x2 48 «* "Yes, there was something about the way she used her lips when speakâ€" ing * * * something rather * * * It was no goodâ€"she would float into his mind. The recurrent vision anâ€" noyed him exceedingly; but in the end he had to capitulate and suffer the invasion. Three minutes later the innumerâ€" able fascinating qualitiee of Miss Gwendoline Arklow were the focal point of his intractable thoughts. He was very angryâ€"a girl of whom he knew nothing; whom he had only known a couple of weeks. her temperament * * * such a dear, happy, tender, considerate, unselfish little soul * * * She * * * "Hang it all! What utter rubbish I‘m talking!" he exclaimed realizing that he had been soliloquizing. He put her instantly out of his mind, and eoncentrated upon Baedeker‘s North ern Italy. and a figure that would have made a French scewiptor rave idtotically. Very pretty * * * But the real charm was Then he began to think in detail of Gwerstoline. What wonderfal eloquent eyes she hoalâ€"and how full of misâ€" chief and merriment they were, when that peculiarly haunting, wistful look was absent. And what lovely hair * * * and lips * * * contrasting . so amazingly with her soft creamy skin ®â€"® Shohadbeamih:lteoth,wo‘ *# nes3 arra eonvenier slon. "Is it fair to ask a girl to bind herâ€" self for life in a mock marriage? To tie a knot which she could not undo? To forfeit forewer the chance of wedâ€" ded bliss with some one whom sho might yet meet and love devotedlyâ€" fer the sake of money?" He didn‘t like the idea a little bit. back. In a word, he couldn‘t enthus; over the project. Not once or twice, but many times, he took himself to task: aving got everything adjusted, at las ; and the day for the strange cereâ€" mxiy fixed, Derrick busied himself wit‘: preparations for a holiday in Itaw‘y. But he was not at ease; he had a fseling that something was wrong. The fare of sunshine, blue skies and limpid water was, somehow, mot so potent as it had been a little time "Oh!‘" responded G@wendoline, with just the weeniest suspicion of incredâ€" ulity in her modulated voice, "What a shame it is to force a man to marry against his will? All the same, it is very fortunate for me; you see, I am all alone in the world, and need money so badly." Harwood cleared his throat. "Yes," he said, "I am glad for your sake." They didn‘t speak for a long time; when they did it wasn‘t about the iniquitous will. He found himse‘f talkâ€" ing about tigers * * * amit later about he> 1 adopted the eigh:â€"hour nz'ltom. The pupil« recetva uniforms of the School, & monthly allowance and travelling expenses to and from New York. For further information apply to the Buporintendent. "You see," said Derrick, uncomfortâ€" ably, after he had explained the poâ€" sition, "my difficulty is that I am not a marrying manâ€"â€"â€"" t The Toronto Hospital for Incurâ€" ables, in affiliation Kuh Bellevue and Allied Mospitais, ew York City, offers a three years‘ Course of Trainâ€" ln1' to young women, baving the re quired education, and desirous of beâ€" coming nurses This Hospital has say, had not (Giwendoline brought the matter up for immediate conmsideration by a chance remark. The next time came next day. Thoy had lunch at the "Cafe Alcazar," a motor spin down to Hampton Court, and got back in time for tea at the "Petit Salle de Paris," but, somehow, the cpportunity to fix things up did not arrive. They spent a most enjoyâ€" whle day, and arranged to meet on the following afternoon. I Now, how long this sort of thing might have gone on, it is imposwible to He remembered this when he got home, ami heartily "cussed" himself for his remissneâ€"sâ€"but, somehow, se hadn‘t given him a chance. He couldn‘t very well be brusque and barge in with his propesal in the midde of her conversation. After al, it wasn‘t an es y job to sltart collâ€"blscded bargainâ€" ing with a girlâ€"yes, and a very nice girl, tooâ€"whom one has never seen before. Theory is all very well; but it wants a bit of doing. Next time, he tod himsolf, he would get right down to business and setile the whole, thingâ€"you see, it was purely a busiâ€" nes transaction. | PART II. From first to lst the object of their mectinz was not mentioned. The Will and the Way Hot Bouv‘ulâ€" xd 9002»{};‘?:02 NURSES "4, it was purely ment, a matter o There was n BY HERBERT L. VAHEY f mutual compulâ€" ‘_yer, fmperturbably, "your uncle saw ‘fit to revoke the document in question, lmhstimting the testament I now hold | { in my hand. I will read you the main| |clause: ‘Having by careful inquiry| ascertained that my nephew, the said , 'Derriek Harwood, is exceedingly | averse to entering into the matrimoniâ€" i'l state, I hereby rescind all previous! wills, and direct that the sum of 10,â€"‘ ‘000 pounds be paid to him out of my , | estate if he does not marrv‘" | COP_OCOZ, 22°° SCOR Up & Gocument. |__"You will recall that by the terms of the former will," he said, "a sum of 10,000 pounds was left to you on ‘eondition that you marriedâ€"â€"" "Quite so," answered Harwood, "and ‘I have taken steps to comply with that provision." _ "Unfortunately," went on the lawâ€" Rasyiug" CE eetr tE Derrick, annoyed, "What does that mean? It might mean anything." "Precisely," responded the lawyer, beaming as though he detected exâ€" quisite humor in the phrase. "Two interpretations can be placed upon the sentence. It may meanâ€"I say, ‘may,‘â€"that you inherit ‘even if you do not marry,‘ or it may actually be a prohibition!" Harwood looked utterly mystified. The attorney was not to be driven; the legal profession does not permit hustle. He folded his hands, blinked rapidly, and took up a document. reauy seenâ€"â€"" He paused and fiddled with his spatulated finger tips. "This later willâ€"discovered acciâ€" dentally, I may say, by men repairing your uncle‘s late place of residence â€" has only this moment come ints my possession. It is duly signed and witâ€" nessed, and in all other respects, as far as one can see, a valid document." "But what is the purport of it?" asked Derrick, a little impatiently, "You say it will be exceedingly disâ€" agreeableâ€"in what way?" l little. _ If Harwood had suddenly been conâ€" fronted by twentyâ€"two fullâ€"grown, extraâ€"hungry, manâ€"cating tigers he couldn‘t have been more dumbfounded. His expression was a sort of compote of horror, amazement, idiotic ecstasy, ’ incredulity and fanatical rapture, ‘garnished with spasmodic smiles. |_ "Gwendoline, you don‘t!" was all he ‘ said. Just the sort of hopelessly enigâ€" matic thing a man of his type would say. But she understood. You see, (Giwendoline was a girl full of perâ€" | spicacity. | "Mr. Harwood," he said, in a sepulâ€" chral undertone. "I am afraid that I have a communication to make to you which, in the light of your recent enâ€" gagement to Miss Gwendoline Arklow, indicated in your letter of the twentyâ€" fourth, must necessarily be exceedâ€" ingly disagreeable. I shall not weary you with introductory remarks; the plain fact of the matter is: Your uncle, Sir Peter Harwood, left, it apâ€" pesrs, anoiher willâ€"â€"of considerably later date than the one you have alâ€" was ushered into the cold 'preoence of the whiteâ€"faced, bewhiskered little man. They had hardly recovered from the shock of their real engagement, and certainly hadn‘t got over the wonder, glory and beauty of it, when Harwood received a letter from his uncle‘s solicitor, requesting him to call at his earliest convenience. Derrick hastenâ€" ed to comply with the request, anl He gazed at her determinedly; she looked at him from beneath halfâ€" lowered lids. "You said another, didn‘t you?" she murmured, ever so feebly, panting a "In that case our engagement is at an end," declared Harwood, emphaticâ€" wily. "I cannot marry you when you are in love with another man. I tanâ€" not allow you to throw away your chance of happiness in a mock cereâ€" monyâ€"for the sake of money!" | "Oh, but I have no prejudice against marriage!" she said, in answer to his ahrupt question. "When the man I love asks me to marry him I shall not hesitate a moment." Derrick looked at her, puzzled. "So there is a man?" he queried. "Oh, yes, there is a man," she resâ€" sponded, in a very subdued voice. } "No ¢=:b5t about it, she was a nice girl, in {=, 2 very nmice girl! But what of it? I‘m not a marrying menâ€"and, if I were, she‘s not in the least inlerâ€" ested in real matrimony? Why, she said so plainly, in her first letter!" Having reached this conclusionâ€" which was about as cheery as cold mutâ€" tonâ€" Derrick tried to get on with his ho‘iday packing. But he found himâ€" soif wondering why Gwondoline didn‘t want to marryâ€"that is to say, marry in the ordinary way. The thing worâ€" ried him, until, in sheer desperation,| he had to go and ask her. ‘ He sat d a cirarelto es cown in a chair and lighted marry!" mystified. ‘Minard‘s Liniment for Colds, exclaimed But, then, of course, no sour old celibate can possibly understand that perfect!y natural phenomenonâ€"Love Madne:~! The lawyer eyed him disapprobaâ€" tively over the tops of his glasses; such levity at the expense of the law was intolerable. "In my view, then, sir, having in mind the revocation of the previous will, you will lose everyâ€" thing." A radiant and irresistible vision of Gwendoline rose before Harwood‘s eyves, and he smiled in a manner that the solicitor regarded as particularly idiotic. "And in my view," he said, with slow emphasis, "I shall gain everyâ€" thing in the world worth having!" He rose, shook hands pleasantly, and left the office. "I should say," observed the attorâ€" ney, after a long pause, "that Mr. Harwood has been a victim of sunâ€" stroke in Siam!" "On that point I express no opinion â€"it is a matter for legal judgment. In the case of Bramsdon vs. Bramsâ€" don and othersâ€"" "In the case of Harwood and Arkâ€" low vs. Sir Peter Harwood judgment is hereby given in favor of matriâ€" mony," interrupted Derrick, lightâ€" heartedly. '! Divinity fudge is also called "heavâ€" | enly bliss," either name is fitting. It 'l requires two cupfuls of white sugar, 'l oneâ€"half cupful of boiling water, oneâ€" !half cupful of corn syrup, one cupful |of chopped nut meats (almonds, filâ€" \berts or walnuts), whites of two oggs, | one teaspoonful of vanilla. Boil the | sugar, water and syrup topether until |a drop of the mixture becomes crisp | when dropped in co‘d water. Beat the whites of eggs until stiff, add the hot \ mixture, beating all the time. When |fairly stiff, add nuts and vanilla, conâ€" |\ tinue beating until very stiff, then ! pour into a buttered tin, and when ; cool cut in squares. ‘ "And you are inclined to think that marriage is thereby interdicted," said Derrick irritably. "Ah!" remarked the solicitor, dubiâ€" ously. "That is the pointâ€"an exâ€" ceedingly nice legal point, too, I may say. It may be that you forfeit if you marry. You see, the phrase is ‘ten thousand pounds * * * if he does not marry!‘ That being an expressed conâ€" dition." "I don‘t understand," he observed. "My uncle left me 10,000 pounds on condition that I got married. That was the first will. Now he leaves me that amount ‘if I don‘t marry.‘ It is therefore quite clear that whether I marry or do not marry I get the legacy!" Rocks are easily made. They reâ€" quire one and oneâ€"half cupfuls of brown sugar, twoâ€"thirds of a cupful of butter, two eggs, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, oneâ€"quarter teaspoonful of ground cloves, oneâ€"quarter teaâ€" spoonful of salt, two and oneâ€"half cupâ€" fuls of flour, one level teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda, one and oneâ€"half cupfuls of chopped nut meats and raisâ€" Airy kisses are well named. They: are made with two cupfuls of brown, sugar, one tablespoonful of vinegar, one teaspoonful of vanilia extract,| oneâ€"half cupful of water, white of one: egg, one cupful of chopped nut meats (either pecans or walnuts). Boil: sugar, water and vinegar together: until the mixture forms a thread when| a small quantity is dropped from a} spoon. Beat the white of egg until| stiff and pour the hot mixture into it, beating all the time. When mther] stiff, add the vanilla and the nuts.! Drop from a spoon on waxed paper.; a walnut and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Boil the mixture until it spins a thread, then pour into a greased pan over puffed rice and allow it partly to cool before shaping into balls. _ Recipes For Holiday Times. Puffed rice balls, a wholesome candy for children, can be made by rolling puffed rice in a taffy that is made for pulling. To make the taffy use one cupful of water, two cupfuls of sugar, a lump of butter the size of CANADA PRESERVES HJSTORIC SiTEs Histery and romance surround the story of Fort Prince of Wales, at the uth of the Churchill River, on Hudson‘s Bay. It was a stronger fort in 18th century than Quebec. Built with walls 300 feet long and 300 feet de, with foundations 30 foot wide, and a roadway 20 feet wide on their summits, the fort was the strongest of the Hudson‘s Bay Company in the North. Three French warships captured the fort in 1782. The picture sht:ws an old gateway. Woman‘s Sphere shook hands pléil;ntl-s', (The End.) , etc. An excellent fruit cake is made by this wellâ€"tried recipe: Six eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately, seven cupfuls of flour, three cupfuls of sugar, two cupfuls of sour milk, one and oneâ€"half cupfuls of butter, one cupful of fruit syrup, two teaspoonâ€" fuls of bicarbonate of soda, one teaâ€" spoonful each of » ground cinnamon, cloves and allspice, one pound each of raisins, dates and figs, oneâ€"half pound each of currants and citron, oneâ€" fourth pound of candied orange peel.; Seed the raisins, chop dates and figs into small pieces and cut the citron |__A fricassee of chicken would be exâ€" cellent for the special dinner: Singe, draw and cut a chicken into picces, put two tablespoonful of butter in a saucepan. When hot, but not brown, put in the breast of the chicken, flesh side down. Let the breast cook quick-|‘ ly, then take pieces out, being careful not to burn the butter. Into the butâ€" ter rub two tablespoonfuls of flour, add a pint of water, a level teaspoonâ€" ful of grated onion and two bay leaves. When this begins boiling, put in the chicken, the neck and back inl the bottom, then the dark meat and on top the white meat, flesh side down.| Cover the saucepan and simmer gent-' ly for an hour. When the chicken is‘ tender, dish, remove the fat from the surface of the sauce, add the yolk of an egg, beaten with four tablespoonâ€" fuls of cream, and strain this over the| chicken, then dust‘ it thickly with! chopped parsley or chopped celery.l Around the dish put triangles of toast,{ and serve with cranberries or currant, jelly. | ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO I Foamy sauce is made with the | white of one egg, oneâ€"half cupful of | sugar or maple syrup, oneâ€"third of a | cupful of boiling milk, one teaspoonâ€" ‘ful of lemon juice. Beat the white of the egig until it is foamy, but not dry. Add the sweetening gradually, and | beat the mixture until it is creamy. Add the boiling milk and the lemonâ€" | juice and serve at once. _ _A wholesome hard sauce is made { thus: Put into a bow!l one tablespoonâ€" (ful of butter, one cupful of sugar, ‘ ind one tablespoonful of sweet cream. | Stir until well creamed, adding a gratâ€" :ing of nutmeg or a few drops of any ;prof«-n'ed flavoring. When creamed, ‘add the whipped white of one egg, stirring it in lightly. When this is mixed add two more tablespoonfuls of cream, beat well, and pile on a glass. dish. Most hard sauces are inâ€"‘ digestible and greasy, but this is perâ€" fectly light, porous and wholesome. | Cranberry relish requires three cupâ€"‘ lectual tha; fuls of cranberries, three oranges, essarily an three cupfuls of brown sugar, three music, but cupfuls of seeded raisins, threeâ€"quarâ€" eminently ters of a cupful of vinegar, oneâ€"half forms of a teaspoonful of ground cloves and tions favor threeâ€"quarters of a teaspoonful of of moral tr ground cinnamon. Cut the cranâ€" ness, But berries in halves and wash in a strainâ€" method of er to remove as many seeds as poSâ€" individval sible, then drain. Add the orange| is to be sec pulp and rind, sugar, raisins and vineâ€"| â€" gar. Cook slowly until thick, about! The wor fifteen minutes. â€" Add the spices and bodied man cook five minutes longer, then pour a horse. into sterilized glasses and seal with| It takes paraffin. | forest to 1 Graham pudding would be a pleas Cream the butter and sugar, add the ing and wholesome substitute for the milk, egg yolks and fruit syrup plum pudding which is frequently Gradually add two cupfuls of the served with the dinner. It requires flour, the spices and the whites of one cupful of molasses, oneâ€"quarter the eggs. Dust the fruit with flour cupful of shortening, one egg, beaten, and add with the remainder of the one and oneâ€"half cupfuls of sour milk, flour. Beat for five minutes, and lastâ€" one cupful of graham flour, sevenâ€"| ly, add the soda dissolved in as little eighths of a cupful of white flour, water as possible. Pour into a greasâ€" twoâ€"thirds of a cupful of raisins, one ed pan, cover with a tightly fitling lid teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda, and, instead of baking, steam for six two teaspoonfuls of cinnamon, oneâ€" hours, Then place in a quick oven for quatter teaspoonful of cloves, and a fifteen or twenty minutes to brown. pinch of grated nutmeg. Combine By this method of cooking, the cake is the ingredients in the order given, ready for use much sooner, though if dredging the raisins with flour. Pour stored in a cool, dry place it will keep the mixture into a greased mold or perfectly for months. can having a tightly fitting lid and+ w steam for two and oneâ€"haif ho'urs.l The Appeal of Musi:. Serve with foamy sauce or hard sauce.! Music can appeal to the higher as ins, one teaspoonful of vanilla. Cream the butter and sugar, add the eggs well beaten, and the remaining dry ingredients (except nuts and raisins) sifted together. Mix well, add the nut meats and chopped raisins and vanilNa. The mixture should be very stiff. Drop from a spoon on a butâ€" tered pan and bake until light brown. It takes a dozen square miles of forest to furnish the paper for one edition of the Sunday newspapers in the United States. It would therefore appear, as far as moral control is concerned, that all music can achieve is to create an atâ€" mosphere. Regulsar hearing of inâ€" spiring music must have a good effect. Continual hearing of morbid music must have an evil effect. But really permanent moral consequences can only be produced by acting upon the mind along lines more purely intelâ€" lectual than emotional. There is neeâ€" essarily an intellectual element in all music, but the general appeal is preâ€" eminently emotional. _ Like othe'ri forms of art, music can create condiâ€"| tions favorable to the encouragcmentf of moral truth and of ideal righteousâ€". ness. But a more purely mental, method of appeal is essential if the| individual apprehension of the good| is to be secured on a permanent basis.‘ well as to the lower in man. It may move to high resolve, it may agitate, it may enlighten. But these effects seem generally to be temporary in their nature. Except in those few cases where intellectual apprehension is secured, the effect of sound is not maintained for long, when its action upon the emotions has ceased. Troops will be played right up to the firing line, the piper will skirl up to the very moment of the charge, for memâ€" ory does not seem able to perpetuate the message of the sound. COUNTLESS GRATEFUL TESTIMONIALS and Repeat Orders received during past 25 years. DOBSON‘S NEW LIFE REMEDY is not an experiment but the product of a quarter century of study and research. Pleasant to take. Does not upset the stomach. No harmful drugs, DO NOT BE PREJUDICED. Dobson‘s New Life Remedy will give you a new lease on life by freeing you of p#*a. Thousands of enthusiastic customers have written us stating that after years of failure with other medicines, electric belts, etc., they were cured by Dobson‘s New Life Remedy. One bottle for One Dolar. Six bottles for Five Doliars. Dobsan and orange peel into thin slices. Cream the butter and sugar, add the milk, egg yolks and fruit syrup. Gradually add two cupfuls of the| flour, the spices and the whites of[ the eggs. Dust the fruit with flour and add with the remainder of the flour. Beat for five minutes, and lastâ€" ly, add the soda dissolved in as little water as possible. Pour into a greu-l ed pan, cover with a tightly fitling lidy and, instead of baking, steam for six, hours. Then place in a quick oven for| fifteen or twenty minutes to brown. By this method of cooking, the cake is ready for use much sooner, though if stored in a cool, dry place it will keep perfectly for months. f THE TEST OF TIME FOR RHEUMATIC HAS PROVEN Is a positive Remedy for Acute, Chronic matisin in all its various forms. The working power of an ableâ€" ‘The only doliar that can buy more this Christmas than it could twenty years ago is the dollar that buys the Gillette shaving serviceâ€"once & $5.00 luxury. & With a single dollar, you can now end someone‘s shaving troublesâ€"save him moneyâ€"enable him to shave at home with speed, comfort and safety every day of his life â€" multiply your Christmas wishes by the days of the year â€" 365 times â€" and Gillette Brownie and 3 genuine Gillette blades Made and guaranteed genuine by Gillette Safety Razor Co. of Canada is about N ew Zite Remedy Compang Safety Razor oneâ€"tenth that of 78 West Advlaide St., Toronto Canada New Hite | / "When you marry him, love him. After you marry him, study him. If {he is honest, humor him. If he is generous, appreciate him. When he is quarre!lsome, ignore him. If he is ‘slothful, spurn him. If he is noble, praise bim,. If he is confidential, enâ€" courage him. If he is secretive, trust him. If he is jealous, cure him. If he likes society, accompany him. When he does you a favor, thank him. When he deserves it, kiss him. Let him think how well you. understand him; but never let him know that you manâ€" age him." A wise old minister, before parting with a young coup!» he had joined in matrimony, used to slip a card into the bride‘s hand, on which was printed this advice: Gentlewomen are about the only ones who do not object to doing menial work, according to Miss J. C. Kerr, diâ€" rector of the Useful Women orguanizaâ€" tion, with a membership of 1,000, who are out to do anything for anybody, says a London despatch. She says that every week more titled women are taking jobs as a result of lost forâ€" tunes, and that many are finding a great measure of happiness and conâ€" tentment in serving others, though they themselves haye been served all their lives. Miss Kerr cited instances where they had become parior maids, lady‘s maids and companions. She added that they always dropped their titles to conceal their identity, that they might be, saved embarrassâ€" ment. Minard‘s Liniment for Warts. Prevents chapped hands, cracked lips, chilblains. Makes your skin soft, white, clear and smooth. Gentlewomen Ready to do Menial Tasks. All druggists sell it Wisdom for Wives. and Muscular Rheuâ€" Consumers of coke, howey adopt suitable methods of firi wood should be started by t ing a sixâ€"inch layer of coke i1 kindlings after they are we! with the draft on Wher t has started to burning «o. fireâ€"box with the fue! and « the draft until the coke will ; tinue to burn. Keep the i: under control; do not let it | and then try to cut it down a denly. With the tamsized t nace should carry fire o if there is any anthrac should be used at nict wealther, There is among householders a ve general prejudice against the use coke as fuel for the furnace. Obj: tion is made that it is bulky and th it burns too rapidly. The way in which your friend holds his head, in repose or action, will give you another clue to his character A coxcomb once said to a philosoâ€" pher, "What makes you hang your head down so* Why don‘t you hold it up, and look as 1 d>*" The reply was cuttne. "Look at that field of whea.‘" an swered the sage. *"The heads that are well filled bend downwards: those that stand up straight are empiy‘" It would be ridiculous, of course, to say that every man who holds up nie bead is lacking in brains. On the conâ€" trary, an upright poise shows mental vigor and determination. But it is equally (true that the finer, deeper characteristics are olten indicated by & forward dropping of the head. As for its bulk, there is no gainsas ing the fact that it takes up mor space than is desirable. But this can not be regarded as of absolute import ance if anthracite wherewith to fl!] t« family coal bin is not obtainable. Th« difliculty of too rapid burning may +« overcome by limiting the supply of ; through the ashâ€"pit. Coke should be used for h« houses because it is a clean an< venient fuel. It requires less . tion than coal, gives a more un temperature in the house, and a does away with the necessity of . ing the furnace and Nues. Beware, for instance, the r furtive shake, that imparts a caress; it is the velvet touch of cat, and the claws are never far There are handshakes that impart a perfect trust and confidence, while others seem to give an instinctive warning. These latter are Nature‘s danger signals, and should be heeded in time. The handshake itself, of course, is one of the finest indications to charâ€" acter. Just as you can "sense" the amount of friendship that an acquaintâ€" ance feels for you, by the manner in which he returns your grasp, so is it possible, by this simple préssure of the hand, to read with much accuracy the real natures of those you meet. This, however, is quite intuitive, and no hard and fast rules can be laid down. How does your friend greet you* If he bows slightly when shaking hands, he adds to friendship a deference to you and to your opinmons. If, on the other hand, be retains an upright posiâ€" tion whle greeting you, he possesses a greater sense of his own importanc« and dignity, and less of yours. Be led by the former; he has an obâ€" jective always in view, and will probâ€" ably succeed. But confide in the lat ter; he is the more human of the two The first will be preoccupled with his aims, and inclined to be intolerant of your failings and weaknesses; the other, a wider outlook and kindlier disposition, will find time to lond a helping hand. Perhaps you have noticed that one of your friends walks in a straight line, stepping neither to right nor left; while another is more unde~ided in his motions, moving from side to side dur ing his progress, and varying the length of his pace. A careless gait has nothing to hide; he who possesses it is just what he apâ€" pears to be. A studied, careful manâ€" ner of walking, on the other hand, give signs of a deeper and more secreâ€" tive nature. A lorwer stride shows a greater breadth of mind. When slow, it indiâ€" cates a goodâ€"natured, equable temporaâ€" ment, but inclined towards selfishness, The man who possesses a long, quick step will "get on" in life, not always pausing to think of you and others whome he may pass. Follow him‘ He may lead you to success; but he won‘t walit for you if you lag behind. Does he step out with a short, brisk stride? If so, he is kindâ€"heartod, but has a rather uncertain temper. With a firm belief in himself and his own opinions, he delikes to be contradicted, His character, like his step, is straightâ€" forward and rellable, but raiher conâ€" These indications of charactor, Naâ€" ture‘s "bills of conten‘ts," so to speak, are to be found n the natur>l, overy» day movements of those with whom you come into contact. Watch your friend‘s step! His manâ€" mer of walking will tell you much about his character. written Jarge. _ The trouble is that most of us won‘t bother to read these The Advantages of Coke. first feed into wood 11 igniteq this |:l:: of the ar disâ€" But D en A (P