ihianB mMintPmm mjszfum V fJMWMI CliCVTJiii ffiAVBraa r jse a siw skbsj VhSrJ JiP LADV BEATRICE BUTLER BEATRICE FRANCIS Elizabeth Butler is not only one of the most beautiful girls in Great Britain but in the matter of an cestors she can make pretty nearly any boast she likes and back it up -with the records in Burkes peerage Lady Beat rice is just passing out of her teens She was born on March 2G 1S7 Her father is Marquis of Ormonde Earl of Ormonde and Ossory and Viscount Thurles of Thurles in the County Tip perary Her mother was Lady Eliza beth Harriet Grovesnor eldest daugh ter of the Duke of Westminster The house of Butler of Ormonde is one of the noblest in Ireland and the oldest in Irish history The Butlers and Ger aldines rivals in power and equals in LADY BEATEIOE BUTLER renown have been at the head of the fine nobility of Iceland ever since the Anglo Norman invasion The first of the family to arrive on Irish soil and set up a castle was old Theobald Fitz Walter in the reign of Henry II He was chief butler of Ireland whence the surname His father was Hervey Wal ter who married in 1156 That seems to have been the foundation of the house and the descent has been pretty clear since then Little Lady Beatrice may therefore be truly said to be the daughter of a hundred earls but she is one that may be admired She has a Bcsults of Open Air Life Women will have to organize a new crusade against wrinkles and the leath erlike growing old sort of look of the skin if they persist in following up all the open air pursuits which belong to mans kingdom Fresh air in all kinds of weather may be conducive to health but it is very trying to -delicate skins Women who row and ride bicycles should substitute oatmeal or boiled bread and milk for soap The dry skin is especially sensitive to the effects of sun and air and needs all the precau tions it is possible to find to keep it smooth and white Potatoes boiled in milk are said to be very effective in whitening and softening the skin and almond meal should be on every toilet table Get Their Shoes Blackened The spectacle of a woman availing herself rf the services of a bootblack on the streets has become so common as to attract no more attention than that of a woman reading a daily newspaper in a street car or L train says the Chi cago Chronicle Itwas not so lgng -ago that a woman with a newspaper was considered to be doing something very mannish and she was stared at in consequence Women have dared to I XiW fe tP WOMEN HAVE BECOME PATBONS brave public inspection by sitting in the chair of the street corner bootblack and reading a paper while the industrious bootblack gives them a patent leather or a russet polish Women require the cleaning of their shoes as often and with as much reason as men do theirs and the ladles bootblacking parlors that have been opened in the shopping districts have proved decided successes Silf MUU W trt rSsQrLh fF - - 3sl ji a imi ir o t t r j 11 t r ei - iv szrkix ajiarKKtiKKfv7WJi7r fffwAMrai m LfiS JJil m o P It is nest to impossible to polish a rus set shoe unless the foot is in it as the friction of the cloths must be violent It was because of this that the young women mustered up courage to put their dainty feet upon the box The Demands of Society Society demands that you should look well Not that you should be a beauty but that you should on oc casion put on your best bib and tucker and help up the picture that all in all constitutes society You speak of the social world as selfish so it is for it demands from all its votaries absolute unselfishness You must learn to have no ill feeling toward anybody If a chatterbox tells you that Madame I Malice has made you tlie subject of heri ridicule you must make yourself smile go forward and meet Madame Malice with a pleasant word a courteous bow and you must entirely forget that she has ever said anything but that which was pleasant Society ceases to be good when malicious sayings are nized Ruth Ashmore in Ladies Home Journal Mrs Bryan an Expert Swimmer Mrs William Jennings Bryan wife of the Democratic presidential candi date is up to date in many ways For one thing she is a firm believer in the wheel although as yet she is not an ex pert rider Being comparatively a novice she has not yet reached the stage of wearing a short skirt but free ly acknowledges the advantages of such a garment to the fast riding bicyclienne She is also a splendid swimmer and rather prides herself on her natatorial ability She is also proud of her mem bership in the Sorosis of Lincoln Neb It does not belong to the federation nf clubs but is in the Nebraska State Fed eration The Lincoln Sorosis has a membership of twenty five to which number it is strictly limited Three or four names are always on the waiting list No one is admitted who has not some claim to membership through in terest in current events or some special excellence in other directions Mrs Bryan lays no great stress on her ad mission to the bar She regards is as an ordinary matter in view of the large number of women now practicing law There is no dress reform in her creed only an idea that sensible attention to the first laws of -health should be con sidered also that dress should be dis tinctly feminine not extravagant but F t vs MRS BRYAN AT HOME IN THE WATER very pretty little sister Constance Mary who is just 1G as becoming as possible and suitable to the occasion She wears evening dress when the event requires it but not decollete gowns Evidently super stition doesnt count with her for on the finger with the gold wedding band slip wears a large opal Useless The folly of excessive accumulation in the way of ornaments and the thousand and one trifles scat tered through the modern home is never more forcibly impressed than when packing away household goods and gods previous to the summer ex odus Each article has some associa tion that renders it in a degree precious and yet half of them disfigure rather than adorn the apartment to which they belong How much wiser is the mistress of the Japanese home who while keeping it exquisitely neat never cumbers and litters it with cheap or excessive ornamentation She under stands the rest to eye and brain in frequent change of surroundings To day she hangs up a piece of rare em broidery and in front of it places a lit tle table with some one choice vase holding a few carefully arranged flower sprays Across the corner a screen with richly painted or embroid ered panels is set and everywhere the eye looks upon some object worthy of study and admiration and so few are they as to admit of genuine enjoyment and appreciation After a few weeks a complete change is made one set of art treasures removed and another put in their place By this method a suc cession of charming interiors are se cured far more educating and refining in influence than the crowded tables cabinets and mantels found in th American drawing room Announcing the Babys Birth 111 sending announcement cards or a babys birth the babys name is printed in full on a small card which is inclosed with the parents card If desired it may be attached to the larger card by a bow of very narrow white satin rib bon or silver cord The date of birth is added but not the weight of the baby lior any other particulars of any sort whatever Ladies Home Journal A man -reels drowsy after a hearty dinner because a large part of the blood in the system goes to the stomach to aidriri digestion and leaves the braia poorly supplied OUR BOYS AND GIRLS THIS IS THEIR DEPARTMENT OF THE PAPER Quaint Sayings and Cute Doings of the lattle Folks Everywhere Gathered and Printed Here for All Other Lit tle Ones to Bead Pussy Willow The brook is brimmed with melted snow The maple sap is running And on the highest elm a crow His big black wings is sunning A close green bud the May flower lies Upon its mossy pillow And sweet and low the South Wind blows And through the brown fields calling goes Come Pussy Pussy Willow Within your close brown wrapper stir Come out and show your silver fur Come Pussy Pussy Willow Soon red will hud the maple trees I The bluebirds will be singing nd yello Wi lassels in the breeze Be from the poplars swinging And rosy will the May flower lie Upon its mossy pillow But you must come the first of all Come Pussy Pussy Willow A fairy gift to children dear The downy firstling of the year Come Pussy Pussy Willow Pun for His Doer One day Bobby was eating grapes and after some boy fashion swallow ing skins seeds and all Dont do that Bobby cried his mother hastily You might get ap pendicitus She told the little boy something of the danger of swallowing seeds and showed him how to separate the seeds from the pulp so as to eat only the best part The lesson made a deep im pression on Bobby A few days later he sat in the garden watching his lit tle dog eating his dinner Presidently Fldo began on a small bone taking it into his mouth with great appearance of delight Bobby jumped up in a great fright and pulled the bone away Fido stop stop he exclaimed Ooll get pendicitis Ten baby owls roosting on a line One let go and then there were nine Nine baby owls swinging on a gate Ope fell off and then there were eight Eight baby owls a good time havin One burst his little self and then there were seven Seven baby owls all in amix One got out of it and then there were six TO I a 2lL ffiv Six baby owls in for a dive One didnt come up and then there were five i jjp4jri Five baby owls sliding down our cellar door One got mad and then there were four Four baby owls up in a tree Bang went a big gun and then there were three SV s 5C rr rr -- Three baby owls a winkin at you One winked too hard atid then there were two Two baby owls starting for a run One got left behind and -then there was one One baby owl crooning all alone An old hawk gobbled him up and then there was none- Burns Love for His Wife Burns has been hotly assailed writes Arthur Warren in presenting The Other Side of Robert Burns in the Ladies Home Journal because of his alleged indifference to his wife Jean Armour but the fact is he was ardently fond of her Jean was true to him and his true affection never really turned from her Jean worship ped him literally worshiped him And when we study her devoted life we must agree that there must have been much that was admirable in the char acter of a man who was adored bj so true a woman Burns Diograpnera have paid too scanty attention to all this There is no use in apologizing for the detects of Bobbies life- but thpre is such a thing as insisting too heavily upon them Too much has been inade in the thousand stories pt Burns- life of the Highland Mary epi sode and too little of what he really felt for Jean Armour and of Jeans in tense loyalty to him and devoted care of him The real facts about Highland Mary will never be known They com prise the one episode of Burns life which is veiled in mystery But one can study the poets life closely enough to see that the persecution which in the early days -Seemed to hopelessly separate him from love drove him to Highland Mary for solace and that Marys sudden death idealized that Highland lassie in his memory There was not much more to it and Jean never troubled herself about it There has been a sad waste of popular sym pathy over Highland Mary It is to loyal Jean our thoughts should turn Burns love for her and for his children was very great That is a pleasing ture of him handed down by one who aw him sitting in the summer evening at his door with his little daughter ia his arms dangling her and singing to her and trying to elicit her mental fac ulties The little girl died in the au tumn of 1795 when her fathers health was failing COLOR LINE IN SOUTH AFRICA It Is as Strongly Drawn There as in Any Part of America It rarely if ever happens that a na tive whatever his rank is received on any social occasion inside a white house indsod he woud seldom be per mitted except as a domestic servant to enter a private house at all When Khama the famous chief of the Ba Mangwato a Christian and a man of admittedly high character who has ruled his people with singular wisdom and ability was in England last au tumn and was there entertained at lunch by the Duke of Westminster and other persons of social eminence the news excited general annoyance and disgust among the whites in South Africa A story was told me of a gar den party given by the wife of a lead ing white ecclesiastic the appearance at which of a native clergyman led many of the white guests to withdraw in dudgeon Once when I was a guest at a mia sion station in Basutoland I was ask ed by my host whether I had any ob jection to his bringing in to the family meal the native pastor who had been preaching to the native congregation When I expressed some surprise that he should think it necessary to ask he explained that race feeling was so strong among the colonists that it would have been deemed improper and in deed insulting to make a white guest sit down at the same table with a black man unless special permission had first been given Thus one may say thai there is no social intercourse whatever between the races their relations are purely those of business Now and then the black man gets ahead of the white but the latters pride of race re mains r was told of a Trhitf who con descended to be hired to work by a Kafir but stipulated that the Kafir should address him as Boss Of intermarriage there is of course no question It is not forbidden by law in the two British colonies as it is in most if not all of the Southern States of America but it is excessively rare nor does it appear that there are now other irregular unions outside marriage as there constantly were in the old days while slavery existed In this respect the case of South Africa remarkably resembles that of the Southern States where also there Is now very little mixture of blood though there was a great deal fifty years ago Probably in both cases it is better that the races should not mingle their blood for the white race would be likely to lose more than the black race would gain Century Lost Sword Returned Reno Post No 6 G A R was vis ited by the National Staff Association the other night in Armory Hall at East Greenwich Conn The regular meet ing was held with closed doors after which an open meeting was held with a collation for guests Speeches were called for by Post Commander Samuel F Crompeon and Dr C O Ballou re sponded for the visitors to the post The final address was delivered by Junior Yice Commander S W K Al len Mr Allen touched upon the sub ject of war relics One had come into his hands a sword whose scabbard showed hard knocks It was recently forwarded to the commander by a relic collector of Washington D C It was picked up on the field of Bull Run and when the rust was removed from the blade the name of Lieutenant Stephen P Arnold Second Regiment Rhode Island Infantry was found inscribed Colonel Arnold was present but knew nothing of the recovery of his long lost sword until it was laid in his hands by the speaker Torments Elephants to Death There exists a small reptile of which elephants have a very peculiar dread and against which neither their sagac ity nor prowess can defend them This diminutive creature gets into the trunk of the elephant and pursues its course until it finally fixes in its head and by keeping Mm in constant agony at length torments the stupendous animal to death He Got It Dick Tou know that feller workin in shaft 17 who was always kickin for a raise Mick Yes Dick Well he kicked over a can of dynamite to day and got it A man pursues bad luck of tener than bad luck pursues a man THE BATTLE MELDS OLD SOLDIERS TALK OVER ARMY EXPERIENCES The Bine ad the Gray Be view Incidents of the lAte War and In a Graphic and Interesting Manner Tell of Camp March and Battle Thrilllnc Incidents Matches in War Times The late war caused the Southern people to realize the utter helpless ness of a purely agricultural commu nity when thrown upon its own re sources and cut off from communica tion with the outside world As the months rolled on it became more difficult for the inhabitants of the Confederacy to supply themselves with many of the necessaries and con veniences of every day life Matches for instance were used by millions of people but it was impossible to run them through the blockade in sufficient quantities It soon became evident that they must be manufactured at home but -how was it to be done The machinery was lacking and also the materials James McPherson a public spirited book seller in Atlanta was one of the first to attempt to solve the problem At considerable expense he succeeded In getting some machinery phosphor us and sulphur through the blockade and in a short time his match factory was in operation The factory was situated a few miles from the city and the matches were stored in McPhersons book store and sold there by wholesale and retail They were made of poplar and sold in square blocks the factory not being provided with a machine that would separate the matches Inexperienced workmen found it a hard matter to turn out matches that would light At first about the only way to make them available was to bring them in contact with the dying embers in a fireplace but this was inconvenient and efforts were made to improve their quality Finally the composition was changed and the matches blazed up at the lightest touch It was not necessary to strike them They were self acting and unexpected ly broke out at odd hours Qf the day and night The clerks in the book store had double work in those exciting days When they were selling books they had to watch the big boxes con taining the matches and roll them out into the street the moment they began to smoke Once in the street the boxes would be emptied and the contents left until they were reduced to ashes There was not much profit in an ar ticle containing the elements of self destruction and a night watchman had to be employed to remain in the store and drag out the boxes as soon as they showed indications of spontaneous combustion But the factory was an Atlanta enterprise and the people were proud of it At least it was a begin ning It was a sign of promise and showed that in spite of the blockade there were enterprising men in the South who had the pluck and energy to risk their fortunes and go to work to build up the industries of the coun try It was not long before the discovery was made that the composition used for the matches was a first class rat poison Here was a new source of rev enue for the manufacturer The stuff was put up in little tin boxes and ad vertised as a rat exterminator If Mc Pherson could not boast of the superior quality of his matches he could at least feel proud of his rat poison The compound sold rapidly for the sup plies of grain stored in the city by the Confederates caused the place to swarm with fierce rodents of the largest size But there was one difficulty in the way and an unfortunate incident soon destroyed the popularity of the poison and there was a sudden falling off in the demand for it At that time there was a hat store nearly opposite the book store Holbrook the owner had no end of trouble with rats and one day in his wrath he determined to make a clean sweep of them Pur chasing several boxes of the extermin ator he laid some big slices of stale bread on his counter and covered them with the poison He spread the mix ture on the bread with a case knife and rubbed it in vigorously The merchant was a fine looking man with a big blonde beard reach ing nearly to his waist Just as he was giving about a quarter of a pound of the stuff one of his most energetic rubs on a hard slice of bread it sud denly blazed up like gunpowder The flames set fire to Holbrooks handsome whiskers and when his clerks had thrown a bucket of water over him the astonished and frightened hatter would hardly have been recognized by his best friend Seizing the half con sumed piece of bread he rushed across the street to the book store Wheres McPherson the singed and blackened visitor shouted Out at the factory Teplied a clerk What is the matter Mr Holbrook Matter enough yelled the v other See what this infernal rat poison has done It has almost killed me ruined my whiskers and it came near burn ing down my store Tell McPherson that I want to see him right away I would rather fight a million rats than fool with this blasted old poison And the angry man darted back to his store without giving any further details of his misadventure A visit to his barber however made him more presentable and he was soon in a bet ter humor Ill be dashed If I know what to do said McPherson We must have rat poison you know and matches People should be more carefuL If j they will stand around and have plen 1 ty of water handy when they use my 1 goods they will get along all right A newspaper man suggested that It would bS a good idea to store a lot of the matches In some place where they would be captured by the Feder als They might blaze up some nightj and destroy their supplies he said or they might be shipped to some of the Northern cities No replied a Confederate officer with a sly glance at the bystander that would be barbarous We must all bear our crosses and we must put up with our home made matches and rat poison until we can do better Then everybody laughed and the clerks proceeded to drag into the streer a large box from which a white smoke was just beginning to issue Shermans cavalry destroyed the fac tory just before the siege of Atlanta and thus perished a great Confederate industry Wallace Putnam Reed in Chicago Times Herald Iiived on Crackers and Water The first conspicuous victim of the civil war Colonel Ellsworth of the New York Fire Zouaves was killed atJ Alexandria May 24 18G1 Having- oc cupied the town without resistance and seeing a Confederate flag floating from the summit of the Marshall House he ran into the hotel went up stairs to the roof and tore down the flag On his way down he was met by the hotel keeper and shot dead His assassin perished at the same moment killed with a bayonet thrust by Frank E Brownell Ellsworths friend John Hay gives in McClures Magazine such personal reminiscences of the young hero he was but twenty four as may show his simple kindly heart and the struggles he went through to gain a le gal education Poverty drove the boy early out into the world to make a living He drifted to Chicago where he entered a law office and lived on a pittance earned by copying papers His food and drink for mouths were dry biscuits and water his bed was the hard floor of the office He would not accept even an apple from any one because he could not return the courtesy Going on an errand into an eating house he met a friend and several companions who insisted on his hav ing an oyster stew He refused his friend pressed the waiter brought on the oysters for the party and Ells worth sat down The stew was the first morsel of food he had tasted for three days and three nights Subse quently ho had money he went to his friend and told him that he Ells worth owed him half a dollar The man said no but Ellsworth insisted that his memory was better than his friends and made him take the money1 the price of the oysters In a diary which Ellsworth kept for a little while are such entries as these Have written four hours this even ing two pounds of crackers sleep on office floor to night Read one hun dred and fifty pages of Blackstone V slept on floor I have contracted a cold by sleeping on the floor Then there is the gnawing sensation which prevents my long continued applica tion I spent my last ten cents for1 crackers to day Nothing whatever to eat I am very tired and hungry to night Onward At the first gun that fired on Sum terEllsworth raised with incredible celerity the New York Zouaves a regi ment eleven hundred strong and brought it to Washington His friends knowing his military talents thought that his first battle would make him a brigadier general and that the sec ond would give him a division Presi dent Lincoln thought so highly of him that he called him to Washington to place him in charge of a bureau of mi litia But Man proposes God dis poses Grants Gratitnde General Grants kindness of heart and deep sense of obligation are seen in a pleasing light in a story told by the St Louis Republic While the General was President he visited St Louis and Mr Garrison President of a railroad took him out for a drive On the way they met a shabby old man in his shirt sleeves Grant recognized the man and stop ped the buggy He got out extended his hand and said Hello Uncle Ben How are you and your wife getting along The old man greeted the President and said that they were getting along very well they were happy if they 4 had enough to eat and if he could get a little tobacco for his pipe Uncle Ben wouldnt you like to be postmaster of Meramec township asked the President Uncle Ben said he would not object and Grant shook him by the hand and said God bless you and your wife Uncle Ben I think of you often When Grant got back in the buggy he was much moved and said to Mr Garrison Poor old Uncle Ben He has a big heart I remember when 1 and my wife living in that house over tljere did not have any more to eat than we needed and Uncle Ben would come around to the Bouse at night and leave a basket of provisions on the doorstep He was afraid to come and give them to us thinking that he might possibly hurt our feelings God bless his memory The President did not forget his promise Uncle Ben was soqn made postmaster The payment of personal debts by means of public office IsVnot to be defended but the public con science was not then aroused as- It is now Cold Harbor Senator Reagan of Texas who was present at the battle of Cold Harbor says that if Grant had succeeded in breaking Lees lines the Confederate commander had not a regiment of rfrr serves to put into the fight Grant in- curred heavy losses at Cold Harbor bub it seems that he tried to end the war v on that field - v - i V 1 a A AH A ffl M S -I