JTO. J) , at standest r and ton. , a recor@ , nor anto- poor pedes- r with thy lischarged ; {rorewes Lain full than mine inust have with alry steed, thon oung, thou ou'rt sold, Adams. LIFE] LIFE an.—Life. skinned saying?” J'—Town ging; or V—Hous= transmi- brute in ie, mon- I pre- T prayers Why, I'm Take my —Thank the next 1ly hard —Indeed WS seem Bazar. the new ink it's { capable 1alf look kee Sen- te their Philadel- Guyer—I ad-game 7-pong.— ess corn er.) . "No, in of the corns.” a sudden sed con- day. A n refuge had my ot your- h. his ques- t us un- d Sena- ny opin- ow I am Star. will rise . “Yes,” . “The metimes fter the shington 1 is just opened. anything angling, yuld say 1aniac.— subject Poet— 211, what en Wwrit- w much or it.— y > ow Mrs. ou—does / irs. De- nly last wo hun- r at the s Seem nly two orld be- s—What ose who ime and T near recently. the cow, ture he . rdered a ollowing the de- Thirty- ine col- .steners, , a 38- spender and 10 s—what ’ ¥ ~ / First Woman Lawyer in Territory. Mrs. Margaret Yale was admitted to the bar before Judge Gill of the Federal court, says the Nowata corre- spondence, Kansas City Star. Mrs Yale is the first woman admitted to She is a department of the bar in Indian Teritory. graduate of the law Michigan. Miss Vanderbilt's Flame, One of the finest jewels that society has seen in many a day was recently purchased by Miss Gladys Vanderbilt. At first glance it resembles a tiny ball of flame encircled by an almost imperceptible gold rim, but on closer survey it turns out to be a convex opal concealing a timepiece about the slze of a dime. So attractive is it that her masculine friends—and some of her feminine one, too—say that when they see it blazing on Miss Van- derbilt’s dress they are inclined to ask for a light. Suffragists Hard at Work. Philadelphia Home Missionary work 8 to be included in the woman suf- frage campaign for converts. A re- cent statistical investigation of the attitude of club women toward suf- frage revealed the fact that a large proportion of them are either anti- suffragists, or indifferent to it. A committee of eloquent speakers from the suffrage society will probably be appointed, whose whole duty it will be to arrange revival meetings for the cause of woman suffrage among club women.—Philadelphia Record. Gold Shoes With Gray Gloves. Though gray is to continue in vogue, apparently the fancy for wear- ing gray shoes to match the gowns is dying out. When Mrs. Nicholas Longworth came out of a theatre in the capital recently she wore a gray crepe gown embroidered with morn- ing glories and her slippers seemed of burnished gold. They are Cuban slip- ~pers, made in her honeymoon trip to Havana. She has several pairs of silvery slippers from the West Indies, and these are to be worn with a ainty gray cloth gown. These slip- ers are made of cloth of gold or fllver, and some are covered with tiny sequins. How to Us: Hot Milk. Hot milk is a cure for many ills. When you come in tired from an af- ternoon’s shopping, try how a cup of it will refresh you. As a pick-me- ip it is unrivalled, for it not only timulates but nourishes. The only point to be remembered is to take it n sips, and not in one draught. In ips it is easily assimilated, but taken a draught it may easily cause a d attack of indigestion. For the mplexion milk is excellent. If the e is wrinkled, rough or sallow, he it with hot milk. Treat the in to hot milk every night, and the provement in whiteness and tex- e will soon be apparent—New k Journal. Flowers for Evening Wear. prge flowers used singly or small- pnes thickly disposed are in vogue now, as being newer than gar- Is or sprays. Roses are general orites, chiefly in dark red, pale jk or deep cream or yellow, any of je three colors forming a most y contrast with all black, pale and white or cream gloves. a violets look also exceedingly n conjunction with the above ith pale pink with mauve Just as in anything re- to dress, with a little thought aste, it is easy to obtain the hum effect out of flower decora- For instance, flowers should ost cases be chosen preferably of rker color than the dress they rate; red flowers will look better white frock than white flowers red one.—London Standard. e 4 A Forgetful Girl. here is a very forgetful girl in ver, living on Washington street. ng a young man, who called on last week, would stay too long, get the clock in the parlor half pur ahead. She was tired, having out horseback riding that day, anted to get to bed early. The e worked. But then she forgot n the clock back, and, having frous young men friends, she also y carelessly forgot which one it las. Last night the young man call- i again. The clock was still fast, hd he noticed it. “That clock is wrong, isn’t it?’ he ked. Yes,” she replied. “I set it ahead a fellow who called Wednesday ht would go home in time to let get some sleep.” i he clock fooled him all right,” ie galied quietly. do yqu know?” oung Wan smiled a sickly 5 short bolero. fussy. Offhand one would say that anybody could make one of these tiny affairs, but a little thought will prob- ably result in engaging a good tailor. ed a short distance from the edge to simulate tucks are becoming to slen- der figures. the shaped pieces disappear one after the other; that is, the ends of the first are covered by a strip of inser- tion or the narrow front panel, the second by the first skirt plait, and so on. the shoulder capes that consist of three or more layers cut in points or scallops and finished with buttonhol- a princess skirt (whose lower part shows the same treatment) fastens with a soft bow at the corsage, tha neck being low exposing the soft lace The girl coughed. . | culty securing good help?’—Denver Post. Dr. Reich Delights Boston. Boston women say that they would give almost anything in the world it Dr. Emil Reich, who has been making such a stir in English society, would only come over and talk to them, and they assert that if he wanted a finan- cial guarantee they even would be willing, if need be, to pawn their hats. What pleased the Bostonians espe- cially was that in one of his most re- cent London lectures Dr. Reich re- marked, “Because woman has a smaller brain masg than man, it does not by any means follow that she has an inferior intellect. I smile when I bear men assert that women have not equal intelligence with men; it is a position that no man can serious- ly maintain.” No wonder Boston would open her finest drawing rooms to the doctor after this, and is anxious to send a petition begging him to cross the water.—New York Press. How to Have Beautiful Hair. “While there's hair, there's hope,” and no woman should resort to manu- factured hair as long as she has any of her own. False hair hurts the scalp, and retards the growth of the hair. With a shampoo once every two or three weeks, a scalp treatment ip be tween times, and a regular brushing every night there is no reason why a woman should not have hair that is beautiful and healthy. For treatment of hair that has been injured by using “rats” there is noth- ing better than scalp massage, the application of a good hair tonic and regular brushing. Coaxing of this sort will cause a new growth and cause the old one to brace up One of the best tonics for the hair is salt, and an excellent dry tonic shampob may be made with it. Mix a coarse quality of salt with powdered orris root, using two ounces to a pound of salt. Sift well in order to mix thoroughly, rub into the hair and scalp and brush out with a good bris- tle brush. Let the arrangement of the hair de- pend on the shape of your face, and don’t dress your hair in the prevail- ing style just because it is the pre- vailing style. If it is becoming adopt it, but if not don’t make a caricature of yourself for the sake of being in the fashion. For an itching, irritated scalp try applications of a solution of boric acid. Purchase an ounce of pure boric acid crystals and place in a quart jar of hot water. Apply to the scalp every night, and in a short time there will be no more trouble. Although a good sumning is the best thing in the world for the hair, it is not particularly good for it to be dried in the sun after shampooing. The sun seems to make each imdivid- ual hair stand out separate from the others, and, as a consequence, it is difficult to arrange it nicely. See that the hair is thoroughly dried and then given a sun bath. —New York Mail. Fashion Notes. Small ribbon rosettes set around the edge of an embroidered baby cap lend an air of bewitching loveliness to.the small face within. Picot edges of gold are a feature of some of the newest of the fancy braids; another conceit is the gold thread laced across the braid. The fullness of the shoct sleeve puffs is sometimes reduced to the re- quired size about the arm by a serles of vertical tucks, which simulate a band, the lower edge being left to flare in a tiny rufie just above the elbow. ¢ The success of a sult depends a great deal upon the trimming of the A correct amount gives it style, but overloading makes it Skirt yokes of shaped bands stitch. The skirt is plaited, and store of fresh water could be carried. Pine-needles were the nly antidote for scurvy; and many a time the boat came tumbling back a man well enough to stand bef Great Neuropaths The Sujferings of Captains of the World. By Tighe Hopkins. colors, In ambush for nearly all of them some form nerve disorder lurks, O trol, is almost the sole exception. What says the bead-roll? At thirty-two Alexander the Great, who had reckoned himself a god, die on their destinies. Charlemagne, the great and wise caj tain of the Franks, who stands for feudal civilization, wh “snatched from darkness all the lands he conquered,” an “We're having so much trouble | during, or just after, one of his frenetic orgies. Caesar, the foremost man of in getting a hired girl,” she said. | the ancient world, had strange convulsions in his later years, and it may be Does your mother ever have diffi] that the dagger of Brutus saved him from declining into madness. Marlbor- daring Clive, world famous and the conqueror of India, at forty was decidedl a neuropath. Clive was passionate, morbid, gouty, and an opium eater, ton was distinctly epileptic. Peter the Great is “said to have lasted three days.” Charles V., whose mothe had a certain general unsoundness of mind, to which mercy was altogethe homet—but let Mahomet rest. said, by the celestials, - - . of « The Endless Life - ~S By Samuel McChord Crothers. UT the time comes when there is something mare. material world is nothing short of a miracle. causation. His language is strange in this world of law. it only a chance concourse of atoms, organized into a brain ship eternal beauty. to circumstances, but only to a higher will, Molecules, however organized, do not naturally Chemical reactions are not thus expressed. new power in the mechanical forces. er kind of energy. The stupendous fact is the existence of a living will. Out lute good.” Can that be true? Our instinct for orderly causation does not allow the statement to pass unchallenged. A universe out of which there emerges a living will cannot be purposeless. In the light of the living will the history of the past must be written, and this newly revealed force throws a penetrating light into the future. Here is something that has an eternal meaning: — ; O living will that shalt endure When all that seems shall suffer shock, Atl —The untie, - - » o How the Cossacks First Came to America By Agnes C. Laut Msi fay nnd rman CF 00000000000 ONG before Peter the Great had sent Vitus Bering to Amer- 390009994908 ica, in 1741, Russian voyagers had launched out east and ® & north with a daredevil recklessness that would have done $ | 3 honor to prehistoric man. That part of their adventures is ® & record that exceeds the wildest darings of fiction. Their 3 : boats were called kotches. They were some sixty feet long, 90000000006 flat-bottomed, planked with green timber. Not a nail was 00000000000 sci. Where were nails to come from six thcusand miles across the frozen tundras? Indeed, iron was so scarce that at a later day, when ships with nails ventured on these seas, natives were de- tected diving below to pull the nails from the timbers with their teeth. In- stead of nails, the Cossacks used reindeer thongs to bind the planking togeth- er. Instead of tar, moss and clay and the tallow of sea animals calked the sgams. Needless to say, there was neither canvas nor rope. Reindeer thongs supplied the cordage, reindeer hides the sails, On such rickety craft, “with the help of God and a little powder,” the Russian voyagers hoisted sail and put to sea. On just such vessels did Deshneff and Staduchin attempt to round Asia from the Avctic into Bering sea (1647-50). #10 be sure, the first bang of the ice-floes against the prow of the rickety boats knocked them into kindling wood. Two-thirds of the Cossack voyagers were lost every year; and often all news that came of the crew was a mast- pole washed in by the tide, with a dead man lashed to the crosstrees. Small to the home port, not ore the mast.—Harper’s Magazine, » - » » ya United States -a— Army is Too Small By F. L. Huidekoper. 3 —— Fe — N 2 O nation in the entire history of the world sas yst neglected its military strength without ultimately paying the penalty. France was the foremost military power from 1800 to 1812, and again in 1860, and Russia was presumed to be invincl- ble less than three years ago. Yet we all know what ter- rible humiliation France underwent in 1870-1871 and what defeats Russia has just suffered. Do we fondly imagine that A very old-time flavor attaches to ng or braid. One that accompanies € a “1 called Wednesday night.” ¥ of the bodice beneath. were? giving a new version to the old proverb so as to make it read, “The Lord takes care of habes, fools and the United States!” power,” with duties and responsibilities which we never have had before. We have rich possessions upon which other nations naturally look with covetous ing is sure to come.—North American Review. we are going to escape the consequences, when, in actual fact, we are not one whit better prepared for war than they We have gone on entirely too long laboring under a grave delusion, and We have become a “world yes; we have a great country whose prosperity is unexampled. Unless we re strong enough to hold the one and to protect the othar, our day of reckon- I supreme captains of the world there are but six or seven, | and scarce one among them exhibits genius in its healthiest | of | Grotesque as the statement seems, epilespy, manifest in greater or in less degree, revolves up- who reared an empire that no hand but his was able to con- ough, who was married to a violent woman, and whose only son died in boy- hood, was epileptic during his ten last years of life. The adventurous and At forty-nine, rich and of unstinted reputation, he committed suicide. Welling- His fainting fits after Waterloo were frequent, and it was an attack of epilepsy that carried him off. The Romanoffs have been neuropathic for nearly three centuries, and one of the epileptic fits of was insane, had fits in his youth, and was gouty, bald and scrofulous. Fred- erick the Great (from the face of whose father, when he took a walk, says Macaulay, “every human being fled”), reared in a perfect inferno of a palace, foreign. The stock of Oliver Cromwell was not overhealthy, and of the neuro- pathic tendencies of the Protector himself there is sufficient evidence. Ma- Joan of Are, the divine girl-woman, seer and soldier, who came from her sheepfolds of Lorraine to make victorious the ori- flamme of France, Joan heard voices and saw visions, and was kissed, she je: And ot the dust there emerges a creature whose existence in the Connect him as closely as you may with all that went before, and yet the amazing fact remains that his being carries him into an- other sphere which transcends the familiar road physical it as yesterday they may have been organized into the weeds of the roadside, from which comes the confident voice: I love, I hope, I wor- I offer myself in obedience to a perfect law of righteous- ness, I gladly suffer that others may be saved, I resist the threatening evil that I see, I choose not the easy way, but the difficult way, my will shall not yield thus utter themselves. There are no equivalents for this Are we not compelled to say, “We are in the presence of a new and high- of a universe purposeless fore there comes a purposeful will devoted to abso- SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. | er at sea than on a railroad. purpose of a leaf. London is trying new fire helmets, proof against smoke fumes or gases. Wearing one of them a fireman passed fifteen minutes in a room filled with smoke from burning straw that had been sprinkled with sulphur and emerged unaffected. 0 d d The little lizard called the gecho has been supposed to cling to the ceiling, like the housefly, by means of suctorial discs at the ends of the toes. This proves to be incorrect and Dr. Schmidt has found that the underside of the toe scales have clusters of hair- like, erectile bodies, by which the ani- mal seems to cling. It is now believed that the holding power is due to elec- tricity. y r Arctic science should be greatly ad- vanced by the permanent station for its study to be established this year on the south coast of Disco Island. This novel station, to be established by a gift from Mr. A. Holck, of Copen- hagen, and to be aided by an annual grant of $3000 from the Danish gov- ernment, will have a well equipped biological laboratory, with working places for visitors and will provide a library of Arctic literature. The only charge to visiting naturalists will be a small fee for board. r An indication of the rapidly growing Interest in underground water sup- plies, even in states where the rainfall is abundant and the soil is naturally fertile, is given by the program just prepared for the work of the coming season by the Geological Survey of Illinois. A special department of the work will be devoted to the study of the underground waters of that state, >| in order to determine the limits of what are called the “Artesian basins,” and the various depths to which it may be necessary to penetrate in different localities to obtain good water for mu- nicipal and agricultural purposes. All the waters will be carefully analy- zed and subjected to laboratory tests, and thus it is hoped that the work of developing new water-supplies will he put upon a thoroughly scientific foot- ing. Capock, much used in Holland and other European countries, is a pro- duct of certain bamboos known in the Dutch Indies as the “false cotton tree.” It is a down of a yellowish brown silky filaments, which is found in the capsule of the fruit, which it sur- rounds and protects the tender pulp. It is not only very light, but it ab- sorbs scarcely any water even after months of maceration. Less than a pound is sufficlent to support a man of ordinary weight in water. In the English and German navies the ma- terial is being used instead of cork for life-saving apparatus, and French surgeons now find that it has advan- tages as a substitute for wadding or cotton for bandages or compresses. It is suggested that the price, which is now high, might be reduced by en- couraging the cultivation of this va- riety of bamboo in Eastern colonies. ARTIFICIAL COD'S EGGS. Breton Fisherfolk Saved by a Novel Kind of Bait. France claims to have at last solved the problem of the Breton sar- dine fishery, say the London Globe. The crisis which has spread such misery in the province was not caused by the disappearance of the shoals, but by their non-appearance from the lower depths, simply be- cause the fishermen had not the only really effective bait for attracting them. This consists in the ‘spawn, or “eggs,” of codfish, which are only prepared in Norway, and sold at the monopoly price of nearly £6 per bar- rel. As the Breton fisherfolk could not afford such a price, they have used inferior substitutes, which have reduced them almost to famine. But at last M. Fabre Domerque, inspec- tor-general of French fisheries, has come brilliantly to the rescue by de- vising an artificial production of cod’s “eggs.” This artificial product is identical in size, color and odor with the natural “eggs,” from which it is quite undistinguishable. Thrown into the water it is ravenously sought by fish in shoals. Mr. Domerque has taken out a patent, but he has placed it in the hands of the minister of ma- rine, so that French fishermen may now have their bait at about a quar- ter the price asked in Norway. Filipinos Good Motormen. The experiment made in deepening solely on native Filipinos to man the cars of the Manila Electric Railway has proved eminently successful. The native has lived up to the require- ments of the job fully as well as the white man could have done under any conditions, and probably better, tak- ing the climate under consideration. To operate a modern electric car in the crowded streets of an Oriental city, where the traffic and pedestrians are absolutely at variance and unac- customed to so foreign an element calls for the full measure of steadi- ness and resourcefulness to avoid ac | An astronomer now declares that! ! Mars Is a million years older tian the | oy carth, | The risk of being struck by lightn- {Ing is five times gredter in the country | 1 ’ ‘than in cities, and twenty times great- The “leafless acacia” is a peculiar tree that forms forests in Australia. The tree has no leaves, but respires through a little stem answering the | PEARLS OF THOUGHT, No house is dark in which a little Mild smiles, Where ignorance loves to tarry. The only safe place to keep one's heart is in a home. \ One's sphere or lot in life may seem { hard, but its trials may be mitigated by cheerfulness, To fear that perhaps he will not come to bless our work is weakening doubt.—Alexander Maclaren, D.D. Life is so wondrous a gift that we are bound to trust its Giver even when we cannot understand His dealings with us.—H., W, Crosskey. The mind which habitually indulges in great expectations is usually the kind which first breaks down under the strain of great disappointments. — Seamen's Coast Journal. {The absolute justice of the system | of things is as clear to me as any | scientific fact. The gravitation of sin to sorrow is as certain as that of the earth to the sun.—T. H. Huxley. It is not the possession of money that constitutes wealth, that gives the highest satisfaction, and awakens the consciousness of noble adhievement, the assurance that one is fulfilling his mission, and that he is reading aright { the sealed message which the Creator placed in his hand at birth.—Success Magazine, The day returns and brings us the petty round of irritating concerns and duties. Help us to play the man, help us to perform them with laughter and kind faces; let chéerfulness abound with industry. Give us to go blithely on our business all this day, bring us to our resting beds weary and content and undishonored; and grant us in the end the gift of sleep.—Robert Louis Stevenson. dwells conceit WORKMEN AS STOCKHOLDERS. What Johney Bearrup Accomplished With His Mill in New Mexico. In Albuquerue, N. M,, is a man with an idea, says the World's Work. He went there twenty-five years ago from Ohio, a young pioneer, apparent- ly less well fitted perhaps for success in the competition of life in a country where water is a luxury than most of his fellows. The idea that now makes him a constructive successful business man was a Socialistic theory that co-operation was the only form of industrial organization with which he cared to have anything to do. And it was manufacturing that he had set his heart on—in a parched .desert where, outside of the struggling little the country did not maintain ge of one person to the But he said to himself, materials should be manufac. where it is produced.” with these two ideas matur- mind that Johnny Bearrup, tured his real name—went on con- tented! ing sheep until a year and a half ago he was able to start the v which he calls the Rio Grande olen Mills, one of the largest man- ufacturing establishments in New Mexico. As far as possible it is con- ducted co-operatively. Most of the workmen are stockholders. Mr. Bear- rup advertises in Socialistic papers, and sells his blankets and other wool- en goods largely to the co-operative societies. There are a good many Socialists In the United States. His agents visit co-operative stores and Socialistic societies. They sell not only blankets, but they sell stock in the mill on a 5 percent commission. He invites the stockholders to come and to work in the mills. For his idea is expanding. If the Socialists will keep on buying his blankets, and the stockholders will keep on coming to - his little settlement on the outskirts of Albuquerque, he sees no reason why his co-operative factory should not be the nucleus of a co-operative town or why the co-operative factory should not be supplied from a co-op erative sheep ranch as well as selling to co-operative stores. If he were simply a visionary, his experiment would deserve only passing attention, but he is a keen, wWide- awalie business man. He has the re spect and confidence of the other business men of the town. He is well liked. There is no apparent reason why the enterprise should not suc- ceed—as long as he is at the head of it, Grave Digger Unearths Rich Ledge. A gravedigger working in the hill- side cemetery has uncovered a four foot vein, and assays show that it car- ries values of $100 a ton in gold. The hole was immediately filled, and | George W. Oliver staked off a claim. This is not the first time that the presence of gold has been suspected in the hillside cemetery. Highly min- eralized quartz has frequently been uncovered in the place, but the values have never run so high in gold, and it is likely that the active operations of the miner will soon invade the “silent halls of death.”—Reno correspondence San Francisco Chronicle. The Moon and Crops. In the early years of Tuskegee, says Booker T. Washington in the World's ‘Work, much was said about the effect of the moon upon the crops, but the discussions usually brought out the point that deep ploughing was more important in moon; and lunar theories of agricul- ture have long since been discarded by those farmers who have attended the meetings. agriculture than the James Callahan, a philanthropist, who died recently at Des Moines, Ia., left $20,000 to establish a home for dient.—Electricity. drunkards’ wives.