SoptelliluT .",11, 11)00, American Wives Of German Royalty Although American women, Willi tlii'lr inlllliiiiH, have (iiiroirlntcil a K'xnl I y share of Ktiropcuu tllli'H, imly otic woman Ih a princess In Iii.t own right ami only one of Undo Sam's iIiui1i(th ever wedded a kliiK- Tlm Princess Wnlilcrsco, tin1 power behind tho throne of (lorinany, Ih at prom-tit mni'li to I In.' fori; In llio Chinese affair, or, more properly speaking, her hUHlmnd, Field Mar Hlial Count von WaldorHi'o, wlio Itt Just aliont assuming supremo command of the allied lorceH In China. I'rlnci'HH von YVnldorxeo liad Intended vIh llliiK her American frlcndH and her old home IIiIh nutiinin, for the llrnt llini! Hlnee before her marriage, had political alfalrH not j 1 in 1 1 K''l her plans. Sho wiih tho lieautlful MIhh Lea Mary Ksthcr Leu daughter of David Lea, a rich New York grocer, nnd one. of three very lovely sisters, all of whom married Into titled famllleH. Count von WaldcrHce Ih her fecund liiiHliand. Shu Ih the I'Miicchh Fied erlek von Nour, the tltlo being conferred upon her by the einpetor of Austria after the death of her II rut hUHhaml, who ndliiiUlHheil the title of prince of SclllcHWlg-llnlHtcIn to contract a marriage with her. Ho wiih a prince of the royal line and on thin licet nut olleied MIhh l.ea a morganatic marihigc, for la marrying her otherwlHe he would have to relinquish his tltleH. She re fUHed other than a regular marriage, whero tlpou the prince gallantly ahandoued li Ih high Htatlou and wedded her. Six montliH latei he died, leaving her nilntreHH of IiIh $1,000,(11111. Count von WaldiTHee Ih of an old PrtlHHiun family and wiih a favorite of tho Kmperor William. The prlnccHH' lulluence In the present tier man court, where hIio Ih called the power behind the throne, came about through the marriage of the kaiser, then Prince Wll liclm of I'niHHla, which hIio Ih credited with having brought about In face of the iingry oppoHltlon of the prluce'H mother. The hrlile wiih the prlnccHH' grnndnlcco by hur llrHt marriage, tho PrlnccHH Augusta Vic toria, to whom hIio proved u most kind and JudlclouH rrlend when her tnnjcHty llrHt came to llerlln, a Hlmple, country girl, with but llttlo knowledge of the wayH of courts, Tho I'rluceHH Frederick It wiih who Instructed the future empress In tho devlotiH pullm of I'riiHHl.in court etiquette, and Hhu wiih nlwayn regarded by I'riuco and I'rluceHH Wllliclin of l'rilHHla an their dcarcHt and moHt valued friend. Tho friend Hhlp Iiiih been held up to tho prcHcnl (lay. Her noble traltH of character havo luado her greatly beloved of all tho (Ionium people. Tho prlnccHH rutaliiH her lovo for her native country and celehrateH every Fourth of July In numt patriotic faHlilou. Olio of tho chaniiH of her Hummer home, hIio Hays, Ih that hIio can see tho HtarH and Mrlpoa im American ships piihh on their way aerosH tho Atlantic. Tho prlnccHH Ih n beautiful woman, with Hiiow-whlto hair and queenly hearing. Tho honored wife of a king wnH the counl cfh of Fdlii, the only woman who over reiiehed hucIi h lofty and royal eminence She married in ISfi'.i inorgiiniitloally Furdl mind of Portugal, who died in 1SS5. The counteHH wiih originally Kllso IIoiih ler of lloHton. Hhu went to ICuropo to Htudy for the operatic Htage Her ilebut wiih mado on tho night of the birthday of tho king, at tho Royal Opera Iiouho, Lisbon; tho king caw her and Inline dlately fell In lovo with lior, proposed mar lingo and wiih accepted. King Fcrdlnand'H Hon, KIiik LouIh, wiih then tho actunl ruler i f IN Nilgai. The latter'H wife, queen Marli, I'la, attended her father-ln-luw'H wedding ami klHHed the American bride. King Ferdi nand obtained for IiIh wife the title of count esH of I'M la. She might have been a queen In reality the queen of Spain for In tho year of her marriage tho crown of Spain was offered to King Ferdinand by (leneralH l'rlni and Serrano, but tho king preferred IiIh peaceful life, and tho countesH Hhrank from the dutlcH of a queen. The two were devoted and lived an Idyllic exlHtenco at 1'ena eiiHtle, Hurrounded by n viint oHtute, which wiih beautifully cultivated. Many trees and Hhrulm were Imported from Miibhii chtlHotta, the native dale of the counteHH, at tho express wish of tho king, who wiih u man of rollncil tiiHtcn In art, literature and inuidc. Tho counteHH, hcHidcH rare beauty. wiih pom-eased of many iiccoinpllHliluentH. After the klng'H death the counteHH lived in retirement at tho Chateau of Clntra, on In timate terniH with all the royal family by whom hIio wiih greatly beloved. She wan tiealed exactly iih If die hnd been bom to purple. liiHteud of In a little, cramped brick Iiouho In PleiiHiint Htreet, HohIoii. Her two hIhIith. resldentH of lloston, niake no boast of being HlHterH-ln-law to a king, and. In deed, but few Know that they are. nays that they are very bountiful and hh a rule cultured. She uilils: "Didn't you know that many of your best young men marry native glrln? Oh, yea, and they are proud of It. And at our ballH, our partloH, both the white nnd the nice 'brown people' alwayH meet on an equal footing. Tho old aristocratic native famllleH are very line. Their daughter are beautiful glrln, educated, and let me whisper It -eager to marry an American. Tho Amerl- iiiih, you know, ure looked upon an being the greatest people In all the world. As n rule, all of the foreigners there are' educated and of u lino cIiihh, ho our society Ih veiv line." Mm. HlggliiH pays that the glrlH of Hawaii have beautiful natures iih well as face and form, and, like tho women of our own southern HtatoH. develop very early and are young women at the age of I.. In telling of Homo of the wayH uud customs of tho people of the country, die hiij'h: "A favorite word of gtootlng Ih 'Alloha,' that Ih used eoiiHlantly to nay goodby, good morning, and. In fact, takes tho place of all our words uud phniHCH In hucIi matters. It Ih a very affectionate term. too. Or, again, they say, 'Oul Nile," which means 'With deep affection I greet you.' The lower dtthHoH of the natives are line. I'oor they may be, but they aro JiiHt iih dean and nleo iih they can be. Thoy are ho grateful ami affectionate. You pass Home old mini and say, 'Alloha,' and he responds In kind and sweeps IiIh tattered old hat to the very ground. They havo been ukoi! to loyalty, uud they think all Americans aro grand. No mutter how poor ft tit lowly tho natives may be, they never beg or deal. That Ih ii remarkable fact. In fact, stealing or begging would he unknown to the iduud had It not been Introduced by the For tugueHo. There are Home Japanese and Chinese there, too. Some of the natives have them iih servants. Another thing I would like to speak of, and that Ih the peculiar grace of the native. They are always grace ful and polite--ami In the ballroom such dancerH." Mr. and Mrs. HlggliiH lived In tho llttlo village of Illlo, on the volcano road, only Hoventeen iiiUch from the great volcanic center of tho country, and hIio will return to her old homo next year to take charge of the Hiigar and coffee plantation left by her liUHbaml. Ah tho HiiwailaiiH aro now u part of uh, It Ih especially gratifying to read this and other favorable iiccotiutH of them. Woman Forester MIhh Mini Lloyd Dock of Hat rlHburg, l'ns Iiiih HiicccHHfully demonstrated the fact that a woman may pursue a congenial occupation with prollt and honor equal to that a man may attain In tho same line of work, and that It Ih not neccHsury In the choice of oc cupation that any of tho traditional "truly feminine" bo considered, for MIhh Dock has chosen for her pursuit In life the somewhat unusual vocation of forestry for whldi her scleutlllc tastes and education have fitted 1 LLTSTIJ AT FA) H15IS. inter falls lo main- them understand tin die desires lo concerning the Hllbjeit die I i presenting to them and there Is eldom an Interval In her life In which she niu forg ' the wotk which absorbs so much (f i At the recent meeting of tho Oeticr.il F d oration of Women's Clubs at Milwauke MisH.Dock was ono of the honored Hpcak el'H. ".Sometimes 1 wish 1 had been Jus' a ' tie hearthstone woman." she said to tin writer, "and that 1 had never lookc I through a microscope ami didn't k iih n phaoiiogiiin from n cryptogram and in vi t had to tramp around In muddy boots Ioo!;nr! for ii specimen, but that mood lasts jus' while I am physically weary, nnd a fev hours' sleep or a glass of milk will inn' e me forget all about such foolishness and I go back to my 'cultures' with rem we Interest nnd appreciation, for tin re in no field In tho world In which women will tin I Hiieh fascinating work." In tho bulletin Miss Dock pnyH "One of the most Interesting features of tin women's congress wiih the section of ugrl culture and hortlctiltute, where mist of the papers recounted the practical expil'l ences, struggles nnd successes of wome of Utah, California ami .Minnesota Ireland Fngland, llelglum, Denmark. New Zealand and New South Wales, In the fields of dairv work, beekeeping, poultry-roaring, s'od. breeding, silk culture, ostrich farming bulb culture uud farming in general." The account of the parks and the publ grounds of Hnglatid and (iermany Ih parti tilarly Interesting. In the prefatory line MIhh Dock remarkH that "In America th' work of the civic or village luiproveni 'ii' societies usually begins with the effort to have the streets clean and regulate the dis posal of waste ami rubbish. Abroad Hi- have fortunately leached a point when clean streets are a matter of course, not only main thoroughfares, but small ami ol seuro streets as well." Window Gardening Nine-tenths of the windows used for window gardening are too crowded for the plants to look well or do well. Turn a new leaf right now by throwing away every pool or Insignificant growth. Better to buy new Htock lu tho Hprlng than to turn your pre cIoiih window Hpaco into a hospital ward for sickly plants. Keep tho foliage immaculately dean. Wash the leaven once or twice every week. A plant's lungs aro Its leaves. Showering tho foliage washes the dust nut of the pores, refreshes tho plant ami imparts vigor. He sides this, clean plants do not harbor In sects, the greatest foe of tho Indoor garden, and the hardest to light. Loosen the crusted earth at tho top' of the pots. Tho roots need air and In soft, plia ble earth they get It by capillary transmis sion. A hard top crust seals tho soli up as though In a jug. Neither air nor water IIiuIh free entrance through It. Plants in hnrd soli often suffer from lack of moisture at tho roots though water has been given every day. Slide tho shades up to tho top of tho up per sash, take down the curtains at the plant windows and let Cod's Invigorating sun shine in Sunshine to a plant Is what gold ih to a Klondike minor In extremely cold weather stay the water- iHI B v h' 1 IHIl Yl.Bgk' l - I lH iHwJKJH tSHH SATl KDY ri.l II Win 1 i CHNUUALO O IIOWAHD AND SBN T l'l'llLIC MUX VISIT DM MIX I'll to lug pot. Plants need little water during severe weather anil they chill or frie'.e twice as quickly after n fresh drenching. If wuterlng lavomes .ibs'd'it"1:' ticessary. have it the temperature or the room nnd give only in the morning. Watering in the evening durlus a cold snap is to invite u visit" from Jack Frost. Pet your plants. Turn t:ie:n. tran ilium Into shape as they grow, pick olf every dead leaf or faded llower. Haphazard care does Hot pay with house plants. A Hunch of Short Stories Colonel M. K. Denton of Missouri, a dis tant blood relation of Colonel Thomas Hiirt llditon, gives this ludicrous account of how the newspapers some years ago gave MIs soiirians the reputation of never bathing: "At the Knights Templars' conclave held in San Francisco." quoth Henton, "when we reached the Missouri headquarters lit the Palace Hotel Colonel Chris ICllerbe was luting as master of ceremonies and doing the registering act for the whole delega tliti. A clerk, pompous as the grand chamberlain of queen Victoria, was stand ing behind the desk and In a megaphone voice assigning guests to their rooms, or dering bellboys about, etc. When Hllorbo wrote on the register 'Ciosernor Robert A. Vauiphcll of .Missouri' the clerk asked: Koiun with bath?' 'No,' replied liovornor Campbell, who was only stopping tempo rarily ut the hotel, Intending to stay with some Missouri relatives. The clerk, 111 stentorian tones said: 'Oovernor Campbell of Missouri does not take a bath!' which greatly amused the spectators, especially the reporters. They did not have to change it much so ns to make It read: 'MIssnuriatiH don't bathe.' " An Interesting little anecdote is told about how "D.ivld Ilartun" enmo to bo written, says a writer In tho Woman's , Home Coni,ianion It is rather pathetic. It seems that Mr Woscott the nuthor. was Hie kind of a man who could do pretty modi an thing paint a pit lure plan n Girls of Hawaii Mrs. HlggliiH. a former resident of Kansas City, who moved to Hawaii with her husband some seven years ago and who is now lu Dallas, Tex., on the sad errand of closing up varloiiH matters pertaining tuber dead husband's estate, says that t'ncle Sam should bo very proud of hla new territory, for It Is undoubtedly one nf the most beauti ful countries lu the world ami as for the natives, sho cannot say too much in their praise. She says they call thu natives, the llawallans. "brown people," and that they are very much liked by the AmerlcaiiH and the Knglldi. Of the glrln, Mrs. HlggliiH her, nor Is there anything of tho amateur jibout her work, in which hIio ontorH with true professional ardor and nklll born of experience, UiHt year tho women of the Pennsylvania State Federation of Women's Clubs up pointed Miss Dock to represent them at the International congrcHH of women held lu London and the Department of Agriculture recognizing her special lltnesH for investlgu Hon In landscape gardening and forestry asked her to extend her trip through Kng land and the continent and repori what die observed along these lines, hep tig that it might prove of henellt. The result of her work Ih published by the Department of Ag rlculturo as "Ilullotln Xo. (12, " mid cannot help proving Interesting to those who may be able to obtain It. Miss Dock Is a slender little blue-eyed woman, with the broad brow and thoughtful o.xproHsluu of the scholar. In form and font me representing the most rellned type of woman. Her personality Is most attract Ive. her quick, nervous movements at.d pleasantly modulated voice always inspiring nnd holding one's attention. When little Miss Dock can bo persuaded to give an ac count of some of her Invest Igatlons she ' "i ufa-nMPUiwi:! "TMMBWMffBffCKiMjBiBtjiMlBlBtjiijHBtW COLl Mills AND SCHl YLF.lt, (ilULS PICN'ICKIXfi VI UK WD ISLWD 1 i '' I'lMOAS TWO DISTINOl'IS'Iii") I , Li urn It. II. stwiik. Iimiso or ccnipcso n srnntn hut he had never made much money; so when he be i nine ill and realized that he might not live long and would leave his family with little or no money he was desperate. "Write a book." suggested a friend nnd neighbor to him one day when they were talking over the situation. "I did make an attempt at It once," answered Mr. Weseott ; "I tried n love story, hut I couldn't make It go." "Add a little local color to It," said tho llrwt speaker: "take one of tho people about here that you know and work him up old . for instance," mentioning n character familiar to them both; "he'd be first-rate." "That's a good Idea!" exclaimed Mr. Weseott and the result of this conversation was "David llartini;" and yet "David" was never in the story nt all as It wna first conceived. The porch of the Hloemfnnteln club waH a favorite meeting place for the notables engaged in the South African war while Lord Roberts' forces occupied the town. Here many diHcussions and a few quarrels took place. It was quite a sight to see tho different little groups of men that as sembled there every evening engaged ill earnest conversation. One evening n group of well known correspondents, among them Ileiinett Ilurlelgh,' were talking together when Winston Churchill suddenly appeared on the Hcene nnd rushed up to Mr. Ilur lelgh to congratulate him on that brilliant stroke of his in getting away from Lndy stnith Just at the right moment. He began by saying: "Mr. Ilurlelgh, that was tho finest thing you have over dono In Journalism In the whole of your life It waa simply great." This was kindly nientit, but, unluckily, It was one of thoso things that, ns Punch used to say, "might havo been expressed differ ently." Hy consequence It only nettled tho great wnr correspondent, who replied: "Hoy! It Is presumptuous In you to tell tno what is tho greatest thing I have dono in my life you, a lad, JiiHt Deglnnlns your career!" Coli nel A. K. McCluro has stood on many platforms, Iiiih addressed assemblies, largo and small, political, social and religious. Ho is noted for his self-conunand under any i Ircunist.incoH, but on one occasion ho wns distinctly embarrassed and 111 nt easo. On this occasion, rolutoH the Philadelphia Pest. Colonel McClure was the chief speaker at a largo assembly, the audience being made up mainly of farmers or other pi rsons who had driven to the place of meeting. In the midst of an eloquent speech It began to ruin. One after another i f IiIh hearers Jumped up and hurried out, until the speaker was left with an array of empty benches heforo him. Colonel MeClure's fnco flushed crimson. He had said not a word that could give offense and he naturally failed to under stand the midden leave-tnklng, but hla em barrassment was quickly changed to amuse ment when tho chairman aroHo and said: "It's all right, colonel; they're only going out to look after the horses; they'll bo Inn k pretty soon." The orator sat down until the farmers returned and then resumed his speech. 4