. , . I CHINESE WOMEN'S HARD LOT Despite Crippled Feet and Heavy Toil They Remain Cheerful All a : the Time Dr. Charles K. Boys , a mission , al'J' at \Veihsien , China , in a letter received in New York by the Presbyterian board of foreign missions , throws some light on the , , t I condition of the middle class or y ! , in China. lie : r" women says " 'Ve have been employing u Chinese sewing wonHlu for a couple of weeks ; , and I have been much impressed with the cheer E fulness and force of character hOW11 ; by these poor creatures t . condemned to bobble through lifer r ou feet not much hlI'fI'e1" than a , ' sheep's hoof. This woman can go " _ , upstairs only with great dim ( . cultJ' ; she can't run a footlower } sewing machine without pain , so our little hand machine is a boon to her . . . , . , . . - "Althoucrh cart } ing any . burden ) . is i very painful , in their own homer : m . ' these have to ' ' ' ' women ye carry a ) ) hpuy.y child around with them . while they do their hOlIsl'work \ , buttoning the child into the fronT of their clothing to keep } it warm ) ] ) through the winter. Yet many of the women have cheerful face and kindly , smiling eyes very much like an old southern m ll11- \ my , who has seen mUl'h trouble , : I yet remains cheerful and l'ontent. This is especially true of the Christian Chinese women , so much , so that their neighbors say . Some magic changes their faces. , "To-daJ' 1 passed sonic women t washing clothes iu a little stream ill native fashion , where they . crouch for ] yours iu the bitter cold , sousing the clothes back and forth ' in the ter-no soap and no Wash board-lul'ky if they have a mat or a stone to sit on. Another heavy task in the fall season is the , making of wadded garments for ihe : whole familJ' It is no easy matter when added to all that a woman is expected to do. A woman - an near us tried to commit suicide last fall because she was asked to make her husband's uncle's win l tel' clothes. , : "These wadded garments : . . M are , ungainly looking , but are said tn I be very comfortable bJ mission , a aries who wear them. They art ! ' I made of two layers : of muslin , ; dyed blue 01' black , with a layer 01 ; cotton batting between. Each in , dividual ears three 01' four of the ! wadded coats and usually ont " , I pair of trousers , the latter very loose and baggy .above and very } tight around the ankle , wherE , j they are secured bJ' a , strap/ ' ) . " CAMPING OUT IN ROCKIES. r Joys and Sorrows of Strenuous Life in the wilderness of the Famous Iountnins. .t "About dusk you straggle in ! , with trout 01' gam . The camp , camp- " i , keeper lays aside his mending or his repairing 01' his note-book , and I airs up the cooking fire.rIhe smell of broiling and frying and \ . , boiling arises in the air , " says S. E. White , in The : Mountains. "By the dancing flame of the camp-fire you . eat your third dinner for the day -in the mountains all meals are _ r _ , - . . . _ _ _ - _ - _ , . . . . . . . . L' . . , J. . --A - dinners , and forniiduble ones at that. The curtain of blackness draws down close. Through it shine stars , loom mountains cold and mistlike in the moon. You tell stories. You smoke pipes. After a time the pleasant chill creeps down from the eternal sno\s. Some one throws another han l. rul of pine cones on the fire. Sleep , ily you prepare for bed. The pine cones flare up , throwing their light in Jour eJes. You turn over and wrap the soft woolen blllnlwt close about . your . chin. You wink : drowsily and at once you are . asleep. Late iu the nighlt you awaken to find l Jour nose as cold aE a. dog's. You open one eJ'c. A , few coal marks where the fire has been. The mist mountains have drawn nearer , they seem to bend over you in silent con templa tiol1 , The moon is sailing high in the hmtyen. With a sighJou draw the canvas tarpaulin over Jour head. Instantly it is morning. " FOND OF SUNFLOWER SEED Enormous Amount , Consumed in Cznr's Country Strikes Visit- ing French Physician A French physician , Dr. Mar- coil , says Leslie's Weekly , statefi' that one of , the first things which struck him on his arrival in Rus sin was tIle enormous quantity o sunflower seeds consumed in that ( 'oun trJ. The seeds , which arc oleaginous and have an agreeable - able taste , are constantly chewed uJ' the people. Time outer husk i:3 : detached with the teeth and spat out. These husks ] are seen scattered . tered about 011 pavements and garden walks , ill railway ; car- I'iages , tramway cars and cabs and on the floors of restaurants and private rooms. On days of public festivity the ground everywhere - wHere is covered with them as thickly as the streets of Paris are strewn with confetti , during tIle carnival At every street corner a brisk trade is done with the seeds ' J' old women. A striking proof of this l'assioll-for it is nothing less - of the Russian peasant is the fact that the czarina - ilia could think of nothing that would be more welcome to the . soldiers - diers in Manchuria , and she is said to have spent $160 in satisfying their craving for sunflower seeds. As the seeds are very cheap , that sum represents an enormous con- signment. . . . Living RapiaIy "I tell you , Singleton , you don't know the joys and felicities of a contented married life , the happy flight of years , the long restful calm of- " , "How long have you been mar- ried ! " ' Jnst a month" - Chicago tl0Urllal. Feminine View He-Doll't ' think Miss \ - you Up- son carries her head - rather high ! : She-Yes , poor girl ! I can'T ! help fef ( ling sorry for her. : . "Feeling sorry for her ! " "Yes. She has such an awfully long neck : , you know.-Chicago Daily News . . - _ . . . . . . - - - - ' ; , - . . 7" . " : - - - - - - - - - A WORD TO THE WISE Use Climax Chicken reed for little chicks / and you ; will say "I Iff wonder why I never found ! out about this feed sooncr. ' Send for a . . book , ilGive thc Little Chicks a Chance. " Corn meal and water arc V back numbers with this fccd. Put up , sold ruin ! guaranteed by , W O. P. HECK FALLS CITY ERASKA. . . r I' . . , " . Sold hy J. H. Miller & son , Merrill ff " I. . E. Hal'ling , Hamlin , . . , iI Shildncck 13ros. , Salcm. I " C. W. Allen , llarada l " H. U. LalHlolt , huhcrt. , R _ ! _ ' " SOME EPIGRAMS ON WOMEN Collection of Quaint Sayings from 11Mollentrnve , " a Popular London PIny. The woman who knows Greek : will spend all ] lour and a half in dressing her hair for a party. I calcula that if women wore their hair short a million ullemploJed hours would be thrown daily upon the wodd. Time young couple with the grains of rice st ill upon them start blithely across the marriage links lnl'h depends ! O1 the way the .y m : : gotiate the first disill \1IiOIl-OI' : ; bunker ! Passion WillS maids and perseverance - verance widows. The rejected lover should never lose hope. In addressing the lady his tone should be soft , mellifluous -a outh wind rustling over orange trees. Orange trees-not ' ' ! cypresses .A woman acquires logic when she has a checkbook of her own. Man is fidde and woman capri- cious 01' vice versa. The man who stuns women up in a sentence is the man whom wonm- ' en can fool with a phrase. It is a woman's most delightful quality that she is not interested in politics. 'Vhat is love ? An electric spark that flies at irregular I tangents and ricochets wildly . from heart to heart. Now it soars upward and finds a lodging in the superior brain , then it descends , boomerang fashion , and leaps at the smile of a girl : Time poets have babbled of love since the first introduction of rhyme , philosophers look through heir i glasses , chemists dissect and grauuualians parse-but all that we know 01' need know is that Cupid is-young. The woman who is attracted bJ' the man of the massive brain will do wisely ! ) to marry his good-look. ing brother. THE WISDOM OF CHILDREN Little Ones Make Remarks That No GrownUp Person Would Think Of What could be mOre simple 01' more splendidly direct as a compliment . pliment to a pretty girl than the small boy's admiring question : l'Are your eyes new ones ? " No "grown-up" person could have thought of that. uA ruminating animal is one that chews her cubs"-there might surely be less thoughtful definitions , says the Spectator. As for definitions , no dictionary has ever given anything - . thing better than "a movable 'ast-a nienic" . . . - - - . - - With Cleanly Persons H Soap Desirable and Water are Pompeian Massage Cream is Essential You do not wear fresh underwear . wear for "the looks of [ it , " but to enjoy the sense of cleanliness. Clean outer garments answer for appearances. Soap and water will take the surface grime off the face [ , but Pom- peian Cream alone will take the hidden dirt from the pores--the dirt that makes the complexion sallow , muddy and oily. Pompeian Mass ge Cream can- not improve nature but it permits nature to do its perfect work- it makes the pores throw off the dirt and impurities , and it gives a I Sense of cleanliness unknown'before its use. Does not-cannot-pro- mote the growth of hair on the face. For ) arc ut Killg- Pharmacy. There is a delightful note of the night nursery in the beginning of a girl's essay on hOrs : "The boy is not an animal , hut they can bp heard to a considerable distance ; " equaled , perhaps , in its splendid simplicity by the bOJ"s written criticism to the effect ( that "most ' ' and ' " It girls are very shy : ( angry" is the directness of the description - Lion which compels attention in \'ivd comments such as : "lTust before it killed me the tooth came ont ; " and nothing surely could be more Johnsonian in its absolute truth than the answer given to the painstaking schoolmaster . master trying to make the class understand what might be meant hJ' the subversive word "antipo des. " "If I bored a hole right through the earth till I came out at the other side , where should J be ? " "Off Jer 'ead ! You can : t do it ! " Unpleasant Reminder. Mrs \ lank-1'ha girl in the next flat keeps drumming the tune I was playing the night you proposed to me. 1\11' \ Blallk-I know it ! As I'ye said fifty times before , I wish 8l1e'd move ! -Detl'oit Free Prcss. Wilkins-You've never worked ] a day ill your life , have you ! BilIdns-X ; but I've worked lots of people.-Detroit Free Press. - j.