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Durham Review (1897), 24 Jun 1915, p. 6

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L4 _ _ He went out through the open window and wandered into the grounds, driven from her presence b« ed, he bowed his thanks coldly, and retired from the piano, leaving a fair field for his rival. "I thought you were going to rest while some one else sung," ie said, reproachfully, gho glanced up with a smile at Lord Lancaster. "So I was," she replied, lightly, "but Captain Lancaster wished me Z) lay while he m:lg for Lady Adela. So of sourse I could not refuse. Lancaster %ud into her face with Fil e en aoe hnd or she 8 â€" bute W to {or and which he 5 she could not fail to nderstand? Angered and chagrinâ€" Whenr the song was ended De Vere, who hzd lingered jealously near the piano. went up to Leonora‘s side. "He is going to sing to Lady Adela," the girl said to herself, a litâ€" tle disdainfully, but her touch was firm and unfaltering as she struck the chords while Lord _ Lancaster sung. "My Queen.‘ She bowed silently, and he sclectâ€" ed a piece of music and placed it beâ€" fore her. It was that beautiful song, "Oh, pray don‘t!" she cried; but he had already turned around. "Lancaster," he called, "won‘t you come and sing something while b{iss West has a breathingâ€"spell ?" He came forward at once. He thought it would be very pleasant to disvlace De Vere for a moment, to stand by her side and watch her exâ€" quisite face and the glancing white hands as they moved over the shinâ€" ing pearl keys. "Pray do not rise," he said, bendâ€" ing over her, hurriedly; "I will sing, but I shall want you to play my acâ€" companiment." e "Yes 1 will sing it," she said; and again there fell a hush of silence as the sweet and wellâ€"trained voice fillâ€" ed the room with its melody. De Vere was fain to acknowledge that she sung as well as she played. When she had sung the last line she looked up into his face. "Will you play or sing something now whire I rest?" she asked. "I never knew how unfortunate I was before in having no talent for music," he said, ruefully. "I should like to oblige you so much, but I have no more voice than a raven, Miss West. 1 will call Lancaster. He can sing like a seraph." she sic ane ful leg ful face, proud and glad in the priviâ€" lege he enjoyed of being so near her. When she had pla{’ed several inâ€" strumental .pieces brilliantly, _ he placed another song before her. "Let me hear if you can sing as well as you can play," he pleaded. She glanced at the song. It was Longfellow‘s "Bridge." "Yes I will sing it," she said: and bed He longed to say, "Give me the right to place you on an eqll’ulity with these women as my wife," but he was afraid to venture yet. Something in her cold, careless manner forbade the thought. He said to himself that he must wait until he knew her longer and had wooed her more. She was not to be lightly won, this beautiful gifted girl. She was proud and senâ€" sitive. He would have to bide his was quite another matter. There cerâ€" tainly appeared to be no chance of it now. He was charmed with the splendid musical talent she _ had evinced. He felt a glow of pride in her as if she belonged to him alâ€" "You have done splendidly," _ he whispered, as he hung delightedly over her. "There is not a ladf in the room who can do half so well." "Thank you," she replied, demureâ€" ly. "But you had better give me anâ€" other piece. I am here to play, not other to tal He right It was quite likely that De Vere would see the difference between his lowly born love and the real ladies in the room, as Lady Adela had said, but that he would be disenchanted It "y ) with a smothered sigh he placed re her several pieces, and while played he stood silemli’ by her turning the leaves of her music, gazing into the beautiful, soulâ€" The Lady of Lancaster ; CHAPTER XXXIV Or, Leonora West‘s Love. _ She was very thoughtful for an instant. She seemed to be making ; up her mind. |_ "You must not say no," he â€"said, | hastily. "I assure you that Lady «Lancaster will have no objection to | my doing so, if your aunt will perâ€" | mit me. May Ilcgme * & Lancaster, being.dwise, chose the latterâ€"part. He an innate conâ€" viction that Leonora would accept Lieutenant De Vere. He did not feel ‘ In fact, she was inwardly raging \ with vexation. Her clever Ylan for ‘annihilating Leonora had failed. The girl had appeared to much more adâ€" | vantage than she had expectedâ€"had | created a sensation, in fact. The men | were all in raptures, the women were | all angry and jealous, and Leonora‘s modest withdrawal from the scene | as soon as she arose from the piano . was felt by all as a relief. x "The cruel madness of love, The honey of poisonâ€"flowers, and all the measureless ill." The impulses of men in love are as various as their natures, Where one will linger around the fatal charmer ?nd hug his pain, another will fly rom \ Leonora raised her eyes gravely to his face. "Yes, iou may come,‘ she answerâ€" ed, and then turned quickly away. "May I come into Mrs. West‘s room and see you toâ€"morrow?" he asked, with an entreating glance into the bright eyes, and he saw a gleam of, mischief shining in them. ‘ "Will Lady Lancaster permit you to do so?" she inquired, demurelg'. | «"Yes," he replied. "I have told her, quite frankly the reason why I came, to Lancaster Park, and she had noâ€"| thing to say against it. If you willi let me see you toâ€"morrow, I will tell you what I told her," he continued.f with his heart beating fast as he gaz-l ed at her fresh young beauty. I "For my heart was hot and restless, | And my life was full of care, \ And the flurden laid upon me | Seemed greater than I could bear." Lieutenant De Vere had gone with her as far as the door. He had held her hand a minute in saying goodâ€" night. _ 5 e ayntey ) Hhe ;ain of her coldness, her studied : indifference. There was a gulf beâ€" [ tween them that grew wider and wider at every effort he made to bridge it. "I could not do it, really," said the dowager. "She is not in our set at all. She is a mere nobody, the deâ€" pendent niece of my housekeeper." _ "Well, but Lancaster and De Vere were quite handâ€"inâ€"glove with her," objected one. _ o f De Vere marry Leonora? â€" shall 1[[ "What an old shrew! I don‘t blame marry Lady Adela? What will fate, Lancaster for running away. I‘m do with the tangled thread of our, quite sure I should do so, too, if she lives, I wonder ?" lbulhed me as she does Lancaster," He went back to the house, and he, said the YOUY)g fellow to himself, but found that Leonora was gone, and @loud, he said, with an air of surâ€" that De Vere had gone over to the| Prise: fauteuil, and was talking to theearl‘s _ "My dear Lady Lancaster, 1 am daughter. Several of the men had sure you wrong my friend. Why formed a coterie around Lady Lanâ€" should he run away from . you, his caster, and were goodâ€"naturedly upâ€" kind friend, and from the beautiful braiding her because she had declinâ€" Lady Adela?" ed to present them to the beautiful _ "Ah, why? I have my suspicions, musician. |Lieutenant De Vere, but I shall not "A mere accidental acquaintance. She came over from America with them," said the dowager, carelessly. "I wish that I could go back to m‘% regiment toâ€"morrow," he thought. "Wr; should I linger on here, and how will it all end, I wonder? Will De Vere marry Leonora?® shall I marry Lady Adela? What will fate do with the tangled thread of our lives, I wonder?" _ _ He had always been gaz and lightâ€" hearted until now, but an hour of proâ€" found bitterness came to him toâ€" night alone in the odorous moonlit stillness. The words of Leonora‘s song semed to echo in his brain: His aimless walk led him to the, Magic Mirror, where he had come upon her so suddenly and with such , irrepressible joy that night. If only‘ she had listened to him then, she would have known the whole story| of that passionate love wherewith he loved herâ€"she did not even care to hear, he said to himself with bitter| pain and humiliation as he gazed into the clear pool from which her face‘ had shone on him that night, and fooled him with the love he thought he saw on the lips and in the eyes. | "Heaven help me! I am a fool to waste my heart on one who laughs at my love," he said to himself. "I will tear her from my heart. I will never show her again the tenderness of a heart she choose to trample. She will choose De Vere. That is wise. He is rich, I have nothing but Lanâ€" caster. Yet, if she would love me, I could bear poverty without a sigh, deeming myself ricÂ¥A in her affection." CHAPTER XXXvV. \ _ Lancaster was madâ€"mad with love, for the beautiful, penniless American| | girl, Leonora West. De Vere had| | suspected it all along, he was sure of| ! it now. That song last night â€" had ‘ opened his eyes. A nang of bitter,’ futile jealousy shot through his| | heart. He believed that his friend | was an unacknowledged rival. A| | vague terror of the end rushed over him. Who would win, Lancaster or | himself ? !_ _ "I have not been hard upon him. I | have been most patient; but his beâ€" | havior is inexplicable," cried she. "I ‘have offered a wife and a fortune to | himâ€"a beautiful, highâ€"bred, highâ€" | born wife, and a splendid fortune â€" | yet he is indifferent to both. All |Lady Adela‘s beauty makes no imâ€" | pression on him. He is barely civil to her. What is the matter with him, Lieutenant De Vere? Is he going to | be fool enough to fly in the face of his own good fortune?" ‘ | __"I hope not" said Lieutentnt De‘ Vere, but he looked very anxious. He ‘remembered that "whom the gods | wish to destroy they first make mad." ie e eP L o hrets â€"be sure of that," he replied, loyal "I am not in Lancaster‘s confidence, believe me, Lady Lancaster," he reâ€" plied. “l{ut:nere be anly woman in the case, he never told me so.‘ Perâ€" haps fou are makin'g a mountain out of a little moleâ€"hill. She stud:;fi hl.? ;tuntivel{. 1 shall find out no‘ ? rom you. I can see th;g" she sai +. "You and Clive are intimate," she said; "you ought to know a great deal about him. Tell me what it is that makes him so blind to his own interests? Is there any one in the way? Is there any woman in the case ?" Lady Lancaster came nearer to himâ€"she looked anxiously at him with her small, beadâ€"like black eyes. V an awl PMon ans. InthoangsIf Lo "Do not be too hard upon him. Give him time, Lady Lncaster. He will not brook harshness, he will break a tight rein and escape from it. You should know that much of all men‘s natures," said De Vere, pleadâ€" ing for his friend. â€" \ _ ‘"Here is a note he left for me," she ‘said, angrily. "He sag's he has been suddenly called away by urgent busiâ€" nessâ€"maj’ be detained a week or more, and wishes me to present exâ€" | cuses and regrets to you and the rest | of the company." _ _ # "Ah, why? I have my suspicions, Lieutenant De Vere, but I shall not impart them to any oneâ€"at least not yet. But he has behaved very badly, going off like this. I do not know how to make excuses for him, least of all to Lady Adela. She was jealous last night. I could see that. What will she say now? Clive has been playing fast and loose with me ever since last fall. It cannot go on forâ€" e}\"er. I shall mke him understand that." "My dear Lady Lancaster, I am sure you wrong my friend. Why should he run away from . you, his kind friend, and from the beautiful Lady Adela?" _ _ se "Of course he hadâ€"or why should he have gone?" inquired the handâ€" some young fellow, staring at her in amazement. "I don‘t knowâ€"but I have my suspicions. I half believe that he has run Away from me and Lady Adela. If I were quite sure of it, I‘d have my revenge," she muttered, irascibly. w Ne M thnl o mm Th "But do you believe that he really ht;lsl business?" she inquired, peevâ€" ishly. "I am very sorry he had to go," said the lieutenant. "Did you know of an{y reason Lord Lancaster could have for going up to London this morning?" she asked him, after they had gone through the preliminaries of a hasty goodâ€"mornâ€" ing. "No," he replied, gazing at her in .surprise. "Well, he has goneâ€"did you know that?" she demanded. "Yes, I heard from his groom that he went at daylight this morning," he replied. ns & n h‘ What was Lad{ Lancaster‘s dismay next morning, when she arose to her late breakfast, to find a note awaiting her from that troublesome nephew. She was in a great rage when she read it. She pushed back her dainty, untasted repast, which had been servâ€" ed in the privacy of her own room, and rang her bell violently. He came immediately, full of wonâ€" der at this abrupt summons, and found her pacing up and down the floor in a great rage which she did not take any pains to conceal. strong enough to witness his friend‘s happiness just yet. He felt that if he remained he might betray his pasâ€" sion and be laughed at for his pains. He sought safety from himself in igâ€" nominious flight. "Present my comJ)liments to Lieuâ€" tenant De Vere, and ask him to come to me for ten minutes," she said sharply, to the servant who anSWereJ the summons. never ; The loss of thousands of lives in : war has made infant life more valuâ€" }able, if possible, than ever. Everyâ€" | thing that can be done to stop infant !mortality must be done. The sumâ€" mer months claim thousands of little ilives. There are two main causesâ€" the fly peril and the dust devil. The | nation has been educated to the fly | peril, and we know that the fly deâ€" | serves no mercy. It carries infection, | taints food, and is directly responsible | for much illness. ‘ dry and be dispersed in‘the air, should mean that many valuable litâ€" tle lives will be saved to grovw up and fill the war gaps. Keep the dust devil down! This, and seeing that in yards, etc., there is no decaying food, animal or vegeâ€" table refuse, to attract flies, or to In a house there should be no dry dusting and sweeping. The dust is disturbed, W any germs Lt m&y contain settle on food, or are breathâ€" ed in with the air. Wipe over furniâ€" ture with damp cloths, therefore, and scrub and wash the floors. But there remains the â€" "dust devil.". There is much less diarrhcea in wet than in dry seasons. The rain cleanses the surface of the ground, and keeps dust laden with germs from flying about. Take a lesson from Nature, and freely water the ground outside your house in hot, dry weaâ€" ther, especially where the children play. The dancing dust in a shaft of sunlight is deadly, but unless the wind had swept it up it wouldn‘t be there. . Though the name of Colonel Barry is not one with which the public are very familiar, he occupies a position of peculiar importance at headquarâ€" ters. He is the Prince of Wales‘ Equerry at the front, to which posiâ€" tion he was appointed lately by General French. An old and intimate friend of the British Commanderâ€"inâ€" Chief, Colonel Barry served with the 10th Hussars in the Boer War, when he gained his D.S.0. He stands in high favor with the King, is very well off, is as good a sportsman as he is a soldier, and is personally one of the most popular members of the general staff. The Prince has the greatest regard for his Equerry, and the friendship that exists between them is of the peculiar kind that is probably never found except between men who have been soldiering toâ€" gether on active service. "I know that. But I am a coward; I am almost afraid to ask her for the boon I crave most upon earth," he â€"said, giving her in those few words a glimpse into his full heart. "What a very disagreeable old woâ€" man!" he said to himself, reddening with vexation. ; "She is full of spleen and venom. I must go out or I shall be tempted to say something sharp to her.‘ "Take my advice, and don‘t delay the proposal, young man. Don‘t let excessive modesty deter you. Reâ€" member that faint heart never won fair lady." _ _ e "As I am such an old woman, you will forgive me for telling vyou not to be a fool, Lieutenant De Vere," she said. "There are very few men who are married for themselves alone in these days, and, let me add, there are very few who deserve it. The averâ€" age woman looks out for money and position now. Be sensible, and thank your lucky stars that when you go to court Miss West you can carrY a forâ€" tune in your hand, as well as a heart." He went, and as he was leaving, she fired a last shot at him: "Pshaw! you are a coward," said my ladg, laughing. "Where is the woâ€" man who is going to refuse you with your face and fortune? You are a prize in the matrimonial market." "But I want to be accepted for mg- self, and not for my fortune, Lady Lancaster," he answered, proudly, and yet not without a sense of satisâ€" faction over these worldly advantâ€" ages of his. It was very pleasant to be his own master, to be able to do as he pleased, to ask no one‘s leave to marry whom he wished. , Lady Lancaster laughed a very disâ€" agreeable laugh. vin _ "And you will lose no time in makâ€" ing her your own? Delays are danâ€" gerous," she said, with a subtle meaning in her tone that made his heart beat. "She is the most beautiful of woâ€" men," he answered, forgetting his momentary illâ€"humor in the pleasure she awoke in him by her artful praise of Leonora. wishtes‘ for a successful ‘suit. Miss West is beautiful and accomplished, and with your wealth you can have {xo ?ii;’ficulty in lifting her to your evel.‘ "I dare say you think me a meddlesome olg woman," she ggnlxptly‘; "but you have my "Thank you. I understand the oriâ€" gin of your interest," he answered with a‘ slight smile; and she winc_eci perceptibly. She did not want him to know whither her suspicions tendâ€" to his friend in spite of reawakened jealousy. "And your own wooingâ€"how does that e&l"oap.r?" she inquired, with something like a sneer, abruptly changing the subject. . He flushed indignantly. ‘You are pleased to jest on deliâ€" cate mlai,oets. Lady Lancaster," he said, stiffly. "I beg your gardon” she answered, quickly. "I did not know you were so sensitive, but I assure you that I :l“kq a great interest in your love air." Col. S. L. Barry, D.S.0. The Dust Devil. (To be continued.) ONTARIO ARCHI TORONTO ve best Muffins.â€"This receipt was introâ€" duced to a certain household by a serâ€" vant from Hungary. In Hungary, she explained, she used salt pork, but she found bacon better than pork. She sifts 1% cupfuls of flour with 1% teaspoonfuls of baking powder, a teaspoonful of sugar and a half teaâ€" spoonful of salt. Then she adds a beaten egg, a teaspoonful of melted butter and half a cupful of sweet milk. After beating smooth she adds half a cupful of bacon. The bacon is first fried or broiled until crisp and then chopped and measured. The muffins are baked in hot muffin pans Pineapple Wax. â€" Pineapple wax is especially delicious on ice cream or other frozen desserts. The receipt is as follows: Pare a fresh pineapple, and cut it into cubes of uniform size. Put them into a steamer, and steam them until they are tender (until the cubes look clear). The juice that results is not used, because it is too strong, but it may be of use in flavorâ€" ing other fruits. It should not be wasted, for it has a very strong pineâ€" apple flavor. When the cubes are done, make a thick syrup of water and sugar, and, when it boils, drop in the cubes, and cook them until they again look clear. It makes a preserve a little stiffer than a marmalade, and when it is poured over a frozen desâ€" sert, it becomes a wax that is very delectable. | Caulifiower _ Pudding.â€"Break _ a cauliflower into sprigs, and soak it in cold salted water for half an hour; then drain it. Cover the mixture with sweet milk and boil it until it is tender. Drain it, add oneâ€"half of a cupfu! of thick, sweet cream, the wellweaten yolks of four eggs, oneâ€" half of a teaspoonful of salt, a pinch of ground mace, a dash of Cayenne, two tablespoonfuls of soft butter, and the juice of oneâ€"half of a lemon. Mix everything well, pour the whole into a buttered pudding dish, and bake it in a slow oven until it is firm. i Bachelor Buttons.â€"Cream together one cupful of sugar and oneâ€"half of a cupful of butter; add one egg and beat the mixture; then add one cupâ€" ful of bread flour with a pinch of salt, and three tablespoonfuls of almonds chopped fine, and mix the ingredients thoroughly. Drop the batter by teaâ€" spoonfuls on a buttered making tin, and spread it in the form of buttons, being careful not to have the dough any thinner on the edges than in the middle. Place oneâ€"half of a nut on top of each button, and bake them in a moderate oven. Orange Mint Salad.â€"Remove the: pulp from four large oranges by cutâ€"| ting the fruit into halves, crosswise, and using a spoon. Sprinkle it with | two tablespoonfuls of powdered suâ€" gar, and add two tablespoonfuls of| finely chopped, fresh mint leaves, and | one tablespoonful of lemon juice., Chill it thoroughly, and serve it in glasses garnished with a sprig of | mint. If the oranges are very juicy,| it is well to pour off a portion of the| juice before serving. 1 Souffle of Fish.â€"Take fish that has been left over from a meal, reâ€" move the bones, and cut it into small pieces. Add an equal quantity of uncooked marconi, and cook the whole in salted water. Drain it, and add oneâ€"half the quantity of grated Swiss cheese; mix everything well, put the whole in a baking dish, and small pieces of butter, and cook it in the oven. Serve it hot. Beray Eggs.â€"Fry some sausages. Warm some tomato sauce, fresh or preserved. Add a little meat juice. Fry some eggs in butter, and arâ€" range round the sausages with the tomato sauce. f BENSON‘S is behind every package of More than half a Century of Quality ABOUT THE HOUSEHOLD Selected in order to get what you want Starch Always order by the name Practically every grocer in Canada BENSON‘S inai ol plats BENSON‘S. ;:i One teaspoonful of soda to one pint th’jd! sour milk. .. _, One teaspoonful of extract to one of plain loaf cake. es ndl One scant cupful of liquid to two .. | full cupfuls of flour for bread. | _ In using a white sauce with meat, which is a usual procedure with the , French cook, great care is taken to | have the white sauce thoroughly , cooked before it is added to the meat. According to a man who makes fly paper, the resin used to make the paper sticky is soluble in castor oil, and any article which has come in contact with the fly paper can be cleansed if the sppt is soaked in it. In using butter with{neat the first thing to remember is that the butter should not be burned. Burned fats of any sort are exceedingly indigesâ€" tible and ruin the flavor of the meat. If a glove splits at the thumb or near a seam a sure and permanent way to repair it is to buttonhole the kid either side of the split, then sew the buttonhole edges together. If you wish to prevent green vegeâ€" tables from boiling over, drop a piece of dripping the size of a walnut into the centre of them,. just as they comâ€" mence to boil. When a hand embroidered blouse begins to show wear and little holes appear, simply buttonhole around the tear or embroider a dot over the worn place. One ounce of Epsom salts added to a gallon of water makes an excellent rinsing mixture for colored blouses and washing dresses. When boiling a ham leave it in the water in which it has been boiled unâ€" til it is quite cold. This will make it juicy and tender. Vinegar heated to the boiling point will soften paint brushes that have become dry and hard. * Oneâ€"half cup of yeast or oneâ€"quarâ€" ter cake compressed yeast to one pint liquid. Fonr peppercorns, four cloves, one teaspoonful of mixed herbs for each quart of water for soup stock. One scant cupful of liquid to one cupful of flour for batters. â€" One quart of water to each pound of meat and bone for soup stock. One scant cupful of liquid to two cups of flour for muffins. This table may help the young housekeeper: One teaspoonful of salt to one quart of soup. One teaspoonful of sait to two quarts of flour. , Banang Layer Cake.â€"Bake a white cake batter in layer pans. Ice each layer over the top with a thick coat of icing and over that put a thick layer of round banana slices. Place the layers of cake one over the other and ice the top and sides. It should be eaten while fresh if in summer. In very cold weather, the banana cake will keep for a few days. The filling needs no other flavoring than the bananas. Fried â€" Bananas.â€"Peel= and slice lengthwise in three parts. Have hot lard deep enough to cover the slices. Fry a light brown, and very carefully lift with a flat cooking shovel, from the fat to kitchen paper to drain a few minutes Lightly sprinkle with sugar and send to table hot. Banana Fritters.â€"Peel two banaâ€" nas and slice in thin circles. Dip in a batter made of one cup of sifted flour, a rounded teaspoon of butter, one tablespoon of sugar, a pinch of salt, one egg and one â€"half cup of sweet milk. Fry in hot lard. Serve with this sauce: Beat the yolks of two eggs with half cup of sugar. Add two tablespoons of _ orange juice; steam until smooth and thick. Then add two well beaten whites â€" of eggs, dust slightly with grated nutmeg and bananas in a moderately hot oven for 20 minutes. Remove the skins and reduce the hot fruit to a pulp. Have ready the wellâ€"beaten whites of two eggs, and while the banana pulp is hot, rapidly beat together, with two teaspoons of sugar. When cold serve with whipped cream. This is deliâ€" cious. The banana is the housekeeper‘s main dependence among fruits. It supplies the table all the year around. out butter. The bits Oof _ DBCO!! throughout the muffins give sufficient flavor of the sort butter would supply. until done and they are TRAINING DISTEMPER SPOKHN MEDICAL CO., Things Worth Knowing. Useful Table. : may help the young Ever hear of this? Yes, of course you did. but under a different name. You have seen it in cases where the horse was "overtrained," worked a little too fast and regular, The nervous system g::l the shock after the voluntary muscular system has n taxed too heavily. ‘The trouble starts in the mucous surfaces, and the digestive upwntu-. too, must then be impaired. He begins to cough when the glands are materially affected. Is your true salvation. It restores the appetite and normal functions of the whole system. The action in such cases is remarkably rapid and sure for recovery when you use ThiR Fanbaliw s mamefisclcy 9 7 C MERDCErE 0 x Femafy amanm#ius o2 G _ 00 _JTCCVC‘} when you use this remedy ucordlli! to instructions with each bottle. All Wholesale Drug Houses. Sold by all druggists. horse goods houses, or express prepaid by manufacturers. Bume ces 0 NCES C 99 ward Clarke." "I have been speaking all day in another court," he said, "and I am rather exhausted. His request was granted. The clerk called the next case, and immediately a young barrister rose who, for some reason of his own, did not want the case to be tried at that time. He also requested that his case might be postponed. "Why?" asked the judge coldly. "May it please your lordship," the barrister replied, "I, too, am in a‘ state of exhaustion, for I have been listening the whole day to Sir Edâ€" A case in which Sir Edward Clarke, the eminent barrister, was employed came up for a hearing late in the afternoon, says the Tatler, and Sir Edward asked the judge to allow it to stand over until the following day. When, toward the end of the fight, some one remembered him, he was found on the barbette topâ€"deafened and somewhat dazed, but still wiping the glasses of the sighting apparatus. To use his own language, he had "jist stuck it." But he had only done his duty, no doubt. No one will grudge him the decoration that he now wears proudly on the breast of his canvas jumper. Anyone who has been within even a few miles of great guns while they are being fired can form a slight idea of the nerveâ€"racking, earâ€"splitting concussions that burst out round the> lad. But besides that, the Tiger was under heavy fire from the German ships, and Bamford was the only member of her crew who was not beâ€" hind thick armor. The gun crews, in their delight at getting sight of their antagonists again, at once began to fire, and in the excitement everyone forgot about the youngster. When making a steamed pudding put a piece of well greased paper over the top before tying the cloth. ‘l\h will prevent the cloths from becoming greasy, and tlnymnou-oubhu wash. * Tokoepfemlfmh.ndgrm.ll theyurround‘etalnrgcwb, and put into it some water about two inches in depth; stand the pots in this, and allow the water to soak up from the hole in the bottom. ‘The chill should be takenâ€" off the water first but on no account pour water on the top of the ferns. Pot flowers may also be kept in this manner. Exhausting For Everyone. to everyone, irreâ€" ality. Fortunately , even in boyhood. realed many boyâ€" 1e bravest is a lad enlisted "boy" in Acting on the reâ€" the Board of Adâ€" has conferred on hat men have died tinguished â€" Service Tiger are qualiâ€" ie act WORRY AND WEAKXN Often indicate Overwork a Run Down Nervous Syst; Overwork and worry have a effect on the system and ofter rise to nervousness and sleeples Other signs include a wea} headaches and indigestion. In I#f matters are neglected, a cor breakdown of the nervous systo lows. On every hand one can o wictims of this state of nervo, haustion who are at a loss to what to do with themselv, , nervous, debilitated state hay in fied all ordinar_v treatment. If you are a victim nerves, if your symptor scribed above, you need Pink Pills because they ful nerve tonic. Their action on weak nerves fact that they enrich the blood through whi. are fed. Under the to: Conerete â€" arci bed rock have h MHampshire com grave stones in umt them it: ul(’ tram “i"f of a new ean be hiddon in a table ornamon mk-.uous ul,ujn The United 8t Dr. Williams‘ Pink nervous weakness with the headaches, feeling of intense â€" pression of spirits t tim of nervous ailm :‘d. Mr. Henry .8., says: "It gives sure to testify as t Williams‘ Pink Pill their use J was a p nerves were all un from frequent head mches, and was alm for work. I had t dies without sucee: decided to give D Pills a trial. 1 to dley made me a w tablish a wire Cod especiall vessels along time of fog Members of the Germ are fined twenty marks they fail to put in an : the "house." Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the What these Pi they will do for and nervous man Bold by all med by mail at 50 cer for $2.50 by wr liams‘ Medicine ( Urysials © pure and pe can be used have been n ist. A saddle has New Jersey i cludes leather buekles which â€" riders‘ clothing a new ) be strappec two person: opened for crank . Massachu less have h periments ; ing messag the ground Aluminun through w} san be circs ed by a Vis surgical co1 P_ure Ice for : so ME NEMW \ Aw For Sale by discrim Dairy, it‘s Pure children‘s diet. L thing that can tak food and the chil it‘s made by CiH them all the lce OM Lt i0 &# Include plent»s

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