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Show A V'- - N 1 i; ? r Just why tome men to-co- cranky tod hortly after marriage ia a question many bride find bard to amwer. B Mm. Jala tUB, Cradnaan,Oi t Tlieir inability to solve the problem invariably lies in the fact that they fail to consider the matter from the proper standpoint If the bride would but look to her method of feeding him, she would, in most instances, not only find the cause of hubbys changed nature, but that the alone is to blame. The average brule, unfortunately, knows entirely too little about making a meal nourishing as well as appetizing. While she usually will spare no effort to make a dish tempting, she apparently ignores the part of it If it will suffice to appease hunger and prove agreeable to hubbys palate she feels it will meet all requirement. Day after day she will feed him on canned goods, sweet cake and pudding, then wonder why he steadily grows less agreeable in the home. himself Meeklyvhtibby will at, .saying nothing lest it offend, until he finds a victim to indigestion. His sunny disposition gradually disappears, he now finds it easy to complain, nothing pleases, and his young w ife is heartbroken. She attributes the cause to everything but the right one. She imagines his love for her is growing cold, that he lias become diasatifh-with married life,and visions of divorce proceedings appear through her tears. To her, hubby has become a chronic crank, and the real cause remains. a mystery. Sad, isnt i? Too many girls nowadays marry without a proper knowledge of cooking. Mothers and public schools should not only teach girls bow to prevalue pare all manner of food in au appetizing way, but the nutritious of each, and the importance of serving that which the body craves for the sustenance of life and heatth. Court, many Some day, perhaps, when we all stand before the accountbeen held have that to learn will be surprise as well as regret they be a change? able for their widowhood. Can there not 9 MILCH AT THE COWS SUMMER WHITE ZTTX HOUSE HUEl How to Keep Our Husbands Cheerful 0U & 2 J. .jt, 4 s ' VVt ARDENS TURNED INTO PARKS Movement Started in Baltimore That If Successful Will Mane a Real City Beautiful. ng IS I lllll1 Hill This Is the herd of Jerseys on the Harlakenden estate which will supply the milk and butler for Presi dent Wilson s table during his stay at the summer White House. TALKS WITH YUAN friend. Then turning to Chicago Man Pays Visit to President of China. ed All laboring people, especially those who live on Meat In the Forbidden City Dlecusa Should Be Chosen Sunday Outbreak for the Inveetment of farms, should have one day American Capital In the New in each week on which to for Day of Rest Republic, and read. rest By Mn. R. O. AKns, Cewsnrhe, Tom be chosen should Sunday Pekin, China. President Yuan Shlh-ka-i for this. See that the'Tiouse now lives in the forbidden city, that famous group of palaces which is in order and all dishes washed Saturday night. For breakfast Sunday wire some prepared cereal with sugar, cream for centuries was the residence of ChiAs the ruler of a free na's emperors and fruit, if obtainable. Set breakfast dishes in the sink and turn on people Yuan now occupies the very water. When clean, dry and set away, not forgetting to sterilize before courts and halls where he was wont to kneel as a humble courtier before using neit day. an absolute monarch. True, the cenFor dinner serve on dainty Japanese napkins sandwiches made of cold tral part of the forbidden city ia still meat and light bread, prepared the day previous. Salmon or chicken salad, occupied by the deposed boy emperor beef roast or boiled ham make nice sandwiches and there are numbers of and by the widows of the emperors hut this is side disks, such as vegetable salads, sliced sweet potatoes and deviled eggs, Kfeanghsu and Tungchich, only a temporary arrangement which may be prepared ready and served without using more dishri. The first American to be received A palatable dessert may be made of plain cake and iced tea. Then by President Yuan since his removel to the imperial palaca was John T. treat the tea glasses as the breakfast dishes. of Chicago. . Tha interview Lenfeatey A pleasing was arranged through E. T. WUliamfi Supper may be similar to dinner, but should be lighter. ikwAhc 4Meet wywy iiM,i.l.bl-atiryii- u lnUtoiLi.tN,lcmonade. the American charge d'affalrs end If there are children in the family they will enjoy having their lunch ing mtnieter to China. By special ap Mr. WlUiama and Mr. Let placed in a basket and being allowed to eat in the yard or orchard, picnie polntment featey went to the Palace of the ThrSf fashion. The older ones, too, enjoy having their meals in the sitting-rooSeas April 11. They entered the pt ace by the east gate, which ia a bett-tlfor on the porch. specimen of Chinese architecture. dining-rooThis plan affords a pleasant change from the every-da- y inside the gate they were get Just meals, eliminates cooking and dish washing and enables the housekeeper by a servant in uniform who escorted to make Sunday a day of rest, as everyone should. them to the edge' of the lake, wkich Ilea between the gate and tha palace. There they found a barge manned by ten oarsmen waiting to taka ttem Good literature is some- serosa the lake. This barge was forthing of vital importance merly the pleasure boat of the (band Good-Literatu- re Is Empress Dowager Tze Hal. Frow the au our homes. The charac- lake they had a fine view of the ter of our boys and girls and palaces of the forbidden city.prks To will depend almost as large- the north was a magnificent ntrble By Mrv Qm. PwmIv Crave Cly, Pe. spanning the lake. Beyond that ly on what they read as ou bridge toward the pagoda of the ten thoutheir home training. sand Buddhas and the Imperial tern- allow ed to enter (fur homes. be No filthy literature should ever Parents should choose only good books for the hoys and girls to read while they are young, and by so doing we will be molding their characters along the line of the highest and the purest things of life, and it will have a great influence on their lives as they grow to man and womanhood and go out into the world alone. 9 j . Mr Lenfes-te- y he said that he was always to see travelers from other pleascoun- tries, especially from America. When Admiral Tsai had Interpreted thl Mr. Lenfeatey expressed his admiration for the energetic way in which the president conducted the affairs of state. We Americans,' said Mr admire you not a little' for the way In whiqh you make enemies. We know from experience that no one can carry out a great reform movement without making enemies. After the president had thanked him for compliment, Mr. Lenfeatey asked what the policy of the republic would be with reference to the Investment of American capital in China. The president answered that he appreciated the friendly attitude of America toward the republic of China md especially the stand which the American government had taken on the loan question. There can be ne doubt, said the president, but that every encouragement will be given to Americans who a share In the commercial and ustrial development of China Len-feste- SPEND MILLIONS m m of Vital Importance President Yuan Nearly f 600,000,000 la Saratoga spent annually by Americans on music, according to detailed figures submitted to the annual meeting of the New York State Music Teachers association by John C. Freund. The report gave the following annual expenditures: Opera, $8,000,000; concerts of all kinds, $30,000,000; church music, $50,000,000 to $55,000,-000- ; orchestras in theaters, vaudeville and moving picture houses, $30,000,-000- ; military and brass bands of all $36,000,000; conservatories, kinds, schools and private teachers, $175,000,-000- ; American students, expenses and tuition abroad,. $7,600,000. The expenditures In the musical industries amounting to $S20, 000,000 annually, the speaker said. Analyzing these figures, Mr. Freund said that this country spent every year for music three times the amount spent on the army and navy. Half-Forgott- To the south was a beautiful Island, where the golden tiled roof of many palaces could be sees Ming among the trees. Arriving at the opposite ihore of the lake they were met by aa officer who conducted them through several large gates to the palace bow occupied by the president la the anteroom of the reception hall they were met by Admiral Tsai Ting y to the president Admiral Tsai was dressed In Chinese fashion and wora a bronze colored go 0f Bjg. After a wait of n few minutes It was announced that the president was ready to receive them. As they advanced serosa the spacious waiting room they saw the curtain to tha door of the reception mom slowly drawn aside. About tea Inside the door stood the president framed In a as picture. After Mr. Williams had shaken hands with the president Admiral Tsai Introduced Mr. The president invited ail to he seated at n mall uble near the euier 0f tha room. A aervant brought cups of ten, bottle of champagne, dfr and The president - BrsF conversed in Chinese with Mr. williams, shorn be has known for aani year And whom h counts amoug best plea. 9 Serum to Check Deadly March of Plague Surely, with all of the indefatigable search of the pathological scientists we shall find a serum or cul ture which will check the By Wkm J. Bwgw, Biraew Ale. deadly march of the frer increasing white plague Much progress has been made in this great work in that today there are two remedies being practically tried out. While the Friedmann turtle scrum has failed in advanced cases, yet it has probably checked some incipient cases, particularly in that form of tuberculosis which attacks ths muscles snd limbs. An American doctor has today announced a culture cure for tuberculosis. So, I say, there ia yet hope we shall master this dread disease. It was s great discovery when fully proven that tuberculosis is not hereditary but very contagious. Now we learn that cancer is contagious, but taken in its earlier stages may be destroyed by the knife or by other heroic treatment, such as powerful tissue destroying ointments; also there are claims of cures by the electric needle, The bumanItsriahs whd1iave tnade"generouf contributions for patho logical researchare"grcal" f rioud of thehuman race ; and eoeval with them are those nolle men of science who are bending every faculty to the finding of the much sought cures for deadly diseases. tat -- (ro-retar- LIKE well-know- n pYS . ill THE SCHOOL what jCkU4eit T fLee-Aweet- GARDENS nave' -- Though it is but a small stretch of years since first we heard oS local has school gardens, the movement been one of the most rapid la development of anything touching public life during that time. We now have gardens at 75 schools In this city with 75.000 Children actually working in them from a half hour to three hours a week, says the Los Angeles Times. In addition about 15,000 of these children are doing some sort of gardening at home. Surely this Is a most satisfying and gratifying showing, considering how recent and how crude the beginning, and how feeble the movement during the first year after its introduction. At first no support or even encouragement waa given it by the local school officials, and funds for Its launching and maintenance ' were collected from an apathetic public by a few noble, zealous club fom-en- , The telemerous during the day. who bad more than a dream of phone waa kept ringing moat of the a glorious future for this great eduday by people who wanted to bay cational feature of modern school, the cow and also by those who had life. cats to sell I dont know how long those ads are supposed to run, but Cleveland la Awakened. we don't want any black cats and of the leading artists of CleveForty we havent any fresh milch cow to land have appointed a committee, repsell. resenting the new Arts club, to call upon five citizens and respectfully FIRM NAME OF ISMAY PASSES ask Ihem to atlr the artistic conscience of th sixth city In the United Retirement of J. Bruce as President of States The committee will be asked to deWhite Star Lin Ends Family vise ways and mean for forming a Connection. vast Municipal Art association, London. The famous firm of Ismay, whose duties will arise aa events Imrie A Co., founders of the White transpire, but which will attempt to Star line, has disappeared with the look after the matter of esthetic culture in Cleveland. Our little slaters are running said Professor away ahead of us, Curtl Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Detroit, and even wee and tiny Toledo. He said that the patronage of symphony concerts and devotion to many art forms In the efty proved that the people are hungering and thirsting for the good and the beautiful. People merely want someone or some organization to take the lead. love-makin- g SHOWER CATS ON NEWLY WED Friends of Spokane Pair Use Classified Ade to Carry Out Their Prank. Spokane. An opportunity to sell black cats over three months old at 75 cents to five dollars each, and a chance to buy a milch cow for $25, If taken at once, drew a throng to 109 East Liberty avenue all day, which looked like David Haruma stable yard In the height of his boss swapping actlvttiea Wanted Oats over three months old; black preferred; 75c to $5. Call at 109 E. Liberty. That little want ad inserted in the local papers was responsible for part of the early morning crowd of kitten sellers who called on Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Gray as early as six Shlh-Ka- i. MUSIC Financier. London. In Chancery Lane, the figure other day, a once passed along quite unnoticed. He was no other than JabeX Spencer Balfour,, PfiWK KILLS TWO MEN one too robust, and who looked as if tha world did anything engine Rune Wild Through Buffalo but shine upon. him. Not many years , Yards and Crashes Into a Ago J. Spencer Balfour was the wizard Freight Train- at a touch of whose wand dross turned to gold the J. F. Morgan of the Lon. Buffalo. A small boy went Into the don of bl day. - , New York Central railroad roundhouse hero and climbed Into the cab Employers Honor Their Cook. of an engine. Ho pulled open the New York. Mr. and Mrs. BenJ. B. throttle and as the engine started for- Jacobson of this city gave a party In ward he Jumped. The locomotive honor of Miss Helena Schwarts, who ran wild through the yards at a completed 25 year of faithful service peed of 45 inilea an hour and crashed aa Mrs. Jacobsons cook. head on Into a freight train coming from the opposite direction. The enCupid Hits Commerce. Ossining, N. Y. A a result of more gines met with terrific force. Fred on the beach near, the Ludoke, engineer, was almost Instantly killed and William Froellch. fire- boat line between this town and the' man, was so badly injured that he beach has been abandoned, and women bathers must walk. died soon afterward. l 1 FOR Three Timee Amount Spent on Army and Navy la aid for It by Americana. X There are plenty of good books, and parents should do all they possibly can to uplift humanity in the way of having good books in the homes for the boys and girls to read. Bad literature will lend their young, tender lives downward into the paths of sin snd vileness, while good literature will lift them heavenward. Good books will mold a noble character in the life of a boy or girl. 1 think the devil and his evilrworks are on every page of all bad literature. Good literature is necessary for our boys and girls of today, that they might be fitted to be the noble Christian men and women of tomorrow. So let parents look well to the reading material of boys and girls today and await results in the men snd women of tomorrow. Can yon picture a more pitiable sight than that of a beautiful young boy or girl going down to ruin and perhaps an early grave through the ttil effects of reading the dirty novel ? ihi re wan inaugii Baltimore a movement, oi perliapb it might be belter uruied a propagandist!!, which ati.id at the putlirg down ol tiie tiiiies whuji lietle the back lots that extend Ironi the iiai of dwellings to the uijdwpv alios, relates the American of that ritv Each householder was expected to beautify his particular back yard by the planting of flowers or thiuh f bery, or at least, by raising a eaipe-ors glass When all the household) in a block act upon this suggestion tue retuli will be to create a small paik in the rear of their homes When the scheme is realized fully the back window outlook will he upou a spread of flower gardens a blooming small paradise. The idea has not yet materialized in a way to make Baltimore a city of flower gardens, all over and everywhere, but about in spots there are evidences that a good many householders have had their imaginations touched by the poetic suggestion. The home garden committee, which has its headquarters at 812 Fidelity building. is doing much to promote the backyard garden movement. Scattered over the city there we thousands of back yards that are now beautiful with blooms and green In the majority of inshrubbery. stances, however, these are boxed in affairs each little garden Is carefully segregated from the neighboring gardens on either side. The pulling down of the division fences would at once enlarge the vistas, and if all the division fences on both sides the midway alleys were pulled down there would be the effect of a diversified garden park. There may be obstacles in the way of pulling down the back fences, but they are generally obsta cles that can be removed. The convincing evidence that the difficulties can be obviated la that, in instances, they have been obviated. tars ago Two rated oclock. Mrs. Gray waa Miss Lulu Carr. She and Mr. Gray were married at Our Lady of Leudres church, and the insertion of the want ad was part of n prank played on the newlyweds by their friend The cat ad had only a unall part In the deeply laid plot of tor in the asms Issue appeared this offer of aale: Fresh milch cow, i25. lt Uken at once. 109 .Liberty On top of this a crowd of Junk dealers who were requested to call at the address at ten o'clock also caused the considerable newly-marriecouple amusement, incidental to the annoyance, but they took the Incidents all aa n Joke, as they stood off the various callers during the day. Several parties with a surplus stock of kitten were at the house as early as alx oclock," said Mr. Gray, Some of them brought laughingly. 't whole aacks full of cat were butthere te Investigate, atop at least three or four to a sack. Boys with cate- - kept . coming at Intervals failed to during the, day, but. w select one, The freah milch cow for $25 naturally appealed to a lot of people, and callers to look at our cow were pu-well-wisher- d We-dldn- Electric Street Stoves for Police. In Glasgow the police on night duty are being afforded facilities for warming food and tea at certain street tele--' phene and signal boxes. To this end the boxes are fitted with electrical hotplates, which can be switched on to the corporation mains and utilized for warming food or drink. Twenty minutes are allowed for supper, and the circuit is so arranged that the heater element cannot be left under current when not In uae, even if the user omit to switch off.. Each box ia alke A trues iMy. fitted with a telephone communicating retirement of J'. Bruce' Ismay from th with the nearest police depot, and n red signal lamp controlled from the presidency of the Internationa Ka rine Mercantile' company. When y jupertntendents office. When t-glowtbia signal Indicate! tha- teleaccepted Mr. Morgans offer to ing, communication la phonic purchase thebuslneis hemade lt a condition that oa bis retirement the with the first constable who sees it name of Ismay be no longer used |