Trent, on leaving the hotel, turned for almost the first time in his life westwards. For years the narrow al- leys, the thronged streets, the great buildings of the city had known him day by day, almost hour by hour. Its roar and clamor, the strife of tongues and keen measuring of wits had been the salt of his life. Steadily, sturdily, almost insolently, he had thrust his "Don't try, unless you want me to take it back,†Trent said, strolling to the side board. "Lord, how those City chaps can guzzle! Not a drop of champagne left. Two unopened bot- tles, though! Here, stick 'em in your bag and take 'em to the missis. young man. I paid for the lot, so there's no use leaving any. Now clear out as quick as you can. Prn off."' "You will allow me, to--" Scarlet Trent closed the door with a slam and disappeared. The young man passed him a few moments later as he stood on the steps of the hotel lighting a cigar. He paused attain, intent on stammering out some words J! thanks. Trent turned his back upon him coldly. l you The clerk half closed his eye: and steadied himself by gasping the back of a chair. There was a lump in his throat in earnest now. "You- on meiirrit,Giyt" he gasp- ed. 1et-r.pll afraid I can't thank Trent tttanred at it Bnd held out his hand. Then he paused. "Never mind," he said, with a short laugh, " meant to give you a fiver, but it don't make much odds. Only t'etLthat.rtru pay some new elothes" “I am much obliged to you, sir," he laid humbly, "but you have made I mistake. This note is for fifty Trends." He rose from his seat and threw a bank-note over the table. The clerk opened it nnd handed it back with a little Mart. “Well, you’ve shut ms Ge he de- clared. "You seem n poor sort of I creature to me but if you’re content it's no business of mine. Here, buy yourself an overcoat, and drink a glass affine. I'm off!" ""V ___.-.., w, - all. I am quite he p, and mod." Scarlett ter,, buy mutually. "Then you don't k it," he ex- claiined. ei " the " may not, r, young man continued, with a tree courage. "but I am. After happineee is spelt with ditrermtt letter. for all of us. You have denied ,tmmelf--work- ed hard, carried many burden: and run great flake to become a million- aire. 1 too have denied myself, have worked end 1r,'rft,'l to make a home for the girl cared for. You have succeeded and an are 'trad can hold Edith'r-t . your pa on. my wife's hand in mine and I an hap- py. I have no ambition to be a mil- lionaire. I was very ambitious to win my wife." 1 Scarlett Trent looked at him for a: moment open-mouthed and open- eyed. Then he laughed outright and a chill load fell from the heart of the man who for a moment had forgotten himself. The laugh was scornful per-I haps, but it was not angry. . . I “w-" ..._..v..- haven " . Once -rdorriheTii Yet how hard to I pan from who. "Yoy frtPlstalttn, a: This hint may Save your Jam t Home Jam-Makers CHAPTER WL--tCont'dt THE GOLDEN KEY young man CHAPTER VIII, “mi man raised his head. re t e pink winning. "“1350 gitga mu. the Or “The Alumnus ol lcdsard." By tho Author of "Whnt Ho Gout Her." f he “Id. u one’a ddiir' Her voice was hitth-pitUed and penetrating. Listening to it Trent unconsciously compared it with the voices of the women of that other world into which he had undated earlier in the afternoon. He turned I Ironing Inge towards her. me. The old lady will be itG'ariii they puke 'em. Can't we have u drive round for an hour, eh t" "Come on, General," she cried. "Pve done a skip and driven down to meet £911. 'yth.io1te.tprhen they miss He took the train for Walton, travelling first-class, and was treat- ed with much deference by the of- fieials on the line. As he alighted and passed through the booking-hall into the station-yard a voice hailed him. He looked a: sharply. A carriage and pair of arses was waiting, And inside a young woman with I very amen hat and a profusion of yellow lit. A sense of depression swept over him as he was driven through the crowded streets towards Waterloo. The half-scornful, half-earnest, pro- phecy, to which he had listened years ago in a squalid African hut, Bashed into his mind. For the first time he began to have dim apprehensions as to his future. All his life he had been a toiler, and joy had been with him in the fierce combat which he had waged that day. He had fought his battle and he had won-where were the fruits of his victory? A puny. miserable little creature like Dicken- son could prate of happiness and turn a shining face to the future-Dieken- son, who lived upon a pittance, who depended upon the whim of his em- ployer, and who confessed to ambi- tions which were surely pitiable. Trent lit a fresh cigar and smiled; things; would surely come right with him-they must. What Dickenson could gain was surely his by right a. thousand times over. by' From the Strand he crossed Traftu- '.o gar Square into Pall Mall, and up the lriiisicrriG' into Piccadilly. He was tr, very soon aware that he had wandered li into a world whose ways were not his ‘ ways, and with whom he had no kin- q ship. Yet he set himself sedulously .'l to observe them, conscious that what "I he saw represented a very large side ' of life. From the first he was aware I of a certain difference in himself and t his ways. The careless glance of a [ lounger on the pavement " Pall y Mall filled him with a sudden anger. " The man was wearing gloves, an v article of dress which Trent ignored, i' and smoking a cigarette, which he a‘ loathed. Trent was carelessly dress- ied in a tweed suit and red tie; his e critic wore a silk hat and frock coat, it patent leather boots, and a dark tie of invisible pattern. Yet Trent l knew that he was a type of that class which would look upon him as an out- ' sider, and a black sheep, until he had t bought his standing. They would expect him to conform to their type, ; to learn to speak their jargon, to think ' with their uny brains and to see / with their short-sighted eyes. At the ' "Criterion" he turned in and had tt' i drink, and, bolder for the wine which 1 he had swallowed at a gulp, he told ." himself that he would do nothing of r the sort. He would not alter a jot. l They must take him as he was or , leave him. He suffered his thoughts I to dwell for a moment upon his , wealth, on the years which had gone , to the winning of it, on a certain _ nameless day, the memory of which , even now sent sometimes the blood , running colder through his veins, on [ the weaker men who had gone under that he might prosper. Now that it 1was his, he wanted the best possible , value for it: it was the natural desire of the man to be uppermost in the bargain. The delights of the world behind, it seemed to' him that he had already drained. The crushing of his rivals, the homage of his less success- ful competitors, the grosser pleas- ures of wine, the music-halls, and the l unlimited spending of money amongst people whom he despised had long since palled upon him. He had a keen, , strong desire to escape once and fori ever from his surroundings. He lounged along, smoking a large cigar,1 keen-eyed and observant, laying up j [for himself a store of impressions, j iyneonseiouslt irritated at every step , l by a sense of ostracism, of being in , some indefinable manner without kin-, 1 ship and wholly apart from this world , in which it seemed natural now that l he should find some place. He gazed a at. the great houses without respect, or envy, at the men with a fierce con- ' , tempt, at the women with a sore feel- , ing that if by chance he should bi, brought into contact with any of them ' , they would regard him " a sort or, wild animal, to be humored or avoided ' purely as a matter of tself-interest.! ' The very brightness and brilliancy of their toilettes, the rustling of their; dresses, the trim elegance and dainti-' ness which he was able to appreciate' without being able to understand, ont served to deepen his consciousness of l the gulf which lay between him and; them. They were of a world to which,) even if we were permitted to enter it, 1 he could not possibly belong. He re-, turned such glances as fell upon him with fierce insolence; he was indeed] somewhat of a strange figure in his; ill-fitting and inappropriate clothes; amongst a gathering of smart Pele,) ple. A lady looking at him through, raised lorgnettes turned and whisper- ed something with a smile to her com- panion--onee before he had heard an audible titter from a little group of loiterers. He returned the glance with a lightning-like look of diabolical fiereeness, and, turning round, stood upon the curbstone and called a han, "You %itrht have aphid yourself May through to the front ranks. In 'lnny respects those were singular and unusual elements which had gone to the making of his success. His had inot been the victory of honied false- (hoods, of suave deceit, of gentle but _ legalized robbery. He had been a l hard worker, a daring speculator with l nerves of iron, and courage which ‘Would have tt1orffUd a nobler cause. 3 Nor had his been the methods of good I fellowshi ' the sharing of “good 'turns," the camaraderie of finance. 5 The men with whom he had had large Idealings he had treated as enemies rather than friends, ever watching I them covertly with close but unslack- l ening vigilance. And now, for the grunt at any rate, it was all over. _ ere had come a pause in his life. His back was to the City and his face was set towards an unknown world. Half unconsciously he had undertaken a lit.. tle voyage of exploration. I .‘ The girl had moved a step towards t him as she s oke, and a gleam of sun- , light which had found its way into I the grove flashed for a moment on the l stray little curls of her brown-gold _ hair and across her face. Her lips were parted in a delightful smile; she _ was very pretty, and inclined to be apologetic. But Scarlett Trent had seen nothing save that first glance, when the sun had touched her face with fire. A strong man at all times, _ and more than commonly self-master- ful he felt himself now as helpless as a child. A sudden pallor had whiten- l ed his face to the lips, there were strange singings in his ears, and a mist before his eyes. It was she! ,There was no liossibility of any mis- _ take. It was t e fir! for whose pie- ture he had gamb ed in the hut at ,BfskwaryitrHfonty's baby-girl, of ‘whom he had babbled even in death. iHe leaned against a tree, stricken 1' dump, and she was frightened; He had strength enough to stop her. A few deep breaths and he was him- self again, shaken and with a heart beating like a steam engine, but at least able to talk intelligently) (To be continued.) "Yiu are ill," sshifiG'idriipn, so sorry. Let me run to the house and fetch some one!" "I beg your pardon, miss," he said confusedly, "my mistake! You see, your back was turned to me." She nodded and smiled graciously. "If you are Mr. Scarlett Trent," she said, "it is I who should apologise, for I am a flagrant trespasser. You must let me explain." 'l/d woman likely to have become his un idden guest. He knew at once that she was one of that class with whom he had never had any association. She was the first lady whom he had ever addressed, and he could have bitten out his tongue when he remembered the form of his doing so. a little plantation into a large partit- like field. He took off his hat and fanned himself thoughtfully as he walked. The one taste which his long and absorbing struggle with the giants of Capel Court had never weak- ened was his love for the country. He lifted his head to taste the bran which came sweeping across from the Surrey Downs, keenly relishing the, fragrance of the new-mown hay and [the faint odor of pines from the dis. tant dark-crested hill. As he came up the field towards the house he looked with pleasure at the great bed of trortreoua-eolored rhododendrons which bordered his lawn, the dark ce- dars which drooped over the smooth ‘shaven grass, and the faint flush of color from the rose-gardens beyond.: The house itself was small, but pic- turesque. It was a grey stone build- ing of two stories only, and from where he seemed was 1tompletely Stn.. bowered in flowers and creepers. In ‘a way, he thought he would be sorry to leave it. It had been a pleasant summer-house for him, although, of course, it was no fit dwelliryehouse, for a millionaire. He must look out} for something at once now---a country house and estate. All these things would come as a matter of course. He opened another gate and passedi into an inner plantation of pines and. shrubs which bordered the grounds. A; winding path led through it, and, coming round a bend, he stopped short with a little exclamation. A girl was standing with her back to him rapidly sketching upon a little block which she__had in her left hand. I She turned slowly round and look- ed at him in cold sprurise. Trent knew at once that he had made a mis- take. She was plainly dressed in white linen and a cool muslin blouse, but there was something about her, unmistakably even to Trent, which placed her ve_r_y far apart indeed from "Hullo!" he "reitGririsii, "another guest! and who brought you down, yogpg lady, oh?†- The man touched his hat, the car- riage drove off and Trent, with a grim smile upon his lips, walked along the dusty road. Soon he paused before a little white gate marked private, and, unlocking it with a key which he took from. his Packet, passed through “Drive home, (hefty-he said. "Pm wa1kimr. Trent shrugged his shoulders and tugged to_the eoaetunan., F "What a bout? temper you're int" she remarked. " 'm not particular about driving. Do you want to walk alone t" "Exaetb."' he answered. “I dot" She leaned back in the carriage with Mighty)“; c6lor. "Wo, there'a Vane thing about me," she said acidly. "I never go when I ain’t wanted." the table," he all shortly. “I didn't order a outing. to meet me all; 1.don't.ymnt one. I am going to The picture shows the famous “Regimental Church" In Warsaw. She tossed her head. CHAPTER IX. IN CAPTgJRED WARSXW, {Egg Dainty Dishes. from the Tomatoes Fried in Cream-This is in: the a German dish. Peel and cut fresh hay and tomatoes into thick slices if tomstoes the dis- are large, or if small let them remain he came whole. Season, flour, saute in hot 1'l'1 dll butter, then sift a little more flour iendrom, over them (if needed) and add a cup dark ce- of cream. Stew all together until the smooth cream is thickened and the tomatoes lush of are well cooked. Carrot 8oup.--Two cups of peeled and chopped carrots, one-fourth cup of rice, two cups of scolded milk, two cups of water, two slices of onion, two tablespoonfuls of flour, four ta- blespoonfuls of butter, sprig of pars- ley, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt, pepper to taste. Cook carrots in water until tender. Press through sieve, saving liquid. Cook rice in milk in double boiler. Cook onion in butter, add flour and seasonings. Mix carrot pulp and liquid with rice and milk, and pour upon butter and flour. Lemon Rice Puddinr--Wash three- fourths of a cup of rice and put into a double boiler with three cups of boiling water, adding more water if needed. The rice should take up all this water. When cooked set aside to cool. Add three lightly beaten yolks of eggs, salt, a bit of butter and three tablespoonfuls of sugar, grated rind of lemon and milk enough to make very moist. Bake forty-five minutes. Beat whites with liberal half-cup of granulated sugar until stiff, add juice of one lemon, spread over pudding, and brown slowly. .. Cream of Rice Soup. - Rinse two tablespoonfuls of rice in a sieve un- der running water. Drop into a pint of boiling slightly salted water and boil for 20 minutes. Then add a quart of scalded rich milk. When it boils add two teaspoonfuls of corn- starch rubbed smooth in a little smooth milk, a teaspoonful of salt and onion juice and pepper to taste. Two teaspoonfuls of grated" cheese may also be added and will much improve the flavor to most tastes. Cook for three minutes and then add a tea- spoonful of butter and serve. Apple Ctrke.-For apple cake sift a pint of flour with a teasspoonfu1 and a half of baking powder and half a tea- spoonful of salt. Add two tablespoon- fuls of butter, rubbing it in thorough- ly, and then add a beaten egg and milk enough to make a thick batter. Spread the batter in a buttered tin to the thickness of an inch. Over the top spread quarters or eights of peel- ed and cored apples, and sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. Bake in a hot oven. Fruit Charlotte.---) what fruits in season you like best. Make indivi- dual cases of light puff pastry. Whip up two cups of thick cream, sweeten and flavor to taste and have the frdit ready, raw or stewed. Put a layer of fruit in the case, then a layer of cream, then more fruit and top with cream. Decorate with bit of cherry or other bright fruit. Orange Mint "ityL--Spripkle the carefully skinned and divided pulp of four oranges with two tab1espoonfuhs of powdered sugar, two tablespoonfuls of finely chopped, fresh mint leaves and one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Chill thoroughly and serve in glasses ornamented with sprigs of mint. If the oranges are very juicy, pour " a portion of the juice before serving. . . .. ,,wa‘,,_ / . 15-21 is electrically Weighed. hermetically seated and dispatched to your table Ireah vvjth all the fragrant odors of the Sunny Isle. Sample Eon: Salada, Toronto. iiifil',i'.)ijlffiTlli AMA A saw. Eisner) FROM CEYLON About the Household W‘va’" T TORONTO "Bo you are marrying the man of your choice P' "Not exactly the man of my choice; rather the man I could get." Bells of this description, but of the cheapest kind, were among the most popular trinkets used by the early ex- plorers and traders in bartering with the natives of America. . The hawks were tricked out with gay hoods and held until ordered to pursue "the quarry," or game, by leathern straps fastened with rings of leather about Geh leg just above the talons, and silken cords called "ltssseis." To.eaeh of these leathem straps, or "lrewets," was attached a small boll. In the flight of hawks it was often so arranged that the differ. ent bells made " consort of sweet sounds." Birds Trained to Win Their Muter's Prey. Falconry, or hawking, was I favor- ite sport with the nobility and gentry of Europe down to the first half of the seventeenth century. Hawks were trained to mount and pursue game and bring it to their masters and mis- tresses, coming and going to the call of the latter with mantelous docility. 'Sa;R"c"rd Take about eight fair-sized potatoes and scrub them clean with a vege- table brush. Cut them in halves, spread each half with a little butter, sprinkle with pepper and salt and lay a thin slice of cheese on top. Place on a slightly greased pan and bake in en even hot oven until soft and brown. If you do not have ice and wish to keep fresh meat every day, piece on an earthen dish and cover it with a cloth wrung out of vinegar, covering with a pan to keep from drying out. Bet in a cool place. This will not in- jure meat. It is wise to wipe over the cord: of the porch shades occasionally with on oil-nonked rug. The constant friction on the cord in what wean the strands and causes the cord to break. A little oil will lessen this friction percepti- bly. If a cake tin is greased lightly and flour sifted over it, Ill surplus flour removed by a sharp tap of the tin, the result will be quite as good as using a paper lining and is more easily and quickly done. When purchasing a roast of veal have the butcher lard it with salt pork. This will make the meat juicy instead of being dry, and it will have a fine flavor that can be had in no other way. Take vegetables out of the water the moment they are sufficiently cook- ed. If underdone they are indigesti- ble, and If overdone their appear-nee is spoiled and their flavor lost. Fold tt piece of emery paper in the centre and draw the knife rapidly back and forth several times, turning it from aide to side. This is an ex- cellent sharpener for paring knives. A milky jug should always be rinsed in cold water (More being washed in hot. If the hot water is used first, the curd becomes set and the surface is not so easily cleansed. To utilize the tops of old stockings and also prevent the color of your preserved fruits from darkening, wash the tops and draw them over the jars after sealing the fruit in them. If rice and vegetables have to stand after cooking, it is best to co- ver them with a cloth under the lid to absorb the steam and keep them from becoming sodden. Usis milk instead of wiltiir"ior mak- ing pie crust, which is to be served eoY: Jt will_keep crisp longer. Wrap eiieese in a cloth moistened with vinegar if you would keep it moist and free from mold. Lunch sets of large aid imall doll- ies are one of the best ways out of thtfyrannr of the tablecloth. Never put away a garment in need of mending. Cucumbers make a delicious und- wich. Slice tomatoes with a bread knife with saw teeth. I Wash yellowed linens and bleach them in the sun. Leg of Mutton in Bunket.-Meae deep, narrow gushes in the thick end of a clean leg of mutton. Crowd in In mixed seasoning of salt, red and blnck pepper. Add s little minced onion, a little dry mustard and powdered ;herbs. Brush all over with melted butter or soft bacon fat. Then sprin- kle lightly with salt, set on a rack in a roasting pan. Put in a very hot oven. Let brown, then rub over it a tart jelly melted in a little hot water and envelop in a crust of flour end water, made very stiff and rolled half an inch thick. Pinch the edges tight together, lay back in the pen, cover and bake in a hot oven. Take up, break the blanket carefully, lift out the meat and pour the gravy from the envelope into a small saucepan. Add to it either hot claret or a spoonful of tart jelly, a drop or two of tabaseo, boil up and serve in a boat. Bring, to boiling point, drain 3nd serve. If too thick, thin with cream or milk., Garnish with chopped purs- ley. - -- - HAWKS PURSUED GAME. Honest, Anyhow. Household Hints. Originally a yard meant the conference of the body. The cork life preservers now in gen- eral use are not only cumbersome but ditfieult of adjustment in a moment of panic. Those who are forced to go to see. are urged to use them, how- ever, in addition to the new kapok vest. It is generally understood that the cork jacket will be soon a relic of the pest, however, as the new de- vice is now recognized " the better life preserver. Kapok is a silky, floits1ike fibre from Java of extraordinary buoyancy. One pound of this singular "utr will keep taflotit and well out of water a person of avenge weight. On many of the great liners still in service a new life preserver has been installed. This is called} kapok vest, the name being derived "from its ma- terial. Fear of the deadly submarine, which seems destined to continue to plsy its part in a long series of sea disasters, has led steamship officials to provide every possible safety de- vice for their patrons. Will Keep Ailoat a Person of Average Weight. ONE POUND LIFE PRESERVER. Before the spinning begins the fur is picked over by hand. Bunches of fur are then put in a carding comb and worked up into long skeins. The spinner winds a skein loosely about his left hand, and with the right hand gradually pulls out a fine thread, which he attaches to the spindle of the diatatt. As a single thread does not possess suftieient strength for knitting purposes, it is necessary to make a- three-ply yarn by combing the threads from three spindles into one. The finished yarn is wound upon a spool or made into a skein ready to be knitted into any desired article. The long, silky fur appears when the rabbit is from three to four months old, and it is then plucked by hand about every two months. From one to three ounces of fur is removed each time. The fur is kept in a paste- board or wooden box, lined with pa- per, and protected from moths by means of a bit of camphor or naphtha- lene. Like other rabbits, the Angorn is prolific; eight or ten young are born at I litter. The rubbit cages are us- ually kept in a well-protected yard or beneath a shed, and stand two feet or more above the ground. When the young rabbits are a month old, the hair is combed as often " once in ten days, in order to keep it free Rom knots or matting. The combing causes the rabbit very little inconveni- _ence; in fact, it helps the frequent moltings of the little animals. 001!“qu use. The beauty of the Angora rabbit early attracted attention, and it was introduced into Europe over a hundred years ago. The peasants of Switzer- land, Savoy, and Flanders have long bred the animal, and in those countries Angora rabbits are a source of con- siderable profit. The soft, furry "Angora" caps and mittens that are so popular are knit ifrom yarn spun from the hair of the Angora rabbit. The hair is not sheer- ed periodically, like the fleece of sheep but is combed of every few months. in the course of a year some three- quarters of a pound of hair, valued at more than two dollars, is obtained from a single animal. Not only caps and mittens, but stockings, wristers, scarfs, vests, leggings, socks, under-, wear, shawls, and other articles are knit from the soft warm yarn. l The Angora rabbit is not uncommon , in this country. Adult rabbits bring) from $8 to " a pair. The best An-l, goras are pure white with pink eyes,| and their hair is ten or twelve inchesi in length. There are also gray An- goras with dark eyes, and black An-l goras. flay Artielee Are Knit he. the 1 Yea: of the -c' The long-haired Angor- rabbit in I netive of Asia Minor. Ita mane in derived from the province of Angora. where elmoet all the minds of what- ever species have long, line, silky hair. The long, thick wool of " die Angora goat end the~.AngDn IMO!» indeed, hna4tme beenor well-{acetate- ed “tide of commerce. The Anson cat, which came originally from that, region, in else "stubble hr its long; beautiful fur. l, The beauty of the more rabbit early attracted attention, and it wsus) introduced into Europe over I hundred l years ago. The peanuts of Switzer‘ land, Savoy, end Fumders have long1 A um mum“. cir- I Few Addresses made by the hm is of of the rations at war have '-r. " admirable in spirit and when». L' 1.3 that of President Poincare, m.. '.rv, ltoo, in the very Nee of the new, I lthe Bunion reverses. France is ' a lcruehed, she is not dismayed; all that iGerman frichtfulnees has essuycd lleaves her still tmterrifled. With a calmness sud coursge and sn indium- [ability that more s lesson to van. iworld, the men in the trenches. ml {the people st home sre going aim! their work buoyed up by the mm (that they ere fighting the battle of lciviliution, as they ere, snd eoniiuint 1 that victory for the right will not for- ever be delayed snd militarism for- ever be enthroned. The soul of France, "sid the horrors of a warran- yd unparalleled ungery, never shun- jo superbly. The world owes a ‘mv Ihomage here. To the Utina and Greeks of w: '1» on: Europe the phenomenon rarely AI}- peued and therefore their wrltltiy no that, if not entirely, silent r" ‘n- coming it, yet it was not unknmm tr, them. The scarlet surors was looked :zrm by the superstitious barbarians as u. omen of direful slsughter; so it is ", 1 unusual for descriptions of blood y _ t'. ties to contain Illusions to north., "r. lights. . In the anmll of Cloon-ma. -r 2 it in recorded that in 688 All, await paying 1 terrible battle l" n.- ' Leinster and Munster, Ireland, n . pie euron lit the northern skies, ’. r. telling the thughter. l Stepping-stones are provided lo keep the water clean, as well as hand protectlon to prevent the banks ftom crumbling. Balm are dug for wa- tering horses, troughs Ire prom-i 1 only in cue of necessity, and are Ihw'. propped on pants and tmed by mutu- lof pumpe. Pipes any be driven If inter lies " I reasonable depth-m jother words, not more than 20 ftw', , Depending upon their size, these Is:' l , 'm’ll deliver from four to twenty-w. gallons of water per minute. Looked Upon By Bubsrisns As In Olen of Shughur. Many people believe that thy 1.1- mm bomlis is s phenomenon petri- liar to modern times. But this is TM' true. The ancients used to cull i' thaamata, halides and tubes, mum. which expressed the different mi n of the lights. They Are Fighting the Battle of In the German â€my the upstrwun, "at in and for drinking purpmca we! the down-m water for water- ing bone. and for bathing. Suitable signs notify the men which Water is safe to drink and which may be 'ls Cd only for bathing. In mellow or mn- row stream buim Ire dug, or â€mu dun: built " u to form I murmur of maple dimensions. running also to n Anny. Suitlble drinking water is of \Lial importance to an my, and this u only one of u multitude of prohhms that Inuit be studied carefully ,y those who conduct . successful mm- plign. The water of a camp ly " matter of great importance. Hwy GOOD WATER Port ARMY HORSE, A Pie-“III Supply " of Vital lmpor. ' FRANCE UNTERRiFrEit THE AURORA BOREA LlS Civiiimtion. The Gert upon the a march! vel tamed. m tamed in “r fleet. t Bight of triumph: b her auburn armed pa: ing stuck: Whenever and wherev, and German uvies have can. u in the bottle " Ill-Mt. the British have nttheclooeofnyenro! ships of the German nu those in uncbunry n Ki swept from the ten, " Itill rules the waves! ine ruin. , law, design: wry. is real more money .eriptiont, to will have tl fully in, colonies " Oin- indict territory wh had: berom Because of the of the le- Get new ad m has nought by In htteresta---the cott Bomb, for imam Untied Sum wil there plot: have 'reo-Geeman strike works of New Er of the fi; Germqny what on In: cone can thi; tra Germany world, owiu I. by the i business m " It Mitt and men it in "y--in t million; a mourning ad before the Kaine ble, will b 11llinNitu HASP the Ii ed in numb ther World fruits "hes "tld from Donpibe G Mar-{ion CM be: utte O! God 3nd first year of the liven of MINER no: wow NATION Tim Ev Pure at ttiii? ar Th Dante lOth [than ifthe inthe SD! “mm Warsaw in """""emdcauai uetuoeranaatety h THE BRICK has (hum with the II that all comp?“ “an". our Sonic MIMI." You so that you Afternoon your City f men ro sin Annie; To ll irrmln Th th " propt 1))t)4 thew can H tr, For can A you with new“ Rui- isle " "