in SIDELIGHTS ALONG UTILE S11MOM Things You Vant to Know The) Battle of Waterloo. WASHINGTON BYWAYS THE BEE: OMAILV. SATURDAY, JUNE IS, 1H10. 'ugSPE , fjjjSf ES HOME MtSAaiE'PAeEQ : v Recollect the Honorable 'William O. Con rad of MonUnit He's the man who about two tmzt ago startled the country by an nouncing the fact of his existence and casually mentioning that hit would Ilka to bo vice president of tha United States. Nobody outside of Montana had ever heord of Conrad before. That was where Mr. Conrad had It on other folks of vice presidential size. Most of them go from the vice presidency to obscurity; Mr. Con rad thought It would be a (rest stunt to ccme from obscurity to the vice presi dency. And ho came, but not quite to the vice presidency. Being a regular Montana plu tocrat, with a slouch hat, democratic ways and a pile of scads as tall as the Wash ington monument. Mr. Conrad's vice presi dential campaign convinced him that he liked politics pretty well. Expensive? Yes, rather; but what difference does that make to the horny-banded son of fifteen or twenty good, clean Montana millions? And so Mr. Conrad Is running for sen ator this year. He has come to Washing ton to announce his fell purpose and he says there la a good chance of the state going democratlo this year. . The Honorable "Tom" Carter, who now represents Montana In the senate, hasn't as much monef as Mr. Conrad, but he Is In the way of getting congress to pass a bill appropriating $30,000,000 to carry on ir rigation works In the west, and his sup porters figure that If It passes It will dis tribute Just as much money In Montana as '""could possibly be extracted from Mr. Con ' fad's campaign chest. Senator Carter has . a set of paint-brush whiskers that ought to have been copyrighted by Uncle Bam, and If he would tie his trousers down with a string around the bottom of his foot he could step right Into any cartoon and pass himself off as Uncle Sam without being suspected. And they do say that Mr. Con rad. Is developing a situation In Montana ' that promises to moke It necessary for Senator Carter to do the Unele Sam stunt with painful persistency during the next ( few months.- - ' " Bluejackets In the United State navy will be well provided (or in their old age and the government will be saved hun- Flavoring Vegetables, Herbs, Spices. Many flavorings are used in meat dishes, some of whloh are familiar to ail cooks ' onions, carrots, turnips and garlic being ' perhaps ' the most widely known. Butter, '-too, i'lisy be regarded as one of the most common seasonings, and of course makes tho dish richer. Meat extract Is also used ( for flavoring many meat dishes and other '.foods, as are also, though less commonly, similar extracts made from clams or other "sea food." The following list includes these with various otters, a number of Which It Is convenient to keep always on -hand: Onions, carrots, green peppers, par- . snips,' turnips, tomatoes, fresh canned or (dried; celery tops and parsley, either fresh lor, dried; sage, savory, thyme, smcet marjo ram, bay leaf, garlic, lemon rind, vinegar, tapers, pickles, olives; currant Jelly, curry powder, cloves, pepper corns, celery seed. Mneat extract. Chill sauce, pepper sauce, or some similar hot or sharp sauce, and some vklnd of good commercial meat sauce. Some Mints regarding the use of such flavorings Aollowj FLAVOR OP FRIED VEGETABLES. 1 ' Most of the stews, soups, braised meats 'and pot roasts are very much improved If r liie flavoring vegetables which they con ' fain, such as carrots, turnips, onions, cel ery, or green peppers, are fried In a little fat before being cooked with meat This peed not complicate the preparation of the "meat or Increase the number of utensils ed. for tle meat Itself is usually seared DaughterslivLaw Ieed Not Wear Crepe for-Mourning -A daughter-in-law need not put on crepe -at the death of a member of her hus band's family, for etiquette demands of her a shorter" time of observance of the i bereavement and more latitude in matters .octal. . She Is supposed to "wear black for six '.months, but after the ertd of three she may accept invitations, except to' large, formal functions. She Is not permitted to go to dances, however small, but dinners. . luncheons, bridge parties, the theater and opera are amusements she can enjoy. As ahe is not supposed to go without her hus band, he of necessity goes with her and his mourning la denoted by black clothes Only. A man In mourning for parent, sister or child should use white gloves in the even i lug when wearing his dresa clothea. bufc In tha davtlme his glovea should be black. A woman mourning (irmcnu mr uJMaw" parent or chlld my pur i If ll rfli for the house, dull finished materials being selected. Any trimming used must be of white English crepe. At the end of six months a woman wear Ing black for a member of her husband's family may go Into black and white and the light' colors of second mourning. These 'are purple, lavender and gray. StrlcUy apeaking. she is not suposed to wear white hut there is so much latitude In this lrectlori that lace for summer frocks Is permitted. man is not expected to go into black Ji the 61 nth of a member of his wife's t ilf, Ilrt does wear a mourning Dana iia left arm. but this emblem may be aisrarded at the end of six months. While wealing tha band he 1 supposed to limit dreds of thousands of dollars each year It congress enacts Into law a bill suggested by Secretary Meyer and reported favor ably from the senate committee on naval affairs. Mr. Meyer has long been at work upon a plan which would Insure a permanent and efficient force, but which also would take care of the sailors after they had given the best years of their life to the govern ment. It Is not possible to do this under existing law and the result Is that an enormous sum ls,belng expended annually for the purpose of recruiting, outfitting and transporting men to take the place of efficient men who leave the service be cause of the uninviting prospect when they become old. Under the terms of the bill suggested by Secretary Meyer and reported favorably by the senate committee, an enlisted man who has been In the service sixteen years may apply for retirement with pay equal to two-fifths of the amount received by blm at the time application for retirement Is made. Bluejackets who serve twenty five years shall be entitled to retirement at three-fifths pay and those who serve more than twenty-five years shall be en titled to retire with three-quarters pay, $9.50 per month In lieu of rations and cloth ing and $6.25 a month In lieu of quarters, fuel and light. Provision Is also made for men who re main In the service ten years and less than sixteen years and who are Incapaci tated through Injury or disease incident to thelr service. Such men, according to the Meyer plan, mBy be placed on the retired list after examination by a board of sur vey, their pay to be determined by multi plying three one-hundredtha of the pay they receive at the time of application by the whole number of years of honorable service to their credit. Secretary Myer Is confident that the pro visions outlined above would hold the men In the service, thereby Insuring an efficient and permanent force and also would place out of the service men who have outlived their usefulness. Statistics gathered by the Navy - department discloses that - the average bluejacket Is of little use after he has been In the service twenty-five years. over in fat, and the vegetables can be cooked In the same fat before the browning of the meat. ONION JUICES. Cook books usually say that onion Juice bhoulrt be extracted by cuttl ,g an onion In two and rubbing the cut surface against a grater. Considering how hard It la to wash a grater, this method has 'its drawbacks. Small amounts of Juice may be obtained In the following simple way; Peel the onion and extract a few drops of Juice by press ing one side with the dull edge of a knife. ' QREEN PEPPERS. The flavor of green peppers gives an ac ceptable variety. The seed should always be removed. The peppers should be chopped and added to chopped meat or other meat dishes. ' Meat mixed with bread crumbs may be baked in the pepper shells and the stuffed peppers served as a separate dish. himself to black ties and black shoes, but custom permits him wearing tan shoe in warm weather, and if his ties are dull gray and other Inconspicuous colors he will. not bo criticised. If he prefers, out of courtesy to his wife, to go Into mourning his clothes should be black and shirts for daytime black and white. At the end of six months he may leave off black, adopting the left arm band for the remainder of the year. ROSANNA SCHUYLER. A Dyspeptic Pessimist The people who think only of themselves generally have very Uttle to think about Disappointment is the black sheep of the Hope family. Unfortunately Dame Fortune has an old maid alster-lnlaw. There are some men who take their pleasures for business reasons. The things that cost us the most are sometimes the things that make us feel pretty cheap. The matrimonial agency proves that even Cupid la going Ir.to the mall order business. How we all hate the people who have already 'said the bright things we were going to say! There is no such thing as a perfect man. The nearest approach Is the man who Is willing to acknowledge his faults. The woman who marries a widower al ways feels like going to a Spiritualist me dium to get, few pointers from bis flret wife. ) The Text rhlllpplans IV, 8-8. Paul had been the teacher of those to whom he is writing. Near the close of his letter he Is saying, "If I rhould choose a last word to give you, that word would be 'think,' and If another word Is permitted. that word would be 'do.' Finally, brethren, meditate and act." We are In a world where many are criticised because they act without think ing, and where many complain because so much meditation delays, diminishes ac tion. A proper proportion should be main tained between thought and activity. They are the "two wings on which we rise to heights of usefulness and honor, the two feet on which we come bounding into the arena to try our strength with our ad versary, the two hands with which we grasp opportunity." If we are masters of these we are masters of ourselves. Gladstone ssld, "My master Is vlthln me." Ills master was a trained conscience, demand ing a multitude of public acts and utter ances, balanced by almost unparalleled mental activity. We each have a master within. If- this master Is trained to right thinking and right doing we will be de cided, direct, moderate, concentric and consecrated. The world needs men of decision. Alexander says that he con quered the world by ""not delaying." England's great premier once stopped the Irish mail at Chester In order to reach London on ' an important mission. The signal man feared to do it The premier said, "Show me the lever and I will do it" Right thought helps us to know the right levers, tmd the habit of acting upon the right gives courage to pull them. Decision and directness are first cousins. "The way to preach a sermon," said a great educator, Is to "walk up to the text then walk around the text and then walk through the text and the whole people listen best when you are walking through the text. Decision and directness make for clearness and economy, avert wars and disasters, build cities and nations and all because men are thinking aright and doing aright Right thinking and right doing lead to moderation In all things. Excess Is al- Types That We BY LAFAYETTE PARKS. "One thing I like about June Is the sweet girl graduates," Father murmurs in a romantic tone of voice, as the lamp of wisdom swings into the front room to illuminate the day's events for the benefit of his parent . "She certainly is there with the class," agrees Son, puffing contentedly on a cork Up. "Travel the wide world o'er and you can't find the equal of the American col lege girl," declares Father, with patriotic enthusiasm. "The high brow skirt Is sure the candy kid," further admits Son. "When she gets upon the platform, unties the blue ribbon, unrolls her manuscript and reads her little piece that she composed all by herself, you will please note that little Brlghteyes Is all there with the con. What she doesn't know about running the whole blame coun try, Teddy, Uncle Bill and the other wise ginks can't come across with." "I am amaxed," Father asserts, in all sincerity, "with the gems of real philos ophy that are produced at the various schools and colleges for young women." "Take It from me. Pop, you're not the only one the college dames throw a scare Into by tearing off chunks of encyclopedia Amerlcanla," affirms Son. "The chances are. that their own mammas and papas never even suspected that their coy little daughters had so many three-syllable words on tap." fwHtu LADVHAOTHlb BAD HALT DOLuR AMD told the. truth mo ome believeo he e.mough to , loam her five. CEMT5 FARE THE. SHE HOW WHAT PLUCLLDHftLr' SURE MERE'SOSt- IF VOU RE HUMGRV 1 SHOULD BE MOST MMPoy TO HAVE VO- I DIME w' ME WHAT RIDE HOME IM A FY si i i MiiasirT i r QAR! TUT-TUT- ILL CAUL TAX I CAB I M GOIISG IM UIH.UC T Kjr- ' I " - COrrmaHT. t10L T THE NEW 1l i-'V- V ? f ; r. ,. i ' ' 4 . I X. By Ber. M. V. Xigbee, raster Horth Presbyterian Church. ways waste and often disastrous. We may be habitually eager yet never in a hurry "Our reach should always exceed our grasp, else what's a heaven for?" Something to love, something to do and something to hope for, these are Indeed the essentials of life. With only something to do we would be cold, with love only we would be sentimental, with hope only we would be a long time poor, portrait paint ers cause us to exclaim, as we look at the faces of great men, "How composed! How sereno!" which Is only another way of say ing what moderation! How thoughtful and ready for action. Many are failures because they never learned to concentrate their energies; they never dreamed that succesf came by think ing on one thing till It Is thought out and then doing it till It is complete. Reverie alone never yields possession. Thought is wasted which withers before it blossoms in action. Action, which Is the fruit of laxy thinking, is tasteless or worse. Paul practiced concentration of thought and action. "This one thing I do, for getting (putting out of thought) the things Meet Every .Day..-:- "Almost every line of human endeavor Is discoursed Upon with rare Insight by the fair graduates and excellent advice given for sane living," continues Father. "If any subject is skipped," retorts Son, "it Is because It isn't listed In Webster's unabridged." ."Take the problem of marriage, for ex ample," resumes Father. "I heard a paper read by one young girl, submitting a series of rules which. If followed, would almost guarantee a happy married life." "Although I am breaking the oral betting law," proposes Son, "I am willing to wager a small sum that each and every rule was something for hubby to do." "Come to think ef it" recalls Father, "most of the suggestions were intended for men." "I knew It" exclaims Son.' "Life would be one long dream of bliss for the dear creatures if we'd only play the game ac cording to their frame-up. It's good ad vice, but the trouble with It Is that it won't work with us rough creatures. Most of us guys have a few rules of our own we are ready to slip across when we get as far along as the marriage license bureau." "Here's a famous preacher who tells a class of girl graduates that they have the power to reform society," Father inter jects by way of a new angle. "There ore too many reformers In the business now," is Son's opinion. "What most of the girls- Just out of school ought to know Is how to hold down a Job and OFA URES1 that poor ot o EXCUSE ME StR BUT fvE HAD A we - I "V- - 1 " . HALF PAtbEDOMME AND HAVE hQ.CAB FAHt HOME FOR CAR - JUST TOR -.'WK-J --- i lis: i ."l JOKE I'LL TELL SAME STORY DID AMD 5E.E i MAKE OUT VES 1LIVE HER VIME AMD riRTH STREET. 5TRCET YOUR . Ton fVEHlKO.TEA.EGM CJIEW TOM H&JULO THJ-Ofc' ft- L - " behind, I press forward toward the T-rlse. I think of one thing and reach for one thing. The mind which knows the delight of righteous thinking will never be fully satisfied till thought takes hold upon him who Is the source of all righteousness. It Is superficial thinking which does not dis cover the supernatural, acknowledge the Infinite and bow In worship before the Self-existent One. The Bible has made folly sxnonymous with atheism. A founder of one of our American colleges thought to exclude the final lesue of all right thinking frrlm his school by shutting out ordained ministers. Ho failed. Bight thinking In Girard college led Inevitably to serious spiritual thought. It always will. If you have resolved to keep out of your life that which Stephen Qlrard thought to exclude from his college, then you are re solved upon disobedience to this scripture. The truest things, the purest, most equal and most praiseful things come by associa tion with God. God opens visions today. Closing your eyes to a landscape does not blot out the landscape. Every tree stands in Its place and every brook runs Its happy course Just the same. He who will not see must at least hear the rustling of the leaves and the murmur of the waters and know that truth Is and God is and heaven Is and Christ is and duty Is. The will which excludes these, shows not strength, but perversion. Christ kept a balance between medita tion and activity, between the prayer and communion of the mountain and the teach ing and healing of the multitude with In finite decision he met his questioners, friends and foes. His directness took the form of the most open frankness and turned not from the high of earth, nor neglected the lowly. "The chief actor In scenes supremely tragic he was ever calm." He concentrated his energies and con secrated himself to the baptism with which he was to be baptised. It we give our selves to thinking out the will of Ood and doing the will of Qod we will be taking up our cross dally and following Him Think on these things. These things do. The Girl On the Ocean Greyhound. drag loose at least six slmoleons per week. Then the old folks might be able to get hold of some of the cush daughter's educa tion set 'em back. Society might be able to worry along a while without being re decorated, but the plush furniture In the parlor usually gets might shabby when the mazuma Is all going out to keep the girls In college." "The higher education is a splendid prep aration for life," Father avers, "and should like to see every girl go through college." "When that comes true," concludes Son, "I see a bunch of perfectly good cook stoves out of Jobs and a lot of us ginks eating canned near-food while wlfles, with bulging brows, go around the country mak ing speeches on 'How to Be Happy Though Married.' " (Copyright, 1910, by the N. Y. Herald Co.) Ever Buy Any Tailor's Tacks f "I have gone Into nine hardware stores today," said the discouraged amateur dress maker, "and not one of them ever heard of a tailor's tack." "Tailor's tacks!" roared her brother. "You don't mean to say you've been trying to buy tailor's tacks?" "Yes, I do. Madam told me to put the Interlining In my coat with a few tailor's tacks." The brother then explained to her that what she had been trying to buy was the large stltchea which tailors use when put ting parts of suits together. New York Sun. WHV CtRTAlHLV CERTlMLY HEREb A . BAD I MfcVtB COULD fESlT DISTRESS- KHOw. IT 5MV ELECTIOM DISTRICT HERfiAHAtf TELL VOUR FELLER AnO BROTHERS MOT TO ALASKA OOE. DAY (GOOD BYE YOU BAD HALF LET SOME OME ELSE HAVE YQLH ITS TERR'BLE TO DC ULU amu POOR C0J. U RlghU Retemd. MJ. I LI - I 1PM ELECTIOM Ninety-five years ago today, on June K 1SU, Napoleon Bonaparte met with final and crushing defeat in the battle of Waterloo. The Issue of that battle broke the Inflexible will, doomed to disappoint ment the Insatiable ambition and ex tinguishing forever the atar of destiny of the greatest soldier, the greatest lawgiver, the greatest financier and the greatest politician modern Europe had known. Mr. Theodore Roosevelt Is due to arrive In New York today, after an absence of something more than a year, most of which time has been spent in the wilds of Africa, beyond the pale of civilization. Tlio fact that Mr. Roosevelt's return to the United States has been compared by some politic ians to the return of Napoleon from exile In the Island of Elba, the -more or less mythical existence ot the "Back-from- Elba Club," and the further fact that Mr. Roosevelt is the most remarkable person- Uty in American public life today, adds Interest to the curious coincidence that the day of the Roosevelt homecoming should be the anniversary ot that tragic event In which the original back-from-Elba move ment came to lte terrible end. In March, 1,114, the troops of the allied powers of Europe entered Paris. The Emperor Napoleon then was defeated, but not discouraged. He abdlcted the imperial throne and the French people Invited Louis XVIII, head of the house of Bourbon, to reign over them. Napoleon was to retain tho rank and title ot emperor and was to rule m Imperial state over the Island of Elba, In the Mediterranean sea. Liberal pensions were provided for the Imperial family. The Bourbon rule was stupid, tact less and unpopular. Napoleon kept care ful watch over events from his position of vantage In Elba. Finally, the time came to strike. Napoleon, accompanied only bo a few retainers, set sail from Elba on February 26. On the first day of March he landed on French soli on the shore of the Quit of Juan. He began at orjre his march toward Paris. At first, the people were distrustful and afraid. But when Napoleon reached that part of the country garrisoned by the soldiers who bad fol lowed his eagles to victory, the soldiers and the people threw away the white flag of the Bourbons and hoisted the tricolor of their greatest hero. On March 19, Na poleon approached the outskirts of Paris at the head ef a great army. More' than 100,000 French troops were drawn up In battle array to opose him, and to defend the lilies of Louis XVIII. Curiously, ques- tlonlngly, excitedly, Napoleon's own soldiers waited to receive an attack from Napoleon. But even they did not know their emperor. For, Instead of a charging column, there came an open carriage and In It was seated the Little Corporal, the Great Cor- s lean. He stood up In the carriage and with one wave of his hand captured 100,000 soldiers sworn to defend the king of France. That night Louis fled from Paris and Napoleon entered the Tullerles and again assumed the dignity, power and authority . of emperor of tha French. Na poleon was back from Elba. One hundred days later, on the plains before the tiny Belgian village ot Waterloo, Napoleon engaged in battle against the combined forces of the British, Dutch, Flemish and German armies, - under the command ot the duke of Wellington. That day Napoleon saw his matchless army routed and cut to pieces. Then and there, the British empire was saved, the German empire made possible, the whole course of the history ot the nineteenth century was changed and shaped anew. It not the moat momentous battle of history. It was the most Interesting. A greater number of Americana will visit the battlefield ot Waterloo this summer than In. any of the ninety-five years since the battle was fought. This will be on account 6f the great International exposi tion being held In Brussels, which is serv ing to attract to beautiful Belgium more than the ordinary proportion of the Amer ican sightseers In EuroDe. The traveler la the old world frequently 'demands the ancient and refuses to waste his tfme on anything less than fjve centuries old, in spite of the guides to elaborate upon the beauties of a brand new railway station or theater. Guides In Washington annoy European travelers by persistently pointing out houses holy with the halo of a hundred years, whereas the travelers have come to America with the express Intention of refusing to see anything over ten years old. The battlefield ot Waterloo is the one notable sight which Is a compromise be tween the ancient and the modern. Com manders of two Scotch regiments on the morning of that fateful lith of June mut tered mutiny against the great duke be cause he had given the Forty-second regl ment a prominent part in the early maneu vers, and, therefore, according to the Scotch colonels, the Forty-second would get all of the praise in the newspapers. Amer ican colonels Who were accused of spectac ular fighting for the benefit Of newspaper correspondents during the war with Spain were the subject of much shaijp criticism because they had so degraded the world- Types We Meet Every Day By BOBBIE BABBLE. Says Trivia, with an anxious stare, The sea is smooth, the day Is fair, And yet how hard the engines pound! I feel quite queer; let's walk around. HoW strange the deck 1st Don't you see This first plank seems to creep toward me? The next one creeps the other way. No, I'm not fll, though J look gray. "Did you say dinner! Don't. I shrink From anything like food or drink. I've learned ere Sandy Hook slips part Why some folks think it wise to fast I must sit down. Why, Where's my chalrT Steward, you mustn't put It there Next to Old Dope he's grim and gray And has no pleasant things to sayt "Not there-4ha.t's next to old Miss Prude; She's somotlmes cross and always rude, And after dark she'd fume and fret If I should light a cigarette. She reads depressing learned books And never oart how fierce she looks. Is that youug Bullion's special ohatrf I'll have mine next; yea, put tt there." "Why Mister Bullion, can tt be Tlvat you are stationed next to met Yes, I'm Mtaa Trivia how d'ye doT What makee the aea so heavenly blue? How's your dear mother? 111? How sad! An hour ago I felt quite bad, But I feel better now. Oh, yes, I'm a grand sailor, I confess!" old martial art But the two Scotch colo nels prove that the soldier's desire to figure In the special dispatches of a war corre spondent was born simultaneously with the first war dlxpatch. The first war corre spondent was John Robinson, who went to the continent In to report the Napo leonic wars for the London Times. In this phase, the battle ot Waterloo is Intensely modern. One may leave Waterloo now at noon and be in London at midnight by traveling with special speed. London did not know ot the battle of Waterloo for tour days, tho Times printing a dispatch on Juuo i, which was followed the next day by the publication ot the duke ot Wellington's official report. The news of the defeat of the great Napoleon first became known In America on July 31, when the Boston Dally Adver tiser announced: "A gentleman has Jutt arrived from a vessel which ie left in the harbor bringing London dates to June 21," end then followed a reproduction ot the duke of Wellington's report of the battle. The news went from Boston to New York by stage and first was printed In the American metropolis more than six weeks after the battle had taken place. In this phase Waterloo seoma to belong to ancient history. The visitor to the battlefield of Water loo today, unless he be a military expert, cannot but feel a sense of disappointment. To be such a great battle Waterloo was fought upon such an absurdly small field. There was six miles of battlo Una at Get tysburg. Fifty miles of Japanese received with fire the advance ot nearly 1.000,000 Russians in Manchuria. It la hardly . a mile from one end of the field of Waterloo to another. If the muskets and the cannon had been stilled It would have been possible for Napoleon at La Do lie Alliance to have conversed with the great duke near the farm of La Haye Salute across the two shallow valleys Intervening. The best musket known in those days could not b depended upon to do execution at a dis tance of more than 250 yards. Armies had to get close togother If they fought at all, and, as they did come close together, there waa always a great deal of hand-to-hand fighting. This made It necessary for the troops to be kept In compact formation. One knows these things and one remembers that there were not more than 180,000 troops all told engaged In this battle, and yet he Is not prepared to find the great field ot Waterloo a theater too small tor a re spectable skirmish In modern warfare. Visitors to the battlefield, and they are numerous, go out from Brussels by the trolley car, or over a beautiful road through the beech forest by motor car. The village of Waterloo Is Uttle changed perhaps, by the ravages of a century, and It Is today as colorless and uninteresting as it was ninety-five - years ago. It saw nothing of the battle, and Its name was immortalised only by the mere accident that the Puke ot Wellington, on the night of the battle, here found an inn in which to rest himself, and from which he wrote the report of his victory over the great Frenchman. The Inn In which Wellington slept and tha house in which Victor Hugo lived when gathering material tor his cele brated account of the battle are the only show places In the village. By the way, It la Interesting to recall that this great battle la known by three different names. English-speaking people call it Waterloo, Ger mans call It the Battle of La Belle Al liance and the French refer to It as the Battle of Mont St Jean. On his arrival at the field the first thing one asks to see la tha famous sunken road, where so many brave French cavalrymen perished. It is not there. The dirt from each side was taken away and the ground levelled by honest but misguided ' Dutch men who used the earth to erect a pyramid In honor of William, prince of Orange, who was wounded in tha battle. This pyramid of sodded earth, surmounted hy the Dutch Hon, is the most imposing feature of the landscape ot the field. There are but two other monuments. One Is a marble shaft marking the position of the Hanovernlans, which was erected soon after the battle. The other Is the monument ot Napoleon, The memorial to Napoleon marks the spot where Napoleon stbod when the Old Guard made its final effort In his behalf. It Is a bronze eagle, falling to earth wuh a wing broken, transfixed by an arrow. The field of Waterloo lies peaceful un der its carpet ot wheat and -rye, but the marks of the dread conflict are not all obliterated. The garden wall at Hougeou mont still stands, and there are the broken marble terraces of the burned chateau, there la the well which was filled with the blood of English, defenders, there Is the sanctuary ot the chapel into which the pro fane flames dared not to go. The gates of Hougeoumont are filled with bullets, the marks of fir are still upon the stones and brick of the. walla, and before the garden stands the . few survivors ot a veteran forest till nursing In their hearts a heavy weight of English lead and French steel. BT nXBSBXO 3. KASXXV. Tomorrow Tho American Bog. The Girl On the Ocean Greyhound. And Trlvte settles In her chair, Smiling with a contented air. The voyage the-t ahe dreaded so Looks pleasant, now she has a beau. Here comes another, then some more. Until she lands on Europo's shore She'll be so buty, I dare swear She'll have no time for ma.1 de mer. (Copyright 1910, by the N. Y. Herald Co )