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Show Household . patters The Strange Story of thi Life VP Mad SiMil OktH. one and one-hal- f cupfnlo at bread cramba to one and one-bn- lf enpfnla of acalded milk, let aoak bnlf at hour, then add one egg well boaten, half a cup of flour, half a tea Vonfnl of ult, four level teaapoonfnla of baking powder; beat wall and cook the griddle. W Pttd tublo-apoonfn- la n. one-fonr- tb one-fourt- a; two-poun- d one-four- th - . 1 zinc-line- no COlElBEtlWIUESS EWCiDM. INI She Was Married Eleven Times First, at the Age of Sixteen, to the Second Lord EUenboro, and Last at to an Arab, With Whom She Fifty, Lived Thirteen Years. lf one-fourt- h FILL OF PLUCK of an English Peeress BatiM Wheat Griddle Mm. Mix half a cup of entire wheat floor, (From Tho Gentlewoman.) one cupful of wheat floor, three Urol ALE Blusbcards in tho East teaapoonfnla of baking powder, ono are familiar enough, but of taaapoonful aalt and two table fcmalo on in not often to Voonfula of augar; beat ono egg, add ba lighted on. Many woVo It ono and one-haenpfnla of milk man, ilka Catherine of aad ono tableepoonfnl of melted bat Husain, aad Josh of Naples, have distar, poor thla upon the floor mixture; with tho marriage tie altopensed bant well and bake on a griddle. gether, but those who have entered into It, slipped ont of It tea times, and once Beuld half a rap of milk, pour it over might perhaps, have managed it had not the law of Islam forbade, half a cup of corn meal anl let a tend more, only known instance, save too wotea mtnntea, then add half a cupful of the man of Samaria, la the Hon. Janet cold balled rice, half a cupful of flonr, Elisabeth Dlgby, married In 1834 to bnlf a teaapoon of aalt, two the second Lord EUenboro, and who of augar, three level tea died in 1881, wife of Shaykh Mijwat of Woonfnl of hotter and the white of the tb of tha Anaseh branch Mesrab, polk of one egg well beaten, one of butter and the white of the Of noble English birth, brilliant accomegg beaten atlff; bake In muffln pans, plishments, singular beauty and grace, to a quick oven, twenty minute a. attractions which remained to her till her death at the ageof seventy-three- , she had allaadulM Xnm. Cream half a cup of butter, add the the misfortune at her coming out ball folk of one egg and beat well, then to attract the notice of the vain, weak, add another yolk and beat again; then but Imperious Lord EUenboro, and so add teaapoonful of aalt, a at the age of sixteen the poor child was by Episcopal hands duly made little pepper and the Juice of lemon, a little at a time; Juat over to him. The set Into which Lord EUenboro Introduced bis child wife before nerving add h cupful of boiling water; place the bowl In a was notorious even in those days and pan of boiling water and atir alowly there came an explosion and In due and conatantly until the mixture thick-en- time the act of Parliament for her diremove and atir one minute; if vorce was passed, she retaining her tho sauce cooka too long It wiU curdle. magnificent Jewelry and her pin money of 1200 n year. Lord EUenboro was a wealthy man Lobster Cream. Boll a lobster fifteen min by virtue of those sinecure appointtee, remove and when cold break the ments which have to be explained to shell and take out the meat and chop a generation like the present. As son It quite fine; put half a cupful of milk of the Lord Chief Justice of the Kings and half a cupful of bread rrumba Bench, be held Its Chief Clerkship, over the lire and cook for ten minutes; with a moiety of the fees paid to Its Chen add Custoi Brevlum" the two averagcupful of cream, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little cay- ing nearly 10,000 a year. In addition enne pepper and the whites of two ho held, of course, the estates which ogga beaten stiff; add the lobster meat; supported the title. turn Into a buttered mold; stand in a But for tho English law of settlepan of hot water, cover with buttered ment this poor ladys wild, ungulded paper and bake In a moderate oven career might have never happened. twenty minutes; serve with lobster The sole condition attached to the connance, made by rubbing lobster coral tinuance of her Income bound her to through a sieve and adding It to a leuve England forever. She aoon mar. cream sane ried a German baron, from whom in time she got n divorce snch things not being difficult In the Fatherland. stria In Table Uaeae. Ireland, Germany and Scotland all She then went to Italy, presumably contribute their quota to tho appoint- In 1840, where she actually married ment of the modern table, and, aa and divorced, one after the other, six every housewife knows, there are Italians; as the poor Isdy told her sole Styles in table linens no less than in friend on her deathbed, It was always hoanetm The satin damaska are ex- "the money they wanted, and when quisite in pattern and In weave, and she would five no more, the marriage the new motifs for borders are really was off." Ihe work of artists, says the Pittsburg A woman of great and dignified beauChronicle Telegraph. ty, mistress of nine languages, an art' To accompany these beautlfnl things ist with both brush and pencil, posore all white centrepieces and aerv sessing tbht marvellous thing in wottes In German raised embroidery man, a low sweet voice," with unand open work. In the meantime a commonly good business talents to change la rang over the damask and boot, as we shall see by and by, and the lace eloth by the exquisite cloths tha Latin race In time palled upon her. S linen Inset and bordered with Cluoy. So she went to the Isles of Greece, and at Athens married a Count Theo-dok- l, by whom she had two children, one of whom met a tragic death In his mothers presence. But. discarding the father, she took up with n chief of Pallkars. for whom she bnilt s bouse near the Piraeus. In time she divorced him also. Perhaps the example of Lady Hester Stanhope drew her to the East IgTo prevent blue spotting the clothes noring that marriage la not there so gather up the corners and tie to- easily slipped off, and that Islam holds gether. Dip this bag in the water and woman ns a chattel, to bo thrown aside oqueeao It until the water Is bine or even put to death at her husband's enough. In this the way the clothes pleasure. Nevertheless, she faced her will never became spotted. troubles bravely when they same. Landing in 1858 at tha age of fifty Carpets which have become spotted by having liquids, etc., spilt upon them at Beirut, abe still possessed her air may be freshened up and the spots of grande dame, her graceful carriage removed by going over the snrfaca and charm of manner. Lady Burton, with a cloth dipped in warm water in who knew her thirteen years later, styles her more attractive than many Which ammonia haa been put. A woman who is her own laundress young girls." She went thence to Damascus, profolds all flat pieces, like towels, pillowcases and sheets, carefully: then posing to cross tha desert of Bagdad, which an escort was necessary, passes them several times through the for procurable from the Mesrab Arabs, a wringer. The effect Is as If they had branch of the great Anaseh tribe, wbo been mangled, and it saves a deal of controlled the roads, knew all the wells honing. and pleasantly varied their rights by Bee that the sides or walls of your blackmail, so that travelers wbo had meat safes are occasionally scoured 6000 francs each sometimes found paid with soap and slaked quicklime. All themselves "help up" for aa much places where provisions are kept more. Over this department Lady should be so constructed that a brisk subsequently preaided with current of cool air can be made to great success, and au amusing instance pass through them at will. of how she was once done" by dour Never sweep dust from one room Impecunious Sir Itlchard Burton is to Vo another, nor from upstairs to the come later on. lower part of the house. Always take Her escort was captained by one It op In the dustpan where you have 8hajkh Mljwal, a younger brother of previously placed some tea leaves. the tribal bead, an Intelligent man of This prevents the dnst from scattering pleasant address and exactly half her again and returning to Its old haunts. age. Lady Burton, however, by no Kerosene will not only remove the means fancied him, a dirty little dirt that collects In a sort of rim black, much darker than Arabs ara around the sides of a porcelain bath- usually - whom she repeatedly took tub, but It will take off the white for a servant when he opened the door. bath- She could not Imagine how a lady of blotches that form on tubs. Apply with a cloth saturated In her friend's refinement could endure the fluid anf then wrung out. Follow contact with such a black skin. Tet the two fell In love, although with hot vr-land soda. Use a clctn firebrick Instead of the their courting must have been by algoa aa be could not speak a word of ordinary Iron stand, and you will re- only, though tain tho beat of the Iron much longer, her language, nor abe of his, two years naual Iron stand not only admits she subsequently gave up to learn It the air to the bottom of the Iron, but of her Ufewas great opposition to her It enadnets the heat from it. The There Consul refused to perThe marriage. a of heat brick, being wouM warned form it, retains tho hoot in the smoothing Iron become a Turkishher that aha It. and subject by moch loogar. area hinted at restraint aa for a lunacuckoo clocks, so tic. She was prevailed upon to postThe sbaractorlstlc of some parts of Ger- pone It for two years, which she spent many, are being displaced by alarm t Beirut .turning Arabic. So ill that could be done was u make Slocks of the American typo. table-tpoonf- LITTLE JAPS m 1) MIT. Ratty Earn a Living as Servants While Studylar - The Ala of Japanese Parents Here to Make Their Children at Once Little Americans and Also Japanese. terms for her. Tho Shaykh agreed to divorce all hla other wives, and to marry no new ones, a promise ho kept to the end. The couple were to live nix months In her house outside Damascus gates, and six months In hia black tents la the desert, within tinkle of tho camel's bell. Even after this the Consul would not marry them, and the Mufti officiated. So this strange oelng commented a new and double existence while In civilisation dressing an an Arab woman, "more Bedawl than the Beds-wiwearing n veil, blackening her eyes with kohl, living native fashion, and. In Lady Burtons opinion, vary untidily; but drawing, painting, and so forth In n boudoir fitted np with Moslem adornments, the chief being a highly prised lamp from the Great Moaqua at Mecca before referred to. She had an "at home" day, associating with the small Europeon society, and basking In Lady Burtons somewhat feline favor to tha extent of dictating her memoirs. So strange an " Apologia" would hava beeu Interesting, but the ladles fell out, and It never saw n, the light She rode in every Sunday to attend the English church once or twice. But the other half year bad a rougher tone. Wearing the Arab'n woman's blue robe, with her beautiful hair In two plaits reaching to her feet, she gloried In her duty aa n Bednwln wife grinding the corn, milking the camels, washing her huabauda hands and feet cooking his food, and waiting on him while he ate It. And at both places she waa her tribe's agent for the escort and blackmailing business, making, Indeed, but one mistake, which came about thus and might have coma out awkwardly for her. But for her money, indeed, of which ono part went to keep her husband's other wives and families aloof from her, the other part to buy for him new arms and presents, she might for thla Up hava come In for tho eunuch's whip and have bad to recognise that her Ufa waa not her own, but her man-tar's. Consul Burton and hla wife, Isabel, wished to go to Palmyra without paying anything to the Mesraba; indeed, they had not the money 6000 francs per head. So Lady EUenboro, otherwise the Hon. Jane Dlgby ea Mesrab, foreseeing that If the Burtons got throngh safely the trlbe'a business would suffer, tried a stratagem, aa her tears and fears were Impotent to atop the Journey she lent them n tribesmen whose Instructions were to lead them Into an ambush, whera the reat of tbe tribe could hold up H. B. M.'a Consol and his wife; but Burton disarmed the spy, replaced the Arab steed by a humble Jackass, kept him guarded night and dny, and even used him as cover" when raiders came looking around. When, on hia return to the spy reported hla treatment, Jane" could only tell "Iaabel" that aha would take care it should not occur again. Thla strange dual Ufe, which only death could terminate for divorce is. by tho laws of Islam, for the husband alone lasted thirteen years, when the woman of seventy-thre- e waa- seised with typhoid. All fled from It In ah Ject fear, and only tbe kindly wife or an English missionary tended her dur ing the nine days of suffering, till there came to the poor repentant sinner what Islam beautifully terms the mercy of God. And the gentle nurse passed alone with the corpse Ita last night npon earth that the remains of a Christian woman might reat In Christian ground, and not, aa the husband wished, among hla Moaaelman kin. And the good missionary did so lay her to rest with a Christian service, and a Christian monument later on. living upon aome 200 a year, her savings in the bank were 4000. Thla, with her Jewelry, went to the husband, although she had daring Ufe sent some trinkets to the German Baron's ton, 8urely, no stranger life was even seen than that of this English peeress High born, cradled In luxury, possessing every passjiort to success beauty, grace, charm of manner, distinguished In appearance, rare accomplishments and everything that wan engaging In both body and mind brilliantly mar ried, with means more than ample, he waa to die on a mattresa placed on the ground In a lorelgn land, shunned and deserted by all save thr one kindly Christian woman wbo closed her eyes when tbe poor tinner bad en tered the dark valley. Fmb Milk. An Invention which la described a about to revolutionise tbe milk trade la being worked in France. The mUk la not condensed in the ordinary enae, but the water la extracted from It by a patent process. The powder that remains contains all the essential elements, and la converted back to milk by tha simple addition of aaven parts of water to one of the milk extract. It la claimed that It la tbe Invention of Dr. Juat. of Boston, and a German engineer. Since 1840 the world's prodnetloa of meat haa Increased per cent, and grain 430 prr cent. fifty-seve- vm DONT want my children to forget that they are Japanese, " mid n Japanese merchant wbo doea a large business in New sura Muu other American cities, "but e at the same time, I want them to little Americana, too." Thin la the common feeling of all tho Jtpnneee who Uve In thla country with regard to the bringing np of their children. hinny of the Japaneec families In American cities are wealthy. They live la handsome homes, with aurround-bgservice, food and dress typically American. .Take the case of tho Japanese in New York. Mr. Ucbldn, vho Uvea on Central Park West Hla little girl and boy art being brought ip in a thoroughly American way. The girl, little Moto, a charming peach blossom maiden, la now on bar Int visit to her grandfather's borne In Japan. She is to remain there for two years In order to learn all about her ewn country, and then abe will return to America to be finished like any (her future debutante. Iaoa whose Tbe boy. lame sounds, In hla own soft speech, exactly like that of Jacobs hairy brother In tbe Scripture-- la one of tho brightest of the pupils at a New Tork kindergarten. Hla small neighbor, Dlabiklo Nagasaki, the son of a banker on Wall atret, drinks with him from tbe same fountain of knowledge. In manners, games and general outlook on Ufe they appear to be exactly like any healthy, lively American H a, Consul-G- eneral boys. Their Japanese nurses, who wear the picturesque dress of their native land, and teach them the fairy tales and games of ancient Nippon, are tbe only distinctively Oriental features in the home of these children. And so It la with score of other Japanese youngsters in this broad land. "I should estimate," said the editor of a Japanese newspaper published In New York, "that there at least BOO Japanese in New York perhaps more. Moat of them are men in good positions merchants and the like and many of them are bringing np their famUiea here. "Whenever they ran afford to do ao, they send their children to Japan for several yean to be partly educated there and to learn all about tbelr own country. But they take care that tbey ball be educated also In tbla country and have a thorough Ainerlran training. Tbey want them to be both Japanese and American. "Tbe chUdren are Juat aa patriotic aa If tbey Uved all tbelr Uvea la Tokyo or Kobe Instead of In Washington or in New York. 1 know of ono Japanese youngster, now going to school here, who used to get Into daily fighta with hla playmates because be instated that Admiral Ito waa a greater man than Admiral Dewey, and the battle of the Yalu a more glorious victory than the fight In Manila Bay." In San Franriso there are considerably more than 5000 Japanese, most of whom are of tbe coolie claea or occupy menial positions. The proportion of wealthy Japanese In that city la not nearly so large aa It la In New York. Many of them marry white women and give up all Idea of returning to their native land. Tbey take out naturalization papers, become thoroughly Americanised, end bring np their children exactly aa Americana do. These denationalized Japanese do not, aa a rule, mix with their own countrymen, and they do not like their children to learn anything about Japan, not even the fairy tales and games. At least 3060 Japanese work In American families in Kan Francisco aa domestic servants, and a large proportion of them are mere children. Boya come OYer from Japan at the age of ten, twelve or fourteen to get an American education. They are alone, without friends al most penniless, and tbey would seem to run a good chance of starving in a strange land. But they always manage to get along all right Ind to secure tbe education for which they crossed the see. They take placet of aervants without wagea. They merely stipulate for ' their food and clothes and leave of absence during the day to attend school. In the morning am! evening they work hard and fait jfnlly to make up for loot time. Faithfulness is the quality Id which they outshine all other servants available on the Pacific Coast. They always advertise thst a faithful Japanese boy" needs a place, and no Idle boast la the adjective. "You might think," says an American woman wbo has kept house In San Francisco for mauy years, that it would be an awkward arrangement la any household to have the servant ibsent during tbe morning and the greater part of tbe afternoon hot It la not. "I have employed many of these Japanese boys, toine of them only eleven or twelve yesrs old, and have never had any trouble with them. I would not engage any other servant. "The bay Is up at flva in the morn ing, working Ilka a little hero to get everything la order before he goes to school. Ho sweeps and dusts the rooms, cleans the bouts, waabea all tbe dirty dishes, gets breshfasl ready and doea twenty other things before eight o'clock. "By the time he gets hla hooka together and starts for school, yon may look all around the house and not find a single thing left undone. AU your needs aud wishes during tha day hers beeu anticipated. Even afternoon tea haa been got ready, all except the boiling of the water and the making of tho tea. "Aa aoon aa school la dismissed be hnrrlee home. He does not atop to play with tha American boya, for ba knows ha will be wanted, and ha likes to get his work done early, so that he ran spend n good part of tho evening In study. "It la pleaaant to bav these boya about tbe house. Their manners are refined, they always study to please, they are strictly honest and trnthfnL and they do things without being told. Every housekeeper knows bow rare that la In a servant. "It it wonderful bow bard tbey work to get an American education and learn American ways. Naturally, many of them grow np to be successful and prominent men, either In San Francisco or In Japan. "The other day I met a Japaneae gentleman at the house of a friend when I waa paying a social call. I waa told that he waa one of the leading doctors In Nagasaki, and had come over on a visit. "We bad an intereating conversation. Ilia fare acemed familiar, and presently I asked him whether we bad met befure. "Ta It possible that you don't remember me?1 be replied. T waa a boy In your houae for two years, and left you only ulne years ago.' "In hia manners and conversation he was exactly like an educated and accomplished American gentleman. Many of these little Japs when they grow up marry In Kan Francisco, either with their countrywomen or with white women, attain good positions aud lire In America all tbelr Uvea. They do not always stay on tha Pacific Coast. Many of them establish businesses in tbe other large cltlea and prosper exceedingly. A man who spent an evening at the house of a wealthy Japaneae In Philadelphia. came away enthusiastic to praise of his boat's children. "They were the nicest little shaven you ever met, he said. Just like American children In many ways, lint with a grave politeness and gentle manner that American children do not always possess. They were a queer mixture. In one breath the boy informed me that be waa going to Harvard when he grew up; in the next he proudly told me stories of the great deeds of hla samurai ancestors. The girl played Mendelssohn's 'Spring song like a real musician, anil then dressed herself in a kimono and told Japaneae fairy tales. "During the evening tbey played a Japanese game very much like ping-ponI charged (hem with having copied It from ua. 'Not at all they said. Tbla game haa been played In Japan for a thoumust have been sand years. Ping-poncopied from It.1 ''New York Hun. g Barillas Fravcat. Ru(lir. Henry Foster, who was taken to the Nebraska penitentiary a ffew nights ago to cheat a crowd tbat waa bent on murlynching him for the der of Thomas Gentleman, of Fremont, haa escaped the scaffold through tha agency of a diminutive bacillus that requires a microscope t be seen. Tbe bacillus la the "dlplobbacllllcap-ailatus-aerogene- s, cold-bloode- d ao rare that physi- cians in the State have come arrosi only one other tnatance of Its presence. It enters a wound, causing the forming undpr the akin of gaa that la fatal. Gentleman died from the bacillus It waa said at the hoapltal that hla chance of recovery from shooting waa infinitesimal, but none of tho physicians and experts could swear before the coroner's jury that Gentleman would not have lived could he have escaped the bacillus, so the charge of murder bad to l withdrawn. Urate and Katin's rOkTH KNOW1NI Safety pins are peculiarly American. Tbe United States osee 144.000,000 of them earh year. A Chinese hospital baa been eats tenth ed in New York where Chinese patients are treated according to tho methods followed in their own coun- try. Dr. Arthur McDonald, tho criralnob oglst In Washington, now aaya that unless a person wanta to become a criminal he should never eat meat at potatoes. Tha Ruaaiao Government gtveo a golden medal to every couple that celebrate tbelr golden or diamond wed-dinLast year six hundred and fourteen couples received medals g. Salt water tanks are to be attaches to the aides of soma of the German railroad cars, for tha purpose of conveying live fish- from tho seahoard ta tha Inland cltlea and towns - The Metropolitan Art Mnaenm of New Tork hao Juat purchased an oM chariot for $50,000. It waa ones rt bed near Uoine soma time ago, sod la 2006 years old and splendidly preserved. The palm tree, aa is well known, pnte forth a branch every month, ao the ancient Egyptian used a spring of palm having twelve shoot npon It aa their Chrlatmaa tree, aa a symbol of tho completed year. There la a mao iu Warsaw, Poland, who hat the long distance record for bigamy, bar Utah, Turkey and n few such places He haa seventeen living wivea and each and every one of them is glsd that he la in jail. "lie "Only n Frtntar. la only a printer." 8uch waa tbe sneering remark of a leader la a circle of aristocracy codfish quality. Who waa the Earl of Stanhope? Ho was only n printer. What waa Prince Edward William and Prince Napoleon? Proud to call themselves printers Tha Czar of Russia, the Crown Prince of Prussia and the Duke of Battemberg were printers, and the Emperor of China worked In a private printing office almost every day. William Caztoa. tho father of English literature, wan a practical printer. What were J. P. Morris, N. P. Willis, James Parker. Horace Greeley, Charles Dickens James Buchanan, Simon Cameron, Printers ell, and Schuyler Colfax? practical ones Mark Twain, Aon J. Cummings, Bret Ilarte, William Data Howells Joel Chandler Harris nod Opie P. Bead were plain, practical printers,' as were Artemns Warfl.Tw troienm V. Nasby, and Sut Lovlngood. 8enator Plumb, of Kansas and James J. Hogg, ez Governor, of Texas were all prlntera, and the leader of aclenco and philoflopby In hla day made It hla boast that ha waa a Jour" printer. In fact, thousands of tbe moat brilliant mlnda in thla country are to be found In large cities and towns It Is not every one tbat can be a printer braine are absolutely necessary. Centnry, Magazine. Mrs. Juniper entered the doctor's office, dragging by tbe band aa overgrown boy of fourteen. Sbo waa excited and Impatient; ho waa dogged and glum. "0, doctor, bo baa lost hla voice! Ho hasn't spoken a word for two days," the said. The boy looked at ber inllenly, aad suffered tbe doctor to bold hla fact np to the light U'ml Open your mouth. all right F Teague "Ya-ah.- " "Hold your head up and let mo look Berina to ba nothing tho trouble there. Push your tongue out. Now pull It back. Feel all right?" at your throat. Ya-ah- ." "Wliy, Mrs. Juniper, there la nothing tha matter with him," said tha doctor. Impatlantly. "Boy, why don't yen talk?" How can thing to aay? I then I ain't got any- I. If--. of the export trade of Chile are furnished by Its great deposits of nitrate of soda, which la used as a fertilizer in nearly all agricultural But these deposits, like countries. those of coil, are limited, and once removed cannot be replaced. Mr. Vergara, a Chilean authority, haa recently estimated tbe probable future life of tbe uitrale deposit as Indicated by the increasing demand, and be predicts tbat at the end of twenty years exhaustion will be near at band. Our national life," he says, is baaed upon au uncertain foundation, which weakens with (he course of years, and which will be permanently destroyed within a period, tbe duration of which Is measured by the growth in the exports I tion of nitrate." Glad to meet you, old chap, ha said, aa be linked arms with a friend whom bo bad met In the street Just lend me a sovereign for Would be delighted." the friend rejoined, hut I have not got it; see!" lie opened hia purse Its whole waa a half sovereign. Must do. I suppose, for the present, said the prince of borrower aa he picked the coin out daintily with thumb and forefinger. Ta, ta; take care of yourself,'' and walked away. Hut ha returned hastily. Mind, don't forget you owe me a half sovereign." I owe you'" gasped tbe automatic lender. "Of nurse. I meant to borrow a sovereign from you I only got a half. 8m? You owe me the other half. There a no hurry, of course, but. I like Ttia rat's Rivals. punctuality. Name your own day aad Tbe cat has long beeu a pampered pet pay up punctually '' of society, aaya a French writer. Fair An rtrsMstiRbls Woman. Persians, uncanny Chinese, half tin Isbed Manxes, sleek English tortoise "My wife aud I made a compact at shells, and lucky black grimalkins have the beginning of the year. We agreed been cultivaed as carefuly of late years to arbitrate ail nur differences of opinShorthorn and racehorses and cer- ion and give up haviug foolish pats" tain breeds of dogs. Pussy haa had "flow Is the plan working?" hows and a society all to herself, and It's no good. What'a the use trying one could name some famous cat- to get a woman to be sensible about memteries" belonging to such things? The other day, when i bers of society. A great Insult la now had a misunderstanding, she wanted offered her. howpver, in that tbe to have It arbitrated, when 1 knew I mouse baa become a fashionable pel. was right and she'd have teen that sh and baa already attained tbe distinc- was wrong if she bad been at aN tion of polnta.'' A mouse show is iu reasonable. By George, I just lind 4 contemplation, to which every god cat get up on my hind legs and swear h should be taken for a treat. fore she'd give In!" Chlcsgo Tn!. 'n Three-quarter- s well-know- ." eoa-Teu- ta |