taviespoontul of butter. Tms is well mixed with a fork. Then the egg. if any is used, is added and powdered sugar. If there is no egg, we moisten the sauce with cream, as the butter alone will not take up sufficient sugar to make the right quantity. An excelâ€" lent sauce can be made with the butâ€" tablespoonful of mixed with a fo «ny is used, is sugar. If there When eggs up and divide the erust and a premum we gether, making A good cobbler is made with a tablespoonful of butter and lard mixâ€" ed, an egg, a heaping tablespoonful of sugar, a pinch of salt, and from one to two cups of flour, using a teaâ€" spoonfu! of good baking powder to eack cup of flour. Mix the shortening and sugar, add the egg and beat well. Put in flour, powder and salt and add sufficient sweet milk or cold water to muke a batter the consistency of cake batter. Have the fruit ready in a deep pan. Lay the batter in spoonâ€" fuls over the fruit. Cover the pan and cook as directed. On a gas stove it is advisable to use an asbestos mat under the pan or to turn the flame so there is no danger of burning. This may also be baked in the oven. Turn the top of the crust over to find out when it is cooked through. Turn the cobbler out on a dish, putting the erust on bottom and piling the fruiti over. Serve with hard or boiled sauce. I in A good « tablespoonft ed, an egg, of sugar, a one to two spoonful! of eachk cupn of A cobbler is ordinarily cooked over the fire, the crust being baked by the steam from the juice of the fruit. It is placed over the uncooked sugared fruit. If dry fruits are used it is necâ€" essary to add water. Berries and juicy plums do not need anything but sugar. Rhubarb is juicy enough in itself. But care must always be exâ€" ercised to keep the fruit from burnâ€" ing to the bottom of the pan while} the crust is cooking. A moderate heat and & cover over the pan eontaininc‘ the cobbler will insure proper cookâ€" ing. From ten to twentyâ€"five minuteel is required, according to the kind of fruit used. | Ne o L c Sop y i Do you know txo twelve imperial Boaberen | embjems of the Chinese" Here they v ‘are: Sun, moon, stars, mountains, "..“' .’m' ‘m dragons, â€" pheasants, _ altarâ€"vessels, 4C +# W."' PART II. |how heavily the point counted, and 66 | This declaration had produced a replied promptly, Think? I know it!! ’ sensation. _ They had alH questioned: . Donavan‘s eyes still earnestly and < him pcrticu'lar{y on the point. dumbly a?eded for a moment; but Mightn‘t he be mistaken?. The police Cochran‘s face retained an expression ‘inspector had seemed fairly to beg Of perfect convietion. With a stifled ‘him to be mistakenâ€"not because the little sigh Donavan muttered helpâ€" ce en omm |injjscty anpproved of highway TODâ€" *SSIY; "I GON‘t KNOW what I could do. mm mm m hery and homicide, or reaily wished a , Cochran read surrender in that and ‘criminal to escape the law, but beâ€" laid a benevolent hand on the young |eause he foresaw that if this stubborn man‘s knee, reassuring him: "Why, 9 young man persisted in not being misâ€"| Simplest thing in the world, Gene. Woman 5 S here taken about the robber‘s identity Don‘t worry, now. Nothing‘s going to there was going to be no end of happen to you. § 1 trowble. For Handy Andy Hatch was| The powerful and experienced hand lf a celebrity of a sort, and like Uncle On Donavan‘s knee seemed to uphold bnlew Frank, although in a humbler way, a and guide him, as a mighty swimmer remmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmemmmmmmmmzemmmmmmmn:.. ... ommmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm | power in politics. sustains a frightened novice in the The Homely Cobbler. | ter, sugar and cream, adding a pinch _ The parallel lines in Cochran‘s fore. Water, while Uncle Frank briefly e;(é When you want a dessert in a hurry, of Salt and flavoring with vanilia, or head deepened a bit, with a further PMIN@] how simple the d oncluded in one which everyone can eat and enjoy any preferred flavor. The sauce must Grawing ‘L_08‘91‘h'fl‘ of the eyeb!mws like ben. evolent “WO"‘“fl'Ym.ce :ddin';c soberly : without a thought of indigestion, be beaten till it is very smooth and & man with & he&d‘“"he-_ His heav}"-uon my soul, I bel'ie’ve you was mb: remember the homely cobbler. A creamy. If a boiled sauce is desired,| g’g‘%‘r’gu‘;’ï¬il}‘rï¬; f:))::adu:\:th a sort of taken, and it wasn‘t Andy at all!" cobbler, as nearly everybody knows,| use either milk or water for its foun-f“ ne satd vvry distinct] oC mani Donavan smiled slightly and wanly, is fruit with a raised crust and a hard dation. Make a thickening with beatâ€"| "You" s ,, |as over a {uke at a funeral. Sunny or Loiled sauce. It can be as econâ€" Cn egg, and flour or cornstarch. Use) ,,, f"â€:nd“?."m'g't Gelwi.b_ It wasn‘t Gus Whelpley drove him back to the omical as biscuit dough, or as rich as a Pinch of salt and sugar to taste, and ; r}‘,)’. inCys gol fit AHD!: & i“tfle flat, with some cheerful converâ€" good cake batter. A happy medium flavor with vanillia or lemon. When ,,; It‘s just a case of mistaken idenâ€" sation of a general nature which Donâ€" 1 cal atter. 4 Pn tity," Cochran said. _ "You couldn‘t avan seemed scarcely to hear between the two makes the best cobâ€" the cobbler is to be eaten cold, the j j 1 | F ; n fls 4 o L S e o reul | hard o erable. but it 15 "aVR Semn him more‘n a secondâ€"exâ€"| While beaming Gus Whelpley was bler. 1t can be made of fresh fruit, hard sauce is preferable, but It 19 cited, you knowâ€"all confusion. You driving Eugene Donavan home Cochâ€" apples, berries, or rhubarb, or of fried more palatable if eaten hot. ‘made a mistake." 'rsn was telephoning, briefly and or canned fruit when fresh is not obâ€"| Cobbler is much more easily digestâ€"| Confused, Donavan looked astonishâ€" CrYPtically. to an acquaintance. About tainable The best cobbler in the &d than pie. Properly made, it is & ed, lips apart. * * * Then it wheeled the time %onavan was getting into a world, in my estimation, is made from delicious dessert. Dried fruits must back into his mindâ€"that second or so sleepless bed Hatch walked coolly into a mixture of fresh raspberries and | be soaked and stewed a little before in the front office when he had looked | 8 police station and gave himself up, loganberries. As many localities do using them for cobbler. square into the man‘s face at a dj,.lave_mng he had just learned that the not have loganberries, it may be smcs tance of only a few feet. Under t‘h‘ipo}lce were looking for him, denying «dded. that the rasnberti i with| Music Forms Character |shock of Uncle Frank‘s positive asâ€" that he had been concerned in the Pn in apnpipnannnyebas * * | sertion the gripping teeth had relaxed. | holdâ€"up, saying he had a perfect alibi. strawherries or with red currant juice: No other art appeals to s0 M&ANY Now they set again. Cochran saw | Assistant State‘s Attorney Mangler is almost as .zocd. Apricuts,. fresh, people as music. From time imme-:mat in the young HIGH‘s broad, un_'attended the inquest upon young canned or dried, make splendid cobâ€" morial, among savage as well as civilâ€" handsome face as Donavan repliedee"nY Mitchell in behalf of the public bler. Plums make fine cobbler. An ized people, music has been a uniâ€" humbly but doggedly: ’pro'ecwtm\ It was clear to him, as to apple cobbler made of tart juicy versal language understood alike ®y, ‘"Well, I could only say, on the wi,t_’evel"y'body else, that ‘t.he charge apples, with a good hard sauce or| all races. The music of the spheres is m’f,‘"‘d' that I‘m sure it Wsig;_:nn::tlejla.mh res?fd' enhsr;l;eyt!:xé)ont_t C eaten wilth sweet cream, is a dish fit more than a figure of speech. Every| "*AD,. i aenin 4 M iCA Oe i x K n e o :.* | _ Cochran and Mangler entered the Coroner‘s for a king. | country and rase has its own music,| ... ""a °C mmwï¬â€œtmï¬}ï¬â€˜f.ï¬ï¬â€˜mm in ga evnical «tate of mind. a waole one the puddit The sauce 9B West Adsiaidge 8t, Torento | waterâ€"lilies &e bottle for One Dollar; bottles for Five Dollars. Mailed direct to customers. Or from your nearest Drugatst ROP Y gu C ,, AekQ e connth RHEUMATIC sUFFERBERS 1me are scarce we beat one t, putting half of it into the other half into the es when eg@gs are a‘ dispense with it altoâ€" an economical cobbler very plentiful we use he sauce and another is juicy enough in From the cradle to the grave life hslm";.ead?umw::etgh%: :;:: “}c.f:l;g nust always be e’x-lone long symphony. As infants the },, him and he‘d go out and collect it. e fruit from burnâ€", crooning of lullabies hushes us to Suppose he got a couple of roughnecks _ of the pan Whâ€@! sleep. School songs express the joys to go with him, and one of ‘em shot .A moderate heat of youth. We march to the marriage young Mitchell. Understand? It might the pan containing ceremony to the strains of music, and have happened, you see, without Andy ts foundation a | 5. w e enock of UNC PTank S vive dsâ€" I Music Forms Character. | sertion the gripping teeth ;:’dlrelaxed. |__ No other art appeals to so many) Now they set again. Cochran saw ‘ people as music. From time imme-:fl.gt in the young man‘s broad, unâ€" ‘ morial, among savage as well as civilâ€" handsome face as Donavan replied ized people, music has been a uniâ€" humbly but doggedly: $ | versal language understood alike ®y, ‘"Well, I could only say, on the witâ€" | all races. The music of the spheres isfm'f,‘"d- that I‘m sure it was more than a figure of speech. Everyi ' IcounAtry and racse has its own music.!‘ou‘?.c;,‘h‘m;:;l p:mmm?sltbm , and it forms the common l'ang'uage ) stubbornness which carried conviction. each particular race. It is the bond With a flare of exasperation he reâ€" _of nationhood. When the music of torted: "You‘re wrong! You‘re getâ€" _ the nation dies out or is forgotten ting me into a hell of a mess! It can‘t | the race disintegrates and the nation be Hatch! dissolves. When music passes out of| "Listen, Gene, Andy Hatch ain‘t a |\ the home the family scatters. |bad fellow. He didn‘t mean any great A Handkerchief Case for a Man. A girl always has more difficulty planning birthday and Christmas reâ€" membrances for her father and older brothers than for the other members of the family. A simple and inexâ€" pensive little gift is a handkerchief case for a man‘s bureau drawer, with the name of the owner worked on it in the giver‘s handwriting. Hem one end of a piece of white linen teon by twenty inches in size, and fold it forward to make a pocket seven inches deep. Seam the edges of the pocket on the wrong side. Fold over the part that remains for a flap, and run a narrow hem round the three edges of the flap and a row of hemâ€" stitching. A short distance above the bottom of the flap write the name in pencil and then work the letters, using the easy overâ€"andâ€"over stitch in any color that you wish. All day I did the little things, The little things that do not show; I brought the kindling for the fire, I set the candles in a row, I filled a bowl with marigolds â€"The shallow bowl you love the €° PMITUII CI SZMD ANTO SDUpeL UV MERDWECY CNTC| «6 $ + + + flavor with vanilia or lemon. When ,;, l}.'sc,)‘;e}:, 4 ca:;dof rnlysmkcnuï¬eq; o y, ran A ou couldn‘ the cobbler is to be eaten cold, t'he‘have seen him more‘n a secondâ€"exâ€" hard sauce is preferable, but it i9 cited, you knowâ€"aill confusion. You more palatable if eaten hot. ‘made a mistake." |__Cobbler is much more easily digestâ€"| Confused, Donavan looked astonishâ€" ‘ed than pie. Properly made, it is &‘ ed, lips apart. * * * Then it wheeled | delicious dessert. Dried fruits must back into his mindâ€"that second or so | be soaked and stewed a little before in the fmnz 2{2& wrl;x’enfhe h:g }oo:;-d ‘usi . square i man‘s face & using them for cobbler 'm off U{‘le lfl f;w rffefn Untger ile | 5~ . t y | =l fo nole Frank‘s itive asâ€" I Music Forms Character. a sertion the gripping teeth ;:’dlrelax al |__ No other art appeals to so many) Now they set again. Cochran saw ‘ people as music. From time imme-:t}nn in the young man‘s broad, unâ€" ‘ morial, among savage as well as civilâ€" handsome face as Donavan replied ized people, music has been a uniâ€" humbly but doggedly: : 7 And made the house a pleasant place Where weariness might take its Music is a potent factor in the formation of character. It enviches the mind, stimulates the imagination, purifies the soul, expands the affecâ€" tions, softens the heartaches, and leads to a higher and nobler concepâ€" tion of life and its surrouncings. Noâ€" thing can wake the soul‘s strong inâ€" stinct of another world like music. The more people love music, study it and listen to it, the purer their hearts and minds will be. The hours on. My eager feet Could notï¬p pace with my desire, So much to do, so little time! I would not let my body tire. Yet when the coming of the night Blotted the garden from my sight, And on the narrow graveled walks Between the guarding flower stalks I heard your step, I was not through With services 1 meant for you! You came into the quiet room That glowed enchanted with the bloom Of yellow flame. I e«aw your face INumined by the fireâ€"lit space Slowly grow etill and comforted. "It‘s good to be at home," you said. â€"Blanche Bane Kuder. are laid to rest with a requiem. All the emotions of life, fear, anger, joy, sorrow and love find their best exâ€" pression in music. He is rich indeed who has learned to get happiness out of music, how to appreciate the sentiâ€" ment and poetry of song and to underâ€" stand the grandeur of the great masterpieces of music. Minard‘s Liniment for Diphtheria. waterâ€"lilies, flames of fire, rice, axes ind classic characters. Reward. cleucrciernim wamatvage nealmeninec ts of, "Listen, Gene, Andy Hatch ain‘t a| |bad fellow. He didn‘t mean any great | is,harm. Suppose he got a fool idea in , s his head that something was coming to him and he‘d go out and collect it.‘ ** Suppose he got a couple of roughnecks | Vs to co with him and ana af ‘am «ahat In his exasperation Cochran disclosâ€" ed the potentate heavily burdened ‘with cares of state, greatly regretting \that some thoughtless subjects had got themseives into an awful mess, but obliged by his position to deal with the affair in a practica‘, statesâ€" manly manner; obliged to "carry on" and to keep intact the machinery by which carrying on was possible. "If anybody thinks this job‘s a snap, let him try it," the boss added aggrievâ€" ediy. "Oh, public your grandmother!" Cochran replied impatienly. "Get all that tommyrot out of your head, son. If the government of this town was left to the public, there wouldn‘t be any government inside of a year, beâ€" cause the public don‘t give a damn about it. Who told you to draw $200 a month when you couldn‘t find any other job?" * Certainly Donavan did owe the keep of himself and family these last seven months to the boss‘s benevolent interâ€" est, and he was not the man to deny an obligation. It popped into his head that if Cochran‘s powerful hand should be withdrawn now the family would probably be set out on the sideâ€" Donavan swallowed and asked, in helpless candor, "Why don‘t you leave it to the law and the courts?" And by way of vague reply to his relative‘s last remark he added, "It‘s the public‘s business." boss repeated. "You was excited. You made a mistake. When you get a good look at Handy Andy Hatch you‘ll see he wasn‘t the man." That sounded easy, the way Cochran t it, and Donavan was aware that m would be powerfully protected in correcting his "mistake." But there was that stubbornness in him; he swallowed and replied unhappily: Donavan, drawing a hand across his brow, could only mutter. "I don‘t see how you could be held responsible in a case like this." Then he blurted in amazement: "Why, this is murder, Uncle Frank!" Cochran then took the novice someâ€" what farther inside the works: "Andy knows what‘s coming to him as well as anybody does. He‘s done gocd work all along. If aman de‘ivers the goods he‘s entitled to claim his pay. You see, son, you‘re credited to me. I put you in. Whatever you do I‘m held responsible for." In another sudden flare of inritation he added. "Andy‘s got plenty of friends. I don‘t want ‘em taking a crack, at me with a sawedâ€"off shotgun! I‘m responsible for you." oo eeeait en o e on es en e ie Ee t “W.hy, 1 couldn‘t do it, Uncle Frank." Cochran, with another sharp touch of exasperation, retorted: "Why thne hell couldn‘t you? You can talk, can‘t you? That‘s all you got to do." Miserable yourz; Donavan, pressed down to suffccation by the steady mass of Cochran‘s insistence, had turned ra‘s by that time. He appealâ€" ed to the boss with pathetic earnestâ€" ness: "D>+ you really think. Uncle Frank, tâ€"st your life woull be in danger?" Whatever the ally thought on This confidence was much the farâ€" thest Donavan had ever been taken inside the works; by far the most intimate communication that had yet passed between uncle and nephew. intending it. He ain‘t a bad fellowâ€" maybe got a fool idea somebody owed him some money and he‘d better go out and collect it. See?" "You saw him only a The Boss‘s Bounty that may have actuâ€" subject, he saw second," the BY WILL PAYNE. red a replied promptly, "Think? I know it!" tioned | . Donavan‘s eyes still earnestly and point. | dumbly q;pemled for a moment; but nolice Cochran‘s face retained an expression \ _ No rent or taxes have to be paid ‘for land in Lord Howe Island, in the ‘ South Pacific; it has an area of only | five miles, and a ponulation of 120. Hatch was a gangling, middleâ€"aged man with a bony, smoothâ€"shaven face and a neutral, sandy sallow comâ€" plexion. He sat crosslegged in what might have been called the bar. His lawyer, astute Abe Truman, sat near him, but not next to him. The chair between Hatch and Truman was ocâ€" cupied by a man whom Donavan "ad never seen before, but whom the Assistant State‘s Attorney knew to be a cousin of Hatch. Sitting side by side, the cousins did not look strikingâ€" ly alike, yet both were gangling, middleâ€"aged, _ with _ smoothâ€"shaven, bony, sallow faces. Seen separately, one might be mistaken for the other. Seeing the cousin, Mangler had no doubt what the trick was going to be, nor that the cousin could prove inâ€" dubitably that he was elsewhere when !t‘he holdâ€"up and murder_ cccurred. After the first look Donavan carefully kept his eyes away from that pair. i (To be continued.) Thke carrying power of the eagle is not more than ten or twelve pounds. An English profiteer, who had done the usual thingâ€"bought a country esâ€" tate and a town houseâ€"felt that there was still something needed to comâ€" plete his money‘s worth. Other peoâ€" ple had ancestry; he must get some. On the advice of a friend he engaged a man to undertake the necessary reâ€" searches. A forest of pines and firs which took 200 years to grow may be deâ€" stroyed in half as many minutes by a forest fire. Each package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts, dresses, waists, coats, sweaters, stockings, hangings, draperies, everyâ€" thing like new. Buy "Diamond Dyes" â€"no other kindâ€"â€"then perfect home dyeing is guaranteed even if you have never dyed before. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or run. In due time the investigator came to report and laid a sealed packet on the table. Without opening the packet the profiteer asked how much his fee was. "I want one thousand pounds," the man replied, "to say nothing." Men act from impulse and find a reason afterwards, while women act upon impulse and do not troub‘e about the reason. Dye Skirt, Dress or Faded Draperies in Diamond Dyes Donavan looked ill when he entered the musty and crowded room. _ The usual healthful color of his face had gone off to a sickly hue and there were dark circles under his eyes. He took one quick look at the sight which had inspired Mangler‘s derision and then swiftly looked upâ€"never again turning his eyes in that direction until he was or the witness stand. Hatch had calmly iiven himself up, which suggested to the cynical proseâ€" cutor that he was confident of going free. Mangler wondered what the trick was going to be this time; but presâ€" ently he perceived what it was going to be, and the satirical little smile beneath his mustache broadened for an instant. While beaming Gus Whelpley was driving Eugene Donavan home Cochâ€" ran was telephoning, briefly and cryptically. to an acquaintance. About the time Donavan was getting into a sleepless bed Hatch walked coolly into & police station and gave himself up, averring he had just learned that the police were looking for him, denying that he had been concerned in the holdâ€"up, saying he had a perfect alibi. Assistant State‘s Attorney Mangler attended the inquest upon young Benny Mitchell in behalf of the public prosecuton. It was clear to him, as to everybody else, that the charge against Hatch rested entirely upon the paymaster‘s positive identification, and Mangler entered the Coroner‘s court in a cynical state of mind, a satirical little smile lurking beneath his dark, thick and curly mustache. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Hush Money Inglish profiteer, w r‘uet(.):‘iierl The Irish Sea is nowhere more than ?:}'k £090%â€"| r10 feet deep. d _ 2s . spot, n omm n ene | â€" Aftftmsdtl -7------n---n}.-“I,n--....-‘n.. _-"-»‘f'. n BEATTIES . e a ;gsi‘,;( ad done UUH 4 B v F 4A Â¥ N ntry es I 6 f o) Lilspeciar| | to comâ€" j er peo tndinfdediedidMes uce AU CY II A some,. . ukn ‘s Emt e y 0 ® Tiy se gig In the tropics, seaâ€"bathers are proâ€" tected from dangerous fishes by a framework of nets round their bathing places. Russian leather has besome so exâ€" pensive that it is now little used for bookbinding. Almost impossible to value is the property in Gormany claimed by the exâ€"Kaiser; it includes fiftyâ€"three palâ€" aces, mansions and estates in the neighborhood of Berlin. o i _ The street cars in Tokyo all contain Seliï¬ctglxgflï¬:’ltg Bt_xmper a comprehensive map of the city, so o ngine. | well made that it is very easy to find Indigrant pedestrians may now °Xâ€"| your way without asking questions. perience a «light sctisfaction in 2ut0 | Canadian cities, please copy. matically "killing‘ the engine of a moâ€" tor car which has rudely given them | y A m » h unsought â€" impetus wheyn they were| Qu“’o‘? is one of ?.he “Orld; great crossing the street; that is, providing| centres‘ in the manufacture of paper the car has been fitted with the latest| 4n3 P®Pâ€" auiomatic bumper. This innovation | ; trrman consists of an jron latticework gate,|_ Show how strong you are t‘)y not or fender, which is fastened behind a | "Otiting how weak the other fellow is. bumper rod and which is released | wa__â€" when pressure is exerted against the | â€" Never (ry to kill time; time is bound rod. The pressure is furnished by the ‘to kill you in the long run. unsuspecting foot traveler. The im-!w pact of his body against the humpm~i f Cl ‘. p rod causes the ferder to drop, keeping | S TAM'MER I'NG + the body away from the wheels, while | $am$ dhanvengs o Ar e ym# at the same time an auxiliary ignition | } :'““::.';l‘ï¬;"’.'t‘},flï¬â€™;‘;flï¬ï¬,ï¬,‘,‘(’f;3;:“‘,‘,’; L‘ switch is opened, which immediately | nnwraluseech. Graduate pupits everyâ€" I stops thelengine. | |[} where. Freemdvice and literature, * Minard‘s Liniment for Colds, etc. |' Little Sunâ€"Maids "Betweenâ€"Meal" MRA This Genuine Columbia Grafonola, $95 Run the Ball â€"â€"bring home the bacon, collar the blue vase, carry the message to Garcia, etc. Comes from fruit sugar in pracâ€" tically predigested formâ€"levulose, the scientists call itâ€"=so it goes to work almost immediately. Rich in foodâ€" iron also. ‘Try these little raisins when you‘re hungry, lazy, tired or faint. See how they pick you up and set you on your One hundred and fortyâ€"five calâ€" ories of energizing nutriment in every little fiveâ€"cent red box that you see. ETTLE Raisins, full of energy and iron, will put the pep into you that makes winning plays. Use vim like it in your business, too. Help You Raisins 5¢ Everywhere Had Your Iron Today? Quebec is one of the world‘s great centres in the manufacture of paper and pulp. UE postman or express man will T bring Parker service right to your home. Whatever you sendâ€"whethr it be suits, coats, dresses, lace curtains, tapestry draperies, etc., ete.â€"will be beavtifully cleaned by the Parker process and speedily reâ€" aBi. turned. Cleaning Sloan‘s Linimentâ€"Aills pain! We pay carriage one way on all orders. Parker‘s Dye Works, Limited Write for full particulars. Cleaners and Dyers 791 Yonge St. Toronto | Other recommendations include se cluded spots in HMyde Park, Kensing: ton Gardens, St. Jame . Park, Rogents Park and Richmond Park, and it is hoped by establishing such retreats to induce the return of various species of wild binds to London. One of the problems in connection with euch ve treats is the menace of cats and squir rels, and while measures will be taken to exterminate the squirrels nearby residents will be expected to assist by keeping their cats at home. That a small gas tractor can be readily changed into an eficient light roller for road work was demonstrated recently in a very simple manner Fach of the traction wheels was reâ€" placed by a goifâ€"course wheel with ex tension rims that had been filled with cement inside the rim, so as to make its outer face smooth, and like a stone roller with a tread of 20 inches. The cement brought the weight of the tracâ€" tor up to 5.000 pounds. "Make no mistake; if you have versaries, even enemics, do not }« worry you. On the controry, it | good thing; they can help your gress. As for the ingratitule of 11 you have helped, don‘t be surpri It is the order of things on this pla "Live in the mind and the h« Contemplate nature; try to un stand it in its immensity, from th« finitely great to the infinitely sm feel its eternal rebmth oborflow everywhere with inexhaustible fec: ityâ€"all this and you will neve; bored, you will never find. time h: ing, you will feel as young at eigh at forty with all your faculties. "And when you go io sleep last night your last hour will evening of a beautiful day. "But the will to romain youn; 6f our best arms > ainst as death One mile of railway takes 270 tom of rails. King George bas granted permission for the use of part of the spacious garâ€" dens of Buckingham Palace as a wild bird sanctuary, says a London daâ€" patch. _ The committee recently apâ€" pointed by Lord Crawford to consider the establishment of bird sanctuaries in the royal parks suggested among other places the grounds of Bucking ham Palace and with the King‘s per mission sites are already established there for bird retreats. "To live intellecvually doubly. "A imind always occupied and th« love of human progress are, it seen to me," says this savant, "the best co ditions for desirable long life, becans« it is neither ine:t nor ingetive nor :: expense to any one, but, on the c« trary, useful to all. Take hamanity pid but perfectibl smoothly. Be p} Do not become a1 is worse for the that in the long ranges itself, "A simple and tranguil life; rather a vegetarian diet; neither alcohol no: tobacco nor intoxication of any kind ; fresh air, oxygen, calmness, apprecia tion of beauty, thinking. reading and working agreeably; eight hours of sleep, eight hours of exercise, varying according to temperamentâ€"walking riding, eating â€"this, believes Flanm marian, is the secret of longevity. Each organ has its function. Ns ture hates reaction,. Use all your : ulties normally," he advises. Flammarion combines in his own philosophy that of Plato, Aristotle and Epicurus. Says this sevant: "A man of fifty or sixty should posâ€" sess bis full virility. Livingâ€"and livâ€" ing to be old and impotent is not livâ€" ing. The object is not to grow old ; to keep one‘s physical and mental faculâ€" ties. "There are people who believe we are on earth in order to make money. I knew a multiâ€"millionaire who passed all his time counting his coupons. He is dead. He was an unfortunate idiot. He bored himsel? more thean he hored those about him. Choose Congenial Work. "If your daily bread is assured, be satisfied. Work in that line which inâ€" terests you for your personal pseasure Enjoy all your faculties, Do not imag ine tbhat a time for retirement ap proaches. Gather about yourself af fectionate, young, gay surroundings "The thing to prolong is the vital creative force 0‘ the brain and the vigor of the body, both of which supâ€" port the ‘vigueur de Pesprit.‘ "Every human being should be inâ€" terested in something. HMe should not act like a brute; live in order to eat, but eat in order to live." Flammarion might have pointed to Edison and naturally bis own life in adding: "Intensive intellectual life does not fatigue. That which fatigues is ambition. pride, vanity, envy, desire for honors and richasâ€"climbing. Emaill Tractor Converted Into a Road Roller. Palace Gerden as Bird Sanctuary. A PHILOSOPHY OF |[ Be philosophicalâ€"a me angry, because not r the health. Remer long run everything wh it i to 17 n# #( ow the Lo way pan pe MR W i(