucky leaf, Ewen yet some of us always walk TR = eyes and are arrested with gnosscions eerebration at any ladisstion of gould replicate oll 2 own luck at the presnhonse provid. Loof cosrrse. we are Tacky enongh to oh ve the money. The disparity of for. tute, an vil slready so {aur social and polltieal fe inereased by this new discovery. hod cian can boy his four-legged « ers, even his Svecleaved and six ciovers, aml roll them, while poor man will stil have fo hun an the lawn Tor wen a Bittle duck, 4 then he is likely to be told be Rep off The Ee § 20% % & 85 0 Ben ives Have COURT VA Some Definitions, The Abilene Hedecior gives the fol wite as some of the guswers yoovived 2! a recent school examination be June than City: “Defint the word fathom avid form & sentence with 0" fathom has six feet a By a fathon .™ Defias species” “Bim 2 “Deling elorieas i ban oil a soent. A an wie 8 cannot ride In a Kansas Jomrual vip we SX CRI oe Here's a Turnip. Indisna. pot to be outdony tales from BRansas bas come forward with a big vegetable story. A fare carne Into Friawdswood the otier day bringing with hiss a twrnip which was thirty inches lu cleenmierenoe and welghed twelve pounds. This, It Is as sorted, will make Indiana as potable {in the vegetable Kingdom as the State a in the literary world —-New York Commercial Advertiser. by the a &E One hundred volumes a day isthe in-| “Sale les pa fort of diminished alr pressure on the 1 Da Arey ; ness abont trenith, bat povert ; you go without butter. the next you have butter on your bread bat uo sugar in your tes, or maybe you have the suger 204 Be 40 tes to tint it in : Poviriy bas ite drawbacks, The poor man Bast as pitied tine a as the rich one In which to make love to bis neighbor's wife, noe the married couples among the poor find it easy to secure So Jelsnre in which to learn that their tempers ave incompatible. [t may occur to them somitimes that the domestic machinery doesn’t Tn A smoothly se it might, lint Oley are (00 busy 16 1ake it to pieces to see where the rouble lies, so they Jost pour on & Jitile of the ofl of forbearance and let It go at that: eansequently their lives sre apt to Jack the selat furnished by divores, "The rirh, on the other hand, Have plenty of time to “wateh the wheels go pond” and the misnte fhied's anything wrotig with the mechanism of thelr wheretive, Hat ag everyone who bas sxperlioented with locks knows, Rt = i Dsamine to take 8 machine apart than it Ix fo get it tegather sgain. After 87 is said, If reining that povery l@ neither a erisoe nor 8 credit, seller a curse bor an unoditizated hlessing, wills wealth, en the other hand, it mesotenous but amvenlent, snd epervating but pleasant Brander Mage szinie, By the Rev. Dr. 2. . aly : HERE i & notion. orbome Sowhers Sorsaninted inte definite’ statement, hot everywhere pervading the thought of the day, thet the strength and permanency of national life enn be | built on the basis of materind forces. Rut if the history of | patlens proves anything if proves that the strength and pers B manency and solidarity of the State do sot le in such forees, | Alllances with material forsus have always and everywhere Teen covenants with death. Net in physical resources, not tn pigrtil prowets, not in diplomatic shrewdness les the strength of the Nation. but in the charaster of its people. We want in America today men whe sre free from self-interest In thelr thenght nnd plan for the Nitlen. As the complexity of our life grows the sppertanities for masipeliting affairs for personal interests multiply. When aur perso Inleresti hesdnse intertwined with our political relations, we erry 8 warped mind inte the discoesion of public affairs and into the discharge of civil duty: we are apt to conclude that the measures which conducs fo apr pn perdondl interests are the best measures, and so we favor that party and that polivy which will be most HEely fo bring shout the result which We dew wire. Wik must get back to the spirit of the fathers aad put political duty . 1 | Greamens, poets, sedrs who will liring inte Hfe a saving visio, 4 ile elit ba Lf ms sam els ive Bi these vistona are as riviee of walter wa | SEY wapniv- i § jour the electricity to work the railroad § mated that Installation JOM00 horse power will be | mental v morose a clover patch with dowpoast | thon. Now we can bey threatening to | will ba} thie © hart wl 3 | farm than 1 would be auywhers elise, | before Jerwanal interest. Materdalism grips the Nation. The peaplin have no vision, snd where there | f= po vhiom the people perish, These are the men whom Ameries neds; Our poets fie not lstened to because ihelr song is Wo much like the common shout. It has alent ft a morallie ring Our prose writers are doing little more than ps latin for ox a portrait of our common HN. This is not enough. We want 1a vision, We do mof want In poem or ia novel in opera or in drama, simply | A graphie representation of Life sa it fs. Wo want sn ouveiling of iife as it Only thas ean ene life be sived from the moan and the waterinl ‘ §3 dry places, awinge break forth wherever they ov and the sir hecomes fresh These ate the Men who make Amerien, the ten who cause the Kfe of the whale people to throb with beaven-Slied fmipnlsts snd Beaver inspired movemenis. = 2 » 2 - = ‘Value of University Tr By Jastice Oliver Wendell Holmes. ys HAVE stoned with interest to able Lusiness men when they argued snd testified that a Walvessity training made men fitter 8 to ancora Gn thelr peace il sirugal I am far from denying No doubt such 8 training gives to revs a larger mastery of the wwe of seturs wader which they must work, a wider entlvak sver the waeld of sejenee and of fact. If I could give to wrery stadent o scientifie point of view, if education could make nuen realize that you canst produce something out of nothing and make them promptly detect the pretense of doing sei with wheh at present the talk of every day is fled, 1 should think it had more than paid for ftweill. Sul mare shoudl I think so if it could sud men futo the world witli a good rudimentary Knowledge of the laws of thelr ed virotment, oe But, besides prosperity thers 1s to be considered bappivess, which le not Mie same thing The chance of a university to enlarge me's power of happh ves ls at least nut less than is chance to enlarge thelr capaeity for gain 1 Pn that with regacd to this, as with regard to every other sspimtion of man, tiie most Important question seenp to me to be what are his In-born qualities¥ Mr Huskin's first ule for learning to draw, you wil remember, was, be Dorn with penins It is the Best ix ur everyihing eye. If a man Is adequate i og force. de will fr i hanpy in the derpest sense, whatever hia Late, oon WEL Bot ashy be sort even if § the lesser Lnlf And te opinion , GRiversity is sure to oer to all the wenlizing tvadencies— riled, 1 am jlo aid tg say, if ought to offer to the romantic side of life— or it abote all Sther ine tations the coyservator of the vestal fire. we But, geatlonet herd In one department af sour institotion to which § must be permitted specially to peter—tise Jeparigaent (0 which | am gearest hy profession, asd tm which [ awe the honor of being hore. | mean, of course, the Department of Law, It was affirmed, [ believe. by thie Inte Chief Justice ooley, that the law was and eujfht to a sinuuanpiace, No doubt the remark has much truth. It is better thut the law should be commonplace than that i should be eccentric. It seems to we that for men a4 they srw the law may keep its everyday character, and yet be an object of gaderstanding. wonder, and 8 fedd for the lightning of genius 2 + 3 ie $5 A or Wy HR » dy a man gow in hig eighty-fourth year, gad bis wife somewhat past seventy-five, who are esrrying on a farm of a mundeed and forty odd deres of lnml They Keep three of four cows, aod not far from twenty-five sheep. The milk Fy [rom the cows they make (pp at home setting the milk io the old fasifoned pans and chiirning with an od fashioned dosh | elvarn. The present seascy the old man bas gathered nearly B04 bushels of npples (row bls orchand and sold something Hie half of thes in a vile ten miles away, Inking a rw Nushels 3 at a time sad padding them our to private customers. This oll man fi not compelled ty follow this strenuous life, being in comfortable clreums glances, but he prefers to keep up the habits of life which ave brought him 8 wach of happiness amd success. He has raised a large family of children, 1 of whom sre now sefthed on Farms of thiwir own, so that be has Do ode to Solr Bios sive 38 le bites now and then 8 day's work with the plow or In baring. “1 have Deen toll a great many times tat I ought to stop work now and settle down In town or somewhere vise where I woull be able to take Iie ensy the rest of wy time; but 1 tell them that 1 am going te carry on my business as long as I have any. I am pew my own boss. Why should I give yp and let all 1 have dome go to the dogs? The farm Is my own. [ hewed It aut of the woods with my own hands Al I bave got 1 have earnad by the Hitle. If © should give up the farm whal would | do? Nothing? Then 1 wouhl soon be through with thy workl 1 om happier bere rutining my own 1 est well and sheep well, folks enll me young for my age amd sre surprised when 1 wll them that 1 am past eighty foar. 1 ean hire done what I enn’t Jo mysell, and sobody can dictate to me bow I shall do 10.7 There was five In the strength of cbaracivr fur e old man's eve a3 De sald this that told of a vigor and from andinary. Aad no one who Knows the anpoy- ance of renting a farm to the erdinary tenant and the constant deterioration of property after one once turny his back upon it himself will for a moment argue with kim en the point that be Is happier than he would be in any other way. In these dads when so many farmers are laying down the Implements af thelr ol res work amd going away to end their days sveadily In the olty, the simple stocy of this old man whe ¢lings to his farm with seach pathetic tenacity is commended. It may De sald 1Bat not every man possesses the strength to do as Lie has done. That may be true, for be sadoubtedly started aut with 8 reserve of physical power somewhat beyond the average; but more tian one man has shortened his days by giving up the farm and sertling down > the unnatural life of the town or city whim be might have lived many years lauger by staying on the farms with Hs evuryday exercise and fresh alr and sunshine. So 1 think aus ssiend and bia foul wits Ste afi all quite sutlhin, rads ASW Fark Tritun, : gomestie beppiness they siraightway set to work fo get at the why sad the