The "ood Health Co. WW] .3 of“ COUPON but". 'trem, E! (iv" Al all k M". IV D G) the bridge that spanned the led raypitU. (hi drew suddenly " . tt she‘ivmld ttt die and end in tho-dart. nothing wanton below WWW, itrFiGiearer to bee and wnnl bin thrown hire arm about tho Ileudp In " would dd) it," he "id I" "Yen, I would do it." Curly. "You have wreck: uh made "E very “In .0. Only enven httor mm you who are the w I voanterrrhir and a w "a. I murderer. who many a soul into out" had not burn] your nu you din-ennui! than-um Trmaim-‘u but)â€- i trum- to box In [cloned tered Scab: wide own, - of b our her hmpung (to. his t an in A shriek up! mgr she ho "ill 'iu; w will you. nr confound y The mun Trunk†tr chloroform aboir: A bunt ' in can! tette, I, tlPillli and tti w; m CLEANEST. "“5“.- tere' w"r “WI" M I" In“. to "itiaVse't Km " â€CM-h you thank so “may cram lino-an- an memo. _ " In. Co": Case', - Bc. 'sur, m4 - A - - .__--_ -1 "----- I‘M: 5].; - . -. . .-_ - - 7 - at . in. and. of 07M 0'" cu." m mMLIWN 60.. u. The enzmou had born otf " con. lar. lu: the cloud". hunk-at. tor- upon it. hurryml to the baggage-our tor I last 'd ammo with which to N'KVQ the boron httle heroine. The 9.89..." u w.“ u no andâ€: “we utrstified; none of than had non lwr depart. They come to tho nutunl conch-km that. upon rogmum; con-clowns“. the ym. J 3an had Sui, why. no on. Wild no“ “onjocturo. an. I“ and that lives. m the! In the excitement. which Prl1od, the pun-cunt. hurrying hither Ind thither. a.s' alumni]. to View the "rot which. bat tor a young glri‘s bravery must ha" been tho wen. of a. wrriblo din-am. Guy mu $or the mill. forggttpn. - Duo lune. Bt that low: whit. hoe. and 4mm"! the golden " Ind the .rert'. rhln'vl mucus had made. Tre. maxm rttortgrtiBed hervouy burn-ooh whom he indicted to be in tho charred rmrw of the old brirh home on the Hm ram Hay in tho am: an "In In tate. No one notices him in the [not con- Wrr H “mm them. A quick 1t"tl.t Ind-n: Lhroufh the vilhln'l bull. to [Hark was: ttl leer with I devil“)! Foam. hr pm an [ulna-rd. “he: (in: n his wrung athMtle tuna. and in an Intuit. gum» unmntrod. he bu _ the duh muons beyond with his lovely uncon- u-.ouu bur“!- Tram-mo pro-ed Ion.“ ml, with tho ran to behold the young 3er who had sued the train, mentally womkring bow m the world the had dice-â€ma it-- bmu one happened to In at this lonely Ma- ttt this unseemly hour and if 0’10 and " my chance heard In convent.- and himself planning the an: whoa they had tanrled themselm no acutely Mom- In the done mpg; " "Perhaps it was jun u well “by all." be concluded; for Perry Grnnv‘mo am not .pprar to be among tho pan-once": he had not taken that train. Ant. hand- some Percy Granville had can“! tho krribl- file his relentku too had tt"trhod out tor him. Baro!a Tremaine-[or the on. G ' I.- dreu wan tbw-ground hi. le? 1. impotont use on he realized t at hi kin-rm had been trauma by we mu: girl who had diamond m 1-rted ties um! uud tho, train. Atew In In mat-m an no“ out...“ prevaiutd. 1inengem had tett tum†Ind m-ra hurrying when: to tho 'pot m.†might have Inn no) . [Pub " The brurht, 'urlnn ally he. the Hume teil mu upon the lid flea, crowned m the curling rings of you. 1,. r "nu'i-rf-d about it; that 10?!!! I.“ (“w 1m†~-u-r poet dreamed of or urt- had hurt Aut.trst Iti'h the oycito1r-aiiiih, I hauling vkhed man In lm-apnhlo of the‘pun. sentiment oatt.d law." she cried. " l you and 10m 19y. dike." S'wEO‘JFmJ'nc thit, you nu 1kstioed . mv [vi-h- by lair moan- or foul," ' site ' concluded t banned For Jytal 9mm Woe; will: on id 'l' row first" but in... Ihc pl could Milk “in dead with than Oreo ot yours. t in our. you it." he raid many. cu A PT}. It 'Ym.--40oett'd", Ttrt. "lull“ . CHAPTER I". iittl me from him In tho most In at: Inter Guy'u eyelids itat. for an .w-dant. than low ruuv.to-l‘:m.' the triumphant Mum villain bend!" mlsT, Ind BKri I' "OME -“y â€do"! Mm is". "' man- yovu dumb an JMI' rd than lives. "t may “was their bonnie“ Ore childlm old mit. ‘n “mud. it the beau. -r et-tid be hand. and that ho would make fairy. I old make a 1. w moments more. a had escaped dus- a n manner. "I" v famine†itt drero, .o- 'we" Iron anon! :"c _A-res.- and in ll or, A Dark -Temptation the best lan a in the longing .u that enact. Id de V rezoned Tre. e ramped me "ke good can . Make haste, yancc at once; nwnou. he mph-a at (the m from G."- d arms. bat of the slim. " eye, lt- A-ate hand. n help me! tity, In“. "" burden my beau- am your me your re busily ms more, u. may colon. he an nld who 'u " pFotr Why iittr,oi,iioiiiit7dTriiiiiiGa'iil, {to obey your no». whatever M m' Tim-Jen his“ rou, Perry," by murmur-I oi, ‘ynu an» a - vomfort o Inc-Amy: lop» 'nd my inn: no in â€a. Pucy,' he cried, 95mg" 1m with euem-thm' “mm-d irimmn Mckr, of blood to big. annual. 'l h“. on. last, dying - , to main at vow you will irnnt my purer. my My surely you will not refun- my: in“. re Lao-z." l 'My Str/at uncle." rrird the you“. man. with gm! emotion. "you know T, toad ditto: you. it dying would ttttttl you. “:40 JM.hht m can". -T 5er ding. "poi/di." laid the old can- eu'. gasping r my eye- [row dhtt---S “not BN ma.†You have vault. Percr' he "m 1siut. u' "'1'! .:'L " awn v..u are hero." 1": 'rr.s, one gum-M had newt been bsa.otrrouttive. M he loomed to mmblo wtth motion at!" clung to the [trout hyd- that Md MI. '"Atrf The mum] of tho carriage wheel: aroused in» as nothing eluo cuuld have done. "send my nephew to me," he moaned, "and have urn alone together." Another moment and the doctor upon- ed hurriedly. and Percy Granville umltly â€â€˜01-.le the chamber of death and was kneeling Inside his uncle't, vouch. The doctor quietly withdraw to 111 ad- Joining room. an: he had been hidden. leaving them alone together. A half hour passed. and an tho doctor lint'l‘l! the hum-inu- mom back and forth H-s'h‘slv. was it only “my or did ho ‘Iw-y Pun-v Gvatttil1t 1-" out excitedly: _t-rt _"vvr'uN. elm ot me and I will rum. no u. upvln. but _this which you ‘UMh." au Percy. tromulously. "it I comic! can»: "on may that you Man. I mum gladly do it tor your tth The triennial laid Mn hand on t o Lnd. As they neared Red-tone nan Percy ob, served . [ten mum-ion Among the nor- vuula, a murmur of voices, and “chm moving to and fro. "Oh. I un afraid we are too Ute!" "rid Evelyn. "I tear the dear old Ben. orul is dead! Oh, Percy, hurry to his room and tell me-if I can come too." One of the â€rants met him at the door and told him how the fearful accl- dr-m had happened. In uarnlensly handling a loaded revol- n-r which he had alwuye kept in one “WIN“! of hm wardrobu, it had been acti- tiuntully (nuanced, the bullet lodging m um- oi his lungs. Internal hemorrhage had so: in, and nnw his death mm but a qumrtion of a tew short hum. Like one Hun. the l Thu at" I tor tum Scat-Ody . word was spoken between, them during that long, mm ride; Eur lyn could have been content to m for. ever by his side casing winuully into bin handsome taro, wondrouaily pale new in the 1ir:horinir 1131110! the "hrrlaLtf lumps. that he 10 word to the on nrdently We Inna: now return to Percy Gran. ville and Evelyn. whom we left bidding a hasty adieu to their friend. and hurrying back to Bed-none Hall in responoa to the [oh-gran} Percy Md received. Guy. a: she saw he did not riao main. would the dark waters ever revenltheir terrible seam. until the day of judgmem came? Nearer. nearer name the nwltt footsteps. and slain the horrible wry of "Murder!" was faintly repeated, echoed weirdly back through the waving pines. "i"""" --Neee __- ..-..__-V_ ._._-.,. Like an. (twinned. Gay [and into the dark. gum vault. tipped by the TildCII light of the gleaming nan; auddon y the waves parted, and in the Bioherine light she - Harold Tremaine] white (an. und the piercing cry ot "Murdert--helr! help!’ run- up from the vvnvu. A hurried my was IIIIVOHBI the can. lt "I too me to save him. but the would he discovered there And accused of it; in. if her very life had depended upon it, she could not move hand or toot to Br,. - nerve named mnlyud. As in 1 31a" darkly, a picture of the (mum role In a ghastly vulon helore her she could use home†in I prisoner's but. her golden head bowed on the rail. her white wrists manucled. the word., '1'horsted with the mum†of Harold Tre. " “we" written in letwrr, of fire against lu-r name-even the pmturo of tho hana. man and the soatlnld mm- before her munml vision; and she raised her lovely yi-ung (are to the night uky with such wllnile terror and ninth [litmus moans-z lint the whim angels must have pitiod) and wept [or her. l rho roniirml that rchr: should " from the tevrible war. but tate wnmed to claw in urmmtl her and bind her thore. T'vey n.†liml mp llvl‘c and “twat. me," {who mnmml Filllklllg down on hl-r knobs: and vuvvrnvg hvr white tue" and startled t'er"ri "ith hl'l' poor litilo we ubiing hands, c, n- trim! in utter a prayer, but the worth: died on her lips in a moan of tera. v,, on» ctrt “My him now.’ mullervdl The pale moon llrucgled on from the buck, heavy cloudu. Bad with bated breath Gay peered down into the nun-y wane. "0h. Keven! I did not menu to do it!" like gasped, wringing her little white hands in mortal terror, "but he drove me to it; he [ended me to undueâ€. One of our live. would have ended in a trnedy what does it matter that it we: hie in- stead of minor' She looked at tho little hands. white as lily-leaves. dumbing the broken nib. and it almost mined to her excited “no: that ltr were crimson mine of blood upon Would the - up in heaven who had witnouod win: Ibo had done take unle- ary-x PP?') Puff she _wo_ndered vgguoly._ them The thrilling. awful m. “larder!" tune out thrill] on the night air, quickly tol. Iowed by the splash of I heavy tam": body, and In the harm) despair of that terrible moment. poor Gay. who had ngoril- ed her soul by An awful oruno. to had why Ibo had done. -i. --- _--... m u." "a. ti-p-rooted dislike and. no alt the more maxima- to win you and tame you and ttlist your At n! hunk]. mum). bird of par in. when boom has be. witcbod no. There's nothing tune about this Minna. by the eternal! But. my alumina Guy. my bride to be, I must mttgett 1 in to! the blow you dealt me, here out! now. Why [trunk when you know you mun. suhmit to it?" No wonder the villuln'o breath upon her cheek sad the any ot his arm Hound her 't"ddetted poor (by 3nd - her desperate. she had “and .3. With s low, frenzied cry she has off the chap of the um wound about her. "ctirooly mlislrz in her terror that she was pressing him but with Limo“ super hamin strength stun-t the ruling ot the brute. while he seemed nearly part- ted st the madame†of an attack. Inca at the auddonneu of the stack. There Ill . eraah um] I tarnish cry. and the thin board: that termed the rail, ing parted. and anyâ€. permutat- was pro; clpitnud down. down into the 'tethieyr water- that lubed the rock- below In thtit rglenuenu tutr., __ - 7 ,,V --_.N. M...... n..- "tttand baoh-Mo um wash 3.." m IN united, "or T will throw myself our in "Hill down into the water below." The handouts): villain “.11“. and that mocking thh from the 1ood in poor "..t.tt Ou'o â€in. " st t pre‘ene little darling you If! to be run. to “and out no bravely tnd defy no. By George, thin difBeult woom: by". A no} go it; but from the first you: -M.-'. a... - wn "PM all with n "irtriye Mama: " we hnd done one. but. for - on“... "night. upon his srutourrtio (In with her mu. clinched wtttte had. Um", l . _ lie-om "emu-i Nt thus the oorridor. _ - if - ur' Id of hits own name (.11 upon " w n. In his uncle] voice culling M†thy geueral had lain in an out: 2mm, his bursting, 'starittq d intently on the wall, and the luv watched at his bedside feared would pun-s away Without, om the nephew whose coming he had My desired. l3 in a dream CHAPTER. " "no If l tter-t chunk-d in the "st; uni was ha" drawn. :0 mo clear, white [ mlnr nittht-iump sr-table: but it wan 9h. got and.“ In. should " from I seemed to claw her there. Percy hurried tr d: vnrs an ordinary mum bed, while tho mvereigns of Italy and Austria slew.) in small iron beds. The new Mikado sleeps on a my on the floor with a couple of bamboo atirks for a pillow. while the King of the Bel- gians can only be, assured of a good night‘s rest in a hammock. King Alfonso, on the other hand, has a h'xlrriuus bed. while Gersrge V. and Mar? an- particulur that their sur- rounding: are bvroming to their slaw. The Czay and the Pnnv have Slmplnx Apartments of Royalty Simple With Few Exeepliomc The Cvrriere (Mia Sera of Rome, Italy. prints an irrtcrpsting article on how famous millionaires sleep in palatial bmlchamlwrs, whereas the reigning monarchs of the world are simplo folk in 1hr matter of their night's rest. Thus, the Kaiser ta- Hmn n growl man has-exclusive knowledge of the fact. Sir Gerald marrivd in 1905 Miss Alice Blight, of Philadelphia, the granddaughter of Richard Green- ough, the famous sculptor. Her charming personality. and her abil- ity as a hostess, have been of the grvateat assistance to her husband in his diplomatic career. ',/iif. , lalllillll l He possesses a. «J? petfeet Ambassa- "W93â€? , _ " do ri al m an ne r, r 'lil" l ' and this is well ti. Sir Gerald lustrated by 'an Lowther. incident whichoc- curred at a dinner party held at the British Legntion in Tangier. It was a few days " ter the capture of Kaid Maclean by that notorious individual Rai- suli. One of the Ambtusaador'a guests. a fascinating French lady, anxious to know what England would do, called across to him during the repast. "What are you waiting for, Mr Gerald?" i "A Iamtfcutiet, madame," was thrreyly response. ti p ft Mi 3 S: 's en. P,'d!tl m P " E/ll ' ir q ' ."n- MM." [ 'r, y, GEEK $M? el iEf, I. Mag" P griti,it'i' 3‘5â€â€ P. m 162%! ' ' 'rllllqll tl :1"; . ill " , T “viva RI ' ms" Ji, .7 '%llll" -- m Sir Gerald Lowther, the British Ambassador at Constantinople, has been undergoing a very anxious time during the p a s t t w e 1 v e . . - months. He is one f.' 'hit of Britain's most b ltl exla‘riuhced diplo- 4llt mats. and ' has ll Agrt served at Wash- tlkdlllillgllll irutton, St. Pet- 'lBaittmlll ersburg, Madrjid, Put another in Gay‘s place? Marry] Hogan (my him; how could he hrsrbor "tlett a ancy for n single instant. when he thought. only of the cold, pale (we of Gay. his fair you": bride, whom he had loved so madly. lying in her "eor shroud in the toy embrace of death. like a broken lily blighted in the bud. "It is marry rather 'arrood, tuietiri'"he-iiuAt -dut. "ask anything but that; my hurt is torn and hugging; hue mercy: spare 3nd pity me Great. drops of nzony stood on hil brow, his whole frame shook with agitation. Put nmther in Gnv’n n1“. MAPP“ _ A cry braid frdrrthi, $61115: man'l Mr; 2t word. pierced “to s sword to in an. “Percy. my boy," he whispered (“pinc- Iy, "I could not die and leave tho word. unspoken. T want my race to live long generanom after me. All rel-tn with you, my hon. loved nephew-rm who went my name and inherit my fortune. You tut. dcrnund mo, Percy you know the In". r0- qupet l woqld pa. pt rout" - -- 'il't','tt. uncle, you do not menu that mu Vila 'gut-to----" Tho very nanny crowded into the word "mun" named to unmnn him. "To many. you. Percy: that In what I watt 'S?u.to primal-9 In! to do." "Anoier me, my béif' whispered the ?l.d. trer"Tal, his breath growing fuintar. baby: one no ruddy broken! Poor little Gay, his bride. cold now In tteatht, The feeble pressure of the [Guru'- thdo mulled his wandering though“. “Linen, Percy," he murmured faintly. "hu',',',','.'"',,",'," no preview." bb on. my dear undo.†replied Percy. “nay; "I tun unending clonal! to what you_ In." to e, (epic. - - “Wu ever a man‘a hut " cruel u ulna bu been P" he thought. "Who our laqt I wile on him wedding-day?" Surely than had never boon u lon- drenm so â€not. so pinion-M. or no bright " his; ApreV fhtms 3nd 1397.; The picture represented . bridal pm ht,'ht". from Al hyoovorcd m chute ' and tn that moment hit though. untied but to Jun mush In or!“ in " own life; had In the uh mum-c moonbouu that we]. in through the win. dow ho could no tho the. of Mule a", He remembered how “I. lowly you). "oqsioohqdntrit-rauedt6tiuii they partod-tho my of It. " ha knelt there. brought mm to his cyn- thes sweet little bride from who. he hid parted " the very gun. _ _ At that tttfe tie Timed-1'. gttef, OMwOMQn‘erD‘ II n n (it; 9990.“. watt, And his ,'ltlltl'a. 1:. "'roi, an?! nik aaa- if; umlo.’ the yonnt nun replied oaratemtlr. a â€mum 1r'pt'"" anything you may utcwtu would AI ho spoke, he but an the hints" we. of what he would be ' to do. "Y“. I an dying. Parer." whispered the For“. bye-thing lie-nob: "Inn for thin than“ not an" the one wish-4h: on. death of my life, for perhaps you: to me. You mun any We" to my In: re. ngt. Pong." he nut-puma. _ A 399197 "titdritrCitu" pared; l lf, HO“ KINGS Itlu'P0fihl. SIR (i b', It A LD L0 WT ll ER .uhhk u the 'oommon fate-of an GG% and to love,. it is not a hardship, 1 buying." 7 All. ha P want s (To th. continued.) "'wevCr Paris, 77 Tangier, and other parts of the world. paging t w- awn li! .. and ' Apple and Riee Putwtmr--oiie punnd sour cooking apples. two 1mn- gcvs sugar, one-half gill water, piece 'uf cinnamon, one elove. castor l sugar. one. ounce rice. 2 ounces cut'- l, rants. one pint, milk. sugar to taste. [two whites of eggs, ground cinnw lmon. Method. --Pecl, cure. and slice the apples, and cook them till launder in a stewpnn with the sugar ,iand water. a clove, and the piece :(ll. cinnamon. Put the washed rice into the milk, and (wok till salt; lsweou-n to time and add it to the lupplvs. (“wk both together for inbuilt ten minutes, and let cool a (rtttle. Whisk stiffly th,, whim oi leggs. and incorporate lhnn with lthe ahore mixture. Lan-. stir in l the cloned curl-ants. llenmw the lcluu- and tsirumnu,n and pour the , mixtun, into a blit'wred (Ins-p sunf- 'fle ui‘ baking dish. lit-wrinkle- the Itop with a little gi'unnd 'issnarnsrn and custm' sugar, and lulu,- in a 'rr.4,ilrrate oven hr all-rut Monty inEnulos.. Serw WI") hurl ; (‘urrunt F'httiwks.-- Louis oltil0ys flour, one ounce sugar. one egg, one-half pint milk-and-water, two ounces curranta. Method. -- Mix .the flour with a pinch of salt and the sugar; bred: the egg into the punter, and add the milk by’de- Esme: until the batter is ot the oon- fiistency of thick cram“ Sprinkle in the cleaned teurranU last. have to stand one hour. Melt-p mull piece of lard in a. little frying-pan 14rf about lourqintha ',te,tif2y nmoking hot, piriraht snout latter} Jo 90va the bottom, fryrlightly,l turn had brown on the other side.} Continue this until all the but“! has been. med up. Drain each In}? incl: hon-{mm grease,~duat oven lith I little grated nutmeg, and mi: atrtjaticaV'h'ahishur, we} vet-5 hot, piled one on the other. [ Currant Tea Cakes.----',')---. tern pound flour, half ounce of yeast, one toaspoonful caster su- gar, 1 ounce butter, one and one- half gills milk, one egg, four ounces currents. Method.-Put the flour and a teaspoonful of salt into a ba- sin; cream the yeast and caster sugar until liquid. Melt the but- ter, add the milk, and make it te- pid; pour on to the yeast, and add the egg (well beaten). Stir into the flour, mix to a dough, sprinkle in the currants, and set to riée one hour. Divide into two parts. and put into two well-greased cake tins. Let the dough rise to the top of the tins. Bake for 20 minutes in a well-heated oven. Turn out of tins when halt baked, and brush over the tops with egg or milk and castur sugar mixed. Replace and finish baking. - [ spo tr n-uuw' :3 _ ' cup ,r,rit/c' ,nv half Spoon ml; 1.. ce-half i'.". spoon celery salt. few grains pep per. If possible, select chops frum the loin and bone and roll them. Make a stuffing of the other in- gredients, moistening with milk as is necessary; pan broil the chops lightly, browning the underside and seasoning them as they cook. Then cover with the trtuffing and bake for fifteen minutes in a hot oven, when the stufhng should be brown. Serve on toast, with a brown sauce. - Boiled Beef, Dntoh Msle.--lvipe three pounds of beef out from the rump, then place it in a kettle in which is some hot suet drippings, brownintrwell. Add a. medium sized onion cut in slices, a large carrot scraped and cut into slices an inch thick, 0. level tablespoon» ful of salt, and cover with boiling water. Place on the lid and sim- mer until the meat is tender. It may be left whole, but will require less time to cook tender it out into pieces about the size of small ap- ples. - Stuffed Lamb Chopn.---Twelve, lamb chops, one and our “111‘ -r m soft brwndcru' _ F a z- Apple Graham Ptsdding.--Place a layer of graham crackers in bottom of buttered pan; then add layer of pared, cored, and chopped sour ap- ples; continue with more crackers and apples until pan is two-thirds full. Beat one egg with one-fourth teaspoonful salt; add one pint of milk; turn over the apples and crackers and bake in moderate oven until puffy_tsnd brown. Chlokel 'Nrm"erB.--hrake arich Liking powder biscuit dough; mil out one-fourth inch thick; out into squares; place a, spoonful of minced chicken waned with herbs and onion, and moisten with cold gravy; fold dough over; brush with milk and bake about fifteen minutes. Serve with left over gravy. to which add the chopped gibleu. Orange "teee.---Thieken one pint of orange juice with one tableapoon- ful of cornstarch; cook until trans- Paley) gm}! sweeten to suit, And pour the nuce over. Look carefully over the furts to be used; place them in ' pan and cover with cold water; cook until tender; chop very fine and press through a coal-Io liCVO. To this pulp add the juice of one-half lemon and sugar if not 'miBeiently sweet. Miscellanea- Recipes. Rice Pudding with N Sane. - Pres, hot boiled rice into buttered cup}; then ,lirr out on I hot dish me‘ 'iiiiijiii] In Maxi} awn vaicun Wilma may be fvund a l'ullhdt‘d Mun-Unv- of driiwl mud. rtasesn0liiug an aid ftcuh'ti)twd lme-hivo" with a. small opening near the ground. It is the ovelf which is utilized by the iriiltslw for :meml culinary purposea. Earl .in the day the oven u that- c','tl'li,c. heated by tiiitldimt ' are in it, tstrduifttr' they)“: Brt bra-had down an the: pots: and III-soon toinin'g tho bod-labs cooked are' Placed imidp;m§ the wwjg cloattr up. .Ro hiiilielr gtteption in mid to, it until dinmyrtimtt.. _ . - The view is conï¬rmed by the tact that:' -ttitrvivhtters recognize a 'ew neVOe middle of Nmomher am. a periyd of 1letonati'ng firebails. Other similar instances have been ,,otsel-in i877~on Novemhe-r 20 and '23-Vro efmimlmted to have created air dutu.rlysttcew more than a, bun. droirirgeuratrrilr.it as a, loud pool oi thilhdar. u",' /v1rii--re-AC: - 1/ . _1, _ SIN-‘Ae Catn- .. “Do I look like a fool!†_ "Well, I wouldn't say that. But I will say that, you look like a man think: be 100.15 when the wind has Mown hi- hat " and 54:de bu srathered tii watch him chase it The exploding bodies, ot course. are not always seen. A violent air ohook,on the morning of November 19 oaped the shaking of windows and other effects in th vicinity of Sunninghill, England. but could not be coauuyetcd'with any earthquake, and this has led to the unw-lmion that it was dye to the explosion of a fireb1W high in the air. That such explosions axe gamer times audible is well known. W. M. Foote has just, recorded that a Urge meteorite, Jalliag new Holbrook, Ariz.,tt 6.80 pan., on July 19, 1912, broke up with a. loud noise that lasted half a minute or more, and scattered over a, stretch of threw miles of sandy desert. more than 14,000 ortho fragments-ot a wmf weight of nearly 500 pounds-lui ins been picked up and preael'vml. Tiolent Explosions of Meteorites Louder Than Thunder. The suggestion that there are air quakes, due to ample-Hone of mo worm): and quite independent vi earthquakes and volcanoes, come“ from no less an amhormy than W, F. Dunning, the British Hiram- mer. _ When tho window shade falls down and the spring roller unwind. with a whirr it may be easily put into oonunisision by slipping the fhst piece of metal at one end between the prongs of a kitchen fork and turning it until strengthened. f' . plow n summed who; .he (mace. width of pleat or hem r'equired fastened on the pres sure foot of the sowmg machine, just back of the needle, keeps the tuck even. ion: the street. t , For ink stains on the fingers try lemon and salt. Never sleep where the light from a window shines directly on the eyes. Another use for hrtt-over coffee in to turn it into a dessert, a mousse, gelatine or ice cream, the coffee be- ing the sole fuvoring, though some- times it is improved by adding a. tablesrpoonful of sherry or brandy. Never leave a metal spoon in a saucepan if you wish the contents to boil quickly. for the spoon is thr. means of carrying off a great deal of heat. Left-over poffeo in good strained and kept on the ice until lunch, it serves as iced coffee. This should have whipped .cream and sugar passed with it. Have iced tea glasses half full of shaved ice and pour the cold Coffee over it. Occasionally the whipped cream sweetened is mixed with the coffee, but tastes vary too decidedly to make this feasible when strangers are to be consulted. More prosaic, left-over coffee can be sealed in glass jars and be ready to dilute to give lace cur- tains. nets and narrow laces a. creamy tint after laundering. Never serve warmed-over coffee. It is one of the worst of warmed- overi and has little iuirtitication. If it must be done pour the coffee from the grounds, strain and set in a. tight glass jar in a cold place. When reheating tie a little fresh coffee; in.? lawn bag and brim, My a boil with it. TM; gives mot: of the fresh-made flavor. sugu, six tablespoons shortening, one-quarter teaspoon salt, one cup raisins, two cups flour, one-half ,ten‘spoo‘n ground cloves, one tea.- ppoon, cinnamon, uxmeighth any spam) nutmeg. one [8145an soda dissolved in one tableslum warm water. one cup sour apple uhucc. fi?,rutritg, sugar and qhorten- ing. ix 30 ther ftrutr, salt and spices 1nd I55 raisins. Dissolve coda in water, add to apple sauce Ind bent into creamed butter and sugar alternately with flour mix- ture. Bake in a moderate oven. A IRQI' l li ER h N " CA ['SE. o-operstire union» Baking. -. q ' '“ "UAWâ€! . I Left-Over Coffee. Home Hints. TORONTO a tNN V 100 Baumzmia's royal crown is per- haps the grimm 4n the world. It was mule. by oommaod of King Charles, from the “no! of a Turkish gun unnamed at Plan... On heat 10. tsitil..after this and the tsimple golden crown. without iewota or ormu ,t'rttm, made for the tuna. hand Imen coneoerated, King Charlie, took his, crown into his hands with the words: “I wume with pridv Fhi-s crown. wrought from a comma sprinkiad With tha blood of out hee. oey and enumerated by the church: J mavpt it u n symbol of the huh- pendtmcepnd power of Ruumuxia." cold If {all there during the mantel. ’30 the Ducks. with their adheixrnt ‘colmn'us are rmnm ed to der-per wa- term and carefully lid out in both prepared for dream. Here we a)?!» in: lie until their third year, when they are talum out of an: â€a iid undergo an upenratimu which leads to pant-1 {emulation Thu oonaiata, ohioi1.sr in introducing into them the mall pearls. or round pieces a more. which serve us the nuclei of the petsrU-to-be. The shells are then put, back into the we md left undiuturbed for at least four you! more. At the end of that time they are taken out, and it. is than found that, the malluac has covered the, iar served nucleus wihrmuty hymn; of more, or, in other words, has pm- ducod a pearl- Wide World Mitgts- use. a or give the same satisfaction to the ta slink. ; Black, Mixed and Green. Seeking packets Ill]. had so far pmgreased that the ox- perimentaU stage was a. thing of the put and the enterprise mm pm (‘ll A “munch! basis. A patent ior tho new method was obtain“! from the Government. and the whim» titan of the pearl oyster on an ox» tensive scale was undertarken. At the ord of 1893 the first small crop of pearls was harveated and plural upon the market. a fhwting shadow, and his friends laughed at him for "throwing his money into the sea." Be persiMrd in his work, however, “wing a†aorta of theories and changing his methods from time to time, until results were obtained which twomod f0 promise success. In 1896 things spots when the larva: oysters have beef: tou abundiunt. Soon mm; is found attached to t vodka ire [diced in r' not More than n fen Dr. -Mikimoio began his exped- manu some twecrty years "o. At tirtt it. seemed ythttoU Ijkt pufguing Iii-on ExperI-en of I 'hekgtst 1 nd lad-e Scholar. ( The pearl oyster “mm" m founded by Dr. Minnow. . {mom Japanese mutt and urine scholar. It. heodquartesm no on TMokujuma Island, in Ago Buy. Here on s little peninsula inâ€; out into the bay an the my buildings which comprise the ill-do tation, (Validating of . Watery for experimental work. meting dials, packing room., one“ and manager's maiden. In summer, particularly. it, is u. charming little place. The farm proper htsa' I total area of mine 29 nauticu} square miles. The pom] oyster found on these gmundgs belongs to the species M murtmui. which is very abundth in the bay, and funnd more or less in all parks of Japan. The oysters roaiumbie the swwiriwns "mud u, Coy!tm. humor.» for producing the frv.rci. plumb: in the world. It pon ENC gmmnous AROUND Every yaw, July and Ac A JA PANESE PEARL "FARM." ,0â€. Every one show. maids“ i iriiiiViuit if; none possess the {km of Rnunmniau G rim Crown. ll A ua “mud rut-her “we; man's cigar“ than his tts ated d " 1M $6 if!!! g the 5»in eir adhonn ' 1111 pr Maud Fax-5a. do trio-cud. cubical, in The m â€in. I. View, it more diauat than the all“ Ifrom the eun---tt0,tttt0,ttitt, all. on the -, 'tnate-t a! 100,000,000. It is thomdum a link colds: “I more no u in omttml but. i " bouuae the dim oi the - is only 6,600 tail-- and a! Moo. Martian day. have, damn “I came dtsruion as ours. but the id. of the planet being man imelioad on the plane of the orbit by about four degrees. the pour region, where the sun remains more than one day on or below the . are more exu-vnded, as is Ltttgt none. The inequality of days and nigh- at the same latitude in greater on Mars than Ir't1 the earth: at the " titude v! US (1110008 our charted, (by is eight hours and forty-throe min- utm and the Lngest him how- and t,hirty-eisht minutes; than no vn Mars. respectively, rven haunt nud fatty-six minutes and 'ierrmgtaMtgt hours and fifty eight minutea Long. elongated elli. instead of being almost . cinth'Re the out)“. There-fore there, in more ditteremo. between the seam bbth in round. of dumtion and of tom stun; and the northern 'L2','l,tl',e, lav- ored by . I'm! summer, u tumor than the southern hemisphere. The duration of the year on [an " almost dumble, being 6683/. deo intend of my days, a. on this planet. The 'i;Ctsi of um I. a "My wife don that our Year " Double Fania d In, Sear on Earth Illa. Send Pest C " St. Ant EELS LENGTH " DAYS OF Uni. The roll" bum and hand and fttttt lava: mun can!“ In on] Ink. «on " a dud. All cues from K to so eallora. Write far union. Mm nonunion ll bandit 'rtglgygy, u-mll" .. l - If“. “n _ A m Urn-kc: the 'ttttttttheat. “ch-gnu “lam! butter you ova mod. kii"'i'i7ites tth ther"Best Ever" y wife writes me from Lon- hat our daughter was present- court over there." said Mr. r. "This is I great honor and t me nearly a thousand dul- d . Favorite Dun. Not presented at court in this omv yen." ago." replied g. "rt colt me five dol- costa. and I don't we is ..Jx . great honor." Such a M tteh. St my for pinion! M or Don't Miss This P,