& He was sitting crossâ€"legged with his back against one of the poles which supported the open hut, with his eyes fixed upon the cloud of mist hanging over a distant swamp. _A great yellow moon had stolen over the low range of stony hillsâ€"the mist was curling away in little wreaths of gold. _ Trent was watching it, but if you had asked him he would have told you that he was wondering when the alligators came out to feed, and now near the village they ventured. Looking at his hard, square face and keen, black eyes no gne would surely have credited him with any less maâ€" terial thoughts. to the masses. 1 have inherited inâ€" stincts which have been refind and cultivated, perhaps overâ€"cultivated by breeding and associationsâ€"you are troubled with nothing of the sort. Therefore if these surroundings, this discomfort, not to mention the appalâ€" ing overtures of our lady friends, are distressing to you, why, consider how much so they must be to me!" "Furthermore," the man whom Trent had addressed as Monty conâ€" tinued, "there arises the question of danger and physical suitibality to the situation. Contrast our two cases, my dear young friend. _ I am twentyâ€" my dear young friend. _ I am twentyâ€" five years older than you, I have a weak heart, a ridiculous muscle, and the stamina of a rabbit. My fighting days are over. I can shoot straight, but shooting would only serve us here until our cartridges were goneâ€"when the rush came a child could knock me over. _ You, on the contrary, have the constitution of an ox, the muscles of a bull, and the wind of an ostrich. You are, if you will pardon my saying so, a magnificent specimen of the aniâ€" mal man. In the event of trouble you would not hesitate that your chances of escape would be at least double mine. "FAth,** grunted Trentâ€""ugh! I tell you what it is, my venerable friendâ€" I have seen some dirty cabins in the West of Ireland, and some vile holes in East London. _ I‘ve been in some places which I can‘t think of even now without feeling sick. I‘m not a parâ€" ticular chap, wasn‘t brought up to it â€"no, nor squearmish either, but this is a bit thicker than anything I‘ve ever knocked up against. If Francis doesn‘t hurry we‘ll have to chuck it! We shall never stand it out. Monty!" "Talking," the elder man remarked with a sight shrug of his shoulders, "will never have a prejudicial effect upon my health. 'l’lt)) men of yourâ€" pardon me â€" scanty education the exâ€" rression of ideas in speech is doubtâ€" ess a labor. _ To me, on the other hand, it is at once a pieasure and a relief. _ What I was about to observe is this: _ I belong by birth to what are called, I believe, the classes, you Trent smiled very faintly, but he said nothing. "I will go so far as to admit that you are right," he acknowledged. "They are black as sin‘ _ But, my friend Trent, I want you to consider this: If the nature oI our surroundâ€" ings is offensive to you, think what it must be to me. _ I may, I presume, between ourselves, allude to you as as one of the people. Refinement and luxury have never come in your way, far less they have become indispenâ€" sable to you. _ You were, I believe, educated at a Board School, I was at Eton. _ Afterwards you were apprenâ€" ticed to a harnessâ€"maker, Iâ€"but no matter! _ Let us summarize the situâ€" ation." "If that means cutting it short, for Heaven‘s sake do so," Trent grumbled. "You‘ll talk yourself into a fever if you don‘t mind. _ Let‘s know what you‘re driving at." , The older man, gaunt, blearâ€"eyed, ragged, turned on his side. His apâ€" ï¬ouance was little short of repulsive. is voice when he spoke was, curiousâ€" l{ enough, the voice of a gentleman, thick and a trifle rough though it "My young friend,‘ he said, "I agree with youâ€"in effectâ€"most heartily. The place is filthy, the surroundings are repulsive, not to add degrading. The societyâ€"erâ€"not congenialâ€"I alâ€" lude of course to our hostsâ€"and the attentions of these unwashed, and I am afraid I must say unclothed, ladies of dusky complexion is to say the least of it embarrassing." "Dusky complexion!" Trent interâ€" ;ul::l?"†scornfully. "They‘re coal Trent lit a match under pretence of lighting his pipeâ€"in reality beâ€" cause only a few feet away he had seen a pair of bright eyes gleaming at them through a low shrub. _A litâ€" tle native boy scuttled away, as black as night, woollyâ€"headed, and shiny; he had crept up unknown to look with fearful eyes u_Fon the wonderful white strangers. rent threw a lump of earth at him and laughed as he dodged it. Monty nodded his head with solemn emphasis. "Searlett Trent," he cried, "Searlett Trent, listen to me! You are young and Iam old! To you this may be one adventure amongst manyâ€"it is my last. _ I‘ve craved for such a» chance as this ever since I set foot in this eursed land. _ It‘s come late enough, too late almost for me, but I‘m going through with it while there‘s breath in my body. . Swear to me now that will not back out! _ Do you hear, mt? SWEAR!" Trent looked curiously at his comâ€" vastly interested in this sudâ€" m-outbunt, inhthe ï¬rn;r;es; of hi; tone the tightening of the wea m “'&M After q{l;‘t:lun. the old chap had some grit in hi To Trent, who had known him for years as a brokenâ€" down, hangerâ€"on of the settlement at m a drunkard, gambler, a creature to all ï¬"‘“ hopelessly "I have alluded to these matters," he continued, "merely in order to show you that the greater share of danger and discomfort in this expedition falls to my lot. Having reminded you of this, Trent, 1 refer to the concludâ€" ing sentence of your last speech. The words indicated, as I understood them, some doubt of our ability to see this thing through.‘ 4 "Well, go ahead, Monty," he said. "Let‘s hear what you‘re driving at What a gab you‘ve got to be sure!" Monty waved his handâ€"a magniâ€" ficent and silencing gesture. He paused, peered over to where Trent was sitting, with grim, immovâ€" able face, listening with little show of interest. He drew a long, deep :::.th and Eoved over nearer to tllie rway. is manner was suddenly eh!vi. 4 hnd datia THE GOLDEN KEY Or "The Adventures of Ledgard.‘"‘ By the Author of "What He Cost Her.‘" CHAPTER L. "Live!" he repeated, with fierce conâ€" tempt; " you are making the comâ€" ‘mon mistake of the whole ignorant | herd. _ You are measuring life by its | length, when its depth alone is of any import. _ I want no more than a year | or two at the most, and I promise you, Mr. Scarlett Trent, my most estimâ€" | able young com?anion, that, during that year, I will live more than in your whole lifetime. I will drink deep of the pleasures which Xou know nothing of, I will be steeped in joys which you will never reach more nearly than the man who watches a change in the skies or a sunset across the ocean! _ To you, with boundless wealth, there will be depths of hapâ€" piness which you will never probe, joys which, if you have the wit to see them at all, will be no more than a mirage to you." _ _ ¢d passionate appeal were like a revelaâ€" tion. He stretched out his great hand and patted his companion on the backâ€"a proceeding which obviously causd him much discomfort. "I will tell you, Master . Scarlett Trent," heâ€"said, "I will tell you why I crave for wealth. You are a young and an ignorant man. _ Amongst other things you do not know what money will buy. You have your coarse pleasures {do not doubt, w{ich seem sweet to you! _ Beyond themâ€" what ? A tasteless and barbaric display, a vulgar generosity, an igâ€" norant and purposeless prodigality. Bah! _ How different it is with those who know! _ There are many things, my young friend, which I learned in my younger days, and amongst them was the knowledge of how to spend money. _ How to spend it, you underâ€" stand! _ It is an art, believe me! _ I mastered it, and until the end come, it was magnificent. _ In London and Paris toâ€"day, to have wealth and to know how to spend it is to be the equal of princes! The salons of the beautiful fly open before you, great men will clamour for your friendship, all the sweetest triumphs which love and sport can offer are yours. _ You stalk amongst a world of pigmies a veritable giant, the adored of women, the envied of men‘! _ You may be old â€"it matters not; uglyâ€"you will be fooled into reckoning yourself an Adâ€" onis. _ Nobility is great, art is great, genius is great, but the key to the pleasure storehouse of the world is a "To do with it!‘" The old man raisâ€" ed his head. _ "To do with it!" The gleam of reawakened desire lit uï¬ his face. _ He sat for a moment thinkâ€" ing. Then he laughed softly. _ He broke off with a little gasp. He held his throat and looked imploringâ€" ingly towards the bottle. Trent shook his {.ead stonily. _ There was someâ€" thing pitiful in the man‘s talk, in that odd mixture of bitter cynicism and passionate earnestness, but there was also something fascinating. _ As reâ€" gards the brandy, however, Trent was adamant. _ > "You‘re terribly keen on moneyâ€" making for an old‘un," he remarked, after a somewhat lengthy pause. "What do you want to do with it?" key of goldâ€"of "Of _ fortuneâ€"fortune!" â€" Monty‘s head dropped upon his chest, his nosâ€" trils, dilated, he seemed to fall into a state of stupor . Trent watched him half curiously, half contemptuously. "Just a drop Trent!" he pleaded. "I‘m not feeling well, indeed I‘m not! The odours here are so foul. _A liqueurâ€"glassful will do me all the good in the world." "You won‘t get it, Monty, so it‘s no use whining," _ Trent said bluntly. I‘ve given way to you too much alâ€" ready. _ Buck up, man! We‘re on the threshold of fortune and we need all our wits about us.‘ A struggle went on in the face of, the man whose hot breath fell on Trent‘s _ cheek. It was the usual| thingâ€"the disappointment of the bafâ€"| fled drunkardâ€"a little more terriblei in his case perhaps because of the| remnants of refinement still to be| traced in his wellâ€"shaped features.j His weak eyes for once were eloquent, | but with the eloquence of cupiditi and unwholesome craving, his lean cheeks twitched and his hands chook. Trent caught his arm and held it firmly. "No, you don‘t," he said, shaking his head. "That‘s the last bottle, and we‘ve got the journey back. We‘ll keep that, in case of fever." "Not a drop," he declared. "What a fool you are to want it, Monty! You‘re a wreck already. You want to pull through, don‘t you? _ Leave the filthy stuff alone. You‘ll not live a mo'nth to enjoy your coin if we get it." Trent laughed outright, easily and with real mirth. _ Yet in his heart were sown already the seeds of a secret dread. There was a ring of passionate truth in Monty‘s words. He believed what he was saying. Perhaps he was right. The man‘s inborn hatred of a second or inferior place in anything stung him. _ Were there to be any niches after all in the temâ€" ple of happiness to which he could never climb? _ He looked back rapidâ€" ly, looked down the avenue of a squalid and unlovely life, saw himself the child of drinkâ€"sodden and brutal parents, remembered the Board School with its unlovely surroundings, his struggles at a dreary trade, his runâ€" ning awa{ and the fierce draughts of delight which the joy and freedom of the sea had bronï¬:lt to him on the morning when he had crept on deck, a stowaway, to be lashed with every ropeâ€"end and to do the dirty work of every one. . Then the slavery at a Belgian settlement, the jo® on a steamer trading along the , the "I think, if you will allow me, Trent, I will just moisten my lipsâ€"no more â€"with some of that excellnt erandy." "Live!" Monty straightened himself out. _ A tremor went through all his frame. Mortyâ€"no one at Buckomari had ever known of any other name for himâ€"stretched out a long hand, with delicate tapering fingers, and let it rest for a moment gingerly in the thick, brown palm of his companion. Then he glanced stealthily over his shoulder and RBis eyes gleamed. gold!" II At the Krupps‘ works 40,000 canâ€" non are turned out every year. 4 Work at Krupps‘ is conducted in great secrecy. Each worker is forâ€" bidden to enter any office or workshop not connected with his own departâ€" ment. He has a passport for his special job, and he must not take any interest in any other. Krupps‘ private army will march him off to the private barracks if he disobeys. Hundreds of watchmen, heavily armâ€" ed, guard the secrets of the Krupps‘ works both day and night, and the grounds are a mass of electrie traps which immediately signal the apâ€" proach of any intruder. "Because he‘s got sense enough not to come out and fly around until all boys of your age are in bed." The British navy is the only navy that had practised firing at submarâ€" ines before the war. First Krupp Was Blacksmith. From a little blacksmith‘s shop at Essen in 1812, the mighty firm of Krupps, the home of German guns, has grown into the largest armament factory in the world. Friedrich Krupp originated the smithy, and for fourâ€" teen years struggled against poverty. He died a poor man, and on his deathâ€" bed confided the secrets he had disâ€" covered during his lifetime to his son Alfred. It was more than twenty years before Alfred Krupp gained reâ€" cognition, but after obtaining fame through exhibiting a fortyâ€"five ton cast ingot of Krupp steel at the Crysâ€" tal Palace Exhibition in 1851, he never looked back. When he died, in 1887, 60,000 people followed him to the grave. Toâ€"day Krupps‘ works cover 1,000 acres of ground. Even beâ€" fore the warâ€"rush commenced the firm were employing 60,000 men at their main works at Essen and thousâ€" ands of others in their collieries, shipâ€" building yards, and private testing grounds. It is estimated that over 300,000 people depend on Krupps for their livelihood. "I do," replied the marriedâ€"looking man. _ "I‘ve just paid for hats for nine daughters." "Pa, why do people call the owl the bird of wisdom ?" "That‘s true," replied a marriedâ€" looking man in the audience. "You agree with me?" shouted the speaker. A Supporter. "There ought to be only one head to any family," shouted an orator. An undyed satin toque trimmed with rabbit ear bows of black velvet. Sorelli, of Paris, considers this one of the smartest creations of the season. The lower hat is a straw turban with broad band of blue, taffeta trimmed with large silk poppy on either side.â€"Designed by Eliane. life at Buckomari, and lastly this bold enterprise in which the savings of years were invested. It was a life which called aloud for forture some day or other to make a little atoneâ€" ment. â€" The old man was dreaming. Wealth would bring him, uneducated though he was, happiness enough and to spare. Test mt * A foot step fell softly upon the turf outside. Trent sprang at once into an attitude of rigid attention. His revolver, which for four days had been at full cock by his side, stole out and covered the approaching shadow stealing gradually nearer and nearer. The old man saw nothing, for he slept, worn out with excitement and exhaustion. (To be Continued.) Sign of Sapience. New Millinery Model From Paris. Egg Sandwiches.â€"Yolkes of 2 hardâ€" boiled eggs, French mustard, celery salt, paprika, salted chopped almonds, mayonnaise. _ Mash yolks and add seasoning, working until smooth, and then adding enough mayonnaise to spread smoothly. This amount can Veal, Tongue or Ham.â€"Run each meat through food chopper instead of using whole slices. To 1â€"2 cup ham and 1 1â€"2 cups veal and 1 teaspoonful of vinegar, 3 drops tabasco, 1 teaâ€" spoonful of French mustard, horseâ€" radish and tomato catsup. Blend and add mayonnaise enough to spread. Use on white bread only. Harlequin.â€"Spread slices of brown and white bread with different colored butters or fillings. â€" Place four slices together. _ Press down and lay under a weight for an hour or more. _ Slice the opposite way, which will give sections of white and brown, like a checkerboard. Ham Sandwich Nouveau.â€"Mince ham or use very thin paperlike slices. Lay on white bread and cover with thin slice of Swiss cheese. Cover, press firmly together and lay in oven until bread heats and cheese melts. merve with sweet gherkins, either hot or cold. Chicken and Bacon.â€"Mix equal quantities of minced chicken, broiled bacon and celery. _ Add one teaspoonâ€" ful minced green pepper and a few drops of vinegar or salad dressing. Lay shreds of lettuce on sandwich before putting on top and, if at hand, a slice of tomato over each before top crust is put on. Paste Cheese.â€"This can be made at home by grinding sharp cheese through the meat grinder. _ Add papâ€" rika, salt, a little olive oil and onion juice. _ Mix well and pack into jars. Before using, add â€"chopped chives, parsley or cress to give color and adâ€" ditional flavor. 2 Cucumber _ Sandwich.â€"Lay _ slices of cucumber, thinly cut, into a small bow!l of French dressing for oneâ€"half hour. Drain and lay on buttered slices of entire wheat bread covered with lettuce strips. _ Thin chicken slices will combine excellently with cucumbers. _ Tomatoes and cucumâ€" bers both combine well with cream cheese and nuts. Sandwiches and Sandwich Filling. "CALADA" Selected leaves from the finest plantations, famous for teas of subtle deliciousness. SALADA is fresh and free from dust. The Charm of Eastern Fragrance is typified in every sealed packet of About the Household BLACK, MIXED OR GREEN TORONTO | To boil riceâ€"Place the rice in a |pan of fastâ€"boiling water, and be | careful to choose one large enough for | it; 1 ounce to 1 1â€"2 ounces of rice | should be cooked in a quart pan, | which should be threeâ€"parts full of | water, and have half a teaspoonful | of salt and few drops of lemon juice | in it, the latter to preserve the whiteâ€" ness of the rice. Stir occasionally. (Boil the rice from 10 to 15 minutes, | but test it at the former time by | pressing it between the finger and |\ thumb. _ When the grains feel soft iremove the saucepan from the fire at once and drain off the water; return | the rice to the pan and set it on the | corner of the stove to dry, shaking | it occasionally. â€" Some grains of rice will always stick to the pan, and | to remove these put a small pat of | butter in the pan, and as this melts | the grains will fall away. _ The rice | will take quite 10 minutes to dry, and should never be served until the moisture has been got rid of and the grains separated. If the rice is boiled | too slowly or for too long a time, | the result will be a sticky mass. A girl with clever fingers can make good little shirtwaist bows out of her brother‘s castâ€"off ties. A red brick kitchen floor will keep beautifully clean and red if a drop of paraffin oil be used in the water it is washed with. Potatoes, other vegetables and pork chops are among the edibles that may be cooked in the casserole to advanâ€" tage. Never throw away the skin of orâ€" anges. â€" The grated yellow rind is a good flavoring for cakes, etc., and is cheaper than extracts. If your wash boiler springs a leak on wash day, stop the holes temporâ€" arily with a piece of bread rolled into a ball and pressed over the leak. To make a filling of hickory nut cake whip cream very stiff, sweeten and flavor to taste and add nuts cut rather fine. Olives and shrimps chopped togethâ€" er make an excellent salad, with the addition of mayonnaise. A stub pen can be usd in an emerâ€" gency for tightening the tiny screws in a pair of eyeglasses. Rice Rissoles.â€"Make some risotto, as above, but omit the cheese, and add a little tomato sauce. Lay the rice on a dish to cool. _ Then form into balls, egg, crumb and fry a goldâ€" en brown. Rag rugs made of cotton wash well, are inexpensive and are often just the thing for the kitchen . To make pulled bread, pull pieces of crumb out of a freshly baked loaf, then bake these pieces in a quick oven till brown. * Use ammonia water always inâ€" stead of soap if you are cleaning white paint. _ It has the advantage of not dulling the surface. It is a wise housekeeper who does one piece of housecleaning every few weeks, so then the dreadful turmoil of the usual long spring and fall outturnâ€" ings is entirely avoided. To keep apples through the winter in a barrel bore holes in bottom and sides of the barrel and store on a dry platform a foot or more high. Never feed a baby before you give it the nightly bath. The order should be reversed, and then the youngster should sleep the sleep of the clean and well fed. Risotto.â€"Chop half an onion very finely and fry it in half ounce of butâ€" ter. _ Place 4 ounces of rice in a sauce pan with half a pint of stock, add the onion and cook until the stock is absorbed. _ Stir in 1 ounce of gratâ€" ed Parmesan cheese, pepper and salt to taste. _ Make very hot and serve. If liked, serve the rice as a border to a center of scrambled egg. Cabbage leaves contain a great deal of gluten; therefore, are very nourishâ€" ing. Greens should be cooked in their own moisture in the double boiler or plunged into rapidly boiling water, salted, and cooked and drained while they are still green. Whole wheat bread filled with a mixture of dates, raisins and nuts is not only delicious, but so nutritious one could almost live on it alone. Mock cauliflower can be made of half a head of cabbage and half a Mock cauliflower can be made of half a head of cabbage and half a bunch of celery chopped together and boiled 30 minutes. _ Add milk, salt, pepper and butter. The person who does not pay as he goes seldom succeeds in accumulating anything. _ It is better to deny yourâ€" A good plan is to pour in a pint of cold water when the rice is sufficiâ€" ently cooked. This stops the boiling and helps to separate the grains; if put close to the stove when the rice is first put into the pan, the cook will be able to throw in into the pan the moment the rice is tender. If the rice is to be served with meat in place of a vegtable, the rice should only be partly cooked, and the water all drainâ€" ed off and then half a pint to one pint of stock put in the pan. This should be simmered until quite cookâ€" ed, drained and served. be doubled or trebled as necessary. Spread either on white or brown bread, using cress, lettuce or other salad plant, between. Household Hints. Two Rice Dishes. B 77 The family record is an extraorâ€" dinary one. Her mother, Dr. Elizaâ€" beth Garrett Anderson, was one of the first women doctors. She beâ€" gan her medical studies in 1860; and though the College of Surgeons and the College of Physicians refused to admit her to their examinations, she obtained a license to practise from the Society of Apothecaries in 1865. Paris had fewer prejudices than Lonâ€" don and, passing the medical examinâ€" ations of its University, she receivâ€" ed her M.D. degree. Later on, when England realized that she was not to be denied, honors were not lackâ€" ing, and her daughter‘s degree is a London one. Aiter a long career in London, Dr. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson retired to her native town of Aldeburgh, and She remembers that the only time before the war when the authorities showed any special interest in getâ€" ting and keeping hold of her was when a magistrate, not, without comâ€" ments, sentenced her to six weeks‘ imprisonment. For forty years her mother and her aunt had worked with all propriety, for the cause of Women‘s Rights. After that space of time, the ridicule of Parliament and the booings of medical studentsâ€"of students beaten on their own ground â€"palled on the younger generation, and a window was broken. Some good, as it happened, came of the inâ€" cidentâ€"and the sentence. Miss Garâ€" rett Anderson‘s articles on the condiâ€" tions and management of women in prison make, with Lady Constance Lytton‘s papers on the same subject, an invaluable basis for reform. woOMAN DOCTOR DOING FINE WORK ple, and where the rations (most inâ€" contestable of all evidence of recogâ€" nition) supplied to her patients were the official rations of the British solâ€" dier. Since September Miss Louisa Gat~ rett Anderson, an Englishwoman of note as a suffragette, has been doing great things for the wounded. Early in the war she and the British Govâ€" ernment felt mutally shy of one anâ€" other, and her first hospital was opened under French authority. Her next hospital was _ at Wimereux, where she was among her own peoâ€" dispelled, the War Office asked Miss Garrett Anderson to return home and make a hospital in London. Out of her own resourcefulness, experience, and initiative she makes her hospital. It has five hundred beds; it is to be in working order in record time; it is to be wholly selfâ€"sufficientâ€"that is to say, Miss Garratt Anderson herâ€" self is wholly selfâ€"sufficient. How has she come by the necessary abilâ€" ity? Not, certainly, by the fostering foresight of a paternal Government. No count was taken before the war of the possibility of a woman doing the things she is doing, and even afâ€" ter the war was well in hand there was still no effort made to secure the services of the whole group of exâ€" traordinary young Englishwomen to which she belongs. She now holds authority equal to that of a Major in the R.A.M.C., and the Press is eager to give her the salute. She raâ€" ther relishes the humor of the situaâ€" tion when she tries to persuade the public, against its will, that she is not a Majorâ€"that no woman can hold a commission in his Majesty‘s Army. ORGANIZES AND MANAGES MILIâ€" TARY HOSPITAL lC ulf.tï¬nuthuhmnindcbtfor unnecessary things. Agoodluncheondilhismsdcot leftover ham and chicken, put throurll‘ the chopper. _ Put in a baking dish with layers of boiled macaroni, with | the top layer of bread ¢rumbs. | Cayenne pepper is excellnt to rid cupboards of mice. The floor shofld‘ be gone over carefully and each hole | stopped up with a piece of rag dipped, in water and then in cayenne ppper.l The mutual shyness having An Unusual Family. iisa â€" Garrett Anderson Served Prison Term as Suffragette. Once in Jail. iss Louisa Garâ€" The Austrian Crown Has Been Stolen, the name of Gar feminine history. European powers may be preUly hard up when the war comes to an end, and all manner of schemes will probably have to be adopted to scrape money together. Will the royal treasâ€" ures of the war lord and the Ausrian emperor be sold or pawned ? It is interesting to â€"knâ€"=w that the crown donned by the monarch of Austria, which was made originally for Stephen of Hungary, some eight centuries ago, has been stolen, lost and pawned. On one occasion it was pilfered by a queen, who fled across the frozen Danube with it, and there, being in need of ready cash, she pawned it for 2,800 ducats. When it was finally traced and recovered it was placed in a fortress in Hungary and guarded night and day. Nearly 25,000 women, in â€" 843 branches, make up the membership of the Women‘s Institutes of Onâ€" tario, the annual report of which for 1914 has just been issued. Articles in this report cover nearly every line of feminine endeavor. The efforts deâ€" scribed or proposed relate to activiâ€" ties in Institutes, the Church, and community life; to Red Cross and other forms of patriotic helpfuiness; and to agriculture, more especially to fruit growing, poultry raising, and beekeeping for women. The report gives very full consideration to the home, nearly every range of domestic economy receiving attention. . The study of child life is given a large place, and two addresses deal with "Children‘s Rights" and "Education for the Backward." "Electricity as it Relates to Women on the Farm" is the title of a practical talk by Sir Adam Beck. Considerable space is given to health topics, both of a pubâ€" lic and an individual nature. The reâ€" port reflects much credit upon the hosts of women who are helping along Institute work in his Province. h 1 4. Th . coctvnctedtimates Antit another of the remarkable Garrett sisters, belongs the enterprise of havâ€" ing married a man who had never seen her and never and never could see her. Mr. Fawcett had been blinded by a gun accident. During his political career his wife played a prominent part. Few women, indeed, have been more closely associated with practical politics, for hers were, _ _ _A 4%. ind Dact. in a sense, the eyCb ©% MM% °0 WO ; masterâ€"General; and, as A fellowâ€" seer in the larger sense, she wrote, in conjunction with him, various esâ€" says and lectpres on political econâ€" omy. Her daughter, Philippa was Senior Wrangler of her yearâ€"or, better still, bey ‘the man who, ap.r‘ from feminine" competition, was the winner of that high distinction, All these ladies, including the, young mathematician who asto! Camâ€" bridge, and the young râ€" with ink eveqrt 1".0 the hospital in Endell There were some very severe storms at Cracow, the Austrian fortress, which was formerly (1320â€"1609) the capital of Poland, some time before the war. Terriffic gales uprooted several trees, one of which was an vncient elm. In the disturbed esrth at the foot of the fallen tree the crown worn by former kings of P>â€" land, dating back to the fourteenth century, was found. This crown. by the way, has been lost sight of since the middle of the eighteenth cent.ry. At the time of the revolution it was buried in a forest to prevent it being annexed by the Austrians, and it reâ€" mained under the soil for nearly a hundred years. There is no doubt that this crown would fetch a big price if put up for sale by auction. It is adorned with 53 fine sapphires, 50 goodâ€"sized rubies, 1 emerald and 338 pearls. The gems are sunken in a mass of pure gold, and the crown weighs altogether about fourteen pounds. CROWNS MAY PAY FOR WAE Women‘s Institutes of Ontario. Lost and !:lwnetl- of Garrett. scaeriic®*t " more . closely associated cal politics, for hers were, the eyes of the blind Postâ€" eral; and, as a fellowâ€" : larger sense, she wrote, ion with him, various esâ€" ectpres on political econâ€" dAaughter . Philippa was It is part of WHY Youno om@ GROW PALE AxD The Blood Supply is Ds Unless the Yrouble is | Consumption May F When girl miserable, t ents to take means dange The girl in into a happy an abundant in her veins good blood t m nine |g grow v their appetit the slightest headaches ; girls are in « medicine can liams‘ Pink J Pills there health, wit} sparkling ey fragile girl womanhood health. Thi girls and wo tractive, are Ing Dr. Will paid M he he best 0 Dr. W Willi short nlete me n SA V V1 see a new J side the bed man coldly, "I‘m afr other medi "Am I the pati thought hand. Itt endit hand," know : examir week." *"Butâ€"but wh with this ?" It was lives. He had grab " Everyt man shor let me ki I‘m going noon!" Then he t from his poc ling circlet â€" beamed | with ly "I‘m afraid it‘s ing," he murmure back and have it The damsel sho engagen ring, eve my neck Th Th W AN ICE tar n What We wont Reached the For sale TY DA in attra vular wi c(m\'(‘llifl It is the pert She DJ ng Solv H rhay H bv di es : € Ani