f B -v T ti it V UA V ; ty M f 11 DM IN MEXICO Every Clear Brook Serves Its Pur pose as a Washtub. A Country In KPhlch Every Dn.y Monday Ctennllncim Wlthowt Modern Convenience Tlie Contft Clean Linen, iTho Mexlcam housewife 1ms Trotfcrou Wcsome laiuulry question to vex her jrtneid soul. The day of stationary ttubs, patervt wringers and omnipo ttent washing iluids has not yet dawned upon the luvudcro of 3Soute zumn's people. Every day Is Monday in Alexico; when there Is clothing to be washed that d:vy it Is done, whethnr it be Monday or Sunday, to-day or a month Srom now. The mieans that served ur fore fathers are the ones in use to-day, and mi tu re furnishes -all Alio appli ances. Throughout -the 'country the mctlmll of the -washerwoman is the a SSafevw. 7Smmt itjmim&Kmvhs y-jswfcpv.wertfteir-" -,asiKit?ua mrwik. &ghm . - w viais xwvKJTa , S , fe? WASHING IN A CLEAR BROOK. same though in the larger towns the authorities are attempting to es tablish a more sanitary condition. Every river, ditch or pond is u washtub, and the rubbing is alone upon the flat stones that 'lie .about tlj brink. AVhen the women arc .at then: w.or,k thvsy stand in the shallow water or kneel upon the bank. The clothes aru first dipped into the stream, then thrown upon the stone; each piece is patted and pounded, nibbed with a sort of soap-bark or fibre, -wet "with lumdfuls of water scooped up in a cup or in the hand, then for 31 final riningiit is trailed and beaten 3 11 the stream. One might doubt the efficacy of tlim treatment did he not -see the snowy whiteness of the linen bleach ing in the sun Among ifhe natives the term "fam ily "washing" is certainly used in its most literal sense, for the family anil the clothes have one common washing .Uay. After the gnnneiitr. have be-in spread to dry the babies nre net mpon the washing stone and hnndfiils of water poured over them till the little brown bodies shine like satin. JAt 'lo-st the mother has her turn and, -standing or sitting in the stream, she slips out of one garment and into :imothur as the bath pro ceeds. In the .cities there is more of a system tiaod. A woman will come to the house or 'hotel and take the washing; this she delivers to the overseer of 21 ,crovd of regular wash erwomen tvIhj -work all day at the public washing ground. This open laundry is a plot of ground set apart by the town for the convenience and .assistance of these women; here is a long row of washing etotirx rudely cut and placed about two feet apart over a cemented ditch r trough, through which clear wntr runs from some oienrby spring or water course. The regular charge for this luxury is one penny n day. The method of washing Is about ihe same as at the river, Here these poor creatures kneel, hour after hour, under the rays of a tropical sun, and their daily wage amounts to about 30 cents of our money. As 'it. is the custom to wait until nearly everything is soiled before a regular washing is dons, it some times happens that n few articles must be done up at home; then is used n shallow stone basin, oblong in shape and resting with one end propped it little higher than the other. With a jar of water and a cup to pour on a little at a time, the accoutrement is complete. An American woman living in the City of Mexico bought a wooden tub nnd n washboard, showing her Mex ican servant how. to use them; imag ine her surprise some days later at feeing the washboard covered with charcoal crosses nnd the maid kneel itig at the tub, which was placed on the floor, using the old water cup nrul rubbing the clotheH on the bot tom of the tub. W, CLARK. SPORTS AND ATHLETICS The Turf. At the groat American Derby, re cently run at the Washington park track, nt Chicago, Thev Ticket, who won the event, performed a feat that is remark able. The colt is of Kentucky breed, owned by M 1 d d 1 e t o n & Jungbluth, of Louisville, and up to the finish of the great Derby had never pushed its nose under the wire n win ner. As n two- Jockey Hehtewn. ycnr.0hl the colt made 13 starts without winning a race, finishing second four times, third twice, and being unplaced seven times. The only start of The Picket tvs n three-year-old was in the M. Lewis Clark stakes, when he fin iished third to Savable and Bernays. .Although second in value to the fu turity race for two-year-olds, which iis run nnnunlly at the Sheepshead Uay track in New York, the Amu ican derby is in reality the premier turf event in America. It draws greater crowds by many thousands than ever 'hnve been seen on a New York race track, and in 'spectacular features of crowd ond grounds at the time of the race none of the big metropolitan fea tures is to be compared with it. The attendance at the Grand Prix at Paris recently was said to be close to 200,000. This race, however, is run on Sunday, so that the comparisons are hardly fair in the matter of public interest in the race. England is the great race loving nation. I,ts Epson derby Is the great est race of the world, nnd in many par ticulars the most spectacular. Aus tralia, for its population, is the great est thoroughbred racing proinee in the world. Crowds of 150,000 turn out to see the Melbourne cup. which is con tested on magnificently equipped grounds, and under the auspices of a jockey club composed of wealthy men of social and political importance. The American derby seems to be keeping pace with the growth of interest in racing in this country, although it is the one race whjeh draws patronage largely from a class which seldom pays attention to any other race of the year. Jockey Arthur Ilelgescn, who rodo The Pickett to victory, is but 17 years old, and has been riding about two years. He is a model young man, as he neither smokes, drinks or keeps late hours. For the first time in its history the "Brooklyn suburban handicap was won by a three-year-old, when the game Africander, giving weight to mot of the field, captured the event. Fuller, the New Orleans jockey, piloted tho colt to victory. Lou Dillon, owned by C. I. Hillings, recently made a- new world's record to -wagon for the mile, of 2:00. break ing the record of 2:07, held by Lucille. THE FARMER DAIRYMAN. If lie Ilnlne llli Ovrn Fcetl He Cap Mnke Ilin Co luy n Hand no me l'ront. ItuMolinll. The following story of Ed Dele hnnty, at the present time playing right field for the Washington club, in the American league, is by com mon consent tho most remarkable thing that ever hnppened on a ball field. Tt is no doubt familiar to many readers, and is of the great batting streak he displayed In a game against the Chicngos when he Ed Delehait. wns covering left field for the Philadelphia in the na tional league in '07. The game was played nt Chicago, and "Adonis Hill" Terry was pitching for Chicago. Al together the Philudelphias made just eight hits on" Terry, and of the eight Delehanty made no less than five out of five times at bat. The first time up Delehonfy lines out a home run to the left field bleachers. The second he hit for four bases to right field. On his third effort he sent a sizzling liner out to Dahluu, who was pluylng shortstop. Dahlcn got under it ur.d stuck up his hands, but the ball was going so fast that it al most amputated both of his hands. Delehanty got to first on it. Tho fourth time to bat IJeJelianty sent one -ight straight for center and cantered clear around to home without trouble. When he walked to the plate for the fifth time the fans wein all crazy with excitement. "Another home run, Del!" they shouted. Delehanty hit the first ball that was pitched. It went sailing out Into left, hit the roof of the clubhouse on that side and bound ed olT on the roof of the other. Mean while, "Del" walked leisurely around the bases and scored his fourth home run. Hut in spite of Delchanty's marvelous record of our home inns and n single out of five times at but his team loit tJ:o T.me by a tcore of eight to fix. Perhaps nine-tenths of the dairy products of this country are pro duced from farms where dairying is but one of several branches of agri culture carried on, and it is best thnt this should be so, for mixed farming is the most profitable system, and dairying in connection with ihe growing of field crops and other stock is best for the land us well as for the man who owns it, says Dairy and Creamery. There are forms in this country which have actually been impover ished and very much reduced in value because for a long series of years cows have been kept on" them and the milk from them sold to cities or condensing factories or taken ofE the farm for some other purpose. There is a vast difference between selling the butter fat to a creamery and returning the skim-milk to tho farm and selling the whole milk. But very little fertility is taken on the farm when butter alone is sold. The butter is produced from sun and nir, the elements being tnken up by growing plants and transformed into feed for the cows and then returned in the way of butter fat. The mineral elements in the milk and the nitrogen in it in the shape of protein are the things we want to keep on the farm, and but a trifling quantity of these is carried away when butter fat alone is sold. The fnrmer who keeps a few cows and raises his own feed is the one who gets the best price for his feed and the most money from his cows, providing he sells only the butter fat. This being true, It follows that every such dairy farm should phi 11 to produce on his own farm as largo a quanti3' of the best feed he can, and theenpucity of the farm will in crease in the course of years in ex actly the same ratio that the farmer takes advantage of the means at his command to make his farm more fer tile and his crops greater. We have not' yet reached that, looked for period when we can keep a cow on ever' acre of land, but it is entirely within the limits of possi bility to do this. The la ml should be drained. Tho farmer who has a well-drained farm is, to a large extent, independent of abnormal weather conditions, whether it be too wet or to dry. Well-drained land produces a better crop in any kind of a year than doea land not drained. ADIRONDACK FIRES Ucthods Used in Fighting These Destroyers of Forests. tlovr They Were Started A l'ecullar Story Told by Stnte Fire Warden KniinoiiB Hcrolnm DlHplnycd by the Worker. .The great Adirondack fires, which have just 'been extinguished by the aid of a timely rulu which came after el public meeting at New comb, N. Y., in which the people united their, pray crit for rain, have furnished an endless amount of thrilling incidentsnets of heroism and methods of fighting the fires. Some of the finest virgin forest preserves were burned over. Ten thou sand acres of the estate of W. Seward Webb, around Nahasane, was swept over by the flames; llockefeller's 00,000 acres was two-thirds burned over; and property owned by the "brother of Mayor Low, of New York, William C. Whitney, the St. Kegis, Intel-nation- UNIQUE YANKEE NOTION. Thrifty Connecticut Fnrmer Million Automobile Do Service an u Farm I'umii. That the typical "down east" yan kee is a hard man to down has long been generally understood, but. was perhaps never better demonstrated than by the manner in which Andrew "wmSMs, AUTO DOING DUTY AS PUMP. Waters, of Hartford, Conn., turned his auto into a pump. Mr. Waters' stationary engine at tached to the water supply was broken mysteriously just at u time of day when a large quantity of wa ter was required to satisfy t tie thirst of his eettle. To repair the engino would take several days, and Mr. Wa ters needed a substitute at once. In his emergency he backed his au tomobile up to tilts well-house, ele vated the rear wheels clear of the ground, afllxcd a belt, and applied tho juice. Answer: Plenty of water, satisfied cattle, and a contented farmer. And yet some people think an auto has no good use. Chicago Journal. Mine n m nn Inxcctlcldc. Lime is in general use as a fertilizer, and to a limited extent, also, as an in secticide. Testimony as to its value is conflicting, and this is due to its con dition when applied. Lime as an in secticide (tught to be in the form of a dry hydrate. To shell lime or lime stone just enough water is to he added to slake; then sift through a mod erately fine siee and dust on the in sects when they ure wet. Only soft bodied insects can he reached by this substance, and the application must be made so that the caustic proper! lea of the lime may have a chance. Tho larvae of the potato beetle and as paragus beetle are good subjects, and the testimony of its effectiveness 00 the cabbage worm i not wnntintr LOOKING INTO THE FIRE. nl nnd other pulp companies buffered extensively. . There are varying stories as to now these fires started, sonic openly charg ing that many of the fires were delib erately se by Adirondack squatters, who had real or fancied grievances against the owners. Chief State Fire Warden U S. Emmons Is authority for the story that the first of the fires was caused by an empty beer bottle through whose convex bottom the hot rays of the May sun were concen trated as in a burning glass. The long drought had dried the leaves until they were like tinder, and readily burst into flame. It was a herculean task which soon confronted the lite fight ers, and the silent deeds of personal heroism wrought by them, far from the stimulus of public applause, must be for the greater part forever un known. During calm weal her a forest fire is dispiriting rather than terrifying. Contrary to the common idea, the trees are the last' to burn. All that can be seen is a thin line of insignifi cant flame, advancing lazily among the dry underbrush. Occasionally a young balsam, the only tree that burns readily, will catch fire from the heat below and flare up into a huge torch for a minute or two, hut, on the whole, the flames seem amazingly feeble and easy to control. That is because the real fire is far down out of sight. The soil of these virgin forests for several feet down is composed of decayed leaves, which has taken on the con sistency of peat, and which once ig nited, burns deeply and creeps stead ily on, and on, and on, waiting for the rushing wlnd'to fan it Into aronr ing sea of flames, sweeping every thing before it. It is a comparatively easy task to extinguish the fire in the timber nnd underbrush, but when this peatlike soil gets to burning it is a different matter. It will slowly eat its wny for months into the green forest lying ahead, and leave behind a path marked by the layer of white ashes covering the ground and dead trees standing ns ghastly reminders of the fire which has been gnawing at its roots. A man named (iallagher was the first to evolve a scientific plan for the fighting of this soil fire. In advance of the firefighters lie would blaze a wide trail along the front of the fire. Men with axes came behind and felled every tree and bush on the fire side. Then came men with shovels, who dug deep, getting below the pent bed and throwing the dirt as a rampart against the flames. This method never failed to cheek, except when the great wind swept through the forest and fanned the fires into a seething furnace. The Yale summer school of forestry which opens soon nt Mllford, Pn., where ways and means of preventing floods and fires will be4considered, will find a fund of acts and information in these fires, which have, made (he Adirondacks one of the hottest places this side of the accredited confines of his satanlc majesty's royal domains. K. U RILEY. IVIm They Menu. Sweet Girl What do the papers mean when they in Ik about a woman ly woman? Father They mean one who" known how to make pumpkin pies. N. Y. Weekly. EVANGELISTIC TOUR That of Rev. R. A. Torrey Has Been a Record Breaker. Una I'renehert the Annuel Arnanil tin World ivllh Wonderful flucccnn Clniiaed nn n New Kvan- KcllNlle Lender. Not since the days of St. Paul, the apostle, whose fervid missionary spirit drew him to every part of the world, as known nt that time, to prench the (hnpel, has the world witnessed such an evangelistic tour ns that which Hev. 1. A. Torrey and Mr. Charles Al exander have just completed. Thero have been great revivals under Luther, Knox, Wesley, and many others down to the great revival wave which swept over America and England under the preaching and singing of Moody and Sankey, but none have been marked by the remarkable characteristics of the Torrcy-Alexander meetings, which have extended pretty much around the world. The work of other evangel ists has been confined to one or two countries at most, and while vast in the number of people readied and con verts won, still they have not been on as broad a Fcope as the tour just ended by the return to Chicago of Messrs. Torrey and Alexander. After preaching in Hawaii, spending a month in ,rnpau, and preaching 74 times nt difi'erent places, after spend ing three weeks in China, six months in Australia, Tasmania and New Zea land, where meetings of tremendous size and power were held, and. thou sands upon thousands of converts won, after passing through Ceylon antlMn dia, and preaching the Wold and sing ing the (iospcl in those places, after meetings in London and a greal re vival work throughout Scotland, Mr. Torrey comes back with these words upon his lips: "We are on the dawn of a world-wide revival." Surely the mantle of .Mr. Moody and a double portion of his spirit lias fallen upon the ninn whom Mr. Moody, K! years ago, sought out and placed over the Bible: Institute at Chicago, whfch stands to day as one of the greatest monuments to the tuicred memory of the great evangelist. We dare not attempt to estimate the miles traveled, number of meetings held, multitudes of people preached to, and number of converts won, for fear if we came near to the actual fig ures we should be accused of gross ex aggeration or for fear we gave sta tistics which would be considered rea sonable, we would fall so very far below the true figures as to miserably fail to do credit to the great evangel- vHvilL M'jf'vi" 'ilfaifii j3C5SWLii3t VHOflBI ifluBH REV. R. A. TORREY. istic tour. Mr. Torrey left Chicago, December JiU, 1901, nnd returned on June 17 of this year, being gone near ly a year and six months. During this time the globe has been circled with the simple Gospel by preaching and singing. The methods of conducting the meetings were not unlike those which proved so effective in the Moody meetings of years ago. A great deal was made of the singing, and Mr. Al exander captured tho people of Austra lia, witli his singing and successful! leadership of large choruses, organ ized in the places where the meetings, were held. At Melbourne, where the greatest success was realized, he had 1,200 in the chorus, and with the 7,00ft people who crowded nightly into the vast, exposition building to help the singing of the Gospel songs, the ef fect was simply marvelous. The "Glory" song has flooded Australia, and the common greeting there of Christian workers now is II. Tim. 2:15. Mr. Torrey's tour wns the out growth of an urgent cnll In 1809 from religious workers of all denominations of Australia to Mr. Moody to come nnd undertake an extensive campaign t'lere. Circumstances prevented Mn. Moody from responding, and the mat ter was dropped. Later Mr. Torrey came to the attention of the Evangeli zation Society of Australasia, which had previously sent the cnll to Mr. Moody, and he wns Invited to visit the island. Out of this grew the world wide tour which has been so success fully completed. A VOICE iyf,f."""''"'r "rsttafrr .mmmi -- Sm . j y, . tijigfSg. t iMjfijjM 1 ' .J. . -;