33] "Now do you see my plan T I knew: that you were busy here, and that) you did not wont to be interrupted.; The .idow's intention was to inter.! run: you, and mine therefore was to: delay Mr. by all and any means, 1113-: "Your mother, Miss Carrington, ml a brilliant couversationnllst. when: she meets with someone who is "rl able of upreciatlng and replying to, her sallios ; and if l mar say so with-l out undue boasting, i think she found, that person in me Indeed, had not: past experience Juistif1ed me in relri ing to a certain extent on my owni powvrs in this respect, 1 should havr made in different plan I think we! both enjoyed the ride, at any rate in, its earlier stuns. l know, at least. that I did. "After about three miles. the bell†she was riding went dead lame. n was a contingency tor whieh I tr) not unprepared in tact. in my pri- vate words with the man from whom’ we had hired the donkeys, I had stir; ulated expressly that the one he sup-l plied to the lady should not be able to no live miles without breaking down.’ The man performed more than hie contract. for it broke down, as t snr/ in three. I d . Starch K 3â€THE CABLEMAN" CHAPTER xxm--fContiruted.1 " zxcmue PRESENT-DAY ROMANCE BY WEATHERBYHCHESNEY College Opens September IS Write for calendar giving particulars. a. th CIIILMAN. BAA., LL.o.' President. LEARN to increase your earning capacity on the farm. LEARN business methods. LEARN how to produce better crops and better stock. LEARN to grow good fruit, better poultry and the best of everything. September to April at the College Apr" to September at Home. Public school education is su1Meient for admission. --- ONTARIO --- AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OUELPI‘I. Young Man---- If you can’t go to War tlo to College _ "Then, as though to complete my humiliation, she told me exactly what 'she had done and what she meant to do. She did not even pay me the com. 1plimont ot regarding me as antag- lonist from whom it would be advis- [able to concea information. I had thought that my fanciful eloquence had impressed her. I see now that 'she had been laughing at me all the Itime, and i think she regarded me as to somewhat foolish winding. You “His name is Andrew Gillies,' she said. 'Do you know him l" "'You are going to make him an offer tor the hire of his donkey for the day I†I said. But I knew well enough that the remark was foolish. " 'Possibly,' she retorted, 'I shall not want to go. It you will look be. hind you, you will see a man ap- proaching us. By the pace at which he is coming, it would appear that he is riding a better donkey than either ot these which you hired for us. Whe. ther i go to the picnic or no, will de- pend a good deal upon him, I fancy.’ "She glanced at me through hair closed lids. " 'I think,' I said, 'that you will be somewhat late tor the picnic at Lat, Furnas.’ "She had taken the matter into her own hands. I realized that further pretense wag useless. Since, appar- ently, she already knew my cards, I showed my hand. "'Is the pie yours ?' she retreated, 'Does our Mr. Montague consider that he is working his commission of " lay with surprising ease and success t Or did he dispise his antagonist so much that he anticipated that success would be easy , Do you really think I am a fool t' 1/lttlt and 1uuugtiiiatrle. That was (why she was riding a donkey which [had been privately guaranteed to me Ito certain to go lane " the tirtrt or taecond bit of at“! climbing we came -to, I thought that the widow would _ thereby be compelled to do one of two things .' either to abandon the expedi- "iott altogether, which was not what f I thought she would do ; or to waste a ,eonsiderabie part of the morning by 1 walking back to Rebeira Grande and _ hiring a carriage alter all. There was a third potmibilitr--that she might '; suggest continuing the Journey on my donkey, and leaving me to lead the lame one back home; but to that I [was ready with the unanswerable -ttb. jection that she did not know the . way. "My Pegasus of poetic fancy was dashed to the ground, and there was not. so much as B Butter left in his wings; I did not even finish my phrase but looked at her instead. Her manner had changed, and she was re- garding me with a mocking smile. tague "She laughed " though it did not] matter, sat down by the roadside. and said that we would rest tor an hour, and admire the scenery, and perhapsl by that time her steed would have to: covered enough to proceed. Now I: knew quite well that he wouldn't, and> I thought she knew it too; but delay was what I had been playing for all} along, so I fell in with her suggestioni without comment. We eonvertsed, lightly, perhaps even It times bril-i iiantly, for about twenty minutes, aad) the Just when I was in the midst or working out a pretty fancy in mega-f phors for her delectation, and thought: that she was honoring me with her; most alert attention, with the purpose of capping my effort if she could, she} electrified me by putting a question} which had nothing at all to do with' what I was saying. I “is the pie yours so tar, Mr. Mom! “it was a pretty situation, and I was curious to see how she would meet it. of 0011118 she met it in the one way which I had not anticipated. THE '" at' "How do you want it changed, door?†“mg n 31mm menu." A Young Financier. “Auntie, can you change tt dime for me t" What Goes In the Missionary Box. "Whatever Ire you doing, Molly t" asked mother, he she entered the nur- sery. For her "e-year-old daughter was-busily mm; broken toys. head- less dolls, raged clothes, and other odds and ends in an old leather bag. "Oh, mother, can’t you see t" cried Molly. 'Tm pecking a missionary-box. Juit‘Tike the ladies do, And in all right." the added proudly. “I haven’t put in u single thing thnt's any good.†"'I have a ditterent theory as to that,' she replied quietly. 'Your con science, I do,' he replied, punctuously. have cultivated the habit of truth, be- cause. considerably to your own aur- prise, you discovered in early lite that it pays. Had you anything to do with my husband's death ?' "He shot a curious glance at her, and I thought his eyes quaned before hers. "I'm so far particular that I draw the line at, association with a murder- er.' she answered at oncoi 'You have many vices, Andrew Gillies, and possibly they added to your commer- cial value in the past. One of the most noxious of them is your canting parade ot piety. But you used to have one virtue ; a curious virtue it is too, to be part ot the complement ot a common swindler. You speak the truth.' " ‘According to my lights and com science, I do,' he replied, unctuously. "The fellow had dismounted and was standing beside his beast, with one arm resting on the saddle. She had treated me pretty tsetyrntully, but I could have struck him for the look on his face when he answered her c--- "'r didn't think you could be ticular, Rachel Carrington'" 5 "'No, but Andrew Gillies may be Table to guess. He knows more than we do, you remember, about what my husband’s movements were on the last day of his life. We will see how _ thtrpoint strikes you. You would like ’to be present at our interview, no doubt ; and I owe you some return tor jthe pleasant morning you have given "'Don't come too near me, Andrew Gillies,' she cried. 'Keep your distance till you've answered a question or two. I know that your hands aren't clean, but I don't know quite how deep the stain on them is. You've got to satisfy me on that point before we go further.' "I liked the way she tackled Gillies, though. She didn't give him time to think himself a great man. She Just took top station from the ttrat, and kept it, "The man on the donkey didn't come up to us very fast. He seemed to be hesitating because she wasn't alone; and when she saw that, she called out to him not to be afraid that I was a friend of hers and harm? less. I have been accused of being a vain man more than once in the past by people whose oqlnisn wasn't worth considering. If they could have seen me at that momeyt they would have smiled, for it I am vain, my vanity was in a fair way to being flayed " me in shreds ; she gave It a whip-cut at every sentence. "She laughed again, and said that she didn't consider the yet ot any importance. I think I never felt quite so futile as I did when that woman laughed at me. And yet, you know, I admired her for it. " 'l am of the other party,' I remind ed her sulkuy. “She laughed, and I take it that you will believe me when I say that I was feeling pretty riled. " 'But you don't know what the words on it mean,' I cried. 'No one does.' " ‘Because you haven't got it to supply.’ I said at once, and I really thought she hadn't. "Bhe smiled. 'Didn't Mr. Scarbor- ough tell you,' she said, 'that I was behind the door for some time last night.' I know about the scratched Mone.' "'That depends,' she said. 'Though we agree that the pie is not yours. I can't claim that it is all mine either. Andrew Gillies will have a finger in it. too, and I shall whit to see what his contribution is before I otter mine. You understand the situation, I think. He probably found that tact out very soon, and that is why he waited so patiently outside my window this morning. Now why shouldn't he and I pool our resMyureeg-he supplies the plan, and l the additional information which makes the plan ot value t' "'I did not kill him,' he answered. "Were you present when he died t" "'No,' I and, with awn-Mung ad- miration at the way in which trite 1nd played with me, 'it'tt yours. What are you going to put Into it t' "' It suggested an interview.’ Mf. Montague,' she told me sweetly, ‘and the place which was mentioned was this road on which we are now. You timed that good animal's stack ot lameness very wr" If we bud gone a quarter ot a m " ‘iznr, I should have had to tavern excuse tor stopping. As it is )bL. ave given me the opportunity unsought. Do you stlll claim the ownership of the pie t' Mr. Scarborough end the two up _ " left the China“, Mrs. Carrington, u e who had been watched by the' crunch. _ . in; of their footsteps on the gravel, got up sud looked out from her win. H dew. She new e msn in the garden, ouse J sod he saw her " the window. He took I note from his pocket, held it up tor her to see. and then laid it on s gsrden nest in full view from where' Some Dainty Dishes. I she was standing. Then he went When making pickles. remember! away. The man was Andrew Gillies, that the very beat white wine vinegsr a sud she told me that he had in " should be used, “a that they should I probability been waiting in the garden be made in on agnte saucepan that 1.. in concealment tor I long time, hoping quite tree from crscks or blemishen' , tor a chance of delivering the later. When made, they must be put up at You three, by your early start. an carefully as Jelly in sterilized jars and? him the opportunity sooner than he kept tightly gonad. The ma should l had hoped. not he ("Ilia HUM with â€In vanntnhln- I l wtlt understand that I found that sut- "Without wnmng to areâ€, she threw on an ulster and went for the letter. “It AGL ttrit I few minutes mar (To Be Continued.) I, Pickled Walnuts (Another Recipe). " --One hundred walnuts gathered l while young enough for a pin to prick " them easily. Brig tsufficient to cover l them, in the proportion of six ounces .0! salt to one quart of water. Pickle lot a full halt gallon ot vinegar, one (teturpoouttt1 ot salt, two ounces of (iGG"i, black pepper, three ounces of 'crushed ginger, three ounces of crush- ed mace, one<hslt ounce of cloves :stuck into three small onions, two jounces ot mustard seed. Boil l-p'the brine and remove the scum, and when' cold pour over the walnuts. stirring them night and morning ; change the, brine every three days, removing them in nine days. Spread the wal- 'nuts on dishes and let them remain in tho air until black (about twelve hours). Boil the pickle for a minute. !have the walnuts read) in jars, and !pour it on them when boiling. When aquite cold seal and store in a dry 3place. Pickle of Small l "grttibles.--Tnke young ctu1liflowers, cut into small pieces, nasturtium pads, string beans, or young runner beans, and lay them in a stone jar, pouring over them a boiling brine composed of air ounces ot salt to a quart of water. The next day drain them off, shake gently in n clean cloth and put them in a dry Jar. Pour over them the following pickle, which must have come to the boil and hare remained boiling for one minute '. To each quart of vinegar put one: ounce of block pepper, one ounce otl crushed ginger, one punce of ahellots. one ounce of salt,' one ounce of all. Iplee and I. pinch at cayenne. Cover the in for two dagr, drain a! the tiii. uor, boil it up and throw in the you: vegetables tor 1.me Bovine tumtn_rtddtimttdtttth' the Jar. Seal tightly. Pickled MutrhromRs.---Young butter mushrooms only should be used. Cut " the stalks from a quart of mush- rooms. cleansing the akin with a piece ot new white flannel dipped in salt. Place them in a deep stewpan and sprinkle over them two tetuspootifuls ot salt, one half ounce of whole white pepper and two blades of crushed mace. Shake them over a bright fire until the natural liquor has been drawn out and has dried up again.' Then pour over them as much eoldi vinegar as will cove them; let izl‘ come to the boil for 1'i, minute and n01 more. Pour them into a clean, dry Jar] and seal. Pickled t1ltsrhipa.-v-Brine to put on) the gherkins : to each quart of water‘ take six ounces ot salt. Strip thel gherkins ot the blossoms, put them in! a stone jar and cover with boiling! brine. After 24 hours take them out.! wipe each one carefully and place iii) a. clean Jar with halt a dozen bay! leaves. Pour over them a pickle made i as follows: To every quart of vine; gar allow three blades ot mace, two! tablespoonfuls of bruised ginger, halt ounce of black pepper, halt ounce off allspice, tour cloves, a small quantityi ot tarragon, if liked, may be added to. the pickle. When boiling fast, pour} the pickle over the ttherkins, cover! the jar with a small plate tor two days, i when the pickle must be drained oft; and boiled up again. At boiling point] the gherkins must be thrown in for two minutes and then placed back in the Jar. Seal tightly. I Pickled Red Ctmbage,---Bliet the cabbage finely and place it In a colan~ der; sprinkle each layer with coarse salt. Let the strips drain tor two days, then put In a jar and cover with boil. ing vinegar. It a. spice ls used, " must be put in with the vinegar in the pro rtion of one ounce. ot whole black papa; and one-half ounce of auspice to the quart. Pickled BeetB.---To each gallon of vinegar, two ounces ot allsplee, two ounces ot whole pepper. The beets must be carefuly cleansed without breaking the outer Skin. Lay them carefully into a pot of boiling water. let them cook gently for about one and a half hours, drain them, and when cold, peel and slice neatly. Put into a dry Jar. Let the vinegar boil up tor a minute, then stand to be- come perfectly cool before it is poured over the beets. Seal well. The beets will be ready for use in about a week. Lemon Piekls.-Wipe six lemons, cut each into eight pieces. Add one pound of salt, six cloves of garlic. two ounces of horseradish; crush one- qunrter ounce ot cloves, one-quarter ounce ot nutmeg, onequarter ounce of mace, one‘quarter ounce of cayenne pepper. and two ounces ot dry mus- tard. Into these stir two quarts of vinegar. Pour all into 1 strong tir- proof Jar, stand it in a saucepan ot boiling water and boil tor a quarter of an hour. Bet the Jar away and stir with a wooden spoon every day tor six weeks. At the end ot this time put it into small bottles and tie down tightly. Quite tree from cracks or blemishes. When made, they must be put up u uremiiy as jelly in sterilised Jsrs snd kept tightly sesled. The inn should not be quite filled with the vegetshies. but should have the liquid covering them tor at lent on inch in depth. The surplus vinegar is good for "vor. ing minces, bushes and gravies, it used very, very verily. Now for the recipes '. Pickled Oniomt.--ono qunrt ot smell white onions. Remove the outer skin and place in s pan of boiling water. Cook until they look oiesr. then re. move, drain and dry. When cold place in Jars and cover with the following mixture '. One quart of wine vinegar, one ounce of white pepper, one des- "ertspoontul ot salt. Make hot. Pour over the onions. Seal when cold. The onions must be peeled with s silver kknkite. A steel knife causes them to blacken. If peeled in a basin ot water it will save the eyes. TORONTO To obtain a true bias place the ma- terial flat on the cutting table and with a ruler or yard stlck laid across one corner draw a line with chalk or It you would have your summer sup ply of white silk stockings remain white. always see to it that they are dried in the shade and wuhed In lake. warm water, as heat turns them yel- low. a If the hem: of each pair of stockings are pinned together with a small saw ty pin when they are washed it will save time and trouble of sorting ; also they can be hung on the line more quickly. To destroy tlies in the summer simmer together one pint of milk and a pound of brown sugar and 2 ounces ot pepper. Then place the mixture around in saucers. It is instant death to flies, and is harmless. Pitt the sheets at the foot of the bed together with several safety pins. They will not pull up, and this will add to the comfort of the night's sleep. This hint is all right-except for a tall man. To get longer service trom scrim or muslin curtains, hem both ends alike, and this permits you to reverse them when rehangins each time after being washed. To prevent damp and rust attacking the wires of the piano tack a small bag of unslaked lime inside the Instrument just underneath the cover. This wilt absorb all tbe moisture. Mud spots may be readily removed from dress skirts. trousers. rubber costs, or trom children's clothing by rubbing the spots well with sliced raw potato. Strong ammonia water is excellent for removing iodine stains, and blue- berry stains may be removed by wash- ing at once with cold water and white soap. A coating of thick cantor oil applied with a soft tltutne1 cloth to tan shoes whose color is too vialtt will tone them down considerably. Paper bag: which accumulate from the grocery store are very useful to slip over jars and various other artic- les to protect them from duet and nies. Before squeezing the juice trom the lemons put them in I hot oven tor . minute. You will get twice as much Juice. When enclosing lumps do not stick one corner to the letter. Put them in loose. They can’t let out ot I. angled envelope. To shade an electric light in a sick room make a little has of thin green silk with n draw string large enough to slip over the bulb. Take . catsup bottle with a top that will screw on. Then hammer small holes in the top. This will make a nice clothes sprinkler. To remove odors ot onions or nth from cooking utensils, boil a little vinegar in the utensils after they have been washed. To clean linen blinds rub them with a. clean cloth dipped in oatmeal, changing the oatmeal u it get: dirty. To keep meringue from falling, beat a salupoontul ot baking powder into it just before outing it on the pie. If the bran polish gives out do not worry, but lnsteud so to work It the brim: with lemon Juice. When using . double thmd (luv it over I piece ot laundry soup Ind ro. will never In": I Inn]. Plate some soft blotting - on the bottom of flower bowls and they will not mu- polished “races. When ducting hue the duster slightly dump sud tiniBh ott with u dry one. . When turning hem: In uphill. rub well with soap. and then you will have no trouble to hem them. Always rinse black stockings in glue water, and they will keep]. good color. lo-Use ripe-but not over- ripe fruit. 2o--Buy St. Lawrence Red Diamond Extra Granulated Sugar. It is guaranteed pure Sugar Cane Sugar, and free from foreign substances which might prevent jellies from setting and later on cause preserves to ferment. - We advise purchasing the Red Diamond Extra Granulated in the 100 lb. bags which q as a rule is RFD DIAMQH . q at W! choice. the most econo- mical way and assures [fi U G AR Many other handy refinery absolutely correct weight. __ sealed packages to choose from. St; Lawrence Sugar Refineries, Limited, Montreal. Thu-go Worth Romumberlng. Useful Hints and General Into-m- tlon for the Busy Housewife Here's the Way to Succeed in Jam or. Jelly Making. i "it is not what Schmidt or Schultz ithinks about the conduct and object of the war which damages us abroad. What hurts our prestige is the titture we have cut for nearly two years now of a fuck of docile sheep driven be- fore a mercilesa shepherd. Our ene- mies are listening to the right and the left, but can nowhere hew‘what -the will of the German people in. If they could, we would be near to the peace which is to-day possible, and (which only a miracle can improve." I In a late number of his Govern-l ment-defying weekly review, Zukunft, I Herr Maximilian Harden has a re-f :markable article entitled “Those Un- 'derground.†It ls a straight-from-the- shoulder attack on the Government {and the War Party’s fear to unmuzzle "public opinion. Written on the eve of the Socialist Liebknecht's sentence and the suppression of the Liberal- Radlcal Berliner ngehlatt for merely 1 demanding afresh the right to discuss _ "our war aims," Harden's article is iproof that the crusade to face the pre- I ‘sent facts about the wstr--Germanr's f hopeless fight for peace on her terms , .-is a strong and growing movement. Without at all exaggerating its im-, portance it is undoubtedly a manifest- ation of no little promise and encour- ‘agement. Now a City of Crumbling Mosque- and Dilapidated Palaces. One of the picturesque contrasts of- fered by the war, writes Mr. H. M. Allen, is that of the khaki-clad Brit- ish soldiers contending with German. and Turks amid the ruins of Mesopo- tamia. Across the very plains where once swept the war chariots of the Chaldeans are now moving the armed motors of Germany and England. In the rivers where the Babylonian and Persian barges once plied, the shal- low-draft gunboats that tty the Union Jack now manoeuvre. British aero- planes have already been seen fly- ing across the skies that looked down upon Harun-al-Rashid. and a German The latter-the Ballins, Gwinners, Rathenaus, Riesscrs, Thyssens, Kir- dorfs, Furstenbergs, Stinnes’s and the other captains of industry and fimutee -know perfectly well that time is fitthting on the allies' side. Their own interlocking associations with the Government make it impossible for them to speak out. So they use Hard- en for their purpose. When Harden declares that if the German people's real sentiments could be expressed the end of the war would be in sight he is talking not for himself but for Ger- many’s gagged and muzzled men of affairs. The Government's attitude toward the demands of these clause! is that public discussion of the war would "injure us abroad" and "under- mine domestic unity." This is the crusaders' reply, made in their name by Harden: 'ttttreed â€can. no. this an hr t "He In mu. " Ttttten mama. use mm tuitA-rtttesee.-ddrrtnttto 'uul nun-or. then to one pint of cold utter add two uttimsttoottftN ot mm:- l-tod Imr. stirring until thoroughly dissolved. bet handkerchien. ete., gout in the Inter one-In" hour. Dry Jet the open air. 2. The moneyed, commercial and fl. nencinl chases, shippers, mereUnta, mtutuftueturersr, and bankers, for whom the Berliner Tagablatt end Harden have always hen recognized as spokes- men. “The tsiknitieartee of the crusade for the truth lies in the identity of the crusade". They include: - -. 1. The working clnssel, who realise the utter impoverishment which pro- longation of the war means for indul- trinl Germany. weeks. The real Import is conveyed by the only men in Germany still out of ttaol who has the courage and the opportunity to speak the t_ruth. by a Mercile- Shepherd. Undor‘round rumblings in Gummy Inn grown in Intensity, like the Brit. lull artillery the, within the put few. Got-us dee- Like Flock of Queen MAX HARDEN TELLS THE TRUTH BAGDAD OF THE CALH'HS. 3o-Cook well. 4o-Clean, and they by boiling Success will surely follow the of all these hints. at least 10 minutes, sterilize your jars perfectly before pouring in the preserves or jelly. Pain Actresses Carry Tubbies to 30k The correspondent does not attvmpt to my whether the change is due to herd times, to the doubled dog tax or merely to an inexplicable whim of the moment. He an: “Actresses whose popularity is suf- tlelent to shield them from the re- proach of seeking a new form of per- sonnl advertisement have lately taken to frequenting the Boil de Boulogne M the fashionable parade hour with the dearest of little tabbies snuggling roeuithiy in their arms, or gambol. ling riotoully round and about them "Aftor Ill. it my be that the new {billion is merely mother way of pro. testing against the latent order of tlu Prefect of Police enacting that al: dottts must be mauled in Paris and let' on I string.†It remained for Harun, ally and friend of Charlemagne, who came after Al-Mlnsur and his Ions, to ex- tend the capital to the eutern bank. With him, too, began the era of cul- ture, science, literature, and that dis- tinctly Per-inn luxury that at last wrought the downhll of Saracen power. Ania“ such dominate de- generacy Onlr, conqueror of Syrin, Persia and Egypt, oedulously warned his people, but in vain. de Bubs-e. The Parisienne is forming her lap dog of pre-nr days and taking to the kitten u . pet, “cording to the Paris correspondent of the Pall Mall Ga.. zeta. Even the youth who claims to haw . ttttttttted education has I lot tt learn. This caliph, by the way, wss per- haps the richest men of his time, for he possessed some $150,000,000. He did not, however, invest his wealth in Bngdnd real estate, for he and " sons left it I smell town, eonflned to the western bank of the Tigris. More- over, they economized in building ms- terials, for they used fragments plun- dered from the Incient Persian city Cmiphon, its neu- neighbor Seleucin, and from ancient Babylon. " om that nun!" excluimed the aliph, and he went on to inform the hermit that in hi. boyhood he had stolen a bracelet, and his nurse Ud ever otter called him "Molms," tho name of I thiot then well known. Tho old recluse must have made a consider- able impression on the mind of Al- Hnnsur, for the town was eventually mod for him. “an" signifies I garden in the Persian tongue, and the whole word means "The cordon of It vii Al-Maneur. the eecond caliph of the Abhaelide dynaety. who remov- ed the capital of islam hither from Dagnaecul. When he first new the spot he war enchanted with it, " though there was tlen only a eingle habitation upon it--the 'cell of the venerable hermit Dad. The latter, ignorant who hie dirtimruuhed visitor was. not only entered into conversa- tion with him, but predicted that one Moeloe was destined to found a city where they were landing. Zeppeli- n†be mud hm hm on: the bonus who (to Commando: of the Faithful mud to node. “a violent to Baednd recalls tint it was the capital of I domain ranching from Spain into Africa and from Africa to Min, and he known that Hmo-oLRuhid m once la ruler. Thou Neta hvo been inscribed on tho tablet.- of memory through the me- dium of "Amine," "Ali Bob...†“Sind- bad the Soilor." and other delightful “Arabian Night-m tales. But the Bagdnd of to-dny, although the Turk- ish documents still call it "the glori- ous city," ttns naught but crumlrlinq mosques, dilopidoted palaces Ind no.- 1eetod tombs to bear testimony to the splendor of the post. KITTENS DISPLACE LAP DOGS. am can supply the Red Diamond in either fine, c medium, or It I" " He auxin " " the " ten the he sun my mm mane paint on struck Mar ' him to the I min“ the w: As I lay the If If ed tr, th If it H "on he flavor and from entre both tea a t- is a drink th, thousands era: Tea a drer drug ole develoan Ind mi eh (Mm ty PO mu. Wher It PI ‘H H W' " pe ire if me, M that I h all " " it ‘Ol' Itrt â€many he " If WM ti " fully it Wttgt mad h h dei T e Cm Sm td D l rind it Mm