THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 12. 1000.
-i ujn-un l
SAD LIFE STORY OF DUCHESS IS
Elena of Aosta Forced to Leave Husband ty His Gallantries and Her Growing' Illness and' Seek HcaltK in Congo. Although
By Constance Ilarriman. ' v
k01IK, Ueo. 11. No mora poignant
royal tragedy has aver arouaed tha
ympatliy of a nation ttyin that of
ess 'd'Aosta, whose breakdown In
healtU added to her , domestic troubles
make her one of tha most pathetlo fig
' Urea In Kurope, i '. 1
: The daughter of a houae which has
. lost tli rone, and tha wife of a man
who for' a few yeara hoped to Inherit
' ,.ona only to have-that hope taken away
at 4ast. aha Ja denied even the eonsola
' tlon of domeatlo .happiness, and many
people In Italy, do not hesitate to do
, Clara that her physical breakdown la due
; In Jarge part as leaat to the mental
train to which aha baa been subjected.
Her position now la doubly . painful,
' for -aha has started on a Journey In
search of health, which will probably be
her last. A tender and devoted mother,
. aha Is separated from her children per
liaps forever; a passionately faithful
wife, she haa said good-bye to bar hue-
' band,. . .- -. . . , ;. . .
NEARING
Life a Tragedy. , ,.' '
The duchess has been ordered to tha
, Congo for her health, as aha la very' 111
'.with consumption, but court circles sea J
, -under this only too true excuse a verlt- ,
able tragedy. Her entire married life,'
in fact, has - been, a tragedy,- the 'last
scene of which are near. ' f
She was a princess of Franca, -the
daughter of. the Duo d'Orleans, the legit
imate claimant to the throne of that'
country. When ahe married the Duo
. U'Aosta he waa direct heir to the Italian
throne, and It was underatood that the
. Prince of Naples, now the King of Italy,
would never marry. That was her first
disappointment. After the prince's mar- .
rlago her eldest, eon wai heir apparent
for some time, as King Victor had no
children, end ehe dreamed of a throne
for her son. If not for herself; but In
the course of years even that hope died
with the birth of ' the present crown
prince. . ' ' ..... . - ,- ' - . .
. Wft " Will, l.llll, ,11 ' ITI.UVI,I Wltll
Iter husband had not been notably dis-.
turbed, but aa her health declined hie
eye for a pretty face seemed to become
keener, and quarrels resulted. Scandal
after scandal followed, sometimes
hushed up, sometimes com In to public
notice, until the duchess said ehe woutd
endure It no longer, aud would return
to her mother In England. At this point
all the power of her husband's family .
was brought to bear to prevent such
a scandal, and after a struggle she fore
bore, at the expense of her own peace
of mind and bodily health. That she
would have been happier separated from
the , duke la doubtful, as In spite of 'all
the great unhapplnesa he haa caused her,
ehe loves him devotedly, and la wretched
when" separated from him. A comprom
ise was effected and, indeed. It was ren
dered almost necessary by the ever de
clining state of her health. Under this
arrangement, when ehe could -. not en
dure her domestic- relations with her
There is Said to ' he ' Little
):A 1 , V. T C W)
y-A .... . . . r- A
-'TSv. :x It. ' .. ' l ' i Iff L
1 (' a0) v J
w' 'LW .- sf - y WE? If AK M AJV ; . ' ,1 Sii-V T
EINCE AKBDIO;OF SAXONY,'
husband she would leave him for a
time.
This happened two years tago, and
Duchess Klnna went to England to be
present at the marriage of her sister,
Louise, to Prince Charles of Bourbon
Sicily. There she took cold and re
turned so ill that she stopped one day
ITS ' END
Hope of Her Recovery
at Naplea to see her children, and nt
straight en to Cairo, from tlr ti
klaaaowa, and returned later i Im
proved and apparently so well Dial
long eaa of Ufa was promtxtj lur
th physicians. Out they had reckonr.l
without the Uuke! lihe had not v
long In Naplea when bis name and that
of a young girl of nobla family wrr
. brought Into unaavory notoriety,
tha scandal waa such common protrtr
tnat it reached even bis wtfo e lu.lf I
eare Phe took It no much to heart ti nt
In a couple of weeks tha benefits of ltr
trip were dUelrated and ahe waa evan
reported fo be dying. This waa an
aggoratlon." but thoih. who aaw her
scarcely recognised her.
Again ahe determined to throw up the
sponge and repudiate he huland. aitl
again aha forsave' Mm. through tha In
tercession of tha Queen of Kngland. whe
la her yery good friend. Tha tla bolwwu
these two royal ladles began when the
Duke of Clarence, Queen Alexandra'
eldeat son, who died of typhoid fever
and wa passionately In love with the
then Prlncesa Elena of Orleana, called
for her on hia deathbed and she went
to him at the solicitation of Ida mother.
Queen Alexandra lingered two weeks in
Naplea, to effect the reconciliation
Fighti Hard ;
The duch'esa then took her courago In
both hands, shut her eyes tight where
her husband waa concerned, and look
ing Into the frank faces of Iter children,
endured her life and even at tlmea en
Joyed It. However, so weak was sh
that the exertion of going on board King
Edward's yacht, when he visited King
Victor at Balae, to lunch, was too much,
and ahe fatnted and was taken hurriedly
to Caatellamare, where she remained for
some time. .. ' '
She got through last summer pretty
well, but the doctors are said to have
declared that they would not answer for
the consequences If she remained in
Italy during the winter. There la no
doubt that they did say so, 'but peoplo
In court circles are quite convinced also
that the time has come whan she must
have the relief of another absence from
her husband, and the Cohgo was advised
aa the beat climate; now they are ask
ing themselves sadly if this will be the
eternal separation. .
This time it Is said that the duke has
departed from hia custom of admiring
those who approach his own rank,, and,
haa taken up with a little dancer at one
of the local theatres. He Is so Infatu-
ntail that tha Br mAm even Allowed fco
make her appearance In the dead of
night, to be sure at the ducal residence,
and the duchess, ill and awake, hearing
an unaccustomed sound, went out and
found the dancer with her husband.
Thus this luxurious home Is broken,
up. The only children, two handsome
boys. Prince Amedeo and Prince Almonc,
aged respectively 11 and 9,' have been
sent to 'a big Roman Catholic college in
England, their mother 'will soon be la
Africa, and their father stays pa alone
In Naples. ' v-v
CHRISTMAS IN 'The ARCTIC REGIONS
hut was passed and repassed at all
times by bears. Our adventures during
that winter were many and Intense. So
Explorer Cook Tells
of Experiences in
' the Far Nortk . ;
r
rN "WHAT the editor of The, Circle .
claims to be the first magazine artl-"
cle written' by Dr. Frederick A. Cook
that has been published since hia ,
return from the polar reglons--the-'
Brooklyn explorer gives a vivid account
'of certain of the experiences that befell
'him while In quest of the pole, under
iiio caption "Two Midnights In. the'
Arctic."
In this storjr f adventure, which ap
pears in tne December number of The
Circle, Dr. Cook recites the events that
marked the two Christmas days which
lie spent amidst the frigid darkness of
the polar midnight. In part he writes
as follows:
' Christmas, 1907! Christmas, 1908! I
can say this much at least, without fear
of contradiction, that It Is not likely I
will ever forget either of them nor",
what went between.
I have been asked to write of these
experiences In the pole country, though
at neither ChristmaB season the one
before, tho other after the attainment
of the pole was I within hail of our '
goal. But we were near enough to ob
tain a full appreciation of polar con
ditions. We were at Annootok on October 24,
1907, when the sun sank under the
southern Ice, but we were ready for
the long night. In the polar cycle there
la a winter of nine months and a sum
mer of three. We had built winter
quarters, 13x16 feet, of packing cases,
roofed with turf and fairly secure from
the weather. There we spent the time
planning the campaign, making our sleds
from special hickory stock, with seal
lashings, and preparing all the equip
ment The iniensely Interesting details
of mis evenful season In the Eskimo
village, as well as of the entire under- '
taking, of course require mora extended
'writing, but a brief account of Christ
mas day, 1907. belongs In this story.
Christmas at the 78th I Parallel
Eating waa the chief form of enter
tainment Let no one suppose this in
dicates a low state of mind. No greater
compliment can be paid In the far north
than by eating extra rations In honor
of an occasion. We Invited three na
tlvea to Join uset dinner, and one of
mem, unconsciously rollowlng the cus
tom of the day for theae Raklmos have
no knowledge of Christmas brought us . . ' - .
20 duck eggs, which he threw upon the obB,aclr' perhape ?0 feet perhaps 600.
floor; they made a noise like so many, At th" Td of each day. excepting the
stones falling. If the Eskimo regards ew iaBt be,or wo reached the 'pole,
the date at alt It Is as midnight of the nd on tne ntlr return trlp when w
long night for Immediately afterwgrd U"A lhe 'IUt tent- we buUt pur "no
the first brief gleam of returning llant "-hn from the starry world
heartens him once more. ia?k, and trom the dWM"' t""P'"t- Th s took
served up quite a banquet Wsting u' nour' nc wUh'n w"df'r0
of roaat Arctic hare. cryetallLed eota- a.nd " ,ep!- omi B".n "" Into hia
toe., rreen peas. He. and milk, peacheb V.klnln onVtarbel
and cake the latter mad. by lht aid but n,3r.Jw E w -!T
of the eider duck eggs. - Our guesta
Were Puadluna, Kudla and Koolootunr-
wan. we lei tne epint or lb. day gov-
tween them, gomehow we would get
off our frosen boot, and, panta and
thrust that portion of the body Into
en : doing YZ. It ' th -'P'ng bag. a pfec. Of bHekllk.
th. only gift which 1 rJall wTa . ropr Z w 7- hiur iTt. mik,n
i nl.-i ww.v r i.- time. Tea waa an hour in tne making.
i,i,Mi KnnV rr- r ;i lime. irm wks en nuur in wi iimuiiik.
,J1""C-I5.'0r..r'llh aad by tta help we dlalodged the Ice
-1ZL ,h ZZJ h- Vrtl Tr from our head covering, removed fur
ZJZ ,V. ri2L7 a lnDr 'hlrt and then the bag
,?d-.Pf ,.f. l'-- cloKl over aa unconacloua form-so un
lit tie ewer two months later, on Febru
ary 1. ltog, we began our attack en.
toe pole.
a i
orth
conscious that more than once death
by Icequak. or hurrican waa barely
ZiU??Z Grt,U,'U UBd mediately com, the grateful warmth of
The Arctic Grind.
new contact with my own skin thawed
my froaew blood, and I would lie bask
ing In dreams of borne and the days that
Above tne tza parallel itnmaa lire la lar eelow the ooatliera aomsoa.
Ocvold of plaeare and of mental or la I he marafng. with beads thrust
spirits.! exhilaration. lAtm oonvttts of from the baga, wa'reveled la a break
tnceeaant effort not te succumb te fast of two cvp. of tee, a biscuit aa
death. An Icy wing blow alwaya. TV. trig ae a wt-h. a fragmeat of frosa
worked wlthoot ceasing, daring work and a half pound of pecamtcaa.
hoar, seven dare In each week. There Moraine and night - each tnah drank'
was no lfK-hoa. there was wo direr- about ooe aad a h,' f avarta of water,
inn. there was ' ly aa emiieo. round eut none betweon. Breakfast rif. the
of Jah. r op. lift puab -oath, froa garmtite were goun. aa epefilnj
a'rp, cfecp, 1; f t, poiA and oa to- the rttt kkked la ye V3 ef the Igloo, and wa
were again plunging onward into the
maddening Influence of the monotonous
glitter.
On April 2, 19eS, as stated In my
dispatches, w. reached the Pole.
Two days later began the- Journey
back to civilisation. I can scarcely
say If my elation had entirely peseed.
but I know my ambition, my interest
my strength had. , And if ever theae
were needed they wete upon this race
with the Arctic night
The night won. Chriatma day. 190S,
found us far from our destination, In
tha uhmenie.t circumstance civilised,
man can well imagine.
. I cannot conceive of a more miser
able Chrletmas. Certainly It waa the
most wretched I had ever paeeed. and
I hope never to duplicate It Our hut
rnoetly underground and compoeed of
atonea and bone and waste ends, waa
uncomfortable In the extreme. We were
wholly without civilised food, depend
tug upon mo.lt rx and bear meat and
thl w obtained by uaa ef primitive
weapon, our ammunition bring- ex
hausted. . . ,
Tbt Second Midnight
Prhap the strangest emotion I felt
that day was a longing to go abroad ta
the land with a gun over my shoulder.
We eor.17 weeded exerclee. but for the
IS day before Chrtstme aa, also,
after we dared at wture evt tate
the total darfcneae. Wa were ta the
locality ef can g roue beaata, aad oar
we spent Christmas, 1905, like cave
men, lying within our earth cell, In the
not unpleasant light of musk ox fat
fed to moss wick. It was not possible
to talk to my companions about the
day, for the Eskimo knows nothing of
such things and cannot comprehend the
BAFFLING MIRACLE OF THE STARS
I'
Bv Mary Proctor. By this method the onservatlons made ence. A railway train does not " mora
rT will come as a surprise to most Dy ny father In 1869 have recently been surely whirl us to our destination than
people that the big dipper is going connrmea oy w. ijuaenaorri, wnu giv uy mis nuiar migration we are .wept
to pieces. Astronomers are now the following interesting facts as a re- in the direction of Vega. ,-, t v
perfectly sure that the seven stars sult of h,s work. He finds that five of Who would not wish to see with an
in th erom famlllarlv termed the the Btars of the great dipper form a all seeing eye the sun and its family
lire ways or white men. They cele- great dipper are slowly but surely drift- system, piacea a.i a aiamnca unnmg onw. imuusn
brated the arrival of "midnight" by tng apart 100 I'S'ht years from us, each star m'ov- ways gathering new material,: and add-;
eating bear meat for a change, and I The breaking up of this partnership ,nS at t,ie rate of 20 miles a second, lng comets and meteor ewarms to lta
entertained the welcome guests of was first detected by the writer's fath- Since, a light year Is measured by the domain the sun sweeps on and the
memory. er in 169, while he was at work on two rat a which light travels (186.S30 obedient planets follow; - but whither
Such, then, were my Christmas days maps of all the northern and southern mlIes a second), multiplying this by the they are going and how the celestial
in the Pole country; but I would not stars whose motions have been ascer- Sl.600,000 seconds In a year, and the re- journey will end, even science cannot
care to close this story without a word talned. To each star In the maps he at- Bult Dv 100' we "a,n 80me a,nt ldea,tell. y
of tribute to my faithful companions, tached a little arrow indicating the dl- ' tha enormous distance of these stars .
Without this squat Eskimo figure the rection of Its motion, and he found that from our planet. Added to this, each of A Celestial procession.
North Pole would never have been at while five of the stars in the great dip- tha flv? Btar separated from the A most fascinatng discovery has
talned. Without him white men can per were drifting in one direction, two 0,hers ay a v,?,"' 'eflu ? Just been made by Professor Boss re-
never hope to penetrate into the boreal of them were going the opposite way. ,In'j yeara- Jet they are drirtlng on- gfiriajlg s moving cluster of S stars In
region and return. He has his limita- Consequently. 100.000 years hence, the ward as "e ram,ly. aa .??ug an lrawi, the constellation Taurus. These etars
tions but is loyal and enduring. It great dipper will nave altered In ap- ,,'' represent literally a "flight of auns."
all drifting In the same direction, with
would be Interesting to transport a few pearance and no longer Justify its name. atJfaction
of them Into .the midst of some es- The handle of the dipper will be bent , Zt? . V.' "t average velocity of about 25 miles a
pecially liberal Sunday school Christ- almost double, and the dipper, with one ") conl) Ty. " i?., . second. There aro stars "marching in
mas restivai. iuyes wmcn are inairrer- ""a imueuueu
ent to the untenable elorlea of the torn, will show
Aurora BoreaUs would bulge from their compared with a dipper in good con-
i , a i i i .11.. . 1. - . j , rlttlnn
BUCB.KLB ni uBiiuiuuig mo Linoci iiiiiiveia . .oven Htnr In th BTPAt dinner after
.h- f i,... h n.ii If there are inhabitants on our nlan- seven stars in tne great aipper, arter
v v., ...... v.. Ppn,. nprmri thev win wm- ue allowance is made for the motion
scrape flawless ivory would drorf vi-'iLT-i !?" of our own sun; for by the same meth-
ana tne aipper. witn one " i,,,; second. There aro stars "marching tn
out level with the bot- t.w L Sifl i '.t ? widely extended rankft,, by concerted
its utter lack of utility Pat ve iipe iMnj, i Imost j t rest In a,on prescrlbe(j track, under
Ith a dipper in good con- ?.pac- The88 a the known facta of , d TOrhaD8. forever to human
-C"S "ST1"' ,,n" " , intelligence." They are all urging their
way onward through the star depths
with-a velocity compared with which
the swiftest motions known to us are
everything to possess themselves of a dcr when turning over the leaves of a
fin hnrn. A nonkpt knife la an nocnt. Biar anas 01 me present iim wny tiiese " . ..
able gift anywhere, but this, invaluable ven stars wre termed the great dip- w aV"na, motion, ureine Each 8ta lrv the celestial march . Is a
. . r . ' , npr tnat Hi w wnndAr nnw 'hv th snaTes in tne general motion, urging ,ihni,ii. of
friend to the polar explorer" will swap WS?.d.l' "JOZ ! I way In the MptFrttto -bright f"0'-
a perfect pelt of blue rox ror one. Gar- """' " times mrger uwa io juo vn
ments of fur, mittens and boots he reat dipper forms only a small part. vega' we live. They may even rival our
eagerly thrusts upon you for tin cups tp111n TrtwZl a stfeTch A Journey to Starland
and red handkerchiefs. Hang his tree .1: " " , s ,n .a requ're a stretcn
with gummy candy, with "plugs" of to
bacco, with the explosive match and
the detonating biscuit, with now and
then a bit of ribbon, and the Eskimo
will forsake all that he has to follow
the founder of Christianity.
bright day star, the sun, In all lta ma
jesty and srlory. as the sun exceed tne,
of the imagination "to see an outline of In one of his lectures. Professor New- earth. Each star' In the ' celestial pro-.
a bear in those stars as they appear comb once remarked that he never felt cession may be pouring forth supplies
to us now.
Stars Not Stationary. "
That the stars are slowly shifting
For -similar truckery some say, but It their positions in the sky we infer from
may he for the glory of his race, he their light waves. The light from a
a more delicious sense of repose than 0f heat and light and swaying by its
when, crossing tne ocean during the attraction the motions . of attendant
summer, he could find a place on deck earth like our own. ' . i ,
where he could be alone and enjoy the The fact that these star are con
starlit heavens. Looking up at Lyra, stantly urging their way through the
with Veganear the xenlth, while list- heavens leads us to a consideration of
ening to the clank of the engines, he what has been termed star drift Every
w .l. . .k. ... ....... " Wilt
LZt . , h Z ,1 "IZ Btar tne etner tnat riua tried to calculate the hundreds of mil- Btar is in motion; for the so-called
"t,'lmlt i" ?' r,dJ' tZ7.,1 space ,n wavcs' 10to 100'000 be' ,lonB of years tne eh'P wou,d lu," "fixed stars" long ago broke away from
bourne so tew tr1"'Ja.e- lng packed within an Inch. These wave- if it made the same Journey as the sun. their moorings and began to flit at
er, now that he has shared with us the leta travel at a rate that would encircle But the Journey is one in which we large through space. It la a slow star
effort and the Victory, he is worthy the earth seven times In a second. Each .re nil nnonnnrlnualv unrarwl. nn nnr .i.-. -, .t,-. m n niu
to share our civilization. Is not, per- wave ha8 R crest like the ocean wave, great ship earth ae It circles the sun, a aecond, the average speed being .W
haps, for me to say. and the length of the wave Is meaaured which in turn is drifting onward in the mtlea. At this rate, a star traverses
" by the distance between the crests. It solemn procession of stars. The wild- more than 115,000,000 mile a year. The
The Chilian government has several has been found that when a star Is est imaginings of eaatern storytellers, .tars are traveling forever on a Journey
engineering corps in the field studying moving In our direction the waves of with their magic hSrses and enchanted 0f which we know neither the beginning
different methods and systems of lrrl- light are shorter than when It Is mov- carpets, seem spiritless in comparison or the end. As the astronomer poet of
gatlon. lng from us. with the story told by the facts of set- Persia expresses It: -
1 : 1 "There wa the door to which I found
no key; '-' -
Thero was the veil through which I
might not see." , ,
THE STORMY PETREL OF SLOTHFUL CITIES
Continued From the First Page of Tin's Section
'Where the Chills Come In,
hlblted the taking of usurious Interest
on stallment house debt
When the urgently needed meat In
spection bill came up the small farm
ers simply killed It on first reading.
Mrs. Crane heard of the adverse vote
at 4 a. m. ' At 4:30 a. m. she was on
her way to Lansing. She took up the
dead bill, resuscitated it within five
minutes and had It all alive and kick
ing before the senate of Michigan when
it convened that day. She carried it
to enactment by sheer force of argu
ment In the courae of which ehe brought
nearly all farmer and butchers to the
side of pure food. .The vote wa 1
to It when the, bill was pasaed.
Later, when one of the Big Rapids
butcher, who had fought the reform
moot vigorously, opened his, new model
$11.00 slaughter houae. he did It with
a tea, at which Mrs. Crane was the
guest of honor.
The civic Improvement gospel, mean
while, had been spreading. Women ev
erywhere were emulating tbe achieve
ment of Mr. Crane In Kalamasoo. and
everywhere were encountering her chief
difficulties, plu th. obstacle of Ignor
ance of public affair that bad at no
time anapered her.
- At flret mim new civic improve
meat association or club arpeeled to
her. half In hope and half In fear, a
being woman who might pouibly
be able to lend them courage. If not
enlightenment But -soon the fame of
her swift unerrtnr Intuition for local
complications and of her ahecJute know
ledge of every possible difficulty and It
solution apr-eed e widely that ahe to
ram. tbe national consultant Now,
wbon a ctvte tmprevemeut rlub I or-,
ganlsed ta ew city, like Scran ton. ia
Pennsylvania, the first question asked is going the way of all the other towns ,rom in. xwtroii
is: that glimpsed their first visions of the One of the charms of mualo is that
"wh.Ti .Vtt.ii ,..- -Mr. rvr,. h, ritv unit... . ..-.i the musically uneducated person do
ft .t.rt fM -n.rt v. f m not have to "understand- It With
el simile is as accurate as old rel's swoop upon the state of Kentucky ul IWerent, and every passage has
ler's "rosy fingered dawn." Take will probably never be written, because llnr an obJlou! or th'nIJr clnci .1
nton. for instance. there is too much to write. She went enlng. Occasionally It la hard to
Sh alm-ava startii them Thit itormr Th. full itnrv nf that atnnnv- i- imitative -music, nowever, m n 1.1
petrel
Homer'
Sera
She told Seranton how to mitigate, there at the request of the State Fede
lf not eliminate, the tramp evil, citing ration of Women's Clubs, the publ'O
the beautiful woodpile Kalamazoo main- health officers and the medical profes-
suppers and lodgings which the knights a combination cyclone, hurricane and . u. Viry fine. Indeed!" said the crl'i
01 inn ruflu pnurf uin- w 1 1 11 iiic uii- iirnmuu,
appearance of the tramp as the natural Within leas than 24 hours after her
consequence. clrtslng meeting In Louisville the county
She showed Just how simple and how Judge had Inspected and condemned the xytt. - returned the composer "that
beneficial it would be for Scrantonjana aim-house- The fiscal court called In wher, th wandwr b.. the hot !
to take their public schools out of poll- special session for that purpose, had bjjj Droucht to him "
tics and have them more Instructive made a generous appropriation for at - . - - T -
than ever. She showed how public teratlons.
squares could be beautified and the vrry At Frankfort, the following week,
sidewalks made more pleaaant And ahe prominent residents held a mating to
set all Seranton to disputing over the Inaugurate the r. forma .he had Bug-
way the inean. were left to their In- geated.
sanity when numbers ef them might b. tnand for dairy Improvement aad veer.
cured and all could hav. their pitiful healthy cow that the slat, board ef
decipher certain unusual noises, as th.
following story from Fllegende- Blaet
ter Indicates:
The composer had Ju.t played Jjl.e.
it piece to bis frier
"Very fine. Indeed."
"But what Is that passag;. wfcii
makes the cold chills run down it -
Said t"vrl 8ns:
From the Los Angela Express.
"Quite often a straight tip Is or!
There was such a popular de- the beginnla' of a mighty-crooked r'
lot vastly ameliorated.
Seranton had
health was enabled to Issue a sweeping might be some fouttdatloa
rttargea, bet she le not
for 'j-
never In Its history proclamation for reforms of dairy eendl
known such a cyclone. And Seranton aa tions and a eompula-y tuberruUa test ant or unpUsant-4hoa ho wr g
a town, like every other town Mrs Th. larger cltlea and town promptly medicine will pleas, tbe publla hf
Prune baa vlalted. fought back. But tbe set about providing trained settlement lowing the oVe. aats II ran be
local rlvlc I mom vena ent women, lnrlud- workers sad nurse, who eboald sivat Is. ih,f ihm la bo weed ef It ait
lng as It did th. city's social leaders, atructlons le tbe care nf tbe sick,
who were the wives ef tbe town's l-ed- Kentucky opinion was fairly repreeen-
Ing business men., found her their In- tatlve of that whlcti ehe bad eexrovatered
proratalng te do better la te r n .'
Tbe sanra stry. ar4
the kwal rond . l kr.. .b ba '
Pi rat ton as well aa tKrlr guide. Tfcev wherever -be has tt, and one edt- terad. ha. -orv. rrt f 1a e
went gallantly at the task of Improve- torial MKiwit pet It tersely: . tory ef f I -. l" i:ii-.,a. a -l i
ment aad reform she bad wutMned for "There are those who roustder itrm. tw., in ITrM; -f ; ra", .. t
them. Crane a mere busybody prying Into Wiikba la jvr !;,
Not a few ef the local Veadera who other people a bustaeee and sasumlng tr.su rfe; town myr it r t
had take anost umbrage at bef rrltl- eoetrol of wtasr people a atfaira. W ra rr 4 ws ' r.atie s . ,
rtsma. rah.eveetly derlarad themselves she purvetng a private raeralr and yn br f r en. t i i r jr, n t i
fer-the M-ttermeata. aed Scraatoa- wow acting oa ber ewa rrrp t,i,,i Ur e.-