TIW HF,K: OMAITA, MONDAY. NOVKMUKl C. 1010. age Delicious Apple Recipes Tho Tired Business Man THI Trlmd Mite the T Commuter la Freight In (Jo Home In the Dark -J 1IT WAITKIl A. R1NCIJWH. 1 Indian Apple Pudding1 Feel and core doxen tart apple. Scald a quart of milk, j then add a quart of Indian meal, mixing and cooking carefully for several minutes. Add a tee-spoonful of nalt, a cup each of molasses and finely chopped suet, then pour over the apples arranged In a buttered baking dinti. -tlake a couple of hour. This is a southern Uch commonly known as apple poo. Hootch Apple Tart 1'ecl and core half a dosen tut wples and placo In a crock la a tow oven, adding- neither water nor sugar.' When, tender mix In Sultana rai sins, allowing a quarter of a pound to each pound of lipplea. Turn Into a deep chafing dish, sprinkle with sugar aud grated lemon, cover -with a top cruet, pricking well to allow for the escape of steam and bake in a kulck oven, nerve with milk. Fngjish Avple Tart Peal and core tart apples, put into a large saucepan, cover with boiling water, stew gently until tne pples are tender, but unbroken. Line the edges of a deep pie tin with crust, then fill the center of the dish with apples, drop plug Into the center of each a spoonful of orange marmalade. Cover the top of the dish with strips of pastry arranged lattice fashion and bake quickly until brown, tierve hot. Kusslan Apple Pie reel and core eight apples, put Into a baking dish with a little water and bake until tender. Press through a sieve Into a large bowl and set aside to cool and chill. Add three-quarters of a eup of sugar and the whites of four or f , Japan Country of Nearly every village In Japan Is the seat of some special characteristic industry, each carried" oA'ln an Individual way by separate families In their simple and nar row homes, and each family and each member working In some little touch of In dlvlduaiity. A writer In the Craftsman gives a description of the work in the dally life of Japan, Its simplicity and beauty. !n one village an ordinary little boy was sitting In a doorway, not whittling a stick, ' us he might have been doing With us, but embroidering shrysanthemums on a great square of satin. The outlines were stamped on the fabric, stretched In Its frame before him, but wltr.ouf supervision or moaei ne wss filling thetn In according to his own sweet will, all in exquisitely shaded golds and browns .and pinks. Japan Is really a country of unheard-of things, whers ' children contentedly work al pollUliig faoquer, where little boy can Dyeing Hair that is Gray x an Impossible Task for the Amateur Otis of the ImposHible feats for a woman' to accomplish Is to color patches of her hair so all will be the same shade. I choot-e this' subject 'because recently I have re ceived an unusual number of such requests from correspondents, and I want them to understand why I discourage them In any such attempt Every woman who has such a desire must understand that only a skilled pro fessional can color patches successfully, because tb effect of dyes differs, accord ing to the shade and quality of the hair to which It is applied. The hair Itself must be seen and carefully studied by one at tempting to match faded or gray spots. A woman wishing to match a shaded dress material would not send a few threads of It to a shop and expect to get what she wanted. Hhe would send enough of a sample to enable the clerk to get the w hole effect lut matching hair is even more difficult; ttiut is, matching the color when streaks have faded, because quality so largely enters In. It would be useless for a woman to send a lock of her hair, declaring at the same time that she wanted to make the gray the natural color, because no two patches of gray are precisely the same. And even If they were, and proper dye wsrs made, no amateur could apply It with sufficient care to make the colored por tion look, other tran what It I a patch. Coloring patches successfully-Tiay be done by a professional if a woman will give time for the treatment It la no secret r Of Interest to Women J The equal suffragists In Oklahoma have translated women suffrage literature Into the Choctaw. Chickasaw and Cherokee tongues. There are now less than 20o women in the prisons of Holland, according to Dr. Simon von der Aa, who for fifty years has been the chief of administration of prisons in the country. "lurlng my adminlbtration three prisons for women have been closed for lack of Inmates," declared Ir. von der Aa. "There are two reasons for this decrease of crim inal women, (me Is the growtli of social work. There are societies without number nut only to rescue the fallen, but to help the poor and suffering. The other reason Is simply the fait that women are allowed to work and support themselves honor able. I am convinced that the industrial freedom of women Is keeping them out of prison in Holland." Miss Mary Johnson Is sooji to visit her old home in Hlrminghain, Ala., and will give a lecture 011 woman suffrage while she Is there. Hirmingham baa been ex 1 1 finely conservative on the woman suf frage question,' but it 1 Immensely proud of Miss Johnson, and Is looking forward 1th great Interest to hear what she will say. There has been no Increase lti Boston In the coat of the schools per pupil. In 175 the expenditure was v!4 H per pupil; In lixn uhq nut published report) M.ti. The total expenditure Id 19"Z wm W 007.24; In ISMt, 4,tSU,3.'i. There has been no lncraaae per plipll la thirty-five years, and no actual Increase, In spite of tiie Increased stund anoo, since lWi. J li'in ess Sturdza of Rouiuauia has of fered to stipply the money to continue the publication ft the French edition of Jus Stilfi'agll. the orfan of the International V oihau roffrate Alliance. This veiy In tel esiiiei and valuable little monthly, iio 1 1 its fittU rar. is published in English at Rotterdam, Holland, by Mix Martina five egg beaten stiff, with a few iculns of salt and a little lemon and grated peel to season. Heat this mixture until very white and light, turn Into a buttered dish and bake about twenty minutes, herve hot with sugar and cream. An Appetising Keltsh A delicious relish to serve with roast pork or other meats Is made by mixing apple and horseradish. To two-thirds apples chopped or ground fin add one-third grated horseradish, and vine gar enough to make pleasantly acid; alo a little sugar to suit the taste. Mottle. This will keep all winter. Sweet lick led Apples A dollcloua pickle Is this, made from sweet apples. Cut In halves through the stem, leaving the core In and the skin op. Hit three cloves In each half as In pickling peaches, then make a syrup, allowing for eveiy pound of applea three pounds of sugar and a pint of vinegar. Add a few cassia buds or pieces of stick cinnamon, put the fruit In and cook It until It can be pierced with a splint. Pack the apples In Jars, oook the syrup a little longer until tliickened and pour over the fruit. Apple dinger Apple ginger Is another rellKh that will find appreciation. Make a syrup of four pounds of sugar and a pint of water. As soon as It comes to a boll add one ounce- of green ginger sliced, the yellow rind of four lemons cut in tiny bits and four pounds of apples pared and quar tered. Cook twenty minutes, add the Juice of four lemons, let It come to a boll and seal while hot. Patient Workers embroider party frocks, where a workmen gratuitously adds beautifying touches to the tank he accomplishes. "I saw In a furniture factory," says the writer, "a lad sitting with fine emery cloth, Industriously smoothing the corner of a box or coffer. Duly stamped on the back of Ms'cout whs the sea horse, which Is the trade symbol of workers In wood. When I came back that way, half an hour later, he was still carefully at work on the same corner of the same coffer. I did not won der It was as near perfection as the hand of man could make it." Every town has Its peculiar industry. It may be famous only for a cheap, coarse straw work; for a particular sort of wood Inlay; for a queer little ornamental owl, dangling from a stick and made of the thistles that grow by the wayside; for a white enamel work done with powdered egg shells. But whatever It Is It Is well done. in Patches that I am violently opposed to dyeing hair, because the coloring matter, however harmless, eventually Injures the locks, be cause of the treatment to which the scalp and hair mutt be subjected In order that the coloring will stay on. Before applying dye the natural oil must be extracted by washing the hair In strong soda or ammonia water, and the result of such a shampoo Is to starve the hair fol licles and when this condition occurs the locks break and fall. It Is an unwise woman who applies dye to her hair, and I have yet to know of one, who, having done so, did not some time regret the fact When the hair begins to turn gray, or to lose Its color in faded effect, it may be that the scalp lacks nourishment. In any event, good, thorough brushing daily, mas sage once or twice a week, and the ap plication of a good tonlo art likely to pre vent the condition from becoming worse, and not Infrequently liven and Improve the tresses. A tonlo that may be life giving at such a crisis Is made from one-half dram each of terebent, borax and sulphur, and three ounces of lavender water. This Is rubbed Into the scalp nightly. When the hair is dry, and seems to be fading, rather than turning gray, an oint ment which may be helpful can be made from one ounce each of mercury ointment and oil of ergot. It may be scented. It should be rubbed Into the scalp every night MAHOARKT MIXTER. uagea. She receive the report from all the foreign Woman Suffrage associations, and translates them for her paper. For the last year or so she has also Issued an edition In French, but this wss in danger of discontlnusnc for lack of funds, when Princess Sturdxa and some generous French ladles came to the rescue. Meyer Twins Passle Friends. One of the most puzxllng resemblances in the smart world of Washington is that between the Misses Meyer, the daughters of the secretary of the navy. The "Meyer twins," as they are called by stranger, are not In reality twins, nor Is the re- eeiiiuiaiice Deiween uiem by any means aa extraordinary as it appear at first giunce. nose scrutiny shows that the pretty sisters look extremely alike largely because they are invariably dressed lullke. Although the custom of dressing young sisters alike is largely followed on the continent. It Is unusual 111 this country, the majority of American girls rebelling against hating their gowns duplicated even by a twin sister. The Idea of dressing her daughters alike j appealed to Mrs. Meyer, who is a business like person, as a saving of extru planning. Hhe also realized Its artistic possibilities and the Meyer girls are a strikingly at tractive' pair. The toilets of the Meyers are Invariably the latest try of Paris fashions and are eagerly watched for "points" by lest af fluent maids In society. i (loaned in exquisite crepe frocks of a rare shade of old rose and big black vel vet hats, the Meyer girls attracted much attention at the first New i'oik's lecep tlon of the present administration last win ter, t'omimdour coatuims. made with ex ceeding smartness, alao showed 10 advan tage the chic of the "twins." The Misses Meyer are among the most sought after gills in society. Their rear ing has been mors in accoi-dam e with continental than American ideas, and they resemble rather the young French girl of the great world than her American sister. They have beeu tar more strictly ciuiper oned that Is customary in this country. Btreuge to saw although the Meyeis are invariably dirsjed alike, they are seldom ! seen on the i.a'ii- o-c:ishui unless it be tr.i ti a 1 oitair for uung lolk. Persistent AJvutisiuif ts lbs Xuavl lu Uig Ln. ""Hw , wrnmx. nnwwirt tbct tvw mamm otar taaa sai tas, m sjg, - FRIDAY Amy la the most reckless per son with money I have ever known. The bags and purses she owns always get lost or broken before very long, and then she stuffs her money In her glove. If alio is In a hurry and drags It out hastily a per fect shower of coins la apt to rattle around her. Bhe got a large check cashed once and put the money In her hat and wore It home. I came In and found Hob Taylor, an In timate friend of hers, counting It over In the crown of the hat. She had gone in the pantry to telephone and had requested him to see If It was all there In her absence. In the dimly lighted hall the efrect was quite weird. Another friend of hers. Jack Haven, arrived M she reappeared, and on hearing til renult of the Investigation she and Mr. Haven un hesitatingly said Mr. Taylor must have ap propriated the amount of $10. They all counted over again, and finally discovered the missing bill concealed In the lining. ' Ve took a hansom home the other day, and when Amy got out there wan the sound of melal falling on the p:vement. 8he told the driver thHt It must he eltlior "SHK MUST HAVE HEEN A WOMAN OF -CHEAT NOFI,r.NK88 OF CHAR ACTER." a 13 gold piece or a penny He said he had distinctly observed that It was a penny. We looked around a little, but couldn't find anything, and had to go In anyway, as we were late for dinner. 1 m III Astringents and Not Grease Heroic remedies should be resorted to a soon as a crack in the lip appear, be cause, simple as the trouble seems, it is in reality deep seated, for it Indicates an Im poverished condition of the blood. The sore (for such It la) once established, may remain throughout cold weather, and, what is even worse, once it makes Its appear ance, may return year after year, when during the warm weather there Is no trace of it. To cure such a ore or even symptoms of it, treatment which Includes strength ening the blood and generally building up the system must be begun and should be prescribed by a physician. Of course 1 cannot prescribe beyond declaring what was repeated to me by a well known doc tor, that a crack In the Up. when It Is deep and remains, usually Indicates, amoiiK other things, a lack of phosphates in the system, and so a good tonlo should be taken. External applications will allay the pain such a sore causes, and may even aid In healing It, and the general course pursued for outward relief Is to put on grease, but Hot Milk Instead of Hat Tea or Coffee Will Help Cure Headache If instead of drinking a strong cup of tea or 'coffee when suffering a bad head ache a woman would drink a cup of hot milk she would be more apt to cure the pain. Not because hot milk has medicinal properties, but becauss It Is inure easily digested than tea or coffee, and soothes Instead of stimulates the nerves. Overstimulation of the nerves is one of the common causes of headache, and so of course, not until the tension has been relaxed can such pain be allayed. Not every woman so affected can He down quietly aud rest, but there is no need of anyone adding to the excited state of the nerves, and that Is precisely what tea or coffee does. Obviously somthing which will quiet nerves Is required, and for this purpote hot milk becomes valuable. Not always, unfortunately, can milk b drunk wneu a woman is sunnring iroiu headache, becuiuc an upset ston.ach fi quently aceoni) f lies a pain in the head, and to take imi.k- under those conditions would only lnciea.ee nausea, A simple sub SAD CASE. ill He Poor Jones! Half dozer doctor have given him up at vv rus time. She What was the matter with ram? lis lit wouJvloJtjudr v kttOUt . Ji.-t. VP my told her It prolmlily was a .' gold piece, but Amy said, of course, It wasn't; hadn't he told us It was only a penny? 1 looked out the window almost twenty minutes later, and saw the hansom Mill standing IjSk! 'COUNTING IT OVf.R IN TIIR OF THE HAT." CROWN there, with the horse blanketed, and quite a crowd aFslHting the driver to look for the penny. As I went away T saw smlielxidy with a pick was beginning to pry up the flagging of tho puvenients. As Amy didn't know how much money Bhe lind started out with she couldn't tell what sIih had lost. 1 was surprised she didn't Insist on going out and presenting him with some money for taking so much trouble to look for It . Hhe W most sympathetic with the poor and always gives cheerfully to beggars of any description. She will come home and say, "My dear, I folt so sorry for that poor old man I simply hod to give him firty cents, oh. Is that the expressman? Pollie, have you fifty cents? Oh, thanks, ever so much. Well, my dear, as I was saying when I see a case as sad as that I don't mind giving away my last cent of change, even though It .may Impoverish me a little. The poor old thing was so pathetic. His nose was awfully red and inflamed and he told Die H had got frost bitten, as his room has no heat at ail In it. He says he has had no food for five days. 1 gave him a quarter extra to get some cold cream for hi hose. I'm going up to Alice's for lunch. Oh, TolUe, could you lend me twenty-five cent for car far? Thanks, ever so much." , Lust year she and Alice Tan vera came across an old lady In Washington Square one day while thoy were exercising Uieir Will Heal Deep Cracks in Lips this is often a mistake. 1 or wnen ma smarting sensation Is severe, as It Is fre quently, a little cream or vaseline will soothe, but as grease Is softening In ef fect the sore will be kept soft about the edges by the greaBe, and so will not heal. Naturally as the object of such remedies Is to heal, trot grease but an astringent must be applied. One drying method I recommend is to toucli the crack several times a day and at night with benzoin in the stick. This gum, being both soothing and healing, Is effi cacious. Carbollo acid, combined with gly cerine, is another excellent application, for carbollo acid, If sufficiently modified, la healing. To prepare a mixture of the above put ten drops of pure acid to a tea spoonful of glycerine. If this burn se verely add more glycerine. Pplrits of camphor will smart when first put on the sore, but will htul. Any of these driers may be applied fre quently through the day and tm going out doors. When the pain of such a Hp sore Is se vere grease also may be put on after an astringent. MARGARET MIXTER. stitute for milk that is nut to be desplsod is water as hot as it can be sipped. Not tepid water. Much temperature as luke warm might cause nausea, but beat aa ex treme as can be endured by the lips and throat Is excellent. If the stomach Is up set this drink will prevent an undue strain on the muscles, and may even calm them to rest and relief. Another help is to prevent strong light from reaching the eyes of a person who Is suffering from a nervous headache. Con sciously or not, a glare will increase the pain by straining the nerves of the eyes. Homo times hot applications on the eye aid In bringing relief, but there are per sons who are mnde vastly more ill by hot fomentations and t.i whom cold ones art beneficial. This Is a point each patient must decide for herself. M A KU A RET M I XT Kit nigger, Helter, Hosier That Is what a 1 1 v ertlblng In The Hee will do for our business. REAL FINANCIERING. "But can he afford to keep an auto? "He can"t But he hat to keep ne to prevent people finding out hs can't atta-d oncl' f mm dog's aud she excited their pity to such an extent that they passed sleepless nights over her. It seemed that ahe had had an exceptionally sad life. flhe had no home and was obliged to sleep on a bench there. l'Yom what Amy said aha had told them she must have been a woman of great nobleness of character. That such Industry, such self-sacrifice, such sterling Integrity should have such a reward was dreadful. ' I nnvnr couhl get her history quite stalght. Hhe evidently had been married a great number of times and had been brutally treated by all the husbands. The only flaw I could find in her charac ter was that she must have been a bigamist. 1 said to Amy finally, "Hut you say that Hill best her every day last year, and yesterday you said that Jim was the one who beat her there." Amy said coldly. "Hhe was married to Jim In the apting and to 1)111 In the fall " I ssld feebly. "What became of Jim?" Amy said, "I presume she divorced him. I didn't Ilka to pry too closely Into her private affairs." I said, "But she was married to Alex ander, who beat hor that winter. What became of Bill?" Amy said. "It would be too long to tell Cl'T CUT CUT k. "GAVE HIM A QUARTER EXTRA FOR COlJJ CREAM FOR HIS NOSE." you now. Are you going to subscribe to the cloak we are going to get berT" It waa a very hot spring that year and they got her one of the heaviest warmest capes for the money I have ever seen. f Quick Turns J "Ves," said Parkins, he lit an oppres sive 2-cent cigar and began ptifflng upon It, "I must confess I am fond of the weed." "Weil, all I've got to say," said Blnks, Jumping to windward of the smoker, "Is that If we had a live health officer in this town that weed would be pulled." "Well, Jackson, how Is your campaign progressing?" asked Dobblelgh. "Going badly," said Jackson. "I expected the president to come out and give me a boost with my constituents, but hang It all! we can't get the golf link In shape until after election day." "Father," said Willie, "wnaf the dif ference between a sanitarium and a aani- toriumT" "Oh, about Vb a day," said Mr. Blllupa. Harper s. r As to Tea. J The Connoisseur recommends: F'or lovers propinqul-tea. For the wedded fldell-tea. For the sclentlst'-curiosl-tea'. For the American llber-tea. For the priest austerl-tea. For the politician capacl-tea. F'or the philanthropist generosi-tea. For the business man tniegrl-tea. For the maiden modee-tea. For the statesman Aulhori-tea. For the wit brevi-tea. For the Juggler dexteri-tea. For the preacher divinl-tea. For the newly-wed fell ci tea. For the man In trouble equanlinl-tea-. For the farmer fertlll-ta. For the extravagant frugall-tea For the sage gravt-tea. For the Jockey celerl-ta. For the proud humlll-tea For the sinner morall-tea. For the guilty lunuunl-tea. For the Judge Impartlall-tea For the servant clvill-tea. For the damaged Indeinnl-tea. For the Just Inf lexlblll-tea. For the wavering etablll-tea. For the solemn Jolll-tea. For the victor magnanlml-tea For the candidate majori-te For the flctlonlst probablll-tea For the bibliomaniac rari-tra. For the foolish sagaci-tea. For the banker eecurl-tea. Harper's Weekly. EASY. 1 $& Wtl -ft 'What do you understand f the necessities of hie?" "The mean Kg securing tha fciXsase. ' Kid you read how thst railroad official said the companies wished the commuters would move Into tides?" asked Friend Wife. "Vs, for once commuters and company agree," replied the Tired It. mine' Man. "F.very cmnmuter on a stalled Iraln has wished fervently he llveil In t'm city It's only In keeping up the bluff before his friends that he sings the life subur ban. It's great to own your own home Instead of owning Homebody else's. "Wasn't that pitiful about tho railroads carrying commuters at a positive loss? I wept te think of those poor, charitable railroads fighting for the privilege of bringing the 7 00 into lOiirsiitliev llln at 7:33, or pulling out of Murtgagetnwn Just ten Jumps ahead of the pampered com muter. "There's a type of man who doesn't ap preciate how he's blessed. If lie did ap preciate hn ihIkIiI Jump Into the hike. Veil can pick him out In a crowd. You seo him strolling leisurely to tho station at a rate which makes Dnrnndo look like a Ingles man. Light and unhampered because lie uses 11 suit rase and shawl strap Instead of a hnnipcr he snviliters tralnward with perhaps a length of gar den hose, a basket of fresh vegetables, a steak or chicken, a dosen boxes of garden seed, a catalogue telling how .0 use them, a pound of butter, a ton of coal, sack of flour, bag of rapidly-melting bananas and a few trifles in his arms. "He saunter at a gallop, 'tis true, knocking other right and leH; tears up Just as the employe of the eleemosynary railroad slam the gate In his fare, thus giving him en hour's free vaudeville listening to the unintelligible monologue of the train caller-r-r or the nlckel-ln-the-slot banjo If some city feller loosens up. "The railroads do nothing reckless or dangerous In rushing the commuter to hi destination, and he can develop a great whist game If hi town boast of a few more commuter or. even If It doesn't boaat of them. The commuter ar rive home the same day he leaves It occasionally and often meets his family If they are somnambulistic. The com muter saves from month to month to buy a monthly ticket and then spends his holiday trying to worry off the unused extra rides. "You can always know the commuter at the theater or opera. He I the man who Daughters of Mis Cecilia Beaux, who ha been called "the greatest living woman painter," w.us born In Philadelphia. Her I a mixed ancestry- From her father, John Adolphe Beaux, she Inherited a Gallic strain, which may account for her dominating artistic temperament while through her mother she Is allied to the famous old English family of the Leevitu. Miss Beaux was a pupil of William Har taln, afterward studying at the Julien and the Lazar schools In Paris. In V.m the University of Pennsylvania conferred on her the degree of doctor of laws, and she has been the recipient of many honors and the highest recognition here and In Europe. William Walton, In Scrlbtier'a Magaxine, ays of her: The distinguishing characteristics of Miss Beaux' portrait work apear to be so obvious that her various commentators, native and foreign, aet them down In the same way. "Hhe paint slightly a an Im- prei-alonlst might" says an American critic. "but she I a fairer parallel to hlin and raise hi principle to a higher power In her feeling. In her quick sensitiveness to the Imaginative, spiritual significance of Plan of Mixing Tribes Brings Good Results at the Carlisle Indian School For every dollar that comes from the public treasury of ths .United States and I spent by the federal government toward the education of Indian at th Carlisle Indian school In Pennsylvania, say M. Friedman, superintendent of that Institu tion, In his annual report th students produce early a dollar la return. The superintendent closes a comparison with other Institution with th declara tion that the education of ths Indians is not a gratuity, and that as far a may be In an educational Institution, where the students come from poor families without money, at Carlisle they help to pay In labor for what they get In the way of Instruction. The report says: "The Indian peopie are progressing; they are being educated, are more Industrious, lean less on the government, exercise more independence of thought and action and are rapidly becoming property owners. "The plan at mixing the tribes at Car lisle results In nationalizing the Indian; and, after all, that la the great object In our dealings with this primitive people. They see beyond the the reservation, and more than half of our graduates are actually making a success away from the reservation. "It has always been Carlisle's aim to Insist on absolute religious freedom. What has been a vexing question ha been at last aettled by the adoption, practically In toto for the Indian service, of the rules governing and the principle guiding r- r Gentle Cynic J Knnul is merely a condition In which w are tired of doing nothing, and yet we are too tired to do anything else. Many a man who thinks lie Is a ilttl lower than the angels would be surprised to know what they think of turn. Tell a man he la no better than he ought to be and he will get mad enough to give th lmpwslon thai he ought to t better than he Is. U is always dangerous to try to get something for nothing 'Yn.i might get what you derve. Kveiy iluud lias a silver lining. If you don't believe It ask a small boy who Is too sk k to go to school. I'nhke the average tnaii, the thermome ter can take a drop too much at ii!ht and still get up early the neit morning. a poor rule that won't work both ways, i(k ISA'tt soins lelluw seu to "COMMUTER." gets up anywhere from ten to thirty min utes before the final curtain and block; the stage view for the rest of the audlenoa while elnnibeiing over feet, telling hi wife to hurry up. Hut 1 doubt If the theater nianauera rnmplnin about carrying hint at the full rate of i! per plush cushion. "We know him as the man who pleads a final train In quitting a winner instead of stating and losing like a city snorter. Or, as the inn 11 wno dassrnt stay In town, evenings after work because the law ft mower or snow shovel calls to him. "This Is the spoiled pet of the railroads whom they carry at an annual loea rather than have hjm writing to the news papers Frequently they beat him by pull ing out on time wheti he hasn't expected It. Again, when the train reaches the city he has to walk a mile through the train shed or take some local line to reaoh his work. "It makes the railroads doleful to see each commuter currying home a ton of freight In hi lap of luxury, for freight la freight train la where the company make money. Hut the commuter la a freights to go home In the dark." "I slept past that last station," apolo gised Friend Wife. "Do railroad really carry commuters as an accommodation?" "Certainly. As an accommodation to the railroads' treasuries," said the Tired Busi ness Man. (Copyright 1D10. by the N. T. Herald Co.) j Famous Men her model and her accurate rendering of what she ha seen in that momentary pro- ces of insight The eonsplououa fact of Miss Beaux' portrait 4helr re fined realism, their Imagination, their poetia grasp of character which ordinarily eludes the analylst, their beauty and their In dividuality.'; "Few "artists have the fresH touch which the child needs," say another, "and the firm and rapid execution which allows the painter to catch the fleeting" eg. preesion and the half-forms which maka child portraits at once the longing and despair of portrait painters. Mis Beaux's Individuality has triumphed over all suggestions of her foreign master, and! the combination of refinement and strength is altogether her own." 80 rood a painter as Mr. Chase, In his running discourse to his Philadelphia pupils In the galleries of the Pennsylvania academy, calling their attention to Miss Beaux' pictures, spoke of her as. In hi opinion, the greatest Hying1 woman painter. Of her portraits he said that not only were they painted wall, but they were also characterised by ail the finer qualities of artistic feeling everywhere appreciated. (Copyright 1910. by the N. T. Herald Co.) llglous work and teaching In vogue at Carlisle. "The average age of the boy Is It, years, and that of the girls 18 years. Tb aver age attendance for the last school year has been W71H- The total enrollment was 1,01. During the year a number of Improve ments have been made in ths various courses of Instruction. In the academics department an additional branch ha been added to the existing curriculum; namely, that of telegraphy. It has been found that the Indians have a keenly developed, sense of hearing and of touch. "Tbey are patient, seem to grasp the details rapidly, and have a real liking: for the work. Already three boys have beeu engaged by the Cumberland Valley rail road, and excellent reports of their prog ress come In. "The value of the products from ths various shops and Industries aggregate $7'.t JA This does not Include a multi tude of minor activities for which It would be otherwise necessary to hire outside labor. "During the year a total number of 7et students, representing C7 boys and 94 girls, avail themselves of the advantages of the outing system. From July 1. ls, t0 June SD. mo. these students earned a total of $: . of this amount the boys earned IW.J-B.kJ. and the girls, tT.laU. This Is aa Increase over their total uutitig earnlug for the last year of 13.304.08' thinks It s a poor rule to work at all New ! York Times. Bonis people are so quarrelsome that even their own statements conflict. The man w ho accepts our advice usually makes u feel that he Is doing us a favor. The woman with a baby and the woman with a pet dog always feels sorry for each oLber. r Daily Health Hint J l-args pores In the feet, encased U shoes wltt out much ventilation, abcormaj aad acid perspiration cause oorns, according to Harry Flllngton lirooks. Prolonged soaking lu any kind of water causes ten derness. Frequent short bathing In tepid water with a brush, to carry off Imparities, and IncrvA.-e circulation, and spp'icaUvn of a healing, soclhiiig, cooling loUoa made fniii lime water and a vegetable oil. to getiier wlin the proper removal ot tba corns and cailoelUw will kectf th fa comfortable.