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FRO M THE CAPITALS % OETHE OL D WORL D European Gossip and News From Special Corre spondents of The Journal. LOCATION OF JOURNAL SPECIAL CORRESPONDENTS SHOWN BY CROSSES . ON THE MAP. Berlin Budget Journal Spcolal Service. The Kaiser Is Distressed By His Cousin's Illness. Potsdam, Dec. 5.The kaiser is very much distressed by. the news that his cousin, Prince Leopold, chief of the House of Hohenzollem, left Sig maringen suddenly to seek a warmer climate. The prince has gone to Italy by the advice of his physicians, and as he suffers from a most painful affec tion of the throat, it is feared that he may. have cancer, the dread malady, hereditary to his family. Prince Leo pold was born in 1835 and is married to the Infanta Antonia of Portugal. Bennett Automobile Races May Be Galled Off Because of Illness. The James Gordon'- Bennett auto mobile cup races over the Saalthirg Saalburg course may be called off on account of the emperor's illness. Bar on Brandenstein, who manages the German end, was unable to say whether rumors to. that, effect were true/ or not but as they started in the Union club, where' German royalty meets, there seems to be little doubt that the report isvwell founded. . Baron Brandenstein said: "The route is an ideal one, particularly as the German auto club offered to cut out all sharp curves and broaden the public highways wherever that seems desirable. All roads crossing the race track will be closed on the day of the races to forestall accidents." Traveling at the Rate ^ U of 412*4 MHes an Hour. Tour correspondent had a ta\k with Government Councillor Herr who traveled from here to Zossen In a sleeper at the rate of 112% .miles an hour. '!.: -'! Mr. Herr said: "Despite the awful swiftness, I experienced little discom fort when I laid- down in the center/ of the car, in fact, no more than on an -ordinary Pullman, going at the regulation rate. In the rear of the car on the other hand, things were less pleasant and I experienced many shocks. - - ''The motor cars run easier than those coupled on, probably because the first are so much heavier. Taking it all in all, travel in a sleeper going twice the nate of the ordinary Pull man may be recommended to all but very nervous persons." Tolstoy's Teachings in- -..:. ^ *? - - the Eye o | the Xaw. The celebrated expert on criminal law. Professor Von Liszt, delivered a most interesting lecture on "Tolstoy in the Eye of the Law." "Tolstoy," said the professor, "is an apostle of the original Christian church he teaches the eternal truths that Christ taught his followers. His views with re spect to the right of man to punish are"' best set forth in his 'Resurrec- tion.' " The professor said there was no doubt that prisons were high schools of crime. "I have yet to see a pris oner who came out of jail a better man," said Liszt. In conclusion Professor Liszt said that a reform of criminal law was a necessity and that it would be brought about not "by lawyers,: "but by -the conscience of the great masses of people." Vienna Budget Journal Special Strvlee. Official White I4es and Kaiser Wilhelm. Vienna, Dec. &.Die Ziet newspaper created a sensation by bluntly stating that the bulletins of Emperor Wil liam's physicians, while they may be trustworthy, are disbelieved by the overwhelming majority of newspaper readers. "The wholesale lying done by the late Emperor Frederick's med ical attendants is responsible for this sorry state," says the paper. "When TJnser Fritz was stricken to death .the most celebrated physicians of Europe combined with the greatest known scientists to tell lies to the public. Even old Virchow stooped so low as to make. himself the mouthpiece of false reports invented by stupid cour tiers. That has forever discredited the medical profession with the great run of newspaper readers." .... Kischinef WaJfs on Their Way to the Holy Land. Your correspondent visited the waifs of Klshinef, waiting here for the steamer that will carry i, -vtft :~-fiJSX"^}!* ^5 legs, called him by name and attacked him tooth and nail. The superstitious peasant thought he had the devil to deal with and fell down dead. The commotion brought the neighbors to the sc^ne and it was then ascertained that the supposed hog "that walked like a man was- Anton "Wagner, an insane' brother of the proprietress of the farm, Marie Hyelik. In order to escape paying for the care of her brother, the woman had locked, him up with the pigs last Easter, and ever since Wagner had lived and slept with the porkers. In the cour.se. of a few weeks - the few' clothes he wore when locked up, fell from his body besides, the pig stye being, very low ceilinged, he had to walk on all fours. The man almost lost the power of articulation and can walk upright only with great effort. :. Will There Be War Oyer . . . ..,. ... -j^fljjQ Kingdom of Servia? This government is determined to senanothearmy d an to Servia in event of: r revolution, whichthe has been threatening for some months. Ger many and Great Britain ffavor the oc cupation, of Servia by Austria, nut Russia, France and Italy do not. . It is feared that war may break out as a result of the dissensions among the powers . Lisbon Budget Journal Special Service. Hereafter Queen of Portugal Will Protect Beggar Children. Lisbon, Dec. 5.The queen has ap pointed a commission of ladies of the aristocracy, assisted by physicians, to look.into the* ease 04 the beggar chil dren, -inihf-o^ whom"are*fci*e4ftigs of padrones, who treat them cruelly in addition to teaching them every form of crime. Her majesty proposes to have a law passed forbidding parents ,tp hire out. their young children to beggar bosses. At the same time her majesty made a personal appeal to the chief of police asking him to suppress with! all sever ity the horrible practice of crippling children in order to make them piti able objects who, for that reason, can lay claim to charity Several, of these beggar children factories were discov ered by the queen's agents and Half a dozen of the worst padrones are now on .trial- . Roman Artists Will Petition Pope to Oust His Secretary. Rome, Dec 5.Artists, critics, his torians and other men of intellect have gotten up a petition to Pope Pius, ask ing him to open the Borgia apart ments 011.ee more the public. As told in these dispatches, the wonderful halls were placed at the disposal of Merry Del Val, the new secretary of state* The petitioners say that the Wall paintings and other decorations of inestimable value would suffer if the Borgia apartments-were used as living and office rooms. Constantinople Budget Journal Special Service. Bridge Over Cfolden Horn ''J :7 , - \Must "Be Rebuilt at Once. ::- Constantinople, Dec 5.-rrThe minis ter of marine, who was forced by the sultan to personally superintend the patching up of the .bridge leading over the Golden Horn, - reports that the structure is almost beyond repair and mus.t ,b.e rebuilt within .a year's time at the very latest, lest some great cat a*strophe might occur.- The grafters, who have profited enormously by the work of repairs on the bridge for the last fifteen years, tried hard to have the report suppressed, but the sultan got hold of it and .it is said that he himself is in favor of a. new modern structure, Madrid Budget LITTLE -SATURDAtl CHAT S Journal Special .Service. , Protestantism in Old Land Of the Hidalgo. Madrid, Dec. S.AWbile the Protesi tant missions here and in Catalonia are gaining few adherents, despite lavish expenditure of money in the shape of donations,.premiums and so forth, Gaiicia'and Castiiia have many small flourishing Protestant communi ties. Banceloi|L has even a Protestant .Chapel with which - a hospital Jand school are connected. In Galicia, particularly, Protestants are no lqnger .subjected to persecu tion,, and',the word "heretic "., much, abused inotlier parts of Spain, is sel dorii heard there. thee m from Jassa to- Palestine . Ther e ar thirty of them, the oldest 15, the youngest 6 years old. These are the surviving children of the Jews slain by order of the Russian government in Klshinef last summer, seven girls and twenty three boys. Most of these .children witnessed the slaughter and'outrago of their father, mother, sisters /arid brothers. They look depressed, nervous and frightened. The chil dren travel under the guidance of a Jewish school-teacher-, banislied from Kishinev and of a Christian young lady from Odessa, who was moved by pity to follow them .arid lernd them all. possible aid. ..:,' Insane Man, Kept Naked in '! '- Pig's Stye, Frightens Burgltir. ':'"'- A burglar paying a visit to a pig's jitye'in the village of Laun, was frightened, to death when one of the supposed" animafe got up on its hfnd V Old Kinir George Hounding ? '%M f] from Chicago to New Yorkthe Man-place ig&&'''''"':- ^ \nmwn Prints T..lo hattan. Limited leaving Chicago 1 '&$&- ^v:3y-:M ^wn i^rincess Louise. Dresden, Dec. 5.Public hatred of Limitekd departing at 6 o'clock p. m King. George, caused by his cruel per- Write H. R. Dering, A. G. P. Agt., No. secution of the unhappy crown pfin- 2 Sherman Street, Chicago, for details "cert3r shows"in xany waye,"-'When hejabout service. *"- * - -'V- - ,.-- - WITH SOM E #ELLt KNOW M ME N Dr. C. M. Jordan* a Recent Devotee of the Ax, Explains the Advantages Pertaining to the Ancient and Hon- orable Art of Splitting Wood. %. %. These are the fractions recorded in vide himself only into halves. chalk last week on the door of,a woodshed back of 615 East Eighteenth street. At 615 lives Dr. Charles M. Jordan, superintendent of the Minne apolis public schools. Dr. Jordan in ascribed the fractions. They are his conventional .and liarmonious posture, record. The .doctor is proud of theiri. may be (Something of Syjxeroic figure. w!Dante Patcn Is not^rbuder of his Clear- mapiiMsto*j lertsths' seem to J ^ - - - * * fractions. The doctor's figures afie have^eemuhleritfwfe twA*&e1Wbut the- of Initiative the aggressive spirit of' his Chronicles of Cords, the admirable famous", statu* of the aiscobutus history of his achievements in chop- thrower m'ight. With trifling1 ping wood. "More than five-eighths of tiohs. become The'Man With The Ax." Tnanks to his ax, Dr. Jordan has a cord every morning, on an average*" Seeking historic examples, the doc- gained three pounds in six weeks. He says Dr. Jordan, with half-hidden tor stands, in fancy, at his woodshed is Privileged to say. satisfaction,' "and all before break- door, shoulder to shoulder with Wash- "If I keep on ffa"ng flesh at the fast!" * ington, with Lincoln, and with Glad- sam* rate for a. certain number of , Why he chops wood before break- stone He Anns, also, psychological weceks, I shall then wegh twice as fast the doctor hints delicately in the inducements towards the woodpile: much a^ I used to weigh when 1 was Roman tongue"Mens sana, etc!,?' the rude assault upon the maple hal as Old as I amnow. says he.. He chops wood for exercig^. chunk cultivates, he thinks, the power j j :"" Rome Budget Journal Special Service. drives out, hardly anyone greets the old king, only soldiers, officials arid school children salute the royal car riage. Stingy in all other matters, the king never begrudges the money spent on the hprdes of detectives get to watch the ex-crown princess and his own son, who, he fears, is inclined to forgive and forget. Tho Louise is now stopping on the Isle of Wigfht, the king causes the Official Gazette to publish bulletins every little while, setting forth that "he has been pleased to graciously allow her to do this or that for the sake of her father, the Grand Duke of Tuscany." . St. Petersburg Budget Journal Special Servto*. Steel May Go Up if Russia Gets Money for Siberian Road. St. Petersburg, Dec. 5.Your cor respondent learns from one of Rus sia's steel magnates that Russia in tends laying a second track on the Siberian railway, which would mean work for a number of years. The execution of this project depends, to a large extent, on the money market, that is, upon the view taken by lead ing financiers of Russia's future policy. Czar's Brother-in-Law rr Is Charged with Graft. Grand Duke Alexander, brother-Iri law of the czar, secured a credit.of 150,00^000 roubles for the commis sion headed by him. The money is appropriated for building harbors and improving the mercantile fleet. As the former-minister of finance, WItte,. refused even 15,000,000 roubles for that purpose, there are ugly stories of graft and favoritism. HERO OF MAJUBA General Joubert to Tel! His Story at the Metropolitan, Decern* ber 13. General Gideon Joubert, the hero of Ma- jubaTransvaalo Hill, wh won important command during the late war in South Africa, will appear at the Met ropolitan, Sunday evening, Dec. 13, and deliver a lecture that will cover in detail his" thrilling personal experiences in that memorable conflict. The lecture will be profusely illustrated with stereopticon views of the various battlefields of the war and other places of interest In South Af rica. Captain W. S. O'Donnell, "who served with General DeWet during the war, will also appear and tell all about the battle of Modder River, how they' bottled up Kimberly, and the heroic struggle of the Scandinavian troops at Magersfontein. Much of the Inside history of the South African war "has never been written.' The story as told by the men who were in the field will prove vastly interesting to the liberty-loving citizens of this section. Six Fine Fast Trains ^ . Chicago to New York Comprise Q , cloc p And he chose the ax after much re flection. He would have preferred to play football, a game that he admires. He practiced a scrimmage with him self but made little progress. Even a theosophist, he considered, can di- Dr. Jordan rejected the sawbuck and the saw as ungraceful and un-' Grecian. "But a woodchopper," he declares, "that is, I mean, the ideal woodchopper, may assume an un- *" U P-TO-THE-MINUtE FASHIONS . ../ ..- A Daily Hint of Practical Value to Journal Readers of the :-.j 1?air-Sex. , -.-v-/: The fashion pictured given dally in this department are eminently practi cal, and the garments pictured can be reproduced easily from the paper patterns, which may be obtained at trifling cost thru The Journal.. The model* are all in good style, pretty and original in effect and not too elaborate for the ambitious amateur to reproduce. 4S92 Shlrrsd Waiit, 32 to 40 bust. SHTRRED WAIST, 4592. Shirrings continue to be the smart est of all smart, things and appear to inc"fease in number wesk by week.' theand independence of thev in 1881 , who held an waist shows them used iri both waist and sleeves,'so mariaged as to give the fashionable broad'effect, and again in the deep, corselet belt. The model is made of cream crepe de Chine, with the yoke of tucked chiffon and the trimriiing of cream Venetian lace, but any material.spft encugh to admit of shirring lean be substituted. The garniture of lace is specially to bd noted as it combines a bertha of novel shape with shoulder straps that faJT well over the sleeves. These last are full and wide but are shirred to fit the arms snugly for several inches below the shoulders. The corslet is made of cream panne velvet, and adds a touch of brilliancy to the whole. ^ . , . - The waist is made over a fited lin ing and is closed invisibly at the back. This linings is faced tb form the yoke and can be cut away, beneath when ever a transparent effect is deslre,d. The waist is shirred at its upper arid gathered at the lbwer edge and., the bertha with shoulder scraps is Ar ranged over the wole. -The corslet is shaped to fit the figure and is kept in by means of itrfpsrof bone. The sleeves are mountjbd oyer smoothly, fited linings that fjerve to keep the shirrings and the! fun puffs in place. The quantity of matprisl repaired for the aw diom sfw Is m yard" ?1, SH yards 97 or 3% jardt ^totl*swIV,Ul 1% yards *f illwt convenientt servioe thru over Pennsylvania Shor Lines , including two superior limited trains m# ( and The Pennsylvania. ?& #* t ""- i" V* - ''ft* ^SS"^ * "vi r i -*?*" ' *' ~ - * t speak progress develops, *tt t* adapts - , psychi c attack , How much does Dr. Jordan weigh? HMHHHMmHMUMtMNIHMMniWIMHfm In- ordering coupon: : Size Name . Address CAUTIONBe careful to give cor rect Number and Size of Patterns wanted. When the pattern is bust measure you need only mark 82, 34, 86 or whatever it may bb. When in wai[st measure, 22, 24, 26, or what ever it may be. When , riiisses' or chlid's pattern, write only the figure relpresenting the age. It is not neces sary to write "Inches" or 'years." / Pattern for this garment will be sent postpaid, on receipt of 10 cents. Be sure and mention number of pat tern. Address PAPER PATTERN DEPARTMENT, ,, JOURNAL, MINNEAPOLIS. *- IN ART CHICLES Mi$s Mary Moulton Cheney has just is sued' ,,a holiday booklet that has excited the greatest admiration in all who have seen it. It is the thirteenth chapter of, , . . . . . . .a , First Corinthians splendidly hand-lettered cies are supplied by. judicious^admix- and richly'iuuminated in colors and gold, tures. In ^general the qualities de^ The book Is printed on handmade paper from plates and all- the color and gold put In "by hand. The lettering used is espe cially good and is Miss Cheney's own in vention.. The lettering Is large and clear an^.all the capitals are illumined. The de^nfative motive, the vine has been used withYrich butejudiciously The?titl Thi s r.\ attractive ^ WEATHER PREDICTIONS ' - FOR '"THE NORTHWEST * r, *x fA - 1 , For Minneapolis and Vicinity: Fair to-night and Sunday warmer Sunday. . ^ - ' * /'^' ' . ' '-.:''cH Weather Now and ThenMinimum temperature to-day, JO degrees " year ago, 17 degrees. MinnesotaFair to-night and probably Sunday warmer Sunday and in - west portion to-night variable winds. Wisconsin-Generally fair to-night and, Sunday warmer. Sunday west*- erly winds,: becoming variable. . . *'- Iowa-*-Fair to-night and Sunday warmer Sunday variable winds. North and South DakotaFair to-night and Sunday rising-temperature: southerly winds^ '/' Upper Michiganpartly cloudy. to-night and Sunday, with snow near ' Lake Superior colder to-night variable winds. - r Montana--Fair to-night and Sunday warmer, to-night westerly winds.- - * i WEATHER CONDITIONS, t ' * * The very Hght snow has continued during the past twenty-four hours in Minnesota and the Lake region, and there has been light rain in the lower Mississippi valley and heavier rain on the middle and west Gulf coasts. It is colder than it was yesterday morning in parts of Minnesota, in the Dakotas,. Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri and on the Texas coast, and it is considerably/ warmer in Assiniboia and northern Montana The lowest temperatures re- ported this morning aire8 degrees at Moorhead, 6 degrees at Huron,2 degrees at Bismarck and zerb at Winnipeg. The pressure is high over the Rocky mountain region. -T. S. OUTRAM, Section Director. - * " ^ MINIMUM TEMPERATURES Observations taken at 8 a. m., seventy-fifth meridian time, temperatures in last twenty-four hours. Minneapolis . St. Louis..... Buffalo ...... Chicago ..... .Duluth ....... Calgary ^.... Winnipeg ... Kansas Citx Omaha. ...... Bismarck .... We have always bothered Patricia a lot by asking all rnanner of ques tions about tea. She.has always said that she knew good tea when she found it and that she had learned by experiment how to blend the brand she uses, but that there her knowledge ended. We might have found out some of the things we asked for our selves, I suppose, but' we seem to feel that everything pertaining to tea be longs peculiarly in her province, so we have been waiting all fall for her to redeem her promise of looking into the subject., some time arid sharing with us what she learned. So this week, when Helena found a qualntTjooking volume galled,^'JEhfc Little Tea Book," boxed-"fti iea box matting with a-'-l{tfH!g!iim!l-On red firecracker papjfc?^ lying bri Patricia's table, she guessed at once that Patricia was primedfori tea. - Patricia ,warned us that, he^ re searches had not been profound, but that they-had enabled her^P clear up several /p6in^3 thatitiiadybotheredi: and she-thought it Wb'uld ^be ample "to satisfy bur and "other people's^ super-, ficial and idle teatable curiosity/^" ia* % yards of tucking for yoke and % yards 21 inebes wide *or corselet belt. The. pattern 4S92 is - cut in sizes 32, S4. 36, 3S and 40-Incb bast -tneasure.. "You all. know m tea Us" a" specia kind, and that superibr kindsi .but I suppose jfoil think' as I used 'to varid nearly*, everybody does, tbat the^superiQrityHisva matter of the/ibcality br- gr^owihg, kind of plant aiidd gradin"g ^ith- perhaps:spme" question ^f the .d$gre e^ef^purity 'rEyery kind of tea has a name and it isriult natural t'oV suppps^^t^t"means a dis tinct variety, as 'iurfruits or potatoes, but it doekh't in the* retail business it simply designates a mixture,'or,' .as it is called in the tea business, axblend. We are all somewhat familiar" with the practice in ... perfume-making of mixing a variety of scents instead of using the extracts vfrom a single flow er, and tea is handled in 'very/ much the same way and for very much the same reason. "The only- kinds of unblended teas that combine the desirable and popu lar values are the choicest and most expensive that obviously the'majority cannot afford, but by centuries of study and observation, it has been discovered that by combining in cor-, rect, proportions the ordinary grades, in each of which some particular qual ities are cPhspicuous, a very choice and satisfactory tea is secured. It is not - everts necessary to put in any of the expensive varieties to^accbriipllsh this, result. The special variety that in its best quality, afford^, the flavor that people fancy always furnishes the 'basis for coriiiriercial blends, and ithls tea, fill pattern in this PATTERN NO. 20 26 , . 18 - - - - :*jf - - - * i * 20 ...ii........12 ...i... A 18 ............. 14 Around the Samovar $t7QCariorf iSTMVB is"souchong, known from that "oolong',". forty pages is printed in brown and the decorative design is hand-colored in pink and'green. Each page has a border across the bottom and on the outer edge, of care lessly trailing convolvulus vines."'A large illuminated letter fills the upper corner of every alternate page arid opposite" each of these is a cartouche of corresponding sise, showing Guido's head against a back ground of trees. The cover is of plain brown boards. A second popular edition of this book is just-being issued, bound in green buckram. Edgar Perera has on exhibition at his "studio in the Medical block an inter esting representation of the work of Alexis Fournner that includes half a dozen good Oil paintings, a few water colors, a dozen of his monotypes, and a-few drawings. The-olls Include "Afternbbn-. Shadows" showing a stretch of-, fibwery ' nWeailow curiously tapestried with-the shadows^bf unseen trees.. A group of" low red-roofed farm,'off buildings - hear refer to the grade arid style of make arid the varieties of green tea exported are "gunpowder," "imper- ial," "yourig hyson," "hyson" those of black tea are "oolong," "congou," "souchong" and scented teas. All of the Chinese black teas with the ex ception of oblong are known col lectively as -English breakfast, on ac count of their general use in England for generations. "The so-called scented teas get art artificial fragrance from an admixture of flowers, leaves or scented oils. These are used sparingly in blending to give flavor and bouquet to the whole, but where Formosa .oolong is -used a* abase, as it -is in riuariy of the finest blends, there Is no need of ar tificial il^fitrf oiT: tbis_ tea has a rich natur&iSVnavbr arid^iiroma possessed by., lib other tea. ^ , "The blend we have beeri'-using was ian accidental And. with rii"e, but I have learrijgfl^that,-j. is based upon sorind prii^Iples. spp^may^ have that added:sati#ifacUpnv^v-ii Ijaye never specified, the variety'ofoolon to be used-but -j: shall hereafter stipulate thattit isV&p be ForjtnPsa,' The .for mula, as Spine of you'know-, is five ouncesvof^bplong, three'each of bas ket fired Japan" and souchong arid two of orange pekoe. " With'fhecharige to Formosa wlthv its - natural flavor I think I shall do a little experimenting on.my own account arid increase the oolong oite ounce/..an'du's'e only one ounce of-oekoe, as-tbetetls danger of neutralizirig the natural flavors of a! blend with overmuch scent. -Here is another formula guaranteed * as very fin?'that I shall try-sometime. Six parts Formosa oolong to two each of Ning Chow congou and basket fired Japan. Equal parts of choicest Foo Chow and Formosa oolongs, a com bination of one part Assam pekoe to, five of Too Chow and another of one I part Ceylon golden pekoe to five of 1 .Formosa oolong are all recommended, as the perfection of tea. lier J thery e areVspeciai^jarifl l ''Well, I am. sure we should be sat isfied with any ordinarily acceptable blend if we could always have Patricia to brew it," said Minerva. "Tea would always demonstrate then the claims made for it by a learned ancient Chinaman who said: 'Tea tempers the Spirits, humors the mind, dispels las situde, relieves fatigue/ awakens thotight, prevents drowsiness, re freshes the body and clears the per ceptive faculties.* -I declare that youi*' Insidious lre has accomplished all of these comfortable fac"Ces t a " "Japan," " - lon,^' etc. altho it may have a special name also. The base furnishes the dominant qualities, , but. effect. e pag has uprighrestrained t borders of the vines, associated with the cross and other Christian emblems. Bach page has a wide border at the base, each spece being filled bsfj^rtebly varied arrangement of a single vimi- the.lower corner spaces being filled bjf^ther emblems. The vines are all rep resented 'as springing from jars of beau tiful form and design that accord admir a l with the classic spirit of the decora tidns. The cover design is a long, narrow panel enclosing a high slerideir cross flanked below the cross-beam by vines and above the beam are flights of doves. The cower design is done in Bubdued colors on limit buckram and, altho this is harriionl o # and beautiful in itself, the splendid artistic qualities and strong coloring of the' book seem to demand a more elegant set ting than is possible in simple materials. The book is one worthy of a beautifully tooled hand binding of rich leather. As ittStands the entire booklet is a Minneap olis product and copies could still keep this distinctly local quality and not lack the binding suggested, for Miss Edith Griffith is turning out from her home shop bindings worthy of her teacher, Miss Ellen Starr and suitable for this beautiful work pt Mfss Cheney's. - The book was planned in every particu lar by Miss Cheney, who Is her own pub- HSher. The press work was done by Halm i&.Harmon and the binding by A. J. Bahl &'Co. .- '' '.. rib. her studio Miss Cheney has a small hjjtrid press with which she and Miss. May Slmth h^ve made some interestlpg experji ments in bookmaktng, doing all of the work themselves. The press is-known as the Chemlth. The .latest issue, of the press Is "Saint, Quido," by Richard Jef ferles on American vellum, of which el|cbty !sop weft printed^ its deficien- manded af-^bbdy and'pungency'and some partic^tr and distinct" flavor.* "The diyisiori into black and g^een teas..you are all fairiiliar with, whether you'know what it means or not. The infusions of green teas are light and sparkling and pungent the infusions of black tea dark colored, heavy bodied %nd rich -flavored." * It "is- a popular notion that they are made from different plants and therefore In different tea fields. This is not'true, the difference is in the process, and, black and green tea. could be made" side by side from the same pickings of leaves. It is -usual, however, as - a matter of tradition arid convenience, for .certain . districts to. make chiefly' one kind. The terms we commonly - (A ,-' \. Minimum New.York - - Washington . New Orleaps Galveston ... Helena Denver ...... EI Paso Portland .... San Fracclsco Iktt Angeles -4 28 30 48 46 20 14 84 34 44 44 ..,...*..*..- J .. *- .*.* JLf.. m -M resultsa fosr In the last half hour.: framed in an odd manner in curling sheets - of rough copper that harmonize in copper * with theprints. In the lot are one exhibited in the salon and several others unexcelled by any the artist has done. Several sheep studies and "The Inn," a beautiful land- , scape, have many of the best qual^es of , * paintings and are quite as serious work. -/ In addition Mr. Perrea's collection in--, eludes Italian paintings, mosaics, jewelry* v and pottery, Merrimac pottery and othef 'r. artistic brie a brae. gag .-*"' The Peruna Almanac in 8,000,000* Homes .' w The Peruna Lucky Day Almanac tZi'""' has become a fixture In, -over' eight*J miliiph - homes. They-'*tr\4t be ob .tainted: at any-first class druggists,: firee. He sure to inquire early. Tha embowerebackground d in friiit ctit4! cept a few interesting distant glimpses. It Js.full of. the sentiment of homely con tentment and quiet. A. smaller French "Village" is full of cheerful but soft color. Most'of the ' monotypes . have boep # The book of tree-s the "View in the ex lfftf* Almanac is aWeady published, and the supply will soon be exhausted, f p o not put it off. Get one to-day. Isnt there something around -the house you don*t need ? Then exchange, ? it for something you do need. How?} , A Journal-want ad.-, . , . ' me The te i bet - ter than ever. Have you been trying? a particularly magical blend on us?^ "No,, but I- hava profited by a few other suggestloris of the tea blender. He told me that soft or distilled water! was necessary to extract the most of the delicate - qualities of aroma and .flavor from the tea, so I have used! distilled water to-day. Then I have,' jPhly been infusing the tea, five or^sixi minute's, which would be correct .for' India or Ceylon that arev strong in, tannin which we do not wish to ex-i tract, but eight minutes is the mini mum for other teas and all the Eng-' llsh breakfast mixtures can stand ten minutes. While the water must not overboil, it should riot merely have reached the boiling point. A Chines* emperor expressed the rule thus: 'Boil it long enough to turn a craw fish red,', and this is said to be about three minutes. I think myself that the observance of these points has added noticeably to the quality of the: tea and there is no use to expeefgoodj tea unless it is rightly made in eyery particular." v ~& M L 1 ("