iaino#o#o©o*o©oo#ot)0©o# .'to#-»j 7 years, she was sent to the Convent of Mount (le Chautal, in Wheel-oooo290 fc$»si©•a ;£5o© ?o©®Xcm ©•oWnnlocing, to be educated. She showed great aptitude for music and languages, and at her parents’ request her education was principally in these arts, so that when she returned home at the age lt;f Id she was not only beautiful, but clever and accomplished.She became the belle at once, and suitors of fine birth and 1 treed in flocked to pay her court, The most determined was Charles \V. Glover, son of a millionaire manufacturer of Ypsllanti, Mich. He was ardent and devoted, and his suit prospered* lie won the girl for his wife, and his wed*was a magnificent home inThe wed-{00mhIfto 1TinTheKaiclotandto tclot:andwenYpsllaOo m© ?•lC©® • , -c$ ) andworth §100,000.wonpenhv a*Ft onsodslstiwali, i*Cultd 11If was a fashio*'*1 r did a unV.© t29 ■©i ;c4f itl s.iroujisei i1 far oikwedding _ _ oastod and ]uable function,of wealth and . The guests ar, and at the nkfast Dan Cured a Iontheto 1Clit)Tlwasl just later the. theiwas in 1802. goo 17 years old. of j.. /o , b l'£' V;:' I -*:.$•' *simt range romanceBeautiful Oriska Wordmi in pri a * life Mrs. Charles W. (Hover Is add • g another chapter to the i of her life. She is divorcing one millionaire to marry an ther. she wa to be free from the husband she not seen in ten years to becomirst chaptermila.lo4 11tlYO I •* *1She ondu redORISKA WORDEN,bride of n man whom she lias learned to love since she became famous as a singer.This will be news indeed to the western world, for it was here that the young couple spent their honeymoon, says a San Francisco paper, it washere that love's illusion began to fade.with the hon-The romanceas soon as trouble began,' couple returned speedilyMiss Worden charges ithusband's parents.r interference as long as shecould. Then, acting on the advice lt;fher father, she left her husband andher palatial $100,000 residence behindand went to Paris to resume the studyof music in order to lit herself to beself supporting. Colonel Worden gave■ his rich son-in-law the option of following her, which the young man refused. Thus e’er her dream of a happy married life had really begun it was ended. Four months after she became thebride of Millionaire Glover this child wife found herself practically alone In the world. Her husband made no effort to even communicate with her,and their love story ended there.Bitterly disappointed at the wreck of her hopes and her happiness. Miss Worden set herself the task of becoming an accomplished singer. Her life in Paris is the record of a hardand trying struggle, for she was studying under the famous .Jacques I»ouby, one of the most exacting masters in the French capital, where Mine. Suzanne Adams, who will soon be beard here in grand opera, was her classmate.She worked hard, and when she hadfllnlslu d. three years later, Bouhy spokein glowing terms of the sweetness and purity of her rich soprauo voice and pronounced her an artiste worthy ofgrand opera, roles. She then returned to America and became at once the prim a dcuna of the Castle Squareopera company. This was in IS'.*., and. though -in* did not know it untilrecently, her husband had secured adlvnm» from h.*r while she was study-•*log alone in Paris, This she declares in her suit how j»eodiny: wns|!llegal, as it was obtained without her kuowl-wm lea lt;lug •»trotAw e i biothninncot:edkilredhoiset a terTJOchetindoan1 Iarwlthce h ciiisoKKTiororCJS'pent(a1band it was here that the charming singer returned t win most substantial recognition for her talent when the separation from her Yieh husband threw her upon her own resources.The union of wealth and beauty is always sufficiently unusual to attract widespread attention. A millionaire lover is perhaps the ideal and the dream of almost every girl. To Oriska TVorden millionaire lovers ceased to be a novelty years ago. In fact, rich suitors have been the rule and not the ex-FHE CHINESE OUTBREAKNative’s Story of the Siege ofuVrtthe Foreign Legations.CAUSE OF THE ANTIFOREIGN SPIRITrJf'liiion Sen Describe* the Strange He-•ception in her life, with titled lovers to give variety. So it is not strange in fier case, though passing strange to the world at large, if she has recovered ^efficiently from the disillusion of her first matrimonial experience to try a wecond venture that the favored suitor •should also be a millionaire.Ilef of the Il'ucri In Their Fluht.Inn PouiTi—Whnt the Red Lanterni t.irlw t inimed to l)o—Odd Xftme FopI.elation Street.There have been many accounts of I ‘the siege of the foreign legations in Fe-rThat wealth and happiness do not always go hand In hand has been shown 1« the weave and woof of Miss Worden’s bitter experience. She has found money—her husband’s money at least —a hindrance Instead of a help. It has brought her misery instead of happiness, and now, through her counsel, Bobert L. Turk of New York, she is suing for absolute divorce and alimony for ten years at the rate of $10,000 a year, which she will give to charity before wedding the New York stockbroker w'ho is to be I er second husband. At the same time ;ie will sue Mr. and Mrs. Henry Glover, her father-in-lawand mother-in-law, : r SP O.OOO damages for alienating h--r husband's affection, for it is to then, that she attributed much of the misery of her hardstruggle since, she beoa ae the wife of their favorite son. An 1. as with the alimony, she will donate whatev .r damages she recovers to some worthy charity, and thus are woven the tangled threads in the skei. of her remarkable romance.Miss Worden lias always for her beauty. Her n. »th* r ed beauty before her. and was Colonel F. Yv. Wordenrnous Worden family, a d -officer. As a girlking written or told by the persons under fire. A Chinese account of thetrouble is given iu the latest issue ofThe Independent by Chuan Son, assist- ]ant professor of chemistry in the Imperial college. During the siege Professor Chuan Son lived in the tsung-li-ya-men with 300 Boxers. lie translated for the imperial court all foreign communications.Speaking of what led up to the outbreak, Chuan Sen says that in certain districts the people formed bands for evil purposes, which were known as Big Sword societies. These people asserted that their bodies were bulletn noted s a not-* h p **tproof and that m weapons could wound them. As the societies grew in power they took up militia drill, announced their intention to kill foreigners and named their organization “Iiighteous and Harmonious militia.” According to Chuan Sen:•’They claimed the power of taking the souls of spirits into their own bodieswhen they were i oxiug, which madefoolish people sincerely bell* vo their doings, bur those who were wise still deeared ir as superstitious. Why were the people so antiforeigu? The case was that the Chinese Christiantinconverts took tin* advantage of thela-diedinfantry ■everything lavish- d upon F rey could buy When a inm-missionaries sheltering them in law-suit ; before the magistrates concerning ! property. Thus when these people declared that tueir resolution was to iMaugl ter Christians very manv of the