* 7 The exâ€"Kaiser will be brought to trial by the Allies for his public acâ€" tions during the war, but Mr. Poultney Bigelow, the wellâ€"known American author, brings against him accusations of petty meanness almost incredible In a monarch of his pretensions. They were personal friends and companions In their younger days, but Mr. Bigeâ€" low, in his recent book, "Prussianism and Pacifism," makes the German Emperor practically a kleptomaniac. He was the owner of a valuable miniaâ€" ture of the famous Queen Louise, which was a gift to him fromm the aged Queen of Hanover, whose hiusâ€" band was dethroned by William I. in 1866 William II manifested such an intense interest in this miniature that Mr. Bigelow let him have it to look at, mentloning how much he valued it on gsccount of the circumstances under Which he acquired it "Never was that miniature handed back to t gays Mr. Bigelow, "although I .m&. 6f it earnestly to the lmp_orom% yal Aideâ€"deâ€"camp, the late "It was like a fairy story but huâ€" man everyday folks would be homeâ€" gick in fairyland. I know that now." She shook her head. There was perâ€" plexity in the vague gaze she bent on the glowing autumn fields below. "Juliet Fleming, whatever is the matâ€" ter with you. You want something so bad it seems as if you‘d die wanting it and you don‘t know what it is! lou went cl to Torgnto to find out wasn‘t wnrt you thought, money nor clothes nor good times nor even n one autumn afternoon of gold aml scarlet she sat in her Wailing Place watching the wild geese trail across the sky. Quite suddenly she began to speak aloud. In the days that followed the homeâ€" coming she marveled at the blessed change in them. Over her piecing Gran‘ma sang the doxology in a eracked sweet soprano. Ma, deep in bee catalogues, forgot her shooting pains, and Pa and Romey went about the farm, yardstick in hand, jotting down intricate measurements and making ambitious plans for rejuvenâ€" ating the old place. Only the winds that blew about the great rock on the hillside pasture knew the unrest that lay behird Julie‘s brave smile. She alone had not changed. She was still the Julie who wanted what she could not have but now the want was different. It was not the kingdoms of the earth she coveted. Jt Ju PART XI. "We‘ll fix up the house this winter, Pa," planned Ma happily. "You and Romey can put a long window in the south room and open up the old fireâ€" place and Julie and I‘ll tackle the trimmings. If we do real well with the bees and the quilts, maybe next year we can get a phonograph and a kitchen cabinet too. Do you know, Pa, 1 guess that‘s what we went to Toâ€" ronto forâ€"so‘s to find out how to be contented and happy at home!" h On the last lap of the journey, familiar landmarks began to appear and familiar faces to nod as Uncle Henry passed. The cramped little fields seemed broader, greener; the weatherâ€"beaten faces of the neighbors kindliee than they had been when it Already Ma had forgotten the pilâ€" grimage she had meant to make to the professgional laboratories of the reâ€" nowned Doctor Hope, Benefactor of Mankind. n it. If it wasn‘t so far I‘d run »â€"morrow and ask her to let me It The Legacy on Wheels sn‘t fa gaily. 1 anywhere you want to go." !""* breathed Gran‘ma, awed ntl pect. "I never thought about [aybe I can get down io prayer s once in a while, now. Emmie, 1 me‘ll go shopping over to ille! I didn‘t see a single The Exâ€"Kaiser‘s Peculiarities motor : break of tenderâ€" Everything‘s just Toronto. * falling over old place hasn‘t Be Dorothy Henry afd Ill Jul the dusky y by the smell. On ainked holâ€" nked hol. :aborâ€"saving machinery go a long way mswcre(l.! towards solving the problem in town, ome the but doesn‘t do much to help out the rx‘:m'n woman except in a small number ce hasn‘t Of cases. But there are a great many me!" Pa| ways in which the farâ€"seeing country ¢ tf,n,;e,_l woman can make her work easier if n@‘s just| she keep an open mind and is willing Ito adopt new methods in the kitchen with a| as her husband is in the fields. he Flemâ€"| Fireless _ cookersâ€"homeâ€"made â€" or storeâ€"make it possibie to go without he homeâ€"‘ a fire during the heat of the day. : Inlessed| Gasolene or charcoal irons, mangles plecing| whica will do the unstarched pieces, y in a)\a homeâ€"made kiichen wagon for , deep in | wheeling the dishes to and from the shooting| table, water in the house before there nt about| is a car for pleasure riding in the} , jotting| barn, these are only a few of thc‘ nts and| things which the country womar. can rejuvenâ€"| have and should insist upon if she lwishes to retain a vestige of youth bout the| and health. il chanted ver the rner by f home. : house 1 under Zitzewitz. Not only did William rob me of that precious portrait, but his courtiers looked at one another with stupefaction when I made so strange a claim upon one who was evidently not accustomed to restoring what had once come under his allâ€"coveting hand." Mr. Bigelow achieved some fame as a canoeist and made a 1,500â€"mile voyage down the Danube, being the first to pass through the Iron Gates in a canoe. The Emperor borrowed this canoe, the "Caribee," on the exâ€" cuse that he wanted his sons to learn to be expert canoeists. "While I have lost my matchless "Caribee," says Mr. Bigelow, "the Kaiser has broken his word, for when I visited her in 1913 she was hidden away amid other dustâ€" covered nautical curios in an obscure corner of his boathouse at Potsdam. The old guardian did not know whoe I was, and I stayed but long enough to learn that my cbanoo had I::YOI‘_ been used and that I hbad been the victim of a P}f'msufl'ï¬omlu.r‘ A large number of farm homes, it is all too evident, were built in the days when lumber was cheap and large families with daughters who stayed home and helped mother were the fashion. Those days are now numbered with other good things of the forgotâ€" ten post and only the houses are left as a legacy to the twentieth century housekceper with her "no help probâ€" Thers is one thing, though, which can be gotten more easily than any of these in many country houses and that is the elimination of miles of needless walking. The thing which impresses the city visitor most when she takes stock of her country sister‘s workâ€"aâ€"day problems is the countless number of steps which the farm woâ€" man takes during the day. Used to small, compact houses, the city woâ€" man wonders that the country woman has lived to her present age, whatever it be, when she sees the steps which the arrangement of the house makes necessary. ‘ Honest‘y she faced her own soul. ‘She must be sure of that, sure she would never regret the decision she had made there in the great studio window above the city‘s clamor and ‘unrest. Far below in one of the fields ‘a big, patient, plodding figure in blue jeans, moved along the potato rows. Vaguely Julie‘s eyes watched it as | she mused. Suddenly all doubt and hesitation slipped away. No, it was not Geoffrey Varrick she wanted. "He ought to be wearing his broadâ€" brimmed straw," she thought, "hot as it is toâ€"day! Indian summer‘s as bad as August for sunstrokes. John‘s like all men folksâ€"they have to be looked out for just like little boys." A sudden breathless wave of color: swept her cheeks at the sound of her own words. Wih a little laugh that was the cousin of a sob, she sprang to her feet. | "Juliet Fleming, you stop this foolâ€" ishness this minute," she scolded. "Gol "You can‘t imagine darning a fairy prince‘s socks nor getting dinners nor washing platters in a storyâ€"book castle." Julie smiled whimsically. "Seems as if falling in love and being married would mean just that to a woman, doing little common everyday things for him, seeing he had what he liked to eat and sort of mothering The figure in the ficld below straightened up and leaned on its hoe for a moment‘s rest. _ Julie‘s eyes, watching, grew anxious. fairy princes that live in wonderful Ivanhce castles on the edge of the sunset!" £ ilem." Mammoth rooms are fine if you have help, but, O, the backache if only one poor woman has to keep in order. _ And, O, the tired, aching feet after a day of trotting from stove to fable, table to sink, sink to pantry and pantry to woodshed, all at the greatest possible distance from each other. \ _"Oh!" Julie‘s heart sank. _ Was Romey going back to the old lounging | ways, the old lawless companions? lHis next words reâ€"assured her. ; *"Yep!" he said laconically. "You remember those Boy Scouts we saw on the way to Toronto? Well, us felâ€" lows got together and decided it would be bully to pull off a Scout Company | here. The high school principal from Centreville has organized us. He used to be a Scout Master. Say, Juleâ€"he‘s a regar fellow too even if he is a teacher. I wouldn‘t mind going to school to him, maybe next fallâ€"" Many women, however, find a larger kitchen better for their particular needs. With small children who alâ€" ways must be where mother is, an 11x8 kitchen is not just the coziest place in the world. If your kitchen is large and you want it so, then the next thing to do is to plan to make it convenient. _ The sink must remain where it is, unless you wish to engage a plumber, which perhaps at his presâ€" ent rates you do not care to do. But even that would pay you in the long run, if, moving the sink would save you many steps. You can move the table, however, and the cupboards if they are not built in And by buying a few lengths of stove pipe and an elbow or two you may have the stove where you will. Sit down and study your own kitchen. Figure out how you can reâ€"arrange things to make it posâ€" sible to take the fewest numbor of steps in getting a meal and washing dishes, and then proceed to have a general shakeâ€"up. | Don‘t run up and down cellar more than is necessary. If possible make an iceless refrigerataor. And don‘t run down three or four steps and a half dozen rods out to the milk house for all your butter, milk and eggs, as some women persist in doing. Keep what you will need for a day‘s supply in the house. You can keep the milk eool by sitting it in cold water. And the eggs you will use in a day aren‘t going to spoil if you do keep them in the hous>. Plan to save stops. This is a thing we can all do. Get all the kitchen helps you can, everything that makes work easier is a necessity these days. But while ysu are buying laborâ€"saving devices don‘t continue to work overâ€" time walking several miles unnecesâ€" sarily. Did the drouth catch your early poâ€" tatoes and are ‘you worrying about Immediately I hear a ery arise, “No; ;:1: milk to take care of, and no wz\shing; fou done in the kitchen.‘ All very true, one but had it been necessary to do the| des laundry work it could have been done‘ rag in as small a kitchen by installing‘hot laundry tubs instead of the table, and | :q q building a cover for the tubs which! sn could be utilized as a table when washâ€" If ing was not being done. This is workâ€"| in s ed out in many city flats and has prov-] ove en satisfactory. As to the milk, careâ€"| sea! ful planning and a little alteration of‘ A the average farm cellar would make it 1 te possible to care for the milk there, if] ol we weren‘t so wedded to custom. mogin Small kitchens, with every inch of space utilized, is always my slogan. My present kitchen is just 11x8, about the size of many a farm home pantry. There is no pantry, only a small reâ€" frigerator room. Table, sink and stove are all near enough together so that only a couple of steps are necessary in moving from one to the other. This has been large enough to do the work for seven people. and get Uncle Henry and go missionâ€" aryingâ€"take the Poor Farm old folks to prayer meeting or Mrs. Leggett to the movies in Centreville! Stop wonâ€" dering what you want and wonder what other folks want for a while. You won‘t have to look very far to find a worseâ€"off person than you are to take a ride!" "Can‘t now," Romey lifted the cushion from the back seat in search for a needed tool in the tool box underâ€" neath. "I got a date with Jimmy Gillespie and the Haslaw boys. But I‘m going to learn all right." Singing determinedly, she scramblâ€" ed down the hillside. Powdery goldenâ€" rod brushed her skirts, the crimson flames of autumn leaped and flared among the dwarf oak and sumach growth, and falling leaves drifted down like glowing embers on the surâ€" face of the cool grayâ€"brown pool under the willows. Romey was in the side yard washâ€" ing Uricle Henry, every freckle screwâ€" ed tight with anxiety, hissing absentâ€" mindedly through his teeth as if he were grooming old Peleg. " ‘Lo, Julie! How‘s he look?" he inquired with careful concern. "Fine!" Julie answered with enâ€" thusiasm. "Takes you, Romey! When you‘ve finished, I‘ll give you a lesson driving." Dishes the Throshers Like. TORONTO (To be concluded.) ave stops. This is a thing do. Get all the kitchen an, everything that makes For the salad I use cold boiled potaâ€"| toes, onions and cucumber pickles snlt-; | ed and peppered, and chopped toâ€"; igether. For the dressing I use one| { tablespoonful of prepared mustard to| two tablespoons of sweet cream, one: lteaspoon sugar and vinegar to taste.} Line the dishes with crisp lettuce, | leaves, garnish with a couple of sliced : | hardâ€"boiled eggs, salted and peppered,! | and then watch the men wade in. | | I found that the men preferred cold | tea, and as we had no ice I steeped , | the tea in a granite dish, with as little | | water as possible, letting it cool, and' ‘ at the last minute pumped in the coldâ€" ‘est water to be had. From three to‘ six glasses to the man tells what they | ‘thought about that. I Apple Catsupâ€"1 quart apple sauce, 1 teaspoon vinegar, 1 teaspoon cinnaâ€" mon, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon pepper, 1 teaspoon mustard, 1 teaâ€" spoon onion juice, 2 teaspoons salt, 1 pint vinegar. Simmer slowly until thick, bottle and seal. A similar catâ€" sup can be made from plums or grapes, and spiced to taste. Sorghum or molasses may be added if a sweet sauce is liked. "No," answered the friend who was studying a tailor‘s bill. "They don‘t make him. They break him." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows Corrected Proverbs. "The clothes do not make the man," remarked the readyâ€"made philosopher. hot vinegar mixture and stir all until it thickens. Take about three hundred small cucumbers and wash thoroughly. If mediumâ€"sized ones are used, cut in small picces. Pour the boiling sauce over the cold cucumbers, bottle and seal. Curry Picklesâ€"Boil together for five or ten minutes, two quarts of vinegar, one tablespoon of salt, one teaspoon of black pepper; take one tablespoon of curry powder, one,and oneâ€"half tablespoons of corn starch, four tablespoons of ground mustard, one tablespoon of sugar, or more if desired. Mix these thoroughly with a little cold vinegar, then put into Cucumber Catsupâ€"1 dozen large cucumbers, 1 quart vinegar, 1 tableâ€" spoon salt, 4 teaspoon cayenne pepâ€" per. Gathér cucumbers before the sun strikes them and keep in /a cool place until used. Peel and grate the eucumbers and drain off the water. Heat the vinegar and spices to boiling point; pour at once over the grated cucumber, bottle and seal. Cueumbers bottled in this way retain their freshâ€" ness and make a particularly good sauce for steak. I also put a mirror, soap, comb, tow-; els and dishes to wash in at the well, under a big shade tree, setting the, table on the verandah, and fancied I got along easier this year than ever before. I find that simplicity combined | with plain substantial food, suits the | men better than all the fancy dishes I used to make before the old H. C. of ; L. put his foot on my neck. | Another thing, perhaps not so econâ€" omical as the before mentioned, but on the rapidly disappearing order, was brown bread. Our recipe is as foll§ws: Oneâ€"cup of sour cream, two cups of buttermilk, one scant cup of sugar, four tablespoons of cooking molasses stirred together well. Sift in graham flour, to which has been added two teaspoons level of soda and one heapâ€" ing full of bakinz powder, also one teaspoon of salt. Stir rather thick and bake in two loaves. It is better to bake a sample the first time, for unâ€" less the batter is thick enough the bread will fall and it is rather too exâ€" pensive to waste. For gems you will find this recipe hard to improve upon. how 3ou will cook the old ones, so that th threshers will relish them*? Well, then, why not scallop them and make some potato salad? The sheshers who come here surely relishâ€" eA these two dishes, or seeme1 to. "Scalloped potatoes!" you Zasp; "with butter sixty cents a pound and salad dressing takes too much time to make." Wrong again. You need little butter and can make a large bow! of salad dressing in three minutes. Inâ€" stead of butter alone, use small cubes of salt pork and sait, pepper and but» ter,cover with milk and bake in the usual way. If you have some cold milk gravy left, add it in the place of part of the milk. This saves the gravy and makes the potatoes better. BENSON‘S CoRN STARCH For the Pickle Shelf. Rod by rod, o‘er the bloody sod, The invader‘s host recedes. While the shellâ€"torn earth attests the worth Of desperate valor‘s deeds. By the trenches deep, shall widows weep, Or mothers kneel to pray, For the distant ones, whose dauntless sons Have helped to save the day. In La Belle France where the foe‘s adâ€" vance Had blighted the joys of life, They turned their guns on the cruel Huns, And joined in the awful strife. Land of the West, your Gallant breast, Has nourished a race of men, Whose cager feet will scorn retreat, And dash to the fray again. Two of the most shortâ€"sighted taxes ever levied were those on paper and on windows. William III originâ€" ated the paper tax, which at oné time was as high as $140 a ton. On the paper used by Charles Knight to print his Penny Cyclopaedia the tax amountâ€" ed to $100,000. Later there was imâ€" posed a tax of eight cents a sheet on newspapers, with an additional tax of 85 cents on every advertisement. Bachelors of every rank were taxed from 1695 to 1706, the payments varyâ€" ing with the rank of the individual, and ranging from $1.25 to $60 a year. A man over twentyâ€"five and unmarried was a backelor under the law. These life and death taxes were asâ€" sessed on every subject in the kingâ€" dom who had anything to pay, the smallest sum collected being for marâ€" riage, some 60 cents, paid by the man whose income was less than $250 a year. This man paid 50 cents each time he became a father and $1 apâ€" proximately upon the death of his wife or son. Over the wave, our children brave Have gone at humanity‘s call; Ready to give that the right may live, Ready to give their all. as a vanity for which every man would be willing to pay five dollars a year. He expected the Treasury to benciit to the extent of over $1,000,â€" 000 annually, but everyone had his quene cat off. A tax on shopkeepers, though only a small impost arranged on a sliding scale based on the amount of rental paid, was stoutly resisted and evenâ€" tually defeated. A tix on female serâ€" vants, amounting to 60 cents for one, $1.25 for two, and $2.50 for three or | more, was more successful. ~Births,| marriages and deaths were all made to contribute to the national purse.| A duke‘s bride cost him a trifle over | $250; the arrival of an heir meant a ; contribution of $150, and subsequentl male additions to the family ezxch| called for $125. The death of the‘ wife necessitated the payment to the | Government of $250, and smaller sums j were payable on the death of other members of the family. | Great Britain‘s Exchequer Was Enâ€" riched by Many Original Methods. One of Parliament‘s hardest tasks is the preparation of the Budget. Taxes must be imposed, but, as no one llk;u“p_ayin;g'th.em. they must be framed so as not to place too great a burden upon any particular class. For originality of schemes to reâ€" plenish the Exchequer few have riva} led William Pitt. It was he who deâ€" vised the dog tax, an institution which still thrives. He also originated tire income tax, which, during his adminâ€" istration, was fixed at 10 cents in the dollar on all incomes exceeding $1,000. It w;; -ti;t;flfggï¬ion of his time to wear the hair in a powdered queue, and hair powdered appealed to Pitt Dessertsâ€"Rolls Sauces BENSON’S is pure Erepared corn starch delicate and nourishing, unexcelled for all cooking purposes. It improves the texture of bread, biscuits and rolls if one-tgird of the flour is substituted with Benson‘s Corn Starch.._ It makes pie crusts light and flakey. There is a recipe for the most delicious Blanc Mange on the package, together with a dozen other uses. Benson‘s is the best corn starch for making sauces and gravies smooth and creamy. $ UNIQUE TAXES OF OLD DAYS. RAMSAYS FLOOR WA X Keeps Hardwood Floors beautiful For Sale by All Dealers Our Boys in France. Write for booklet of recipes a hat which covers the head as comâ€" pletely as the hood of an Eskimo. Both do it for the same reason. One seeks protection from heat and the other from cold. The heat of one‘s own body is far more endurable than the burnâ€" ing rays of India‘s sun. A man wears a turbam thirty feet long, while a small boy wears one from ten to fifteen feet long. But Indian youngsters have found that the cap of the Canadian boy takes far less time to put on than his turban, and they are generally discarding the headgear of their fathers for that worn in America. 5 At least twice a week economical and wise housekeepers serve "Clark‘s" Pork and Beahs cither with Toâ€" mato, Chili or Plain Sauce. Oriental Turban is Composed of Nineâ€" ty Square Feet of Cloth. Modern women haven‘t a thing on a man from India, when it comes to wearing expensive hats. And they‘ll have to get busy to crowd as much on their heads as do the men from Bomâ€" bay, Calcutta and Punjaub, for those red, yellow and white turbans are as long as three tablecloths put end to end. Each turban is made up of ninety square feet of cloth, thirty feet long by three feet wide. The average person wonders why men in these burning countries wear Minard‘s Liniment Cures Viphtheria W. CLARK, LIMITED MONTREAL Manufacturers of Clark‘s Pork : Beans and other good things. $ A L T All grades. Write for prices. TORONTO SALT WORKS @ J. GLIFF â€" . . TORONTO To understand all is to forgive all. MEN‘S MILLINERY IN INDIA. GLARK‘S BEANS ANO 226 C.289 and And now we come to the scorpion rock of Gibraltar which cannot be apâ€" preciated from the water front, for the town stretches along the western side for over a mile, and only when direcily in the interior of the colony can the gigantic size of the rock rightâ€" fully be estimated. It stands as if against the sky with a prepossessing dignity of indescribable mightiness and power. Tarik, the oneâ€"eyed Moor, landed at the foot of the rock of Calpe (now known as Gibraltar) in the year 711 to reconftoitre Gothic Spain, and therefore from Cibel Tarik (which means the hill of Tarik) the name of Gibraltar originated. Driving through the narrow cobbled streets, visitors are constantly stopped by the natives, who attempt to sell them all sorts of trinkets, for jewelry shops appear at almost every corner. Eating places of every variety, with food at reaching distance from the curb, occupy the tiny sidewalks, and little children crawl in front of the phaetonâ€"dike cabs with the hope of collecting a few pennics. The Pride of Gibraltar Finally the Alameda is reached, and this park, with its palm and cactus plants, is the pride of Gibraltar. Geâ€" ranlums in abundance crown the enâ€" trance and tropical trees and bowers help to create aâ€"scene well to be reâ€" membered. Fountains play about on the east and west sides, while several ama.ll boulevards twine in and out through the park. Attractive pony carts carrying little rosy faced Engâ€" lish children accompanied by their Spanish servants, occupy the roseate driveways in the Alameda, and the liquid\ongs of the birds give a touch of softness and pathos to the spot. Viewed from the deck of an ocean liner surging through the waves of the Mediterrancan»n one can never forâ€" get the thrill he experieaces at first sight of Gibraltur. Spauish girls of rare beauty come out in smaill boats to greet you. and when by the aid of a rope they hoist grapes up rlong the side of the ship it is geldom their basâ€" kets are lowered without a goodly side of the shin it is seldom their basâ€" kets are lowered without a goodly amount of money in exchange for the fruit. Sounds of drums and bugles add to the exciting diz, und amidst screeching whistles you descend to one of the tenders which wait below to take you ashore. T}ne little Spanish stuccoed houses are to be seen everywhere, and the women and, girls with shawls of brilâ€" liant hues and, mantillas upou their heads laugh and dance to the twang of a guitar. Low wheeled, two seated, soâ€"called vans accompanied and drawn by ponies take the visitor to the base of the fortress, and a steep climb must then be made on foot. It is an exâ€" tremely tedious trip, for the ascent is rocky and uneven. Vista of Snowâ€"Capped Mountains. Perhaps the most striking view, from a small opening in one of the caves built in the fortress, is the white wall of Algeciras and San Roque, both parallel with the snowâ€"capped mounâ€" tains of Andalusia. From Height of the Fort a Wonderful Vista Stretches 1,000 Feet Below, & Panorama of Incomparable Beauty. El Hacho, the signal tower, is not always open to visitors and many of the heavy guns are also kept under secrecy. In the tunnelled portions of the fort old batteries and cannon are pointed out by sentries, and secluded spots had been set aside for punishing purposes in bygone years. In one of the dark passageways the stone is cut in peculiar points which stand straight upward, representing icicles because of the shiny, silvery gloss on the ends of the highest needles of the rock, and one can readily imagine fireplaces to have been inserted in the walls. Having attained the height of the fort and emerging suddenly into open sky, a wonderful vista stretches out 1,000 feet below. Ships anchored at bay seem but dwarfs, and the polo grounds, once famous for bull fighting, can also be observed. Far below the barrack yards look up at you and the smoky houses with their sloping roofs keep cover over the lounging solâ€" diers. ROCK As the sun takes refuge behind the fileecy lining of clouds, the mountaing, hills and ocean form a panorama of wide scope and incomparable beauty, Pangs of jealousy were in Miss Coldfoot‘s heart when she heard that her Jate admirer had been accepted by Misg Lovebird, and when ghe hapâ€" pened to run across her in the barâ€" gain rush could not resist giving her a thrust. "I hear you‘ve accepted Jack," she gushed. "I suppose he never told you he once proposed to me." "No," answered Jack‘s fiancee, "He once told me that there were a lot of things in his life he was ashamed of, but I didn‘t ask him what they were." Pepper cost $175 an ounce in Engâ€" land in Henry VIL‘s reign, The world‘s skating record is 30 miles in 3 minutes 75! seconds, made K HAS APPEARANCE OF INâ€" DESCRIBAGLE MIGHT ANQ POWER Thrust and Parry. OF GIBRALTAR t« in tor uj q VW gT 41 J n OW