HAPT CO. CHICAGO, ILL. W Al , Ind., U. § King 5t. East orRonto «~â€" $sqZ3 Get y Colborme Str zl «C j(ELI, IrING Co. Y ear 2o gusranteod. espect SPQ1 h every bot SALE 0N3 Montreal Mackine iC o nfus ds Marks Stamy c iine of seed pro. PRCE perfact n nOoNTO [2 ard and {_} LC CuY "o“.'. OWer W M A ND tle: ETO 60t, 17, dy al #d For Weal or for Woe: n adde ident 7@ ASK FOR PERRIN‘S HAPTEKR XXX1â€"(Con ‘They stop headaches promptly and surely. Do not contain opium, morphine, phenacetin, acetanilid or other dangerous drugs,. 25¢. a box at your Druggist‘s. 125 NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED. Or, A Dark Temptation NAâ€"DRUâ€"CO Headache Waflers Whenever you feel a headache coming on take . You do not pleaded with rious scheme, ; own reward. and addre®>, I have searchâ€" tell you what vyou need not gazing down defiant face. around her d kably for m a week and LOOK for the Tradeâ€"Mark. Perrin‘s Gloves are famed for their Style, Fit and Finish. A Gloves that are XOT stamped with either the tradeâ€"mark or the name "Perrin‘s Make" are not the genuine. Do not be misled UI e fir grea h h Do nV ‘wh'n 1 want it forâ€"you shall know all that in gogd time." | "I shall be at Psesaic until the 20th," replied Perey. "On the 2ist 1 leave on the Servia for a short trip abroad." ! "You may hear from me before that | time," said the detective. | A moment after they parted mmgany. and Percy walked leisurely on to his hotel. Me did not give the matter another thought, for hia thoughts had reverted to , the same channel in which they had been when the detective had accosted himâ€"he wese thinking of the pictured face that had smiled up at him from the canvas in the banker‘s drawingâ€"roomâ€"the face of Mr. Remington‘s adopted daughter. J | the pallid bride of death," and with these words ringing in his ears, and before be could divine her terrible intention, she | had sprung forward, giving him a fearful push that sent him _ reeling headlovg downâ€"down into the horrible depths of the unueed shaft. Not even a moan or a ery reached her, or the thud of the body as it fell on the rocks below, there was such a terrible ringing in her ears. Certainly," responded Percy, shaking the proffered hand beartily. "I am enâ€" tirely at your disposal; we will go to your office or walk up to the avenue, just as you like." "Thanke, 1 haven‘s time to exchange more than a word~ with you just now," replied the detective. "I want your adâ€" drees, I may drop you a line upon a very important matter one of these days." Perey Granville stopped short and lcoked full in the detective‘s face. You have succeeded in hunting down Tremaine at last?" inquired Percy, eagâ€" erly. "If it is so, tell me at onee. I canâ€" not rest night or day until I have taken that cursed villain by the throai avd fcreed the truth out of him of how my darling Little Gay met so foul a death. By Heaven! he shall rue the day he ever crossed my nbaih!" "Gently, genily ed the detective, excited young m Perey Granville turned with a etart of surprise as the deteciive‘s hand fell on hi« shoulder, and the familiar voice reâ€" peated hurriedly : + y B ‘Dead men can tell no tales," she mutâ€" tered, bending breathlessly over the yawnâ€" in@ mouth of the pit. Y am safe." Gathering up her dainty lace skirts in her jeweled hands, she fairly filew back to the houee. It almost seemed to her the tall. specter trees that had witnessed the awful crime might take vengeance upâ€" on her by tossing out their arms and ~;r1kmw her dead as ehe passed beneath them . she reached the house panting and trembling in every limb. Avice, her maid, met her on the thres hold "I have been looking everywhere for you, Miss Evelyn," che said. "Mr. Granâ€" ville is hereâ€"hbe looks pale andâ€" unlike himself." _"I whould like a few words with you., Mr. Granville, if you are not in too much of a hurry." t be so sure about thai," replied "Give me your address, and uble yourself unnecessarily about want it forâ€"you sball know all CHAPTER XXXH t Prssaic until the 20th," "On the 2ist I leave on a short trip abroad." ar from me before that 3eitâ€"r2 It would nave been quite as easy to have"plunged a dagger in the white breast of Evelyn 8t. Claire as to speak the words l‘he had come there to utter. "That is just the question I have come to discuss with you, Evelyn," hbe said, "whether or not ours would be a happy union. I almost haie myself for the ,wnrds I am about to speak, still, they are better said before marriage than after." \ He stopped abruptly and looked at her. Still no gleam of the truth dawned upâ€" 'on Evelyn. "Every heart should be mated to the | one for which Heaven intended it. Ts it not so?" he aeked earnestly. "Yes," replied Evelyn, slowly. "You wonYd not care to keep your pledge lm me to be my bride if you thought I |did not love you, would you?" he purâ€" sued, flushing painfully. : "No," replied Evelyn, little dreaming ; what he would say next. | "Evelyn," he went on huskily, "what | should you eay if I were to tell you frankâ€" ?l_v and honestly that if I were to lead you to the altar, it would be as an unloved | bride? I would save you from this before Since the day he had firet become enâ€" gaged to Evelyn he had alwaye taken an accepted lover®s privilege of seating himâ€" self on the sofa becide her. He could do no less now. * "How white you are, Percy!" she exâ€" claimed. ‘"Have you been ill? You are losing all your genial manner that made you soâ€"so irresistible." Me fushed â€" uneagily and . looked conâ€" fused. What would «he have said, if she had known why he looked so gloomyâ€"that he was tr'yinxl to summon courage to tell her that which was to blight her beautiful love dream? j *ï¬xe}'e"w'ii";}ï¬i-'(hii{"ï¬'m' t hysteri cal in her brilliant flashes of wit. 4 With tremulous lipe, che sung that eweetest of all love refrains, "Kathleen Mavoureen," dweliing with passionate yearning on the line, ‘Ohb, why are thou silent, thou voice of my heart?"" â€" the music dying away in a low wail beneath her trembling fingere. But if Percy heard, he did not heed. "You seem â€" distrait and . preoceuped, Percy," she said at length, turning from the piano, "as though your thoughts were hardly here." £ "Then I am aehamed of myself," he anâ€" swered. _ ‘"That would be unpardonable. The fact is," he added, hesitatingly, and fAlushing uneasily, "my mind is full of one subject, and I am at a lose how to find words to express myself." e "Evelyn," he said slowly, as he nerved himself for the trying ordeal, "did it ever oceur to you that some marriages are grave mistakes?" Fhe looked up into his face. A sudden terror seized her; but she would attach no importance to his words. ‘"There can be no uschappiness where there is love," she returned quickly. A ‘That is quite true, Evelyn," he eaid thoughtfully; "if two marry who love each otherâ€"they are sure to be happyâ€"but if love is wanting in either beart, married life is a curse." Evelyn raised a pair of startled eyes to his; the words had gone through her heart like a eword. "Why should we think of the lives of others, if ours is happy?" che asked, with a nervous @mile on her lips. ‘"The only unhappiness that could reach me isâ€"the fear that 1 should ever lose.your love." Perev Granville‘s handsome face grew paleâ€"he winced under her words. "What would you do, Evelyn," he said, holding the liitle hand that was hid in his in a close clasp, and trying to speak carelcealy, "if such a thing were to really happen ?" lier face grew pale as the lily she wore on her breast. She caught her breath in a quick, convulsive sobâ€"the passionate love in the face she raised to his trouâ€" bled him greatly. "I should kill myself, Percy," she deâ€" clared vehemently; "and if there was a way for my spirit to revisit the earth, I would haunt you until the day you died. 1 could never express how much I love you, dearâ€"you are my world." _ "How much you care for me, Evelyn," . Evelyn did all in her power to charm him that memorable evening. es % M.P.‘s Daughter Who Married Athâ€" lete Is a Suffragette. The recent wedding of Miss Cicely Corbett, the daughter of C. J. Corâ€" bett, the late English Member of Parliament for one of the Sussex divisions, had a special interest, as the ceremony was arranged so as to avoid those parts of the Church service which include the wife‘s promise to "obey." The bridegroom was (C. D. Fishâ€" er, who was a threeâ€"quarter back in the Oxford Rugby team of 1903. Miss Corbett is a keen suffragist and a number of people interested in the movement were present at the‘ wedding. It was held at Horâ€" sted Keynes, where her father lives, and the place was the Congregaâ€" tional Hall of the village. She bowed her head in silence, twining her white, jeweled fingers cloeer about h‘s arm, and her every clinging touch was @ caress. Py he groaned. _ The pale, blond« rested against his She sung impassioned love«ongs to ! im that would have brought any other lover to her feet. C The pale, blonde face drooped until it rested against his shoulder. The great love she lavished upon him wearied him. He could not help contrastâ€" ing her at that moment with his little lost Gay, whom a bold wooer would have frightered as a huntsman frightens & timid bird. "Evelyn," he went on huskily, "what should you eay if I were to tell you frankâ€" ly and honestly that if I were to lead you to the altar, it would be as an unloved bride? I would save you from this before it is too late. I throw myself upon your merey to eave yourself and to save me. I will live up to my engagement if you hold me to it," he said slowly, "but I cannot deceive you. I must tell you the truthâ€"my heart has gone out to another, and yet my word is pledged to you. You hold your fate and mive in your own slender white hbands, Evelyn, iny dear wirl," he whiapered hoarsely, "and I leave it v’vni!h you to decide what our future is to be." it is too merey t I will 1 hold â€" me tle h« in the of allâ€"she w though he 1 give him up At one ena of the hall was a platâ€" form with four chairs upon it, and to this platform advanced the bride, her father, the bridegroom and the best man, while a march was played upon the organ. Then entered the registrar, and the bride and brideâ€" groom made the legal declarations, which were supplemented by the exchange of wedding rings. The registrar then retired, and after a solo had been sung Hugh Chapman of the Savoy, whose symâ€" pathies with the suggestion for the omission of the ‘"‘obey‘" sentence from the service aro already well known, gave a short and eloquent address. It should be said that by this time the bridegroom had exâ€" changed places with the bride‘s father, so that the bride and the bridegroom sat together on one side of the platform and the best man and the bride‘s father on the other. Evelyn‘s heart gave one great prssionâ€" ate throb of «triumph, her blonde head drooped «o near him that her fair bair brushed his cheek. & > _ No doubt came to her but that the eubâ€" ject he referred to was their approachâ€" ing imarriage. Of course it could be nothing else. Wicked as Evelyn St. Claire was, there was something pitiful in the ardent adorâ€" rtion she laviehed upon her handsome over. Was he going to whisper that her passionate heart hear? How she was hungering words, "I love you, dear,‘" lips. y > himself.. She had was Heave bitter venge the life of I Bui noâ€"sh _ Was he going to tell her he was glad their weddingâ€"day was so near at hand? For one brief moment there was silence between them. Ii grew harder and harder to utter the words Percy had come there to speak. _ ~OBEY" LEFT OUT OF sERvICGE Beauty is only skin deep, especi ally if a girl hasn‘t any money. o the altar, it would be . ride? I would save you fr t is too late. I throw mys nercy to eave yourself and will live up to my enga; old me to it," he said s annot deceive you. I mus H a ve 1i pe h eaven intending_ to wreak this engeance upon her for spoiling of Little Gay? )â€"she would marry him in enite he would ho!d him to his promise he hated her. She would never tle he knew there would be litâ€" for him if the decieion rested inds of her who was deaf to all her deep and desperate love for ined w pale as the lily she wore She caught her breath in ulsive â€" sobâ€"the passionate be continued.) terribly to hear ihe fall from his loving words ko longed to he_ said, a happy for the they are his love mk this spoiling Man Who Had 100 Pipes. A wife who obtained a judicial separation from her husband told |a <curious story at the Southâ€" | western (London, England,) police |court. She was Annie Traves, of 15 | Farlow â€" Road, Putney, and she |stated that her husband, a master | earpenter, would only allow her itwnpen(--o a day to get dinner, \though he had about £180 at the ; bank. ‘"What does he do with his \money ?‘ inquired the Magistrate. | "He spends it in clothes, pipes and Jflt!xel' things," was the reply. ‘"He J has 100 pipes, between filty and sixty walking sticks and innumerâ€" lablv pairs of boots." Englishwomen are developing the smoking habit moreé than ever. Of course they do not as a rule get beâ€" yond cigarettes, but recently a peâ€" tit brand of cigars has been put on the market. It is something like the thin cigarettes which one buys on the continent for a couple of centimes, except that the flavor and strength are more akin to the Egypâ€" tian cigarette. It is a leaf covered cigarette, with sufficieat pungency to make the fair smokers think they are doing something daring in lightâ€" ing what looks like a cigar. But when the excitement had died down Mr. Soper simply said : ‘"Not telepathy, but telegraphy." _ And from his pocket he took a small coil of wire, the other end of which, enâ€" closed under a carpet, was in the pocket of the "subject."" The mesâ€" sages had simply been transmitted by his expert touch system. "Do you think a woman believes you when you tell her she is the first girl you ever loved 1"‘ ‘"Yes, if you‘re the first liar she ever met." (On the stage, blindâ€"folded, sat a gentleman, while Mr. Soper, passâ€" ing through the audience, was handâ€" ed a number of articles. Each he scrutinized, but he neither spoke nor made any sign. In every case the "subject‘‘ on the stage called out an accurate description of the article. Then Lady Aberdeen supplied the supreme test. _ Writing upon her A millionaire whose "mindâ€"readâ€" ing‘‘ once astonished Ladv Aberâ€" deen is Warren Y. Soper, viceâ€"preâ€" sident of the Ottawa Electric Comâ€" pany and director of almost a score of others. In his earlier days Mr. Soper was a telegraph operator, and a good one, so good, in fact, that his expert feats with the Morse code once led him to give an exhibition. _ Their Excellencies Lord and Lady Aberâ€" deenâ€"for it was during their stay in Canadaâ€"were present. programme a sentence, she handed it to Mr. Soper, requesting that he trangsmit it mentally to the man on the stage. "I see a sentence of five words" called out the "subject‘‘ a few seconds later, and he repeated the exact words. The astonishment was profound. sURPRISED LADY ABERDEEN Pure, Wholesome and Delicious, with a fullâ€" ness of fiavour not found in ordinary TEAS. It‘s the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, aad BEST HOME DYE, one can buyâ€"â€"Why you don‘t even have to know what KIND of Cloth your Goods are made of.~.So Mistakes are Impossible. Sond for Free Color chr«i;%w Bookiet, and Bookiet giving results of Dyeing over other colors. The JOHNSONâ€"RICHARDSON CO., Limited, Montreal. Caneca. Black, Mixed and Green. ATriumph in TEA Quality Women Now Smoke Cigars. IN LEAD PACKETS OoNLY. Voome D yeing Warren Y. Soper. Sometimes Heat the cl;)thespi:}s if you would have warm hands while hanging out the clothes in cold weather. A great aid to baby‘s bath when he is afraid of water is some water toys which he can play with. Before d‘\"cing. a garment mark the right side with thread so that there will he no doubt about it. Boiled Icingâ€"Often one finds that a boiled frosting is either too much done or not cooked enough. A woâ€" man whose boiled frosting always calls for praise tells the secret of her success. Bhe uses three tableâ€" spoonfuls of water to a cupful of sugar; when the mixture begins to boil she slowly beats six tablespoonâ€" fuls of it into the white of an egg, beaten very stiff. Then she lets the remainder of the syrup boil till it hairs; this point in the cooking reached, she beats it gradually into the egg mixture. Cottage Cheese and Chivesâ€"Rub the salad bow!l with a small clove of garlic or mince the garlic very fine, add two cupfuls of cottage cheese and two teaspoonfuls of chives cut fine with scissors, one teaspoonful of salt and oneâ€"half saltspoonful of paprika. Mix well, add a little rich cream if necessary to help it retain its shape, then stir in lightly three tablespoonfuls of chopped pimento ; pile upon a bed of cress and ornaâ€" ment with pimento cut in fancy shapes and place upon ice until needed. _ Serve with mayonnaise dressing. Every housekeeper should Vk(;;p a pair of butcher‘s cuffs on hand to protect the sleeves in emergencies. To clean ribbon, sponge with alâ€" eohol and rub over the spot with clean white soap, holding the ribâ€" bon straight. Famous _ London Dishâ€"Take a quarter pound of grated cheese. Dissolve in one cupful of milk, a small quarter of a teaspoonful of soda, then add it to the grated cheese ; add a quarter of a teaspoonâ€" ful of mustard, half a saltspoonful of white pepper, a pinch of cayenne pepper and two tablespoonfuls of browned flour. Heat in double boiâ€" ler_until cheese is dissolved, then stir in three wellâ€"beaten eggs, stir a few moments and pour into indiâ€" vidual pattyâ€"pans or cases, and bake a nice brown. Serve hot. T Eiesns > ! tGood Vinegarâ€"To start, use an_v‘ kind of sweet juice. If you have| any jelly that has gone to sugar ori that didn‘t form, or a little sorgâ€"| hum, syrup, or anything of the kind, put it in a stone jar with enough warm water to make just a| sweetened water. Take a piece of| brown wrapping paper, cut round| the size of the jar lid, and put with| it a thin layer of bread dough the| size of the paper. Roll both up toâ€"| gether and drop it in the jar; this will form the plant. Any kind of fruit juice of . rinsings from jelly | glasses may be added at any time.| Keep the jar in a warm place. The contents will be vinegar in about three weeks after the jar is filled and will taste just like cider vineâ€" gar. It is a great saving, for one| uses so much vinegar in the sumâ€" mer for sliced cucumbers, sulads,l beets, beans, covering pickles, etc.| The same "plant‘‘ may be used for years if kept in the juice. 1 Shelves are a necessity in every bathroom. So is a little medicine closet to hang on the wall. _ Brushes and combs are best washed in strong ammonia water. For the bristles, it should be cold. Cheese Cream Toast.â€"Melt one and oneâ€"half tablespoonfuls of butâ€" ter, add one and oneâ€"half tableâ€" spoonfuls of flour and when bubâ€" bling pour on one and oncâ€"half cupâ€" fuls of scalded milk, stirring briskâ€" ly until the sauce is smooth ; season with salt, pepper and paprika. Add twoâ€"thirds of a cupful of mild, gratâ€" ed cheese and cook until the cheese is melted. Dip six slices of toast in the sauce, place in a hot dish and pour the cream sauce over them. Good Cclery Pickleâ€"For this celâ€" ery pickle put in the good leaves as well as the stalks. Three parts celâ€" ery, three parts cabbage, one part onions. Put these through the meat grinder and mix with threefourths cup of salt to a gallon. Let stans overnight, then drainâ€"off what liquid comes away readily. Heat and add the following to every gallon: One quart good vinegar, oneâ€"half cup sugar, eight bay leaves, twenty drops oil of cloves, twenty drops oil of cinnamon. Just before stirring this into the vegetables add oneâ€" fuurth‘teasp«mnful of red peper. Wrap cheese in a cloth soaked in vinegar if you wish it to be kept moist and free from mold. If the alarm clock rings too loudâ€" Iv slip an elastic band around the bell to diminish the noise. Goes farthest for the money LIPTON‘S 7 EA To remove grease Tea when you are tired, particularly if it‘s GOOD HABIT Home Hints from TARIO ARCHIVES _ m TORONTO . en MHaving beaten the Kedong River banks for two hours, a fine lioness jumped out of the reeds and bush about six feet from me, having first emitted a loud grow] that served as a useful warning. I fired and wounded her, when she prepared to charge, lashing her sides with her tail. Luckily Mr. Guy, Mr. Doonâ€" er‘s partner, was at the ready, and his rifle laid her low for a short time, after which she recovered and sprang from bush to bush growlâ€" ing. Spooring her, I followed, and with a third shot from my Mannâ€" licher finished her. When tinware is new, rub it with lard and heat thoroughly in the oven. ,Tinware treated in this way will never rust. Porch chairs of wicker or reed can be cleaned with soapsuds and a scrubbing brush and then can be shellacked . Hot soapsuds with ammonia is admirable for cleaning gold jewelry. In whipping cream, add the white of an egg to every cupful of cream. Cornmeal will remove lamp smoke from a wall blackened by kerosens. Chloroform is good for removing grease spots, but should be used with care. It is not difficult as a rule to know wnen lions are about, as they make their presence audible, Away in the soft, velvety darkness under the stars you hear a "woofâ€"woof."‘‘ anâ€" swered from various points of the compass by other "woofs." materials, rub in powdered French chalk. After some hours shake it out. Use wash pillows whenever posâ€" sible for livingâ€"rooms and dens. They are more hygienic and more sanitary. To stone raisins without stickiâ€" ness, stem them, cover with boiling water for two minutes and then open the raisins. A cake should be iced before it is quite cold. Charcoal powder is excellemt for cleaning fine knives. A sheet of heavy cardboard is deâ€" sirable to cool hot cakes upon. A special knife should always be kept for onions, bread and hot fat. Housewives will find the butcher‘s apron a great convenience, as it covers even the sleeves. We formed camp, and for threel weeks lions came close to us, hopâ€"| ing to pick up our oxen. The huntâ€"} ing of Leo being a rather serious | business and one requiring striet| precautions, we had our fires lightâ€"| ed and hurricane lamps hung up an hbour before dark, and kept them going until daylight. Try a long glass stirring rod stirring food cooking over : stove. It is then time to see to it that the boys have the fires going ; otherwise the utterers of the ‘"woofs" w‘ll likely enough smell you out and make things uncomfortable, al though, as a rule, it is only the Turnips and potatoes mashed gether make a pleasant change the table. His Treatment of Lioness Would + Arouse a Suffragette. The lion is regarded as the king of beasts and the noblest specimen of the fourâ€"footed tribes. But those who have been after him have a different opinion, writes Frank W. Batler in Pall Mall Magazine. In fact, the "king‘" has habits that would make a militant suffraâ€" gette grit her teeth and provide her with some telling facts for lecture purposes., Never blacken a kitchen stove ; wash it every day with clean soap and water. preserves, place a circle of thin cloth on top and sprinkle this with ground cinnamon. The spice preâ€" vents mold from accumulating on the fruit. HMe sallies out at, night accomâ€" panied by his wife, and he sends her off to grow] and roar and frighten game into his jaws. He gets the lion‘s share, she gets the lioness‘s, and when he has satisfied his appeâ€" tite he does an immense amount of roaring and bragging about his prowess. Before beginning to make a cake all utensils and ingredients should be placed ready to hand. Never plunge the ivory handle of a knife into hot water. Wash the knives in a knife jug. Scraps of cream cheese may be made useful by mixing them with butter and milk or a little cream. This should be spread on thin, walâ€" erlik crackers, made into sand wiches and served with salad. . ___â€"=® boiling water on oranges and let them â€" stand five minutes. This will cause tnc white lining to come away with the skir so that a large quantity of oranges can be quickly sliced for sauce or pudding. When sealing fruit butters or HABITS OF THE 110 N. ‘nollow boom which might be Taken for a dlistant cannon shot. | ‘"During the night it was differâ€" ent, although the sound came from ‘a different direction ; there was a perfect tumult, rumbling of thunâ€" der, howling and a sound like the lrurhing of a strong wind. There was no wind. however. Sometimes !one heard all the noises at once. |Gvnera\l_\' and above all, from 7 to ! 10 o‘clock at night, the sound ended I\\'i(h a â€"loud â€" detonation _ much stronger than in the day, followed Ib_v a long echo. Then again would ilw heard an outburst that cannot Ibe imagined. It was as if a moun | tain of glass were shattered and the noise echoed in all directions. At times it seemed as if one could hear the roar of surf, or even the dead (thud of objects falling, such as ‘blockn of stone rolling down preciâ€" i pices."‘ toothless a man. It at wrong he shou! time, and if he never be a nex Seed Corn On the Cob or Shelled. Irap. lpnmm‘. or White Cap Y. Dent $1.35 per bushel. Longtellow _ $1.50; Compton‘s _ $1.60. Preight Baid in On:ario on 10 busbels or more. Bags free. Write for catalogue EARTHQUAKE FPOR WEEK®S. Restore your stomach to healthy vigor by taking a Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Dyspepsia Tablet after each mealâ€"andout out the "plecing*. are the best friends for sufferers from indigestion and dyspepsia. 50c. a Box mt your Druggist‘s. . Made by the National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. A bite of this and a taste of that, all day long, dulls the appetite and weakens the digestion. If 1] Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Dyspepsia Tablets m( imes | m time A is in m class by itselfâ€"the easiest tunning, the most substantislly bullt, the most satisfactory washer, ever Invented. Need merchants @ince 1866 MAXWELLS m 1N a next time iGH SPEEp FUfAMPION wed ng me a de e t} Pooomaintrssesemeetees o9 L xtends s m uou lion who will attack is punished for dong uld know better next he is wise. there will M Fu t1 ADG m oaring rwling t stopp might ‘gouffre‘‘ is in of La Relle, thousand feet unstable still, > of past volâ€" sounds are apâ€" s those accomâ€" earthquakes, re"" is applied ut? pt metim« the v fifteen unda _ was eB st and eat depth. and then of a d()‘. )ed with a be taken viear m Ove r]ves 149 it