LV t is â€" baw aalk U 2 CO0 CR MV "I am so sorry," returned Ecelyn in a | 8t Claire‘s snoering, . di eympatheric voice. "Late hours and re-'and the beautiful lurin ceptions don‘t seem to agree with you.} seemed to whirl about he If you have no engagement for this af| The guilty heiress saw terncon to compel you to remain in doors, | had done their workâ€"poor come to the matinee with mo, and see | mercy. the ‘Mikado;‘ it‘s perfectly charming." | Then the mask of amil "Perhaps 1 may," reéeturned Gay, indifâ€" ’ sumed so well dropped fr ferently, "though I don‘t care very much | fal face. and she turned theatrical performances the wickedest laugh that Before Evelyu could reply, the footman | rippling over her erimeor t in the morning mail, and Zaxd| "You are not going to . upon the table. terbrook," she cried. "I, : There were a dozen of letters or more . nlanned a fate a thousa & banker, quito as many for Als , than that for you. I m wife, and four for Gay ; you the truth, girl," she One, a square cream on\'elo'?. addreased {!euly. retreating toward simply to Mise lemm'[um. ‘Ke. â€" Graâ€" | ward, like a writhing ser merey Park, caught Evelyn‘s eye as she ; clever ruse to Inre you ] siood beside her. and her face paled to a | private asyluma for the in dead white as she recognized Percy Granâ€"| their friends keep the h ville‘s dashing chirography. and this let-!cre:tnre' here until deat ter Gay took up firet and broke the seal. of the task of maintainin One glance at its contentsâ€"a few brief | these walls, where no cry lines â€"and her lovely roseâ€"bud face flushed ; to the outer world, and ar a burning red. ltul wretches, you are to For Weal or for Woe: 1'0 submit to a headache is to w To stop it at once simply take on freshly boiled w.a.ter_let stand for five minutesâ€"and you will have the most delici cup of tea you evg tasted. Put "SALADA" TEA in a warm teapotâ€"pour I!As THE FLAVOR! THE FRAGRANCE! THE DELICIOUSNESS is that makes Ceylon Tea the beverage of delight. In sealed lead packages ONLY. i1G 49 a 8 i6 V & B Your Druggist will confirm our statement that they do not contain anything that can harm heart or nervous system. 25c. a box. NATIONAL DRUVUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA, LIMiTEO. 124 Make The Teapot Test 4& . a~a e A~ x NAâ€"DRUâ€"CO headache Wafers t X VJ Or, A Dark Temptation entered the brain She crept to her ( upon it, dressed a n id Evelyn, alightâ€" ind turning . toâ€" "I may be gone 1 hour, perhaps." ngly at the heavâ€" th something like a her throbbing quite unlike my hours‘ sleep to y out the scheme ped out. 1 must put it in execuâ€" h Cont‘d he next mornâ€" lor an â€" early BLACK, GREEN or MIXED coupe when nd gave the cool, steady sharp drivâ€" 1 poplar ng heart eard the rer peneâ€" h gether mbed tha this waste energy, time and comfort. | "Evelyn," she whispered wildly, "Iâ€"Iâ€" oh, I see it all now; you have drugged | the roses. 1 am faintingâ€"dyingâ€"Iâ€"â€"* A deadly whiteness spread over poor ll.nt!e Gay‘s face, her limbs trembled. The piteons entreaty in her face would | bave melted any heart to pity save that | of her crue! rival and bitterest foe. |_ Gay‘s semses were fast becoming dazed, ‘bul through it all she could hear Evelyn 8t Claire‘s sneering, discordant laugh, and the beautiful luring blonde face seemed to whirl about her. The guilty hbeiress saw that the roses l had done theit workâ€"poor Gay was at her merey. I ‘Then the‘ mast of amilas ona nui wa with me." She slipped her arm through Gay‘s, and drew her innocent victim un the stone steps and into the wide, dark hall, to the most piteous fate a young girl ever mot. A small, dark, wiry man had opened the door for them. Gay did not notice the peculiar look that passed between the door for them. Gay did not notice the peculiar look that passed between them. Evelyn passed into the office or library, Gay following her. _ * m i sik _ The wary heirese, however, gave her ro such opportunity; she never left Gay for a single moment alone. Gay had not mentioned to Mrs. Remingâ€" ton that she intended going to the matâ€" inee, and when ehe went to kies her goodâ€" bye, the grand old lady was taking her usual afternoon siesta, so she tiptoed noiselessly out of the room again withâ€" out waking her, and joined Evelyn, who was waiting her in a coupe at the door. Evelyn threw her arms about her, and quickly drew her into the vehicle, and the door closed after her with a sharp It had been with a very guilty face inâ€" deed that Fanny, the maid, had met her young mistress that morning, and deâ€" spite the money that nestled snugly in her bosom, and the promise that che had given the haughty hefressâ€"to keep her terrible seecret, she could scarcely repress the longing to fling herself down at Litâ€" tle Gay‘s feet and confess all. She heard the order that she was to lay out Gay‘s blue silk walkingâ€"dressâ€"for she was going to the matinee that afterroon, with Miss St. Claireâ€"with a perceptible shudder. ‘What a etrange place," said Gay, shudâ€" deringly, as she followed Evelyn‘s exâ€" ample by seating herself; "what in the world can bring you here, I wonder. This in the silver vase beside her. "I do not know whether I had better go to the matinee wiye you this afternoon or not. 1 really wish, Evelyn, that you would excuse me." "I shall no nothing of the kind," laughâ€" ed Miss St. Claire. "It is a long time afâ€" ler the matinee ie over until evening. I shall not leave you by yourself to indulge in dayâ€"dreams. You must come with me to see the ‘Mikado.‘" Alas, it was an evil mament in which Gay laughingly consented, at length, and walked blindly into the pit that had been dug for her unwary feet. f $ Gay blonde "Miss Remington,â€"I shall do myself the homer of calling upon you this evening, if agreeable. Trusting you are fully reâ€" covered from your recent &..ock in the park, I remain, yourse with respect, "PERCY GRANVILLE." Evelyn 8t. Claire could have struck Little Gay down, she was so bitterly angry at the happy light that flooded the girl‘s face. She knew quite as well as if she had read Gay‘s letter that Percy ur]:;nville had made an appointment to Call. sumed so well dropped from her revengeâ€" ful face. and she turned upon Gay with the wickedest laugh that ever was heard rippling over her crimeon lips. "You are not going to die, Gayne!l Esâ€" terbrook," she cried. "I, your rival, have vï¬annee a fate a thousand times worse To AERSmnt. t o PP C The headache Gay had complained of eecemed to leave her as if by magic, and her lovely dark eyes shone bright as stars. ied ) ... 00 sc ccac d c ce l ca d d id than that for you. I may as well tell you the truth, gir!," she #went on merciâ€" lessly, retreating toward the door, backâ€" ward, like a writhing serpent. "I ‘used & clever ruse to lure you ï¬:re. This is a private asylum for the incurable incane; their friends keep the howling, frenzied creatures here until death relieves tzem 1\1 the task of maintaining them; and in "Home one whom you know, Evelyn, is to call upon me this evening," che said, hiding her blushing face among the roses It ran as follows I i, wh ingly supp« longed to look 1et contained @omething more agrant, innceent breath of the ch Evelyn was pressing so her nostrils. m away!" gasped Gay, tearâ€" ally at the flowers with one : with the other she grasped he back of an adjacent chair ale the fragrant breath of and it will revive you," interâ€" vn, catching un her bougquet, burying Gay‘s white face in with al!l her heart to warn out for the treacherous no cry ever penetrates and amid these frightâ€" are to stay until you Emperor William is not by any means the richest man in the Gerâ€" man empire. Here as well as in other countries the personal wealth of his Majesty has been more or less a matter of mystery, with a noticeâ€" able inclination on the part of his friends to exaggerate the true figâ€" ures of his fortune and the number of his castles. It is true, on the other hand, that the Kaiser possesses the largâ€" est income of any man or woman in (Germany, but there are three perâ€" sons in Prussia alone who have greater wealth than their soverâ€" cign. One is Frau Bertha Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, heiress of the Krupp millions, and the others are Prince Henckel von Donnersâ€" marck and Prince Christisn Kraft zu Hohenloheâ€"Oehringen. Lady Duff Gordon has denied the spiteful assertion _ that she is barred from Court because of her connection with "trade."‘ "It is true," said her ladyship, "‘that I don‘t go to Court ; but this is simply and solely because I haven‘t the time to spare. I‘m too busy." Emperor 020,000 unlimited resources, to be a great art. RICHER According to the latest expert figures concerning the wealth of the Emperor his income is $5,500,000 a year. His private fortune is estiâ€" mated conservatively at $35,000,000. The principal possession of the Kaiâ€" ser consists or144,840 acres of forâ€" est land which yields an annual inâ€" come of $425,000, and 94.812 acres of agricultural lands that bring a yearly net profit of $450,000. Very often one reads in the newsâ€" papers that the Emperor of Gerâ€" many owns 53 castles and 83 princeâ€" ly estates. As a matter of fact the Kaiser owns three castles in Berlin, 13 in Potsdam and vicinity, and some 40 castles _ or â€" castleâ€"like estates throughout the empire. The civil list of William II. is exactly $4,429,â€" 824. That is what the state pays him for being on the job. Lady Duff Gordon, better known in the fashionable world as "Maâ€" dame Lucille,"‘ is in no wise ashamed of her chosen calling ; inâ€" deed she is proud of it, for she conâ€" siders correct dressmaking with She was so young and fair, life and freeâ€" dom seemed so sweet to her. She had looked upon the beautiful, bright world outside for the last time. She was a prisoner in those grim wallsâ€"confined among maniace, whose bloodâ€"curdling cries would soon drive her mad, tooâ€"even beâ€" fore she could die and end it all. Poor Little Gay! _ With a horrible laugh, Evelyn turned from her hapless victim, 1lthered up her silken train in her jeweled hands, and awept swiftly from the room; and, unable to cry out, stir hand or foot, or utter any moan, Gay heard the door close after ‘her‘; and the sharp click of the spring "I knew Percy Granville was coming to call upou the young girl he had rescued in the park a few days previous, little dreaming it was you whom he believed resting in your graveâ€"think of the thrilâ€" ling denouement that would have followâ€" ed had 1 not spirited you away just in time to prevent fate from bringing you two face to face. I should have been unâ€" masked, and you would have won from me the man 1 love. I leave you now in your living tomb," Miss 8t. Claire cried mockingly. "It is the maddest folly, atâ€" tempting to plead or pray to me," she went on, as Gay sunk d‘:)wn on her knees holding out her white armse imploringly, and vainly endeavoring to utter one artiâ€" culate word, the agouy of death on her lovely face. lock ‘"Now listen to the sequel which culâ€" minates my revenge," screamed the beauâ€" tiful, treacherous blonde; "weary and heartâ€"broken, Percy Granville has turned to meâ€"at lastâ€"for sympathy, and on the 20th of the coming month I am to be his brideâ€"do you hear, Gaynell Esterbrook?" swhe cried, "he has acked me to become his bride. Think of that until the torture of it turns your brain, girl, which it soon will do. "I answered that letter to you, eigning Percy‘s name to it, requesting you should look upon him as a ctranger if you ever met. And while you have believed him false, he was cleverly trapped into the belief that you were deadâ€"gnow 1 managâ€" ed that little affair so adroitly, and with such daring wkill, you need never know. "It was I who received the piteous letâ€" ter you wrote to him to Redstone Hall, and it was then that I conceived the darâ€" ine plot of separating you two foreverâ€" by fair means or foulâ€"for he loved you, girlâ€"do you hear me? he fairly idolized you, and that is the reason I have blighted your life. "Now that all possibility of love is reâ€" moved from you forever, let me tell you someihing else," Evelyn St. Claire went on tauntingly. _ "Percy Granville never was false to you as you supposed. 5 "Evelyn!" The name fell from Gay‘s white lips in a low, wailing ory of mortal terror, but Miss 8t. Claire never heeded and went on pitilessly : _ x T P Who can portray the horror of the situaâ€" tionâ€"the pitiful anguish of Little Gay as she realized the foul conspiracy closing in around her. Like the sharp thrust of a dagger, every word her revengeful foe uttered fell upon her bleeding heart. f ow "It was I who separated you from Percy Granville so effectually; I vowed that I would do it, and I have kept my yow of vengeance !" and the sooner you die the better." ARISTOCRATIC TRADER Lady DuB@f Gordon. orrect dressmaking, with PHAXN THEIR KAISER. William Only Has $35,â€" and $5,500,000 Yearly. To be continued.) CHAPTER XXVIII Roast _ Chicken.â€"Cleanse â€" thorâ€" oughly, adding a little soda to the last water. Prepare a stuffing of breadcrumbs, a little chopped onâ€" ion, butter, pepper and salt, or use thyme in place of onion. Roast an hour or more and baste two or three times; or inclose in a covered tin and bake till done. Stew the gibâ€" lets and necks for the gravy. Baked Becf Roll.â€"Three pounds of raw beef (round), chopped fine ; three cups of sweet milk, one egg, one cup of bread crumbs, one table spoon of salt, one teaspoon of pepâ€" per, sage to taste. _ Mix all weil with a tablespoon of melted butter Mold into a loaf, put a little vater and butter in the pan, baste occaâ€" sionally and bake one and & uuar ter hours. Can be eaten hot or cold. Oyster Macaroni.â€"Boii macaroni in a cloth to keep it straight. Put a layer in a dish seasoned with butâ€" ter, salt and‘ pepper, and then a layer of ovsters ; alternate until the dish is full. _ Mix some grated bread with a beaten egg. Spread over the top and bake. This is a popular French dish. A pint of oysters and a pint of macaroni serves six people. . â€" Pink Delight.â€"Into the whites of two eggs, beaten stiff, beat two Croquettes of Beans.â€"Cook oneâ€" half cupful of white beans until well done. Mash them thoroughly, and add two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. Brown in a little butter one small onion very finely hashed, and one tablespoonful of chopped parsley. _ Add these to the beans with enough breadâ€"crumbs to make a paste easily formed into small balls. Fry in deep fat. Baked â€" Bean Soup.â€"Take cold baked beans, add twice the quanâ€" tity of cold water, let simmer until soft. When nearly done, add oneâ€" half as much tomato. Rub through a colander. Add water‘ until the right consistency, season to taste with salt, pepper and mustard. Heat again and serve with toasted crackers or croutons. Baked Veal in Crumbs.â€"Dip a fresh veal cutlet in beaten egg, then in fine crackerâ€"crumbs, and lay it in a bakingâ€"pan. Cut thin slices of bacon or salt (pickled) pork, and lay them over the cutlet, so that it is fairly well covered. Bake in a hot oven for about half an hour. A thick slice of cutlet gives the most satisfactory â€"results. _ Serve with mashed potatoes. Baked Apple Sauce.â€"Fill a deep pudding «dlish with apples, quarterâ€" ed, pared and cored. For 1 quart of apples allow oneâ€"half cup of sugar and oneâ€"half cup of water. Bake, closely covered, in a very moderate oven several hours or unâ€" til dark red. Ceamsessceseseseeseseeee006 Selected Recipes. Banana _ Salad.â€"Arrange nests of lettuce leaves on salad dishes. Slice a banana and lay in each nest. _ Cover with a mayonnaise dressing. It‘s the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME DYE, one can buyâ€"â€"Why you don‘t even have to know what KIND of Cloth your Goods are mtade of.â€".S0 Mistakes are Impossible, Send for Free Golor Card, gtory Booklet, and Booklet giviag results of Dyeing over other colors. The JOHNSONâ€"RICHARDSON CO., Limited, Montreal, Canada. and look for the tradeâ€"mark. Perrin‘s Gloves are famous for their Style, Fit and Finish. Gloves that are NOT stamped with either the tradeâ€"mark or the name*"Perrin‘s Make" are not the genuine. Ask for" Do not be misledâ€" SGome D weing H I+I1â€"12 If a calendar seems too pretty to destroy paste a piece of sandpaper over the calendar pad and use it as a match scratcher. Finger nails that are manicured every week will retain their delicacy and lustre much longer than those that are neglected. Halibut Saladâ€"As the basis for it, take from oneâ€"half pound to a pound and a half of halibut, deâ€" pending upon the number of persons to be served. The dressing as givâ€" en below will be sufficient for the larger quantity. Boil the amount of halibut desired, and when it is cool, flake it, and mix with it the juice of half a lemon, oneâ€"half teaâ€" spoonful of salt, and a pinch of cayenne pepper. Cover it and let it stand one hour. Make a dressâ€" ing of one teaspoonful of mustard, one teaspoonful of salt, two teaâ€" spoonfuls of flour, one and oneâ€"half teaspoonfuls of sugar, one teaâ€" spoonful of melted butter, a pinch of cayenne, the yolk of one egg, and oneâ€"third of a cupful of vinegar. Cook slowly until it thickens to the consistency of cream. Remove it from the fire and add oneâ€"third of a tablespoonful of gelatin dissolved in one and oneâ€"half tablespoonfuis of water. When it is cold add oneâ€" half cupful of cream, whipped, and fold in the fish. Put it into a mold, and chill. You can cut the molded dish into slices, and serve it with either mayonnaise or French dressâ€" ing. Never leave a mat that is frayed at the edges about the house. It is so easy to trip over the torn part. Breaderumbs added to scrambled eggs are a great economy. With this addition two eggs go as far as four without it. Seed Oats Jumblesâ€"Use twelve tablespoonâ€" fuls of butter; threeâ€"quarters of a cupful of sugar; two cupfuls of «our ; the yolks of three eggs beatâ€" en with one teaspoonful of water. Beat the butter to a cream, and then add the sugar and eggs. Sift in the flour, and add a few drops of almond extract. Roll the paste between the hands into little balls the size of a hickoryâ€"nut, and drop them on a buttered tin. Press on each a slice of citron or of candied orangeâ€"peel. Bake in a moderate oven ten or fifteen minutes. tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and one cup of strawberry jam. Set on the ice until chilled. Berve in glasses. This is a simple dessert, but it delights the eye as well as the palate. You may use red raspâ€" berry jam, pineapples or orange marmalade in place of the strawâ€" berry with excellent results. Upsideâ€"Down Picâ€"Peel and quarâ€" ter six large apples, and cook them in a puddingâ€"dish on top of the stove. Make a batter of oneâ€"quarâ€" ter of a cupful of butter, threeâ€" quarters of a cupful of milk, one cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of bakingâ€"powder, one tablespoonful of sugar, and the yolks of two eggs. Bave the whites for the frosting. Pour the batter over the apples, and bake ; then turn the pie out on a plate, cover with frosting on the apple side, and brown in the oven. SBerve with cream. GEO. KEITH & SONS, 124 King St. EBast, Toronto. Ont. Heod Merchants s noe 1866. TRY IT WHEN YOU‘RE TIRED You will find it wonderfully LIPTON‘S TEA It sustains and cheers Useful Hints. FOR your PFleld in the GOVâ€" ERNMENT FIRLD CROP COMPETITION you cannot do better than send for our Catalogue,. and see what we have to offer in SKKD OATS. We have a splendid stock and will be glad to send samples. Wu’loj[ormi'm l&)-p-i: dook ‘"What The Farmer Can Do With Concrete" â€"No farmer can afford to be without a copy. Canada Cement Company Limited â€" . Moantreal BROAD statementâ€"Yet litecrally true. The aim of man from the beginning has been to make his building materials 2s nearly like natâ€" y ural stone as possible. _ The greatlabor required to quarry stone led him to seek various manufactured substitutes. The only reason he ever used wood was that it was easiest to get and most convenient to use. Wood is no longer easy to get. Like most building material, its cost is inâ€" creasing at an alarming rate. The cost of concrete is decreasing. So, from the standpoint of either serâ€" vice or economy, Concrete is the best building material. Canada‘s farmers are using more concrete, in proportion to their numbers, than the farmers of any other country. Why ? TORONTO Canada Cement When a chimney is on fire the first thing to do is to shut off the supply of air by closing all the windows and doors. A large supply of sulâ€" phur, or, failing that, common salt, should be placed on the fire, so as to produce a vapor, which will deâ€" stroy the flames. A wet blanket or rug should be held over the fireplace opening so as to cut off the supply of air as completely as possible. Finally, after several encounters, the matter came to the official ears of the school and the leader of the Alsatian group was dismissed. This caused a general uproar and Kaiser Wilhelm‘s admirers were compelled to disband. The leader of the Alsaâ€" tian boys is the son of one of the high German functionaries, but his mother is a French woman. French and German Boy Scouts Come to Blows. Even among the children of Alâ€" saceâ€"Lorraine exists the bitter enâ€" mity of the French against the Gerâ€" mans, an enmity which no length of time or no efforts of Germanization seem to overcome. T One of the most remarkable exâ€" amples of tattooing of religious subâ€" jocts is that provided by the case of an engineer storekeeper on one of the White Star liners. He has, perâ€" haps, the most wonderful tattooed body in the world. From his neck to his waistline he is covered with pictures and inscriptions. _ Disâ€" played on his body is a wonderful piece of the tatoo artist‘s work. It is nothing less than a faithful reâ€" production of Leonarda da Vinei‘s picture ‘"The Last Supper." The time to eat a turkey t;yu an authority), given crisp, cold weaâ€" ther, is ten days or a fortnight from the date of killing. If grease is spilled upon the kitâ€" chen stove throw a handful of salt upon it, and it will prevent any disagreeable odor from arising. When making a ground rice pudâ€" ding a great improvement to it is to add two teaspoonfuls of cornfiour to the mixture. This makes it very creamy, and adds greatly to the flavor. It often happens that new kid gloves split the first time they are tried on. To prevent this place them between the folds of a damp towel for about an hour before they are to be worn. The damp will stretch the kid, so that the gloves give to the required shape without splitting. A little vinegar kept boiling on the stove while onions or cabbage are cooking will prevent the disâ€" agreeable odor going through the house. To remove scorch marks from linâ€" en take an onion, cut it in half, and rub the scorched places with it. Then wash in cold water, leave to soak for an hour or two, and the mark will disapear. i Never wear one pair of shoes all the time unless obliged to do so. Two pairs of boots worn a day at a time alternately gives more service, and are much more healthv. Before baking potatoes let them stand in hot water for fifteen minâ€" utes. They will require only half the time for baking, are more mealy and palatable. MANIKINX WAR INX LORRAINE. ‘"‘The Last Supper®‘ in Tattoo, your concrete work. There is a Canada Cement dealer in your neighborhood. Accept life and you must accept regret. The man who insists on secing with perfect clearness before he decides never decides.â€"Amiol. The slum is not merely constitutâ€" ed of brokenâ€"down houses, but also of brokenâ€"down people, and as a matter of fact the second problem is more difficult to deal with than the former.â€"Prof. Glaister. In prayer it is better to have a heart without words than words without a heart.â€"Bunyan. Every man who inherits wealth has a long start of those who begin life with only their muscles and brains.â€"Prof. Smart. GENER AL OBSTETRICAL MASSAGE ELECTRO CR SCHOOL NURSING Qualifies you for the best positions. Study at home or attend the School. Graduâ€" ates earn per week Red Cross School of Nursing 358 Queen St. West __ TORONTO, â€" CANADA Send for Free | %';Iâ€"l;iï¬s /y; OUR COURSE IN TORONTO,.ONT. ENW.GILLETT softening| water, removing paint mofienyy he \o.l.‘lll..l\‘f'vll(a >‘ o ‘lllvb glistnfec%'rn'i t | btugpoit ons THE STANDARD ARTICLE â€" SOLD EVERYWHERE drains, DAVID sink s‘ $15.00 to $40.00 Grains of Gold. comrany LIMIT ED LOUocon ud rsing * warm, }N stain vers and % changâ€" 3 time. ‘at least * m little wr other #h brush ently . «kerosene Sorcelain nks and Jis af.. withâ€" it in x# washâ€" &“i])ped nedium ve egzg *h sal gref:u-(-, ring glsrs. "y â€" K #iven a ;ktter‘ , on a ‘bright- »POS als t Ced V( aritten e eucâ€" mfm‘l'; atn Aust h at mcr iv s abs u8h: orms great anted erl 9811 rage ‘rns. M the Omar Â¥ the A J gery topâ€" »r0â€" ed neâ€" war sigâ€" ad rea L pr‘) this How and n as the th th the the wi 11 At 18 18 ib In