{ title: 'The Age Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.) 1905-1909, February 16, 1905, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about Chronicling America - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84036048/1905-02-16/ed-1/seq-2.png', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84036048/1905-02-16/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84036048/1905-02-16/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84036048/1905-02-16/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
About The Age Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.) 1905-1909 | View This Issue
The Age Sentinel (Boulder, Mont.), 16 Feb. 1905, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn84036048/1905-02-16/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
The Age Sentinel Il\ Tut.: Bou'Lltklt PONIdalllau Co. BOULDER, MONTANA PINAFORE DAYS. I sometimes wonder where the girls of yesteryear are gone; The sweet one/ in the picture that, on mern•ry's %liens drawn. I turn to look at now and then; a pic- ture of outdoors Where boys in knickerbockers play, and girls In pinafores Are just as sweet as they can be—as sweet as they were then. Ah, yes; I think they're sweeter now since they'll come not again, Except In memory, to play the games we used to play. 1 wonder If it benefits to turn to yester- day. I wonder if It benefits a follow when he's old To turn to other scenes and days and leeks of braided gold, And fells he used tn long to kiss, but whom he did not dare; But wily dared to stand around and won- der If they'd care. When Liz:le Hohlfeider was young, In aprons starched and stiff. And yellow braids and dimpled chin, I used to wonder If— But what's the use of maundering o'er things we can't forget': But still her inem'ry comes to me and makes me wonder yet. Ah. if she would or she would not, 'Us years too late tu know. Since We were young—Lord, stop the yearee-uwas 20 years ago; I sat one night a year ago and heard her sing and play The stings and tunes my boyhood loved before it went away; And each tune took Inc farther back to youth's unclouded skies, And when I turned to come away the tears were in my eyes: For we had been for just a „pace as young as one, we were— Me Just a romping lad. and she—just Liz - aie Hohlfelder. Both just as young as what we were; she still seems just as young As when she first sang those old songs that just last year she sung; Her voice is just as clear and sweet, her «es are just as blue; 'Tls only just myself that's lost the youth I une time knew; The years have jostled me and made a punching -bag of me. And I'm too fat to ertss one Peg above the other knee. I wonder it it titos to turn when life burns dim and low Tie comrades, boys and girls we loved, days or lor9. ;ups —J. M. Lewis, Hieusten Poet. d******** e *do +PP** • te •tild *PS PER • • • HIS BROTHER'S KEE e • uttunnummt:!nuniummttmusnt tt • 1 BY if. A. RUTHERFORD. e i oreleftilesketrestiVereeffie...e: CINCE his eerliest childhood Arthur itilineton haul adored his beituti- fel and shall ;segue mother, and, in re- turn, his tine 1 ;er weeishiped—his broth- er John. Like a filial and super-vouthful Sir Galahad. hi- pu re anel fe . rvent devo- tion hail ti ver wavered. There had been no ;:sti•rval in all his short life in whieh he \as not her faithful knight. nor any age at at hieh he was not readv to do her sertivIce---to challenge creation on her behalf. But eiretimetances had been .gaintit the expression of his loyally. NO opportunity had heen giv- en hint—nor. being retieent by nature. Old he efesire it —of elething his en- thtselasm ire the adequate language of his e ell -bred class and world. To most Iainde the fart that the Honorable Mrs ltilington was a widow wile lost two sons on whern to lavish her affeetion made her palpable favor - Diem else more inexcusable. In the first plats. there had !teen. from Mrs. Ell- ington:re point of view, two children Where one would have stiffieed—for her sons were twins. John—the elder by a short half-hemr—was the heir, there- for' needed and welcomed. But for Mated there was no such ready-made ride nor, as far as lii» molhe r could see, any reaseen 'ir wives:betty for his ex - let' -nee \Poor little • hap :•• his father had dubbed him at sight, with an in- stinct ot prop:It-tie commiseration. A year later Major Itilington was killed In a railway - aecielent, anii Arthur was left practically pareu tIPS\. Il I. moth- ar's heart haul not holding capacite for the t beside herself. In addition te the privileges \(in- ferred by primogeniture. all the deeft- rat 1VP airac ,. 1 4 of body and mind that the beautiful worldly woman most prized hail been centered on John. Ar- thur. who was ;mall and plain and si- lent ramp in nowhere. Fr o m t i ts t o t e_ sery days John wae what is calleei there a staking\ ehild; healthy. good- looking. good-tempered: of such im- portance In the household that he was clivar» John— never Johnny et Jack, even to his mother Consequently his bearing was assured his manner fear- less and expansive - . The lesion that took Arthur the morning to learn John masitereel in an hoer Gauged by the game formal setandard the brothers - panned out\ differently. Whether the are the , yielded Was of the same value neither insatter nor tutor; paused tee inquire. Between themselves the Mos. though antithet Will, were not antagonintie. John liemed down to Arthur and w•asi kind. and Arthur acc••pted the peedtion and lieu -eu ep to John. Hi.: sole in- heritance from him mother was an in- clination to think that all was for the best In this heal of tamable worlds. That the treatment he reeeived in it wee different from that awarded to his brother did not affert his finding. in sidle Of the great gulf fixed be- tween them by their mother's injudi- cious hand, the twins had taken earl, progressive step in their existence side by side. They had gone to Harrow together, and had entered anil had left Sandhurst at the same time. That John's name appeared near the top of the list and his brother's not far ?tom the other end surprised no one. On/7, 'me person among all Mrs. Ellington's friends had the temerity to remark that It was astonishing. Mrs. Hilington's reply was a self -revelation . \Poor little Arther, he hasn't done badly for him! Fie must have worketi hard to have got through at al!. We didn't expect he would. I fancy John'a example influeneed him more than any of us know. Oh, no Thane la not the least fear that he has beerw'orhol himself. He is perfectly strong and never complains. He has not given me an hour's anxiety since he was born.\ The rasi• friend smiled, and agreed with t he last remark more emphatic- ally than was, perhaps, quite polite. Arthur, she was certain, had never cost his mother a moment's uneasi- ness since he was born. So life—the easy, pleasant life of the rich—passed happily enough for the young Rilington'e, with plenty of pas- time and very few troubles until the year after they left Sandhurst. Even at this point where, in the natural course of events, there should have been the parting of the ways, the strange inter -blending of their fates in- terfered. They were both gazetted to the same regiment. Then the Boer war was declared, and with die down hard- ly formed on their faces, and in com- pany with most that was young and eager and strenuous in the Empire, John and Arthur Itilington set sail for the front. Al John's express wish their mother consented that the farewells should be said at home instead of on the crowded transport. Dry-eyed, haggard and intense, she followed the young men's movements, and hung on their words during the brief hours they could Pass with her. When the moment of part- ing \ame she watched them, in an agony too great for words, mount the dog-cart that was to take them to the station and out of her sight, perhaps. forever. The reins were in John's hands when her white lips parted in a supreme effort to speak. Then she put out her hand and pulled her young- est son by the arm till her lips were at his ear. \Take care of John,\ she whispered. -- \Our bugles sang truce for the night - cloud had lower'd Anil the sentinel stars set their watch in the sky.\ To -night the lines recurred inces- santly to Arthur. \The sentinel stars,\ he repeated to himself, linger- ing on the expression. He loved to think of them as such, for he, too, was on \sentry go,\ and had been ever since his mother's last injunction fell on his ear. The campaign had lasted IS months, and for the most of the time the regiment to which the Itilingtons be- longed—the Light Defencibles—had been in the thick of the fray. In the Orange Free State, in the Transvaal, in Cape Colony, they had followed the trend of the fighting; and, although many a brave soldier had Callen out of the ranks, never to rise again. the Ril- ington brothers, the• Gemini. as they were commonly cailed, had escaped unbut . t. Among their brother ()Meets it \as said that Arthur's anxiety formed an invielble protective arinor time since he had come into ramp he round John that turned both shot and 1°°ked tin Then, remembering the part he hail set himself, his eyi•s re - shell. As there was nu such shield for sought the• ground. lint the eolonel Arthur, his ininninity, they agreed. must be aecrelied to Inek. Jolen himself had seen what Ile wanted in them, and I had formed his own opinion there - neither noticed taw returned the solici- tude. train. Do you Ines,\ you are practically Arthur's; preaenee to -night in the li n h, „ hip un d er t h e etara i„ elea a act -teeing yourself of eowardiee?\ of in the comparatite comfort of the 1 mess tens at the temporary base. Was ' title TO this well-Lnown tie between hine and his lerother. ‚John, his senior In the regiment set he was in life by a cingle step. hail been sent out in com- mand of a email i•onvoy and Its cavort, and Arthur had been deputed to ae- ; emnpany him. \I dare say it \ell be a bit of a treat for the Gemini tie be together.\ ; thought their kind-hearted Colonel. 'I'm blest if I ever saw brothers resell chum:. It's rater the other stay The march was to he a short one. The little column had only left camp their destination the next evening. that morning and expeeted to reach The country to be traversed haul been report eel free from Dee enemy: no elan- e ger was antieipated. For this reason. and also because we are a saniculne r nation, the eseort was small, and „fil - sers anil men proportionately light- hearted Night hail eome anui darkness had I fallen on the land as quirkily as a thick veil ilrawn by a beery hand covers a • scarred face As far as the eye eeeiluC see the solitary little camp was the ! only sign et human life- en the vast and bounellees veldt. The usual ',recall - clone against surprises had been taken. the oxen haul been watered. the rations eaten. t lee last pipe smoked, anel weary men and patient, long-suffering ani- mals hail lain down to rest. Only John and Arthur »reined wakeful, anel ex- ( -hanged a few desultory remarks be- fore teitning In They spoke of their mother and ot how lonely she must be, and again Arthttr remembered the charge she had given him But darkness is the bent cover, and under its wing men who know the country and its secrets ean effect movements in unbroken silent,. Near- er anel nearer through the muffled hours of night crept a foe who slum- bered not. Whose ease was desperate, and whose existente as a lighiing fore, depended on the rapture of that convoy. All they eraYed - food, elath- ing. weapons, and, sleeve all, ammii- n I t ion - was in those wagons. As the first glow of «lawn deepened and burned in the eastern sky, a soli- tary rifi° idiot rang nut over the plain; then another and another. In sharp sesecession, running into one long, un- broken rattle of nowise - dry. Phit-ping. phlt-ping. sang the hail of Mutterer lead Olaf elung and blinded and be- wildered men awl :inIrnals alike. Phut- Ping on every sidr, anil no shelter at hand. The moment of attaek had been well chosen —when Kaffir delvers were bar- nessine, the ox -teams, and the bitstle of the• :dart was on the imprepaied men. Taken at a disadvantage, and for the moment in hopeless disorder, the men Seized their rifles and wildly returned the enerny're flre, wasting their bullets as feet as they could dis- charge their weapons. In the niftier of the excitement Ar- am' fosind time to think of John. \Lie down, John,\ he said. \what's the good of exposing yourself like that? The men are all right—they will be steadier presently.\ he urged, as a bullet hit his brothers' helmet. To his amazement. John's face turned ghastly pale. \This must be stopped,\ he said brokenly, like a man shaken with some terrible fear. \We muet surrender. We are outnumbered, tied the ammunition is exhausted.\ \Surrender! No fear,\ returned Ar- thur reassuringly. \There's plenty of attlinunition ill the wagon. I'll have some eerved out.\ Ile turned, and as he did so John slipped a aaudeerchief from his sleeve, fastened It on a bayonet, and held it on high, where the breeze caught and rocked it gently. Almost at once time firing from the kopje elackened, and then ceased, and simultaneously the men heard the bugle sound \cease fire.\ When they looked round bewildered, though no doubt to some extent relieved, they saw their officers standing together, and on the ground between them a bayonet with a shameful pennon at- tached. Which of the two had raised It? But nothing certain was known of the surrender until, by one of the strange chances of mar that upset all calculations and render the foresight of experience futile, Col. le? Sage heir(' from the Rilingtons themselves an ac- count of what had happened. For reasons of their own. the Boers haul set the two young officers free, having first relieved them of their val- uables, - l'he brothers had t rantped back to camp, some 50 miles, in less than 30 hours. They had had neither food nor water, and had been soaked to the skin in heavy rain. As John was on the point of collapse, shaking in every limb, anui almost unconscious, he was ordered into hospital by the doctor, anti on Arthur devolved the task of giving the details of the unfor- tunate occurrence. \Devilish awkward for the boy, hav- ing such a story te tell when his own brother was In charge.\ thought the colonel, as he prepared himself to lis- ten to the disclosure. After the first few sentences his face hardened. He miseloubted his own senses. \I fall to follow you, Mr. Ellington,\ he interrupted, in a tone that was sel- dom heard by the regiment. \Your story is incredible. Am I to under- stand that, without your brother's knowledge or permission, you flew the white flag after a bare ten minutes' lighting, and with a total lose of three men wounded and two killed?\ \Yes sir.\ \You were not in any Way separated from the ammunition wagon?\ \No sir, we were not.\ \Could you have got at it—if had tried?\ \Quite easily, sir.\ Theie was a ring of conviction anil truth in tile last three words that had been wholly wanting in all that had gone before, and the colonel recog- nized it. A tinge of color came into the young man's face, and for the first you \Yes. sir,\ aneweired Art loir, re- lapsing into the cold and guarded man- ner he hail menneniarily dropped. \Well. Mn,Itilington,\ remumed the volumed. after a painful pause, \I have heard all yeneve got to say. Of eourse, you are aware that you have left tile no option in the matter. It alit have to be gone into when your brother IS - This theory. • ' ch.. Electrician observes, nee to give evidenee which at present - demolishes at a blow all our ornettp- he is dot. in the meantime I shall be Lions et a liquid Interior at the tremen- obliged by your considering the state- dou» teinneniturus implied by a uni - • nt yoll have just maele as eonfielen- formly rtsing graident.\ It now be- t lai But there's suimething behind it comes permissible to SWAMP that the \hit - h I haven't got at. Ir. lit' mean- time you can return to duty.\ AM the eeningster left the tent col Le eagc sighed deeply, hie haul seen many a good man fall In his country's Fen ice. others; heel lost health or uitrt'nglh or ilriitus. atol ot e.rs. am' it— radium. What is known of %Meanie more piteous still- thi ir reputation phenomena in the past, or heat as a and their honor Was his old friend's factor In the formation of the heavenly son destined to join their dishonored bodies, of the sufficiency of 1...1 Mare ranks' theory to account fury the polar eiestene \It is bound to go hard veil h him If \ 50 Mai» cooling laud i\. nega Lives the suppoeition of there being he sticke; to time story. - muttereo. an - \Burl there's: gomething fishy some - other auffirient range for the same ef- • ere luI m „usinerhu-heve it ut fees. Berides, dues the wiirld know enough of the break-up of the tedium that full -dress -parade brother of his. aram and its libe ration of heat at suri'I'll give the boy a chanee. any way • Ile may dear himself yet pressures as exist at great dep'h of rook .- to be imune that the phenomena if th' 'aboratory would be present Gore? A FISH TALE. (II \l'hree blessed .iours and never a bite. I'm getting sick of this. Uh \A nibble, by the gods! Luck at last! Lr! it does feel heavy.\ ce) It must have been at least a 9 t -pounder. We shall, alast never enow, for -- tee it tool: .linelens ali his time to fish himself out. RADIUM MAY HEAT WORLD. Theory Advanced by German Scien- tist Revolutionizes All the Old Ideas lint Arthur never elld el -an himself, ils tell mortally ainineled in the very next skirmish, ann died borne hieirs at \I am glad the odonel understood.\ he mod, as he- drew his last flinering passing breath. And SO war; Col. la' Sage when ever t hie line and hauls Nea t watt 'our and e had «mite a long ionsersa- he heard the message thon \ Of course the court of inquiry never ' - Yes It struck me that Ibid seen your was held. There was no object in stir- fare beiories rejeined the other. ring up noted) . waters. John was in- \Yee you offerel mea edger. and I tie vended home with rheumatic fever. I eepted It with thanks. hut remarked that huit reeovered to enjoy lom -elf in eisli j would smoke another time. I iarried life.—Canadian Magaelne. ' that cigar for three da», and Ilti-n I made use eef it. I a - ant to thank you for that THERE WAS A DIFFERENCE. , cigar (Mo. more •' - Was it an extra good one?\ was A German physicist. Herr Liebenow, puts lorward the theory, which has been hinted by others, teat the re Ines be enough rauiem in the crust of the globe tu account for the tame'. internal heat. It ia ()My ti cessar) to suppoee, for this object, that radium is - uniformly dis- tributed throughout the mau\ of the eartb in quantities of about 1-1,000 of what is known to our in pitchblende.\ But there are many ineleattoue that radium ee curs more tree:prides -aan this in all knosn roclos and Illat its oc- currence la more trequent near the sur- face of the earth than in the interior, temeerature rises toward the renter „t the earth, hut attains a MiXtrilt1M at num tery great depth, and that the interier beyond that point is at a uniform ane eomparatively low temperature This is making rather tepo much 01 Man Banned I p In erl land Not Hight ot Sins He Was Hart. Uncle Jared and Uncle Benjamin made a sorry pair. Title, there war , blood on Uncle Benjamin's; forehead, ; and he lotked white and faint. But !'nele Jared. ‚u ho fried to support him, walked with a very proneetneed limp elisplayed only one coat tail where two should hate been, anil was rum- pled and hedraggled generally in a way to suggest participation in a riot, re- lates Youth's Companion. \What's happened to you two: — ; asked a townsman. • That pesky atilt of Benjamin's run , away and throw' -,t him just as I came ; Unele Jaied enswered. \I'm ; giving him a lift along toward'« home.,\ though you needed one ourself,\ prenounced the inquleitor. ' Wh at '8 been h poem in' to Nola?' \Who me? nothin' to :meek of— pisit been to Wan to see the Mg pro- cession. Got more or less hustled round and tromped on. Init—\ He etooped painfully to adjust a shoe which had been ripped open so that half of the upper flapped as he walked \Don't see noteh difference betwixt ye, pidgin' by the display o' wreck- age,\ the neighbor persisted. \There's conelder'ide difference, I take it,\ Uncle Jared answ - ered, with roneliteive dignity. \Benjamin's Met with a accident, but I've b‘en pleas- u rin'.\ Thanks Were Due. \About a year ago,\ said the drummee to the man in the seat ahead. \I ‚'a- ' queried. \No sir. It watt an extra bad nne. Was FO bad [het the man I gave It smoked It and dropped dead. and I did ri have to pay the little debt f I °a . hlm!\—Chirago Daily News. Secrets of Long Life. A Lowrie' nee spaper has been ask a number of very old men for the seer , di their long life. The replies arco' tt. sort commonly heard One lives Iona he 'aune he lias :aken wine every day im- moderation, another because he lie never tasted wine; one finds novereite. virtue In moderate physical exert is; another is convinced that he lives lone beeavse he keeps his body quiet and b mind active. Ali of which means tus' each man has followed his natural in cline; lien, never exceeded the redeem; fixed by good sen.e, and really thought little or nothing about It.—St. Louis Post-Dispateh. Lady Skipper. Miss Jene Morgan, a lady well- known in Philadelphia soelety, has 'ragged all the neeessary examinations and beer granted a master mariner's eertlficate Next, spring Mime Morgan will assume command of her father's yacht, the Watwin, and go for a erulse round the world Peculating Trainmen. Santa Fe detcetives, disguised as tramps. have fetind that its trainmen have been earrying passengers at great- ly reduced ratee en the cotnpeny's Cali- fornia Rues and pocketing the money. WOMAN'S WIT IN BUSINESS more Ways Than One of Gaining a Paine, with a Contrary Employer. A delegation of young men had beco shown into the drawing -room of their employer's residente, and when his wife entered they seemed ill at ease. relates Smith's Weekly. \We are employed at yottr husband's office,\ explained one of them at length. \Indeed she said In some surprise. To what am I indebted for this call?\ \Well said the spokesniate pluck- ing up a little courage, \we've been getting off at three o'clock an Satur- days, and now we want to make it twelve or one o'clock if we can.\ \Really you must excuse me,\ said the mistress of the house courteously but firmly. \I never interfere with my husband's affairs.\ \Oh we don't want you to,\ they pretested together. \You see,\ said the spokesman, get- ting down to business again, \it's just this way: We want you to be hind and nice and pleasant to him for the next few days, and then we'll go to him and ask him to—\ \There is an inference, gentlemen,\ she began, but the spokesman inter- rupted. \Oh I know all about it,\ he said, \I'm married myself. Things go wrong in the house, and you're tired awl cross at breakfast. Then we suffer at the office. You stay up late to chaper- on your daughter to a ball, and We have more trouble at the office.\ \I was discharged from a post once because my wife was cross the sane morning that my governor's was,\ tilt - :delisted one young man. \1 suppese our wives would have chatted pleas- antly if they had met, but there was an explosion when we did. He was angry and said something sharp to me and 1 to him. That's the way it goes on now; and if you'd make it a point to be particularly pleasant to him for —say, four days—\ \Yes four days will do nicely,\ broke in the spokesman. \Then we'll go to him and everything will be all right. The fourth day you give him the hest brealtfast you can—every- thing that he likes best—and we'll get what we want in three minutes Talk about a woman having no influence in business! Why, the humor she's in has more effect than a hank failure or a boom in trade.\ She thought she ought to Ire angry, but instead, she laughed, agreetl to the proposal, anil four days later, when they waited on the head of the firm, he fusil u' the closing hour 12 o'clock and galei that never in the history of the firm hael things run as satisfac- torily as they haul during the last four ebays. Big Salary, Little Job. The Turkish minister ‚if the navy is said to be worth $12,uneteteio. Ilis sal- ary is $80.000 a year. TE GOT IT. e Help' I m drowning'. nie a lifehtioy.\ HOW TO USE OLD CHINA. A Novel Way to Change Broken Bits Into a Decorative Piece. The next Unie anyone in your fam- ily breaks a piece of China do not throw away the pieces, but save them carefully. If the piece broken should be a large plate, it will be especially valuable to you, although anything of the sort Will be of use. If you have no paints of your own, wait until the family have some paint- ing done about the house. Caen get a little of the paint and a small brush. For five cents you can buy at any NOVEL CHINA PIECE, grocery store a small pack - age ot china cement, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. This will fasten together the edges of the broken china until the plate or other piece looks as good as now. However, it would not do to use it as if it had never been broken, for a very little use Would smash it altogether, but for ornamental pur- poses it is all right. Cut from any old magazine the prettiest figure you can find. It must be a shilhouette figure; that is, full profile. You will find a large variety, especially in the advertising pages. Paste several of these figures lightly all over the bottom of the plate, or if the object brohen be a pitcher or cup, all over the outside surface. Now paint over the whole thing, pictures and all, with your paint, putting on a good, thick coat. Before the paint is dry, loosen with a pin the edges of the figurer; you have pasted on the china. Now strip them all off, being very careful tmt to smudge the edges Of course, there Will be no paint on the china where it was covered by the picture, end the outline of the picture will silos . In white again its surrounding back- ground of paint. The plate, thus prepared, will maSe a very dainty anil attrae•tiv«i turns - ment, and you will lind it lots of fun making this novel use of old bits of china. COUNTRY G!RL COSMETICS Right at Hand, the Country Girl lias Materials for Beauty Lotions. The girl living um a farm has SO many maim riais at hand with %chid' to make acceptable gifts tu city triende, and not the least of these are the ingredients fur harmless but betide; cosmetics. Anil, by the way, aelis the Pilgrim, did you i'nos that aord cosmetic „as derived :rum a Greet term retold : yin' skilled in the art of riecoratern or ornament? From the first, rhubarb sprouts and let- tuce leaves on through spinach (for cat- ering creams and lotions>, strawberries, iucumbers, watermelons and quince, eerie honey and mile and nuts. the girl on the lam has the beat and purest ma; ertale lut (Moose'rom and wort, „11h An •xpenelve Itaeian cream is Made from the grown.' g r. u n »cede of cue um- bers melons and plimpkina maule into emir which is ahignu y perfumed aml m's',' into a paste ‚ii\ »weet cream. The baris of nearly all washes for ehapped hands in quince seeds, so one cari make their own at slight expense by ....Plitt extract of ttch hazel to the emelsian. With tire the girl living on a farm tihisi:d have the pforerbial rose leaf or tea. toe and cream complexion until she is at 'ea -t 77. years of age. The ' room juke of cue limbers enters largely into i the preparation of many fare creatns and eatermelon juice is a famous southern (21 ' Labs certainly. ' \Burned\ by L rul Intense rold as IS We!, burns -- if we May lise the litle r hear If a 'strop\ el' air at a ti intea•se ere «if iffn degrees below zero were 'Ton Ills hand it would have the. „ea ai, would the t awe quart It) molten steel or lead. Every one wheel; the rare of bermes; ought to know .e pain inflicted by placing a frosted bit in • horse's month. It burns like hot Iron. Couldn't Go Far. Strayed—Elan horse with one white foot weighing 1,S00 pounds.—Baltimtre American. face naah Toneate Pore is fins for an ally, greasy ¡bin and the acid of straw- berries rivals that of lemons ass Mellen - Ing agent. The basis of the meet satis- factory cream is iarined mutter) tallow. *hiu h, made creamy with almond oil, swtel with your favorite perfume and colored with the juices of lettuce attn. sib rose peta:s or eurrants, will give both beauty and pleasure to the re- cipient. Try out metton suer in a ena- ble boiler just at. 19rd is rendered. and when Ills reed woe th. top portiot. melt- ing it In • bowl set In hot water, strain through a hair sieve, then through , l'herse eietth, and beat in the almond „II or other itaredients while still creamy. The addition of one dram of tine:tire of berenin or one-half s dram of salicylic add wlr. prevent the emul- sion from beenming rancid. Care of the,. Hands. When washing the hatels always use • pure soap containing no free allose and rinse the soap thoroughly away. Chapped hands are (mammon to indi- tiduals with poorly cireuiating blood, and also to those 'ho frequently im- merse their hands in either hot or cold water. This coetneee jel.y should be used frequently as a preventive of a rough, sensitive aerfare. Thirty grains of gum tragacant h. seven ounce!' of rose water, one-half eimee of glycerin, one- half ounce ef sleeted, en.. tea -pc. ntul of pure borax and two (trope of oil of room. Let the tragaeanth statd in the rose water for three days, str s ie arid add other ingredients Thur. makes a delightfully lovely clear j.119. which dries immediately upon app:ication and which never le-aura the skin oily. It can be used on fare or hands The Lemon Bath. A :mop bath 1 : coneidered a daily ne- sasalty in the West Indies Three or four limes or teams are rot into the water and allowed to lie for half an hour. so that the juice may be extract- ed. Such a hail, givey to the el:in a de- lightfel sent» of freshness end clean - A PRETTY DAISY PILLOW. Crochet Work Employed for This Novel Pillow, Which Can Easily Be Made. -- — Any little girl who is able to crochet can easily make this pretty gift for mother, says the Heston Globe First draw two circles ally size you wish (18 inches in diameter is a good size) on paper. Cut out circle and lay on square of sage green denim (18x18 Inches), and cut the denim Into a circle the exact size of the paper circle. Then buy one spool of white silk finished cotton, one spool of dark green (for the leaves), and one spool of yellow. Crochet the daisies and leaves according to the following di- rections: For the daisies make four chain, using the yellow silk -finished cotton. In the first ch, make as many s c as are required to make a perfect circle. Break the silk and tie in the white; • ch 10, work back 10 a c in the ch Just made, and fasten down with si st. Pass to next st of center, and repeat from •; repeat all around. The flowers seen from the side are made as follows: With the yellow silk make one-half circle, and work petals around the outer edge, as di- rected above. To make a side vein, showing the under side of flower, make a quarter circle with the green silk, and work petals around the edge as before di- rected. If you wish to vary the length of the petals you may do so by making some of the chains short- er than others. For the leaves, work 4 ch with the green silk, 3 d c lu the first ch; turn and make 2 d c in the last ut Of the round just made. Work 2 eta in the next 2 ate ot the last round; turn, make 2 d c In last at of last round, 3 d e in next 3 tits; turn and repeat for next row. Now nar- row 1 st in each round till there are but 2 ata left. Insert the hook in both ata, and draw the silk through both ais; this points the end of leaf Vary the size of leaves by making more or less ata at the beginning, widening and narrowing as directed for first leaf. Sew the flowers and leaves on the pillow as shown in accompanying A DAISY PlieLotv illustration anti draw with lead pencil the steme Outline „terns with the green silk. It is a good idea to but - tonhole the leaves and flowers ont0 the denim. When this bide is corn- pletol eut another circle of denim the sanie size, for back. Around the , edge you may use a cord, a riffle of ribbon or a ruffle of the denim with a herring bone stiteh around edge of ruffle. This is also very pretty made with yellow daisies with brown «on - tu -ra on brown linen. LADY DOCTORS FOR CRAZED German Specialist Advocate. Women Physicians in Hospitals for Lunatics, One of the must 111111Onal Gemini phyricians tur the treatment of mietai Uiseaseit. Prof. Ludt% ig, Is earmetiy act- )i....aung the erust....)Melil of *omen physicians in lunata. as) iump. Alter years ut in‘estiaalion te has tome to the concimelun that the intatie are pe- culiarly susceptible to a Woman s pref.. enee and e, not only the women, but the meu as wetl lie says he has been tustrumenta, in obtaining the ad- w ,, e se t of one woman physician to an se> ;ton for *rowel in south Gartnar.y, and the reie.its ar,' simply phetomenst The women are more tractable, and in the eases where mental disease ia tbe result of sexual trouble the '„man doc- tor works wood , rs Ludwig le tentamn , that In a short time no men physicians wiii be empioved in female lunatic asy- lum:, His opinion Is titipported in large Inemalre by soother eminent *Whom,. Dr. 'Impels. LETTER -WRITING. Do not write long burliness letters. Do not write brief letters of friend- ship. Avoid writing over the head of your correspondent. Never lise words with which you are not familiar. Always .'se nnruled paper of floe teeture. Aauid a prnmeineed rolni', Under no citeumstaneee yen.1 half a sheet ot paper, even for the briefest note, u s ,. only Hack ink Neter write of another anything which you Would not want him to Pee De net write of personal or other important matters tn strangers or Or hoary aequaintaneee Do not nil your letter with lengthy excinies :or your silence. Do not send an important message on a postal eard, anil never use them for notes of invitation. Never begin your letter with the statement that you have little time for cerreepondence One's Own Flower. Mane of the Oiled Englishwomen whose names are also those of flowers favor their namesakes IPA table decora- tions The beautiful blonde Pi 'vents Henry of Pless, daughter of that fa mono English beauty. Mrs Cornwall!, West, la called \Daisy\ by her friends, and this flower often deu oratea het dinine table. while Lady de Trafford, one of whose names 14 Violei, area decorates her table a - ith Sliver bowls el these flowers Even the men are not avenue , to this pretty custom, and roses were the sole decoration at • lane, ball given by Surd Itoerbery. Apple Gelatin. Mane an ordinary apple sauce, basics It rather thin. To every plat of this add a tablespoonful of 'waked gelatin, beat hard and set aside to cried. Serve with rich cream or heep even It =l- uxe ett meringue. sweetened — Mari« Marland.