_ â€"‘ JV“- “V\V across the mountains. But some were missing, andonly their graves remained to tell the story of their wrongs. . This trip was made in June and early in August, the whole Carleton family went to London, where Jim- mie improved so fast that few would have recognized the pale thin invalid of Andersonville notoritey m the active. red-checked, saucy- eyed 310nm; man. who became the iife of the Pequot House. and for whom the gay belles practiced their most bewimhiru; coqnetriea. As far as was possibke, “ill and Tom found and generously reward- ed those who had' so kindly befriend- ed them in their perilous journey I-‘AM ‘ L A â€"- ‘ Six months had passed since Char.ie De Vere died. Paul Haverill, Will Mather. and Tom Carleton had been together on a pilgrimage to Paul's old neighborhood, where the peOple, wi-er grown, we;camed b..ck their old friend and neighbor, and strove in various ways to atone for all which had been cruel and harsh in their former deal- 3 ing toward him. The war had left; them destitute, so far as negroes and l money were concerned; but such 385 they had they freefy offered Paul, en- 1 treating him to stay in their' midst and rebuild the homestead, whose blackened ruins bore testi- mony to what men’s passions will lead them to do when roused and uncon- trolled. But Paul said no ; hecould never again live where there was so much to remind him of the past. A little way out of Nashviile was a beautiful dwelling-house, which, with a few acres of highly cultivated land, was offered for sale. (Maud had spoken of the place when she was in the city, and had said: “I should like to live there." And Tom had remembered it ; and when he had found it for sale, he suggested to Mr. Haverill that they buy it as a winter residence for . Maud. And so what little property . Pan: Haverill had left was invested in Fair Oaks. as the place wascall- ed; and Tom gave orders that the house should be refurnished and ready for himself and bride as early asthe first of November. At Maude’s requeSt they buried him by the side of Isaac Simms, and Capt. Carleton ordered a handsome monu- ment, on which the names of both the boys were cut, Isaac Simms, who died for the North, and Charlie De Vere, who, if need be, would have given his life for the South, each holding en- tirely ditferent political sentiments, but bOth holding the same living faith which made for them an entrance to the world where all is perfect peace, and where we who now see through a glass darkly shall then see face to face, and know why these things are Maude and Annie, Paul Haverill and Tom Carleton watched with him through the night, and just as the beautiful Easter morning broke, and the sunlight fell upon the Rockland hiils, the boy who to the last had re- mained true to the Southern cause, lay dead among the people who had been his foes. "I shall be there tomorrow,†he said, "and then perhaps I shall know why all this has been done, and if we were so wrong.†swayed in the April wind, and talked of the terrible deed, and the wax which was ended, and the world to which soi‘many thousands had gone during the long four years of Strife and btoodshed. vâ€" â€"vâ€" â€"-vâ€"-v So the bells tolled pa, and the pub- lic buildings 'were drap- d in mourn- ing, and the windows of Charlie's room were festooned with black. and he watched the sombre drapery as it â€No, let them toll on. It is proper they should mourn tor him. The South would do the same if it was our President who had been murdered." “It would make me a UnioniSt, if I believed my people capable of that; but they are not,â€"it cannot be," Charlie kept repeating to himself, while the great drops of sweat stood upon his white forehead, and his pulse and heart heat so rapidly, gthat Maude summoned the attending. physician, Who shook his head doubtfully-at the great change for the worse in his patient. “I had hoped at leaSt to keep him till the warm weather, 'but, I am afraid those bells will be the death of him,†he said, as he saw how Charâ€" lie shivered and moaned with each sound of the tolling bells. "Perhaps they would stop if you were to ask them, and tell them why,†Annie suggested to Maude-â€z hut Char- lie, ’who heard it, exclaimed, ' "No, no, no: that. We did net do that," Charlie cried, with a look of horror in his biue eyes when he heard the dreadful story, and that the Southern leaders were suspcetod of :omplicity in the murder. CHAPTER XXXIX.â€"Continued. Vith tears and kisses Maude bent over her brother, who after that conâ€" fession seemed so much brighter and more cheerful, that hope sometimes 'hi'ï¬pered to Maude that he would live. (Annie was almost constantly with him now. He felt better and stronger with her, he said, and death was not so terrible. So, just as she had soothed, and comforted, and nursâ€" ed many a poor fellow from Ander- conville, Annie comforted and nursed Charlie De Vere. until that dreadful Saturday when the telegraphic wires brought up from the South the ap- palling news that our President was (halfâ€"murdered by the assassin’s can . 1 was seldom many minutes aw 3? tho fair. blue-eyed woman who were a}! lost onJimmie Oh, so it is. Yes, ma; and dishonest to de the right to go So it would, think 0! that. Yes, ma; an: me. Anxious Motherâ€"W'hy don't you drive that bad boy away from your playground? ‘ Good Little Boyâ€"It wouldn’t be right. . \Vouldn’t it? - No, ma. You see that playground is public property. ‘ Oh, so it is. dishmest .to deprive any othér {flyâ€"3: the right to go there. - So it would, my angel. I didn’t think of that. as the rain and the drippings from the umbrella as well fell on one shoulder. Seeing another friend with- out an umbrella he invited him in out off the. wet. saying: "There is plenty of room for three." By this new ar- rangement he now had complete pro. teetion, as he had to move the um- brella to the position he carried it when he was using it alone, and a friend on either side protected him from the rain while receiving the drip- pings from the umbrella.â€"Woman’s Home Companion. A man with an umbrella was walk- ing in the rain; an umbrellaless friend joined him and shared the protecrion. The. umbrella owner noticed that now he was getting only half proteCtion, “a“ v1» uuum, six months old, and where Rose and WM often go, while each summer Tom Carleton comes up from Fair Oaks with his beautiful Maude, the heroine of the Cumberland Mountains. HAD MORE THAN ONE REASON Mrs. Carleton, senior, divides her time between her three children, Tom. Jimmie and Rose, but her home proper is with Annie. in Boston,where there is now a little "Lulu Graham,†.blll (baker was astir very early one bright, October morning, his face indicating that some important event was pending in which he was to act a part. It was a double wedding at St. Luae‘s, and Maud and Annie 'were the brides. There was a great crowd to witness the ceremony, and Annies "boys†whom she had nursed at Annapolis, were the first to offer their congratumtions to Mrs. James Carleton. who looked so fair and pure and lovely, while Maude, whose beauty was of a more brilliant order seemed to sparkle and flash as she bent her stately head in response to the greet- ings given to her. Upon Bill, who had turned hack- driver, devolved the honor of taking} the bridal party to and from thel church, and his horses were covered ; with the Federal flag, while conspicu-I ous in his button-hoie was a small one made of white silk and presented to! him by a girl whom he called "Em," and who blushed every time she heard , Bill‘s vo.ce ordering the crowd to stand 1' back and his horses to “show their] oats," as he drove from the church! with the newly-married people. Their destination was Nashville, where, in Maudes beautiful home,. Jimmie and Annie passed a few de-i lightful weeks, and then returned to! Boston to the old Carleton house on“ Beacon Street, which had been fitted up for their reception. I I horses, and, patronized by Rose, who took her at enze under her protection, she made a few pleasant acquain- tances. and ever after talked confi- dently of her "summer at the sea- side.†She did not care to go again. however. "She and John were not exactly like peOple born to high life,†she said. and so she settled quietly down in her pretty home, and made, as the Widow Simms said, “quite a decent woman, considerin’ that; she was one of them Rug-319,393,†‘ She soon grew tried of Saratoga. She was too much alone in that great crowd, and when she heard that the Carietons were at New London her to b‘aratoga, with an English- nurse for little Ike, she began to re- azize that something had happened to her which brought Rose Mather’s envied styie of living within her mean-s. at first. and Susan did not believe it either. But when John. who. with ail his good sense, was a little given to Show, or, as his mother expressed it. "to making a fool of himself,†brought her a set of diamonds, hand- somer than Rose Mather's, and bought her a new carriage, and took Bm Baker .Wa-S A well-timed investment in oil SIOCk,~â€"a lucky turn of the Wheel,â€" an'l Captain John Simms awoke, one morning, with one hundred thous- ands dollars! He did not believe it Tom and. Maude were there, too,to- gether with Rose Mather and ‘Vill. and Susan Sims and John. ithe girls had learned, was awidOW, }and of whom they at first had no glears. But they changed their minds «then day after day saw the “hand- some Carleton at her side, and night after night found him walking with her aiong the road, or sitting on the rocks and watching the tide comein just as he had done years ago, when bath were younger than they were now. They lived those days over again. and, in their perfecr happiness almost forgot the sorrow and pain which had come to them bOth since they first looked out upon the waters of New London bay. UMBRELLA DIPLOMACY. The End. it would be selfish â€vuwbu concealed theflears, surrou flexible beard forming a ki: plemented for ornament or defence. 1 of this Strange capture was to be at leas 5,000 pound f c Pl\nnan In A ‘ 1- . Beneath them were v -â€"â€"-â€"’J’ â€"v~ aud- LlUtLI-l LBLLE in the South of France, perceived their nets uncommonly heavy, and, bringing them aboard, found a very it a “monk.†Beneath these mem- branes were aperatures through wh'ch water was drawn in and ejected with great velocity. The rough, rasping skin resembled that of a sea-dog or seal. This marine wonder measured 22 feet in length and 16 feet round the thickest part of the body. The head alone was 4 feet long, with a snout projeCting more than a foot from the month, which had the form of naa two joints, and the feet resembled donkey's hoofs. Each jaw had five rows of very sharp, white teeth. :feet to the tip of the tail, in its I dried state, but had been much longer lwhen alive. It was caught in a net Twith mackerel, between Oxford and Southwold, on the Suffolk Coast, and, being dragged ashore, was knocked down with a boat hook On the net being opened, it suddenly sprang up and flew over 50 yards. The man who , first seized it had several of his fin- i gers bitten off, and, the wounds mor- tifying, he died. It then fastened on the arm of the man who afterward ex- hibited it, and‘ lacerated the limb so badly that the muscles shrank and the - hand and fingers became distorted. The wound would not heal and was thought incurable. By some natura- lists this ferocious creature was call- ed a “sea dragon." In 1759 some fishermen engaged in trawling for tunny, n0t far from Cette in the South of France, perceived their nets uncommonly heavy, and, bringing them aboard, found a very strange fish with five large mem- branes in the shape of a cowl between head and shoulders; hence they named it 2 .‘mnm‘- ’, “-â€" ; {MONSTERS OF THE DEEP. mugs, pzunters have given to dragons and other fabulous creatures support- ing coats-of-arms The body was cov- ered with impenetrable scales, the legs had two joints, and the feet resembled donkey's hoofs. Each jaw had five rows 0f verv shxarn wh7+a hmn‘ I Nearly 200 years later, another won- : derful aquatic animal was caught, and shown about the country by a fisher- man it had injured. In this instance, the head and tail resembled those of an alligator, and there were two large fins which could be used bath to swim and fly. These fins, when examined by the naturalist, were too dry to be extended; but they appeared, by the folds, to be Shaped somewhat like the wings, painters have given to dragons and other fabulous creatures sunnnrf- A century ago, a bone of this re- markable fish was still preserved at Little Nash, in St. John's parish, but it had become considerably reduced in size, through long exposure to the air. 3 Which Are ï¬ne]! at the Opening of f the Sea Serpent Season-A Gm: Fish ; Which Flew. s l' .- lowing will be found of much interest. ; ȤIt is a recital of well established; - ' facts concerning sea monsters discov- z ered or captured in ancient times. The :stories are unquestionably true. ; A NOISY ONE. In 1574 when Elizabeth was Queen, Ia monstrous fish, according to Kil- burne and Basted, was stranded on the sands at a spot somewhere near Broadstairs, which has since borne the name of Fishness. .There the mon- a‘ster died next day for the want of i water, amidst hideous roars that could gbe heard over a mile around. i This extraordinary denizen of the ocean measured no less than 66 teet in length, 14 feet in thickness from fback to belly. which lay uppermost, and the same distance across the tail, while a breadth of 12 feet separated the eyes. Some of the ribs were 14 feet long, the tongue was 15 feet, and, whereas one man managed to creep into a nostril, three were able to stand erect in the monster’s mouth, which opened 12 feet wide. The liver, when removed, made two cartloads, and a six-horse team proved unequal to the effort of drawing one of the eyes; along. THEY TERRIFIED AND ASTONISHED OUR ANCESTORS. A LARGE CRESCENT ed water, and has in consequence the teeming Paradnx Explained by a German Sclentlst. There is considerable danger, accord- ing to a German medical . 'which recently discussed the effect of drinking chemically pure water -â€"_that is, water containing,r no dissolved; salts or gases. The action of pure. distilled [water withdraws salts from the tissues, ‘which swell up by imbibition, and is a dangerous protoplasmic poison. W swallowed ' is proved. Re be worse still. W ture purer than ordinar ter. and hpnno +1.... .. _ ..-. "W a New“. Coizkney our, and was rescued from the loafers about the Euston terminus by one of the drivers of the London and Northwestern Company. “Snatch†always accompanied his master on the footplate of the engine, and was with him in a collision, when the latter was killed. "Snatch" was eventually run over in the London streets by a cab. But he lives in a sympathetic picture by Harrison \Vier. Another well known railway dog was ‘ Jack,†who was quite an institu-; tion at the Central Station, Derby. He was a very active, smooth-coated ter- rier, and lived in the mrters’ room. He. could distinguish a Midland from a London Northwestern or a North Staffordshire train, and discriminate between the servants of the three companies. He was fond of taking trips by train but is iaid to have al- read an inscription on a silver medal attached to his collarâ€""traveling agent for the orphans of railway men who are killed on duty. . My office is at No. 65 Colebroke row, London, where subscriptions will be thankfully re- ".eived and duiy acknowledged.‘ This canine collector got no less than a thousand pounds Sterling, during his charitable career. He is to be seen to-day at Brighton Stationâ€"preserv- edmunder _a glass case- “Tim,†one of the number, at Padding- ton on Monday. There are still sev- eral collecting dogs on the various lines about the country, though the more famous are no more. One of the best known of these dead collec- tors was ‘ Helpâ€â€"a collie trained‘ by a guard on the Brighton line. "I am ‘Help,’ the railway dog of Englandâ€â€"j They ('ollcct Aims nor she Widows and orphans of Employee. Railway dogsâ€"those, that is to say, Lhaf serve as collecting agents for the var: ous charitiesâ€"are likely to receive additional attention from travelers, after her majesty’s kindly notice of At each shoulder was‘a strong, mus- ,cular fin, and hard by, toward the breast, an aperture through which one could thrust hand and arm up into the mouth. Between these fins two short paws, proceeding from the breast, had somewhat the appearance of the fore places, and entirely devoid of scales. half of human feet, the five toes on each of them joined together, looking like nails. Near the tail were two large fins, one on the back, the 0th- er under the belly. The skin was a dark-brown color, spotted darker in places and entirely devoid of scales. Two long horns, hard and elastic, and without the ring joints of those of the lobster, proceeded from the neck. On each side of the back were two sharp-edged protuberances, and between each eye and the breast ap- peared a cavity, somewhat like. the in- side of a human ear, but which did not penetrate to the interior. “(by the fish was not discovered does not appear, but we are told that a man thrust his hand and arm into the mouth up to his shoulder, encoun- tering nothing on the way, so the his- torical naturalist concludes that heart, stomach and bowels must have lain in a very small compass near the tail, where the body was exceedingly small. something like the straight bars of a chimney grate, placed an inch apart. Through these bones one could see in- to a great cavity, extending under the skin toward the breast, and distended by longitudinal ribs plain to the touch on the outside. Right and left inside the body, foot from the jaws, were THREE CROSS RIBS, ings rnsernbling nostrils,- and under} these openings, abou't nine inches be-§ low the jaw, could be seen two large knobs, from which several short teeth protruded. A little further down was another knob armed with similar teeth. ' THE ENGLISH RAILWAY DOGS. POISON IN PURE WATER. 3 the practical impo;- bjzct to medicine. Water Mrs. Youn'love utinc, ' you have beegn treatirizog me just 35d I were a child. \Vhy do you Mr. Youngloveâ€"I don’t 1‘90 must have been thinking 0f 50m}: by else. There surely is no reason 1 I should treat you that W8!- York, was on a visitation 111 Mary’s, Nottingham, he ordered5 Of his attendants to bring him a! {Obacco and semi» liquor into the tâ€"E‘)’ for his refreshment after the t1Elle of confirmnion, but the re would not allow it to be done- was reported recently that at a P Emery meeting in Scatland an Journmznt was made to the CW yard, Where all the members 118r “P their pipes and had a smoke be1 resuming their deliberations. lis more largely indulged in thank generally supposed. The custom†Dutch, that people being most invet- erate smokers and rarely seen without their Pipe. They even indulge in“ In their churches, and spittoonï¬m 11‘<‘«41t19r11t1,v provided for the better W Commodation of those members 0““ congregation who cannot deny them.“ selves the enjoyment of a smoke 3â€; Similar practice exists in 58‘9â€â€ ‘churches in South America. At ““1: _ time smoking was carried to 813613 as: excess‘in Seville Cathedral that I!“ Chapter applied to the Pope for W1 8: to repress the abuse. Urban VUL yielding â€to their wish, issued abilL which was promulgated on Jamar!“ :GAZ- In Wales stLng in church W“ indulged in as late as 18.50. In 09° church the communion table stoodm the aisle, and the farmers were in th habit of putting their hats 119°†1? and when the sermon began 11195 m their pipes and smoked, but Wuhan! any idea Of irreverence. {Fiï¬ a1: stated that when the ArChb‘spo?m. York W as Some Instances In which the maze: Has Been Azzlhorlzvd. Although not exactly a popularcub tom; smoking in churches has been and sis, sciatica, the after effems oil:I grippe, headache, dizziness, erysipelni: scrofula, etc. They are alsoaspecifm for the troubles peculiar to the lamb" sysmm, building anew the bloodfl restoring the glow of health to and sallow cheeks. Protect yo against imitations by insisting thlt every box bears the full name Dr. W liams’ Pink Pills for Palq pe0ple. your dealer does not have, them will be sent, post paid. at 50 cents box or six boxes for 82.50. by add: ing the Dr. Williams' Medicine" Brockville, Ont. £- NOW SHE JUST HATES HIM“ Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills areaspeciic for diseases arising from an impovero ished condition of the blood or shut tered nerves such as St. V'itus'da lgcomotor ataxia, rheumatism. mef d man at Clifford, er and P07“ 6.3!: t relates the fotlokiï¬ï¬ Eur; 00‘ “11' some 0 effected in his familv b 02d ‘ l l- W.lliams’ Pink Pills.:t..° ‘ sunny curl ’_ : years ago my little daughth cad blows. t, 'a child of ten 3' arsmas a: ' dflring eyes ‘ n :acute rheumatism. It “tacked “058’ t l, l bad ease: for over amour; little teeth tha Y confined to her bed, and d I‘OWS’ 0 of the time was utterlv hlr belong :3 mg unable to turn in bed 0e k5 3 move at all without helg’) r roand 0News 3 not even bold anything In ‘ is odor Sb: 3 All power or u5e of her limbser ;‘ dimpleth mg l tirelv gone and the pain she he do uE _ was earful. Bv ton M 1'! buttons . lafter a month or so shim at ._ ' a little Strength, and after in“? -‘ ’proved enough '0 be ta owhtlf‘. . l and even W' ' b-mo‘ : Ifashion bymt-ans of a su um" _ ,now sne was seized wi - ; ' ; ‘lment than the rheumagsuatgï¬e' ‘ ;. who bel‘eves .vous system gave . . " lcompletely shattered. She’shmk. flentlgg all the time, " orning *5 ll flown in‘trying to walk. In at ... ° every n1 ’ing to drink from a cup ‘ abc 1again and said 5 6 had 8:, v Y gathered hat t dance 1n. the Worst form. Shep. by assertmg t ‘ [11119 medtcme preSt ribed and ion. as much difference t e instrucuons of her h '~ m at ‘ some time, but " p .mmx-J " “’9 hOt wa fit. She wasted aan a 4 skeleton and we gave her up for .t long or Ceylon- About. this time I readt ' account of a great cure of new a“. {effected by Dr. “illiams’ Pink m der of the famc and resolxed to try them. How toun , . d that sis boxes and the little girl he â€want insiste usmg them. The good effectsof , iled treshly for we! .first if): were quite appam - land w en four boxes were ‘ tan {she seemed so much imp-’3: '“ect’ on the ms . I that the pills were discontinue l She kept on improving and after ale: Weeks was as well as ever. Wem told that the cure would not lastma it was only some powerful ingredlem in the pills which was deceivingu . and that after a time the child will pon the dried leave he worste thanf ever. All this has herb. Even more I proved alse, or now nearly 1th ‘ years she has had unbroken god sloveltly practice}: health, nerves as strong as theym W 9m than 11118 made, and stands school work and illing the kettle iron household‘work as well as amattm y up the bubble a1 person. 1.“ e havedno douotaooutllr. .. in tea-tasting kn \R illiams Link 11.1.5 restoring to us ' - a at has never bailed enough to scald ‘ .i‘ht, and. supported our little girl. whom we looked upon as doomed to an early grave." From the MR- WM. McK AY, CIA-pm TELLS OF ms DAUGHTER? SMOKING IN CHURCHES. . nut: “'35 Utterly} at all without help. ~en hold anything i: weI 01‘ use Of her 1i] gone and the Dain c :ngth, and after 31:11“ ugh to be [3k I valked arounde: :3“ «i Ins/ans of a su . o as sewed With 9:;qu N the rheuma ' ‘m "0"n _tlsm Her†Enterpri‘ and sips with apparent ; She raised a laugh in a little gathered about the tea friends discerned in their cups . water at various times: . edy, ought befofl Emw 08. the drowsy di esvive din. Li; ’ m to 3033.011; Do no? maie the XL. 5.) . dnnklng .it so hot as 10 J ‘ that line th the dellcate membranes . L. :1 Them 6 alimentary.v organs. 5““ Ugo“ 1' bathlng inflï¬ned ews (-nlfl hmé. “$121111 38 can be eomfortabl} 3: wt; “flan mat? scaldmg hot the 'lpp'lâ€" Ll "ids. the end for whlch 11 13 1" “} pot Mere] bPYOï¬d suspicion, coo 'â€"-â€" . a team m'thetagnbou-all the water drunk : oi ZlouL 113- Every morning set a ' Lemma 001d unclupot Over the fire full of? pour g My boil’ cover and bring to ai .L’Mter . Keep this up for fortvi “led “£09011! the water thus steri-i “the bottles or glass jars, stop} in 3‘ â€titan ""311 clean raw 0tf ! ' ' "1 mm. 17001†and set i th c -on, i ple 1.34 ‘ . â€Dior n e cellar or . famlly V ‘ “8.6 when Wa . ‘ - 1 m mama to take 223, $213,313 Want‘ï¬â€™r babies 01' very youngi tween 4% 36380118, but especially of. $03; . the The. prolonged cook- h‘ardleSt of “malevol- “Wm Keep one kettle, a large one. "11°: hOt water upon the range for lMiseholcl eXigencies, dish-washxng, scalding out close vessels, . .. hot water bags, should. such be .ed, drawing the pain out Of ms“ and sprains, soaning the feet ““08 0f. headache or sudden congesâ€" M “3:11.38 80m eyes and so many get Incidental needs that the i318 1° may regarded as a fault}? Ma and house-wife‘s friend. lamâ€"saw «Wm ~ ‘ ““118 mint: will make a tastelesf m if Poured upon leaves or ground: ~'"8hells," and, if drunk by ltsglf, 18 lbs: nauseating than stimulatmg to 'Htomach. ï¬lwfyf keep one kettle. a large one, WV†v.â€" aknew the'water bibber to be in right; and supported her position. . founder of the famous Delmonico ‘ 'nsisted that water should] oiled freshly for each brew of tea. f y,- judge of really excellent tea} detect, on the instant, when it has ‘ made from water just boiled and n the kettle has been dragged to front from the hpb where it has nered all the afternoon brought ‘ in to the bubble, and then pour- npon the dried leaves of the Chi- uherb. Even more objectionable is slovenly practice more prevalent m' stairs than mistresses suspect ï¬ling the kettle from the boiler to ry up the bubble and steam. A tin. tea-tasting knows when the or has never boiled. It may be enough to scald the fingers on 013 it Splashes. yet be unfit for tea “8 01' any other nice culinary 1 It loses ffeshnessâ€"our hot-wa- drinker would say strengthâ€"when .ted Sluggishly. \Varmed over What is. a singing kettle that pub- dan hour or so ago, and has quietly M “my a certain quamiLy of â€r and life until moved anew from lgath to_ repeat the motions of the as. One man, whose wife always as her tea upon the table, comâ€" ns that much of that served to him of his house has the flatness and I'asuspicion of the greasiness of water. This peculiar phase of in- iity is the result of unboiied water 'thing else. With the ebullitiunâ€" wn to the illiterate as a “bubbling â€â€"come the “bead,†and what we 7 Characterize as brightness of aweter for making tea and coffee Id be put into the kettle cold and ied as rapidly as possible to the “Pisan dan of t h- m Y get yp Ll 01‘ malarial germs in l o; reservoir, the simple hi: ted here is of mealâ€" - The impunity objected that around shine 111 UN each won’t you loves him where the his little and hi8 baby. softer gree by pom drinking glam will excite, depths. Th} aeration and pearance. '1 ed by shakij opening it 31 the contents: freely up an}: No one 51 these days and 21 suppl Not only dc tinuous and good {runs 9111‘ £10 ers Thc of spo ‘ flex 1 but . j plants, mm: to winter- The‘ to co: quent} so dax prodw lowing in tix Paris A and p0 so as 1 three the pla and re ery w grown. The disgust seems t try. It beetle, beetle, in color. the holl but tho: food. 0 l disfigure ? lower. ‘ the gro rid of t of wate has been into it b {over the1 [them ins ithe plant : any bugs an Tomato} them intI two min With a mamas ; and chO, of parsle of fat ba cup of hi season 1 teaspooni 0885- A m, 1' emr)‘ luma Luci chopped in place b03110; deep