# & 4 ® Dainty Dishes. Fried Veal.â€"Take a cheap cut of veal and have it cut in thin slices. Take one slice of fat salt pork and cut into slices and fry until crisp. Put the veal in fat and fry until dark brown. Season and cover, put in oven or on back range for oneâ€"half nour or longer. Before covering put on a cupful of boiling water. Lamb â€" Stew â€" With Turnips.â€"Cut into pieces two pounds of shoulder of lamb, cover with boiling water and cook slowly one hour. Have ready one quart of tender turnips, cut into quarters. _ Season with teaspoonfuls of salt and saltspoonful of white pepâ€" per. Cook until turnips are tender. Move meat to plitter, surround with turnips and, after thickening gravy, put it over meat and turnips. f A nice steamed rice pudding is made as follows: One cup steam rice, one cup sealded milk, oneâ€"half tableâ€" There‘s a Subtle Charm EDJ td ie B106 This flavour is unique and never found in cheap, ordinary teas. Let us mail you a sample. Black, Mixed or Green. small turnips, four potatoes, bunch ; each of small carrots and small beets. If beef is very salty put it on to cook ; in cold water; otherwise cover with boiling water. Boi! five minutes, then , let simmer three or four hours, time depending on how long it takes meat to get tender. Quarter cabbage, afâ€" ter removing outside leaves and core. Pare turnip and cut into slices. Scrape carrots and wash beets. Cook beets in boiling water one hour. Drain, drop into cold water and remove skin. One hour before meat is done take enough water from meat kettle to cover cabbage, carrots, turnips in anâ€" other kettle and boil them oneâ€"half hour, then add potatoes and cook anâ€" other half hour. When everything is eooked dish meat, garnish with cabâ€" bage, carrots and turnips. Serve poâ€" tatoes and beets in separate dishes. By cooking dinner this way meat is not â€" flavored with vegetables, but vegetables are flavored with meat. If vegetables are not young, longer time will be reauired for cooking them. Wi ti Oceasionaliy a little ammonia im the water in which glass is washed will give good results. It cleanses the glass thoroughiy without injurâ€" ing it. f Sug To tint discolored lace curtains mix About the Household M about the delicious Havour of M Useful Hints. should not be eaten by those Ter from rheumatism. added to overâ€"salted soup, 1 remove the saltness. {1 +1 a lump prevent it h IY butte 1 the nut In l it fruit cookies one of a cup of butter, brown sugar, two n{uls of baking powâ€" onful of cinnamon, spoonful . of nutmeg ich of salt, oneâ€"half s chopped and a cup ts. First cream the ft h 1c meat ) hour uC wate egg, ne ar and king p« astly, a« Chill. r 1 iJ CC in3 custa er, place cover it cook in modâ€" urs; add vegeâ€" and cook until ibout one hour properly have a it around between tato. Beat ounr â€" o pounds of ich of carrots small pieces, onion. â€" Cover iltspoon s raisins. Sc dropped into rning sour. 1J E diquid _ in i, thickened flour mixed ni eggs _ puddit Bake in wder _ and d the raisâ€" I1, cut and one hour ured over liquid _ in psâ€"on the ske pastry tal then and set 1d corn starch with an equal quantity of the ordinary starch; boil and use in the same way as white starch. The secret of cleaning paint is first of all to brush all the dust off, and then to wash it, drying each little picce as one goes. Afterwards rinse and dry immediately. When a boot or shoe pinches wring a cloth out in very hot water, and place it over the El_ace while the boot is on the foot. This expands the leather and will give relief. When using velvet remember that it must never be pressed flat on a table with an iron. It should be held in the hands and the iron passed gently over it on the wrong side. A shabby handbroom, which will no longer go into crevices and corners, should have an inch or more of wood sawn off from the head, and it will then do good service once more. To keep bread fresh soak a small new sponge in cold water, place it in a saucer, ard stand the saucer in the breadpan. The bread will remain fresh and moist for several days. When scrubbing linoleum or the kitchen boards add a little paraffin to the water. It takes out dirt and grease, and gives linoleum a beautiful wloss. without the trouble of polishâ€" breadpan. The fresh and moist When serubbt 1t Cayenne pepper is excellent to rid cupboards of mice. The floor should be gone over carefully, and each hole stopped up with a picce of rag dipped in water and then in cayenne pepper. A carpet that has seen a fair amount of usage is sometimes discardâ€" ed on account of it showing wear in certain parts, but dyeing in another shade, which is not too difficult to be carried out at home, ought to make it still good for further wear. To cure squeaking shoes take a large plate and pour just enough oil on it to cover the bottom. Then stand the shoes, with their heels propped, so that the soles rest in the oil, Let them stand overnight, and in the morning wipe off any excess of oil there may be. Linen of any kind may be whitened by adding to the washing water a litâ€" tle pipeclay, dissolved in cold water. This method saves a good deal of labor, and cleanses the dirtiest linen thoroughly. To remove grass stains rub the marks well with lard before washing. With the aid of some good petrol any girl can become her own dry cleaner. Chiffon blouses, gloves, ribâ€" bons, and all kinds of vanities that soil easily, are quickly cleaned if imâ€" mersed in petrol, which, however, must be used with the utmost care in a room in which there is neither a light nor a fire, as it is very inflamâ€" mable. Do not open an umbrella to dry it, nor yet stand it on its ferrule. Either method is destructive, the former beâ€" cause the ribs will become warped, and neat, tight rolling impossible for a short time; and the second because the water collecting about the top will rot the covering. Leave the umbrella closed, but not rolled, and turn it handle downwards, then when the silk is perfectly dry rub it with a woollen cloth to restore the gloss. ‘Those Who Escaped Kurds Said to Succumb to Privations. "The Turks are gradually but effecâ€" tively exterminating the Armenian people," asserts the Dedeaghatch corâ€" respondent of the London Times. "The modus operandi is to send from each Armenion village day by day as many persons as a train can carry. When they arrive at Konish, or some adjacent station, they are turned out and an eccort furnished over the Taurus Mountains. "Once on the other side, they are supplied with enough food for a few days and told to continue their jourâ€" ney to the neighborhood of Mosul, as they will now be in perfect safety. The region is nothing but a desert, and before many hours marauding bands of Kurds or Bedouins rob and pillage these helpless men, women and children, so that those who are not actually slain die of hunger or thirst. Not one ever reaches the intended destination, fer should any one try to escape in anothor direction, Turkish shepherds have orders to shoot them at sight. "Many disiracted mothers throw their children into the Euphrates raâ€" ther than see them suffer. Some even _sell them for what they will bring beâ€" fore starting on their journey. "A widely known American misâ€" sionary who arrived at Constantinoâ€" ple the first week in September, deâ€" clared he saw as many as 15,000 Arâ€" menians collected around one station waiting to be sent on this journey from which none would ever return. "Chabikâ€"Arissar, which resisted disâ€" armament and deportation, is reportâ€" ed to have been bombarded, with the result that the entire population, inâ€" eluding the bishop, was killed." Opposites. Madgoâ€""So you consider ideal match?" % Marjorieâ€""Yes; he has money and she knows how to spend it." ARMENIANS PERSECUTED it an CHAPTER XX.â€"(Cont‘d). nestine, too, was strong, but this man 4 "I think," Davenant said, "that you ?5 a rock. What would happen if ‘are taking too much for granted. I ;ee carried out her nurpose, fooled, \do not know Scarlett Trent, and I graoyed him, led him perhaps to frankly admit that I am prejudiced |m'm. Some day her passion would , \against him and all his class. Yet I e'a‘p‘ dup ,bshe would tell him, they | ‘think that he deserves his chance, °V e face to face, injured |like any man. Go to him and ask him ;nan and taunting woman. Davenant face to face, how your father died, ï¬ad an ugly viston as he sat there. declare yourself, press for all parâ€" ~f saI\w th: man‘s eyes catch fire, the ticulars, seek even for corroboration 'Eu’c es 0 l:“’s face twitch; he saw of his word. Treat him if you will as , rnestine shrink back, white with an enemy, but as an honorable one!" | error,~and the man followed her. | She shook her head. ~ \_ "Cecill Aren‘t you well? you‘re . "The man," she said, "has all the looking positively ghastly!" ‘ plausibility of his class. He has He pulled himself togetherâ€"it had learned it in the money school, where been a very realistic little interlude. these things become an art. He beâ€" "Bad headache!" he said, smiling. lieves himself secureâ€"he is even now "By the by, I must go!" seeking for me. He is all preparefl’ "If ever you did such a thing as with his story. No, my way is best." work," she remarked, "I should say "I do not like -)v_c;ï¬i'"way,"' he said. It is not like you, Ernestine." "For the sake of those whom one loves," she said, "one will do much that one hates. When I think that but for this man my father might still have been alive, might have lived to know how much I loathed those who sent him into exileâ€"well, I feel then that there is nothing in the world I would not do to crush him!" He rose to his feetâ€"his fresh, raâ€" ther boyish face, was wrinkled with care. “I' shall live to be sorry, Erâ€" nestine," he said, "that I ever told you the truth about your father." Ed P 1. h re anix lc ts n PA actih onl e ce We l uis "oP relr s9 "If 1 had discovered it for myself," she said, "and, sooner or later, I should have discovered it, and had learned that you too had been in the conspiracy, I should never have sp‘:ken to you again as long as I livâ€" ed." "Then I must not regret it," he said, "only I hate the part you are going to play. I hate to think that 1 must stand by and watch, and say nothing." 1 "There is no reason," she said, "why you should watch it; why do you not go away for a time?" "I cannot," he answered sadly, "and you know why." She was impatient, but she looked at him for a moment with a gleam of sadness in her eyes. "It would be much better for you," she said, "if you would make up your mind to put that folly behind you.â€L He was silent for a few momentsâ€" | looking gloomily across at the girl,‘ loathing the thought that she, his ideal of all those things which most become a woman, Zraceful, handsome, perfectly bred, should ever be brought into contact at all with such a man as this one whose confidence she was planning to gain. No, he could not go away and leave her! He must be: at hand, must remain her friend. | _ "I wonder," he said, "couldn‘t we have one of our old evenings again? Listenâ€"" | _ "I would rather not," she interruptâ€" ‘ ed softly. "If you will persist in talking of forbidden subjects you must go â€" away. Be _ reasonable, Cecil." |\ _ He was silent for a moment. When ‘\he spoke again his tone was changed. [| "Very well," he said. "I will try to let things be as you wishâ€"for the Apresent. Now do you wish to hear some news?" \ â€" She nodded. | â€" "Of course." | _ "It‘s about Dickâ€"seems rather a | coincidence too. He was at the Cape, ‘you know, with a firm of surveyors, and he‘s been offered a post on the |\ Gold Coast." _ es h P EPm M P m en t P "It may be folly, but it is not the sort of folly one forgets." "You had better try then, Cecil," she said, "for it is quite hopeless. You know that. Be a man and leave off dwelling upon the impossible. I do not wish to marry, and I do not exâ€" pect to, but if ever I did, it would not be you!" "The offer came from the Bekwando Company!" "Is he going?" "Â¥es." She was full of eager interest.} "How extraordinary! He might be able to make some inquiries for me." | __"The Gold Coast! How odd! Anyâ€" where nearâ€"â€"" _ o e is $ He nodded. | "What there is to be discovered about Mr. Scarlett Trent he can find | out! But, Ernestine, I want you to | understand this! I have nothing! against the man, and although I disâ€"| like him heartily, I think it is madâ€" ness to associate him in any way with | your father‘s death." | "You do not know him. I do!" | "I have only told you my opinion," | he answered, "it is of no co'qseguence.l t cce l0 anstale cermanke ntriner . 5 \ 1 180000 . 4. CBP M issb cce Avactts. Aacl tont ts d I wnoe the ol io Soeny O ) Nt oee Son aever tmied do find there is anything shady in his past| e.':The erpltinew: asked. . h"‘ out there, depend upon it Dick will| at‘s a natural question enough, || frear of ié J | he admnttled. “\;,18"' first, I onlylï¬an}:ei * R |across a letter lonty wrote with the| fms:‘ehg;'s?gfeï¬â€˜;;d_“'}?:ry e};;::: 3‘;‘;‘; address of those lawyers a few days| bright, and there was a deep flush of gfi(:\'e aa!;gl’ Lie:(;) ndéz;n tah: %ï¬ngr:{oi color in her cheeks. But the Mn jist poomed, and oup sei that madi‘ was not to be deceived. He knew that t hat T i9. i s | these things were not for him. It ;ne eel that {)d] like to ’fwe a lift ‘ig ks e ona C t o o any one belonging to poor 0 :(‘)‘t“ ttl?ee ra;(:;\;mplue she welcomed and , Monty I could find. I‘ve a mind to go | "It is a splendid stroke of fortune," | °0 with the thing ’myself, and f":fl, she said. "You will write to Fred toâ€"| ou‘t‘%o}melv\:ev:ewt};)oetlhnx‘r;'yé)&nqz"lady *‘ day, won‘t you?. Don‘t prejudice hjm! "Cuthbert and Cuth{)er‘t.;’ | sither way.. Write an though your inâ€" | | «They are must resnectable people:? ® osity. 1t 38 cne said. "I know Mr. Cuthbert and RRRmmt mmet o mss ons e e ce terest were merely curiosity. It is the truth I want to get at, that is all. If the man is innocent I wish him no harmâ€"only I believe him p;uilty." There was a knock at the doorâ€" both turned round. Ernestine‘s trim little maidâ€"servant was announcing a visitor who followed close behind. "Mr. Scarlett Trent." CHAPTER XXI. Ernestine was a delightful hostess, she loved situations, and her social tact was illimitable. In a few minâ€" utes Trent was seated in a comfortâ€" able and solid chair with a little round table by his side, drinking tea and eating buttered scones, and if not alâ€" together at his ease very nearly so. Opposite him was Davenant, dying to escape yet constrained to be agreeâ€" able, and animated, too, with a keen, distasteful curiosity to watch Erâ€" nestine‘s methods. _ And Ernestine herself chatted all the time, diffused good fellowship and teaâ€"she made an atmosphere which had a nameless fasâ€" cination for the man who had come to middleage without knowing what a home meant. Davenant studied him and became thoughtful. He took note of the massive features, the iron jaw, the eyes as bright as steel, and his thoughtfuiness became anxiety. Erâ€" THE GOLDEN KEY Cr "‘The Adventures of ledgard." By the Author of "What He Cost Her." TORONTO "If ever you did such a thing as work," she remarked, "I should say that you had been doing too much. As it is, I suppose you have been sitâ€" ting up too late. Goodâ€"bye. I am so glad that you were here to meet Mr. Trent. Mr. Davenant is my cousin, you know," she continued, turning to her visitor, "and he is almost the only one of my family who has not cast me off utterly." Davenant made bis adieux with a heavy heart. He hated the hypocrisy with which he hoped for Scarlett Trent‘s better acqtuaintance and the latter‘s bluff acceptance of an invitaâ€" tion to look him up at his club. He walked out into the street cursing his mad offer to her and the whole busiâ€" ness. But Ernestine was very well satisfied. She led Trent to talk about Africa again, and he plunged into the subâ€" ject without reserve. He told her stories and experiences with a certain graphic and picturesque force which stamped him as the possessor of an imaginative power and command of words for which she would searcely have given him credit. She had the unusual gift of making the best of all those with whom she came in contact. Trent felt that he was interesting her, and gained confidence in hi_n}self. _ She changed her seat a little, There | | was no need for her to affect any inâ€"| ‘terest in what he was saying. She| listened to every word intently. ! | __"Monty," he said reflectingly, "was ‘a good old sort in a way, and I had| an idea, somehow, that his daughter | would turn out something like the| man himself, and at heart Monty was | all right. I didn‘t know who she was or her nameâ€"Monty was always precious close, but I had the address of a firm of lawyers who knew all about her. I called there the other day and saw an old chap who quesâ€" ; tioned me until I wasn‘t sure whether | !I was on my head or my heels, and,. ‘ after all, he told me to call again this | afternoon for her address. I told him, of course, that Monty died a pauper | and he‘d no share of our concession : _ to will away, but I‘d done so well that | I thought I‘d like to make over a trifle | |to herâ€"in fact, I‘d put away £10,000 | worth of Bekwando shares for her. 1| ‘called this afternoon, and do you| i know, Miss Wendermott, the young| lady declined to have anything to say | to meâ€"wouldn‘t let me know who‘ she was that I might have gone and / talked this over in a friendly way : ‘ with her. Didn‘t want money, didn‘t i want to hear about her fat!\_er!" . ! All the time she was making a soâ€" cial estimate of him. He was not by any means impossible. On the conâ€" trary there was no reason why he should not become a success. That he was interested in her was already obvious, but that had become her inâ€" tention. The task began to seem alâ€" }r:xost easy as she sat and listened to im. Then he gave her a start. Quietly and without any warning he changed the subject into one which was fraught with embarrassment for her. At his first words the color faded from her checks. n e o rsLr "I‘ve been pretty lucky since I got back. Things have gone my way a bit, and the only disappointment I‘ve had worth speaking of has been in connection with a matter right outâ€" side money. I‘ve been trying to find the daughter of that old partner of mineâ€"I told you about herâ€"and I can‘t." E. 5 d-:"YoH must have been disappointâ€" ed." "I‘ll admit it," he replied, "I was; I‘d come to think pretty well of Monty although he was a loose fish, and I‘d a st')'rt of fancy for seeing his daughâ€" ter. She took up a screen as though to shield the fire from her face. Would the man‘s eyes never cease questionâ€" ing herâ€"could it be that he suspectâ€" ed? Surc‘; that was impossible _ _ o o o Een n Et o e enR : on with the thing myself, and find out somehow who this young lady is!" "Who were the lawyers?" "Cuthbert and Cuthbert." "They are most respectable people," she said. "I know Mr. Cuthbert and their standing is very high. If Mr. Cuthbert told you that the young lady wished to remain unknown to you, I ;;!n (’luitc sure that you may believe im." "That‘s all right," Trent said, "but here‘s what puzzles me. The girl may be small enough and mean enough to decline to have anything to say to me because her father was a bad lot, and she doesn‘t want to be reminded of him, but for that very reason can you imagine her virtually refusing a large sum of money? I told old Cuthbert about it. There was £10,â€" 000 worth of shares waiting for her and no need for any fuss. Can you understand that?" _ C e "It seems very odd," she said. "Perâ€" haps the girl objects to being given money. It is a large sum to take as a present from a strang‘er."_ on "a. 200 164 achoinie lb acicse fln altict 44 ols .. 7 on "If she is that sort of girl," he said decidedly, "she would at least want to meet and talk with the man who saw the last of her father. No, there‘s something else in it, and I think that I ought to find her. Don‘t you?" She hesitated. "I‘m afraid I can‘t advise you," she said; "only if she has taken so much pains to remain unknown, I am not ‘sureâ€"-â€"? ‘ would reason I “I c “‘lnd t | which | Some « l it.“ | _ Evid the su it. â€" Sh §L. 5e 2 diials Te ut dit 0 es actvscans Timar tlltiatr i C ts uB _ "The time has passed quickly," she said, smiling upon him, so that his momentary discomfort passed away. "I have been very interested in the stories of your past, Mr. Trent, but do you know I am quite as much interestâ€" ed, more so even, in your future." \ "Tell me what you mean," he askâ€" sureâ€"I think that if 1 were you would assume that she has a &! reason for it." "I can see no good reason," he said, "and there is a mystery behind it which would be better cleared up. Some day I will tell you more about "You‘ll remember, I hope, Miss Wendermott," he said, "that this is the first afternoon call I‘ve ever rid. I‘ve no idea how long I ought to have stayed, but certainly not two hours." it-'i Evidently Ernestine was weary of the subject, for she suddenly changed it. She led him on to talk of other things. When at last he glanced at the clock he was horrified to see how long he had stayed. _ _ _ ake | She crossed the room _ and cnme'i | over close to his side, resting her arm ‘upon the mantelpiece. She was still wearing her _ walkingâ€"dress, prim and straight in its folds about her tall, graceful figure, and her hair, save for |\ the slight waviness about the foreâ€" head, was plainly dressed. There were ‘none of the cheap arts about her to which Trent had become accustomed in women who sought to attract. Yet, as she stood looking down at him, a faint smile, half humorous, half satiriâ€" cal, playing about the corners of her shapely mouth, he felt his heart beat faster than ever it had done in any African jungle. It was the nervous ‘and emotional side of the man to which she appealed. He felt unlike himself, undergoing a new phase of development. There was something stirring within him which he could not understand. "You have so much before you, so many possibilities. Thore is so much that you may gain, so much that you may miss." He looked puzzled. "I have a lot of money," he said. "That‘s all!l I haven‘t any friends nor any education worth speaking of. I don‘t see quite where the possiâ€" bilities come in." ‘ There is less song and laughter in |all the towns of the south, for the | Midi has found something in the war | that it is bound to take seriously. All | Perpignan salutes gravely when the | Belgian band, recruited from the reâ€" | fugees of Flanders, marches by playâ€" | ing the "Brabanconne," but the boisâ€" | terous cheers of other days are abâ€" | sent. Every day the Place de la Loge Native Village Thinks Commander| Has Deserted Them. ; Rivesaltes, France, the town that gave birth to the Commanderâ€"inâ€"Chief of the French armies, is pouting. The blinds of Joffre‘s house have been closed more than a year and the paâ€" tient woodpecker has had to pierce them in so many places they look as if a a machineâ€"gun had been operatâ€" jing there. The villagers no longer woint the place out to visitors. All brcause Joffre has not taken the time to wo home to receive the address of felicitations of his neighbors and the present bought for him by popular subscriptions. â€" The Generalâ€"inâ€"Chief is for the moment blacklisted and will have to exercise some of his finest strategy after the war to lift the penâ€" alty of his neglect. The illâ€"humor of Rivesaltes is agâ€" gravated by a total lack of "sous" and a big deficit in wine. The abâ€" sence of small change is attributed to the German raid on all forms of copâ€" per, and this, too, falls on Joffre, who ought to have been able to prevent it. For the shortage of the vintage JOFFRE‘S PEOPLE AGGRIEVED. ;)'f: 1‘.;1'5_ tï¬ere is the more logical reaâ€" son of mildew. 5) is crowded in front of the bulletin board of the Sporting Club, where is posted the latest news from the chamâ€" pion football players of France, with friends anxious to see what name has been added to the already long list of those who had fallen on the field of battle. Toulouse is quite as grave as Perâ€" pignan, though more busy making powder, cartridges and bombs. D LEmgml ue ut ce 20 ge Oc se | chodhblzntund Mss T Toulouse is interesting also for the | mystery that surrounds one of the old | brick mansions _ where Bachelierl carved coats of arms in 1535. With! fixed bayonets, night and day, the Territorials defend the entrance to this house. The rumor was current in the early fall last year that the Bank of France had transferred its gold reserves there. When the bank returned to Paris, however, the Terâ€" ritorials continued their guard. Their mission is still a mystery to the pubâ€" lic in general, but the initiated assert confidentially that Leonard de Vinci‘s "Monna Lisa," removed from the Louvre when danger threatened Paâ€" ris, is in safekeeping there in an inâ€" violable steel case. No Sentiment There. As a pleasantâ€"faced woman passed the corner, Jones touched his hat to her, and remarked feelingly to his companion: . * ":;Xl_\,my boy, I owe a great deal to that woman." "Your mother?" was the query. Ki.g Constantine, of Greece, "No, my landlady." (To be continued.) NOTORIOUS RUSSIAN | COUNTESS RELEASED PROFESSOR SAYS SHE IS REALLY A CRIMINAL Made a Murderer of One Man and Ruined Several. of Count Kamarowsky at Venice in 1907, who made a murderer of Dr. Nicholas Naumoff, son of the Governâ€" or of Orel, and brought M. Prilukoff, a respected Moscow lawyer, to a conâ€" vict‘s cell, has been pardoned and reâ€" leased. She is soon, it is said, to go to the front with the Russian army as a war nurse. The case of ts @Xtraor®Mi® criminal, in whose veins, it is said, flows the blood of the Borgias whose exploits she has imitated, has been subjected to close study by a number of alienists and gynecologists, among them being _ Redlich, Fenomenof, Rhein, and Bossi. And their concluâ€" sions indicate that this modern Circe, who spread ruin wherever she went, was not deliberately vicious, but merely the victim of her own disâ€" eased organism. ‘ml'tf,“w-a'; in 1907 that the world first | \, " 5/ cuact rovions 0 heard of the beautiful Countess Marie th? da.r ke_st vegions of mora[ degradâ€" Tarnowska. When Count Paul Kamâ€" au.on it is possible for sbI@NNG o arowsky, a Russian nobleman, was raise ?}c t‘;mh&f lm[;e“.‘ T:l ‘:2' :ll:oui}‘g!: fatally shot at Venice, her name was | SPDH o o o ecnerst sder, i ghoâ€" the last word he uttered, and it was tergst of the genora‘ rea Ct+ '? **! found that he was betrothed to her, ultlmawly. c:;:stl':."u R 5 n:'mï¬'calnt 4 hed Shsured Ine fife to ther drane. [OSEMENM in Oie DEtOCE MR iere‘@* fit for the sum of $100,000,. Soon her | tion of pathologica! science. complicity in his death was suspectâ€"| ed, and after a long and sensational | O‘Leary Is a Joker, ‘Too. trial, .S‘.‘e was sentenced to eisht! There is a new story in circulation years‘ imprisonment in the penitenâ€" | about Michael O‘Leary, the Irish V.C. tiary at Trani. Her accomplice, Priâ€" | During his visit to London a compaâ€" lukoff, was condemned to ten years‘ | triot grected him enthusiastically penal servitude, and Nicholas Naumâ€"| and begged a single button from his off, who fired the fatal shot, was libâ€" | coat. O‘Leary, without a smile, anâ€" erated, l_)ecause the two years‘ inâ€" '\ swoered: "I‘ll d:) better than thut'. A !ca_rceratlon which had preceded his |single button is too little for you. ;?nal was considered â€"sufficient punâ€"| Just go across the street there and Imhmen': for this dupe of a dangerous | tell the man inside that J sent you ‘adventuress. and he will give you an entire set." Nat a Oriminal. \‘The place was a recruiting office. Not a Criminal, ‘ But the woman who caused thisj and other crimes has not been utterly forgotten during her stay in an Italâ€" ian prison. Professor Luigi M. Bossi, a distinguished alienist and gynecoloâ€" gist associated with the University of Genoa, was called as an expert for the defence at the trial in Genoa. He believed that the Countess Tarnowska was not a criminal, but an â€" invalid, and he was indignant at the punishâ€" ment inflicted upon her. With the purpose of getting before the world the true story of this most tragic woman, he persuaded Anne Vivanti Chartres, the novelist to visit her in prison and take down from her own ilips the amazing narrative of her life. This Mrs. Chartres has done, and the L result is the book "Marie Tarnowska," which is soon to be published. The woman who caused tl_mg death So it is that one of the most mysâ€" terious crimes of modern times is at last revealed in all its startling deâ€" tails. And so, also, the life story of a beautiful woman who wrought more harm than any other of her generation is now told, and told in a way which may give credence to the theory that this woman‘s crimes and those of many another woman have their source in physical weakness rather than moral depravity. The history of the crime which brought to her the imprisonment from | which she has just been released | may be briefly told as follows: The Countess was betrothed to Count Kamarowsky, a wealthy _ Russian nobleman, who was devoted to her. She, however, was in love with one| The Syrup of a Hiyn (£°ed + EDWARDSBURG ;‘ VJJ emowrn _ {! lA B mR ARD of this extraordinary \\ @ R N SY RUDPD Of course, ‘""Crown Brand"‘ is your favorite Table Syrup. Of course, you enjoy its delicious, appetizing flavor with Bread, Pancakes and Hot Biscuits, But what about "Crown Brand‘" in the kitchen ? Do you use for Gingerbread, Cookies, Cakes, Pies and Sweet Sauces for all kinds of Puddings ? Do you always use it for Candyâ€"making? Try it in all these ways. You‘ll find "Crown Brand"" Corn _ Syrup handy, convenient, econgâ€" mical, dependable, good. "LILY WHITE" is )'ust what its name impliesâ€"a clear corn syrupâ€"more delicate in flavor than "Crown Brand", that is equally good for the table and for candyâ€"making, ASK YOUR GROCERâ€"â€"IN 2, 5, 10 AND 20 PounD Ting. The Canada Starch Co. Limited, _ prosperous MOPU"" """""* wich T for her had ruined him. With Priluâ€" koff she plotted Kamarowsky‘s death, and with Prilukoff she intended to share the fortune of Kamarowsky, which he had willed to her, and his life insurance, which was made out in her favor. sxur vaw ABEREREACO OO C 0C were unwilling to be principals in the murder. So she persuaded Nicholas Naumoff, a young man who was desâ€" perately in love with her, to kill Kamarowsky as a means to gain her affection. He obeyed her, and with the results of his obedience the world is familiar. It seems, from this bare recital, that no adequate defence of the us m rerrinl : renenpe oo TE 1 nossib‘e. But It seems, from this bare recitai, that no adequate defence of the Countess Tarnowska is possible. But Professor Bossi thinks otherwise. Here are his views, as he utters them in the address to Mrs, Chartres, which he prefaces her book: ' as " en I°C WVAREOME MBR EERRERCOR CCC "Not only as the medical expert for the defence at the trial of the Counâ€" toss Tarnowska, but as one who has made it his life work to investigate the relation in women between crimâ€" inal impulse and morhid physical conâ€" astniG AgaPr un da. eV LN LE studdstralitcatstinalbactovied FOF dition, I cannot but feel the keenest interest in this book, in which you set forth the problem of wide human interest presented by the case of the prisoner in Trani, "I believe that eventually it will promote the realization that even in the darkest regions of moral degradâ€" ation it is possible for science to raise the torch of hope. Thus, though appealing for the moment to the inâ€" terest of the general reader, it will ultimately constitute a significant document in the history of the evoluâ€" tion of pathological science." The death is announced of Lieutenâ€" ant Colonel Locarde, a distinguished French artillery expert. His death is said to have been due to overwork. During the present war he introduced several new forms of high explosive projectiles for close trench fighting. His is also the credit for the invenâ€" tion of the hydroâ€"pneumatic brake, which is the most novel and important feature of the famous French 75â€"mm. gun. But the Countess Apt Retort. A+ a reception in Paris a traveller, who was a strong "antiâ€"Semite," was talking to Rothschild on the benuties of the Island of Tahiti, and sarcastiâ€" cally remarked: "There are neither hogs nor Jews there!" "Indeed!" _ retorted Rothschild. "Then you and I should go there toâ€" gether. We should be great curiâ€" osities." Dobsonâ€"What does Blifkin remind you of? Hobsonâ€"Well, every time I meet Blifkin he reminds me of a little debt I‘ve owed him for over a year, Typical wheat farms in Australia extend from 600 to 1,000 acres, and are usually worked singleâ€"handed by the farmer and his family, lavorâ€"savâ€" ing machinery being used in every possible direction. Artillery Expert Dies. fortune of AamaArUWTE * mad willed to her, and his nce, which was made out or. Bossi‘s Defence. Pinumkaecs cmd her lover Aesserg c EHT C s Pm i) Moscow lawyer until love A Lesasn AnuNll o d wats Girls ho« d of all one sees and liv pressed, the da the life measur blood p of heal at this c ened and Williams sands of have & early de of uneg weak ne supply every strength. have pr and ove whose h« nie Duffi time« trou thir W "It giv vou wh pro suft or i m« li SC w