! t ' ' I ' . .....___ .IQE FATE .OF AZUMA; Or, The South African Millionaire. CHAPTER XVIII.-(Cont'd). It carried . one miles away this room, for all that it was in the heart of fashionable London. It aroused remembrances of pictures of the in- terior of mosques, notwithstanding that it had no tessellated flooring, nor barefooted Mohammedans and Be- douin'! standing in silent prayer on holy carpets. Inspiration seemed to be wafted backwards and forwards, Inspiration idyllic, yet mystic, as If lt were a casket of great thoughts, of unuttered suggestions. And the •ilent woman of bronze looked like Ule linking image of a united \last and future, reminding one of Anc1ent Egyptology, of sphinxes and pyra- mids and buried sarcophagi, the while she spoke from the heart of an- tiquity bf the great dreams of the future, the great dreams which while they seem so vast as to envelope the world, in reality make it shnnk to the size of a crystal ball lltDall enough to lie in the palm of one man's hand, while the room aeemed full of delicious odors, the woodful odors of great forests that have. been steadily exhaled for all time long before the sphinx and the pyra- mids. And as they came in, Azuma greeted them in African fashion, and Adolphe said something to her In her own tongue which made her look swiftly at Judith. Her look made Ju- dith feel uncomfortable. .. · "What did you say to berT" she asked. Something exciting disturb- Ill&', yet scintillating, seem:d to come to her in this room, something which resembled the nervous exciting rest- lessness the desert air brings with it, the feeling of tingling flesh, and nerves pointed like needles which the desert wind, laden with tiny grains of sand, inspires. Adolphe laughed. "Ah, you must not ask questions. J\zuma and I have many secrets, haven't we, Azuma ?n The girl gave him a swift look from under her dark lashes, which it was impossible to read so much did it seem to contain, adoration, grati- tude, wistfulness, doubt, and some- thing else1 which Adolphe Lieb alone could reaa there. "Oh, do make her tell us our for- tunes," Judith exclaimed, stirring her cup of tea and looking around the room, then at Adolphe, · then at Azuma, smiling with that wonderful smile of hers which held in it at once so much sadness and such arrogance. will you come li moment with me!" "Dear me, how very extraordin- ary," remarked Lady Glaueourt, "what can it bet" "Perhaps she will -tell you after- wards/' he laughed back, as they two · disappeared. And it was in the conservatory, the place he loved to read and write In, with its flowers and rlants and tanks of strange tropica flowers, that Adolphe Lieb in answer to her rather nervous question: "What on earth are you going to show meT" leaning towards her and covering her two hands with hlsc as she sat on the low seat beside him and looking into her eyes, half whill- pered: "I have brought you here to show you my heart." CHAPTER XIX. And now a year bad elapsed ainee Judith's marriage to Adolphe Lleb, a year which sometimes seemed as if I only a few days had gone by, aome- times as if it was long yean BlfO that Adolphe Lieh had said to her with so much of sincerity, with ao mucli expression of feeling: "1 am going to sho'IV you my hearL" It had been a quaint propofl81 yet it had l'leased her because it was ao in keepmg with the man. And now to-day they were ~th in London, in the huge house in Park Lane which eince Judith had come to live there had lost much of its IIB'W· ness, its dasolate appearance. Gay striped awnings at each window threw little glades of cool shade DP9n the masses of pink and deep rose-col- ored geranium in each window. On the air there seemed to hum the noise of busy pleasure which is like the hum of bees, and which in great. cities seems to give something of blitheness to labor and of labor to blitheness, which joins with the sun· shine and the chirp of sparrows, to earrol forth the tra Ia Ia of life. And Judith noticed this morning the con- trast between the interior of the beau- tiful house· and the exterior. Glare and sparkle and stir outside, and within cool darkness, and the con- trast pleased her. It seemed the im- age of her life, the contrast of her deeper inner feelings with the auper- ftuity of her daily environment, super- fluity of wealth, of social occupation, of va et vient and frou frou and laughter and chatter and transient emotion, and perhaps occasionally a flash of real amusement. "She doesn't tell fortunes, Lady Judith, do you Azuma ?" He said th · h The inside-how cool it was, how some mg again to er in a language given over to breeze and shadow, yea, they did not understand, but Azuma there was almost a solemnity, a ITB1J; shook her head. Jle had asked her • f d · th d kn hi if she would show them her pebbles, 1ty o emeanor 1n e ar esa w tell them something, but she wasn't the shaded windows th100w on th• going to show off. marble stoircase, on the panela of "She won't," he said,- it's no different woods in the dift'erent rooma, good." Then he asked her if she on the great tessellated hall floor, on would sing! the porphyry . columns which IUitain- B t th · 1 1 ked d h ed the staircase and the upper corri- u e g~r oo own s yly, her dora, on the carpets which were thick . whole body seeming to writhe in pro- and raised like moas and on the ftow- ::stc~~t having attention drawn era which bloomed everywhere, on · · "Not one little song Azuma t" t~e plc~es on the walla, the lovely Instead Azuma walked past them, pictures In which the landscape ~ the rings on her feet tlnkhng faintly, ed .~ have been. audd~nly steePed' in mulfled on the thick Persian carpet twil1ght, and tlie eyebda. of tie men and opened a cabineL The e ea of and women in the portra~ts half eloa- the three visitors followed her,Tascln- ed hl; the all en'!elo_pmg shadow ated, while Judith noted how at home growtng dro"!'ay, while little canopies she seemed in the house of Ute mil- ov~r the b~r~-cages tlu'ew till1 lionaire. . stripes of sunlight between the hera, But Adolphe Lieb only smiled, he casting ~e shadow of tJ:le bars acroaa Irnew what she was going to do as the ftoonng, ~nd cat:ching the rad- A:ruma took out his violin and brought l il!nt plumage ID ftashmg gleama aa it it to him silentlr, putting it into his d1d from here and ~ere throuch - bands and making a gesture which vice~~ between the blmds, on the aoft --.1 to lnYite hla to do bla beet I pale )'allow dnu ,U wore. to tlltertaln Ilia peeta. Cool lib tM i-.lcle of a pot1!1, ln- "Do you play the Yioli.n t" Judith I =to re~ of ~ to IDVo- could not tell D)' it aurpriMd liar. • to liledlWioD, -nn. IN~ 'l'hBD abe nmembtred that Kra. Gol- ouP aufled and dUII4iit1fb ~ U.. bad to14 Mr that he did. away drum, -e tM faint roar of •- veey lntarutlq," Lady a himdnd .wr-t •crrinc tlll-. Glaucourt remarked1 taking another remindill&' of the boiling in a pot of a eake. from the table, in the semi- ~core of. dill'erent . herba. She cou1cl lromcal tone in which she always Imagine 1t 1!11 outs1de, at the beck of commented on what she didn't under- the house, 1n South Audler Street stand. narrow and congasted, and m Oxford "Yes, you must, you must. Azuma St~t, far away to the right; In Pie- was quite right, make him " she said cad1lly not so far away to the left, smiling sweetly at the girl: ' and clo!'er along Park La!'!'• on the And without much protest Adoll'he o~her a1de of the . Par~ ra1hngs be- took his violin and tuned it ·screwing hmd the ~rreenery a thmner stir, lau two strings a little tighte~, rapidly, cl~sely ~acked, lighter In kind, but with an accustomed hand. Then he atll~ movmg always, the panorama of began to play a rhapsodie hongroiae, veh1cle:s and hwnans1 ~eavy an~ lipt, while <' Azuma squatted on the floor ponderous and. mahc10uely dlaplum- falling silently, noiselessly into ~ ous, great heav1ly l!!den wagons, mo- graceful position, her eyea fixed on tor cars, and. ele«;tric c.abs an.d han- : her master absorbed, enthralled. lsoms, open Vlctonas With the1r bur-l Could it be; that thel'_ were in Lon- den . of butterfly-apparelled womeD, don, in Park Lane T The music ex- ommbuaes and. water. carts, h!'re awl quiaite music which might bve 1 there ~n Amencan sp1der lookmg like brought the performer fame aa an · some 1nsect, some monster mosquito artist, seemed to deny that they darting hither a!'d thither over tht were, as the notes rose and fell, surface of a th!ckly weed-entancfed seeming to seek an exit at the open pond, and weavmg through, In and window, or to feel with tender an- out amongst th~ traffic ~e human tennae of sound for breezes which ants, . some hus1ly hurry~ng, -• drew in and out, breezes which had atoppmg to chat O! gaze into ahop ' come from far away where flowers windows, some le1sut;eiY nunterlnf , grew and the aun fought duels, U~rht along, un~oncerned .WltJ:l the web aDd with light on dancing waters. Now woof of life, watchmg 1t from a dia- it seemed as if horses galloped, tear- tanee, or ~rou~h. ~J!Ktacles of illu- ing along mountain patlul, down billa, slot!z or With critiCISing, lncreduloua, down, down; , now little rivulets nng acolliDC wonder or disdain. · and streams gurgled, and fountaina That in the streets, and yonder in plashed, and birdiJ sang, sang in lit- th• Park the throng of men and wo- tle spurts . with chirping, twittering men, the little children IIHking to sladneas, with spasmodic notae lmaaine themselv~a In pasturea of cau(Cht upwards to hide the dirge, the rreen and aold, riding, driving, teuf- dlsmal walling dirge, which was the teuftng, chattill&'[ walldng, laughiq, theme of the music, which seemed u and the air seem ng to condenae -o- if 110mewhere hearts were breakln.r, tlan and aound Into one great roar of breaking in tile aunahine, aouls moan- llf• which l"'lled in subdued, :re-· lng in Inner hollow caves, hidden strained thunder over the great city away beneath iltratas of ahadow, from one end to the other, lfivllllf the which the sparkling aunahine and the impression that rolled it over tht music could not reach. . whole world and under it, conaiaa Now it seemed to Judith that pain back again in dense coagulated wa..., and joy galloped aide by &ida, IIJht thick, heavy with smoke and dirt and ohadow danced together, playm.r and stench of decay as the sea Ia hi.de and aeek, while the surroundings, laden with a'ftell and weed~ to roll the whole presentment of the room over it once more, again ana again, seemed to make the music speak of in endless-flux and reflux of e~ Eastern scenes, of deserts, und up- muffled sound. on sl!nd, vaster IU\d vaster like in- And this morning she seemed !riY- creaamg uttermoat ·thou.rht, deserts en over to meditation because it W8ll with waving Jl!ilma r~a. ching out .rl- her wedding day, and Adolphe bad gantic denune~ating arms to the wind, bt.~~isted in German fuhion that tllej which blew loul!er .and louder, roar- should havt a famil)' party. Her fa- ed · and fulmln~ot.l!d and scattered ther and mother and bl"'ther ....,.. whirlwind• of aanU, then fell again comins, and other relationa who ha4 lower, lower, softer! aofter, a w~ird at one time been cold, but who ha4 lullaby, then aleep, a eep, a sigh. Then become tremendoualy related, alMe alienee. her marrlaie a few intimate frl ..... "Ahl" Judith baaved a algh and for and of ntcu'alt.1 th• GoUinp. W1la* an Instant no one spoke. 1he wondtred thla mornlnr waa .....,. Fohr an inatant, they all seemed Adolpht wanted to c:eltbrate tldil ~u~ t lnmeshed by tho spell of the daJ wltother he ,.... sincere Ia ..._ h mUIIIC, then Adolphe Lieb'a laugh, hla ulcl~ Ovtl" itt It -~ to liar u h ea 1 lthy .!food-natured laugh broke the It were not poaalble that he ahoUL C r IIID that had fallen Upon them. he went further and aaJted harMlf He held out the how and the violin whether aha heraalf rejoiced or Ml to Asuma, and .movlld from where he A year how (lulckly it had:.:g hahdll been atancllng near the . ftreplaee yet how lull it bad been. She w the he played, towards La.sly Ju- behaYed very well at ftrst, I cllili. - on golnr durinc the honeymoon to I have so1,11ething to show you," Frankfort to see hia oll!i_ mothar and he said, "which only you must see, slateri, and bee.n veey ·lllce to U.... ~-, . not giVing hersetf airs, but taking them by storm by her chaqn and beauty and winning simplicity. Some- times abe had wondered since, what had prompted her to do all this, it was so unlike her1 that she could not herself discover wnether she had done it as In a dream, or because she was herself, her real self, the while she had been conscious of something mo- therly and tender and protective in old Frau Lieb which was missing in her own mother. Then they had spent the winter in South Africa returning later by Cairo, and Judith had felt the charm of the Veldt and been delighted .with the house Adolphe had built there. She had even taken an interest in the . Mines, and in his great schemes of cornering the diamonds, and in Cairo she had been an interested partici- pator in the conversation and dis~us sioris with .high government officials, with the Khedive, and expert engin- eers on the feasibility of establishing a Cape to Cairo railroad, and through- out the whole ten months, for they had been away ten months, stopping at Paris on their way home, linger- ing everywhere that pleased them, Judith had felt the allurement, the strange satisfying content and ela- 1 tlon which his gigantic wealth brought to her, and he had begun to reap some of the benefits of her posi- tion, while he wondered at her ready acquiescence in many matters. Yet, now it seemed to Judith that why she had enjoyed these months, why she rejoiced in this first anniversary of their wedding, was because she had IP;lided with the stream and been satis- fied to be happy. (To be continued.) + IN BLISSFUL IGNORANCE. ~ - "':-------------..:_:__ The Charm of East~rn fragrance is typified in every sealed packet of II . Selected leaves from the finest plantation famous for teas of subtle delle· s, SA - 10usness. LADA IS fresh and free from dust. BLACKs MIXED Oil GREEN B77 added, and then with clear water. Finally, prealf' the sponged parts be- :fore they ue quite dry. If the openirig on the porch wbere a drop screen is needed Is very wide it II often more practical to use two narrow screens, rather than one full ·m-tnore practical because they are ·not 110 heavy to dmw up and down. When the bottom crust of a loaf is so overbaked as to be uneatable ra- move the hard part of it, cut Into thin narrow strips, and these throw Into _soup a moment or so before serving. However brown they arc really a palatable addition: + I SETI'LERS' SLASH. A Prime Cause for This Year's Forest den high winds lifted the burninl material · into the forest and started a serious blaze. j "Nothing is mort· certain," remarlted Chief Forestet MacMillan, "than that had there been no permit regulation the results would have been disastrous in the extreme. • KAISER'S GIFT TO LONDON- · Fires. Statue Ncar Kenllington Palaee Wu While forest fires since the begin- Sent From Gnmany. ning of May have been kept down by · It is not generally known that the the fire ranging systems to a fraction statute of King William which stands o.f last year's destruction, enough pub- outside Kensington Palace was pre- lie and private-owned timber in this sented to England by the Kaiser. It province has been given to tile flames bears the following Inscription:- . to compel ~ close investigation of the "William m. of Orange, King of ' caues. Great Britain and Ireland, 1689-1702. It is asserted by expert forest engin- Presented by Willlam II., G&rman ·eers t~t while railway and lumber Emperor and King of Prussia to Se880nabla Dishes. I and" stir until thick ~nd smooth. Sea- ·compames can greatly reduce the risk King Edward VIL, for the British na• --~~hfish Cutletsodffi?repare shredded son with salt and pour the sauce over to the forests from locomotive sparks i tion, 1907." ... vuus a f h b II and the debris that follows cutting A h rt tl th K . ft s or c s a s, shape in the cucumbers operat' . edl te t t b very s o me ago e aiBel' at cutlets, dip in egg and crumbs • Ions, •mm a . s epa mus e presented a colollll81 statute to Nol'- and fry in deep fat. • -- taken by the J:'rovinclal Governmo!nts way. This is a statute f F 'thjof to c:urb the evtl of settlers' fires. 0 n • Date Jelly-Stew dates until tender, Useful Hints. Every wooded province :>t~ribctcs ~bet .v;at ~o~e ~~ro, who Is ~e aub- remo\·e the stones, put in a mold and A roost of veal will be greatly im- much of ita great annual toss to the Jec 0 an ce an c _nga aulgned to po~r over them liquid lemon jelly. proved if it is larded; this prevents burning of brush by farmers. It is I t~e fourteenth century, an~ relating Chill ~nd serve with whipped cream. it being dry and tasteless when eook- abeolutely necessary of course that I his adventures. . It Is dealgnated to Hahbut Rabbit-Sprinkle two slices ed. farmers should cles:r up thir 'ia.tda, ~tl.mem~ra~ :::e L!n~se~llthtwen~- of fresh halibut with salt and pepper The secret of making popovers and burning is usually th'! one che11 p , cru se 0 e n o e Mld- Triatan da Cunha Has Not Yet Heard and melt(:(J butter, and broil until that really "pop" is to have the pans . method. The only l't'Strietion IIBk!'d mght Su',l. The figun; of the mythl- brown on both sides. Pour over it sizzling hot when the batter is poured . by those concerned in forest protec- cal hero IS forty feet htgh-bont. ten of the War. hot welsh rabbit. into them. . tlou Ia that permits shall be issued to f-;et shorter than the Kaiser thmks Incredible though it may sound, .Eggplant-Peel eggpla~t. cut in One who has noted it carefully says 1thoee intending to burn the brush on hn;nself- an.d stands on a pedestal there still are places which have not shces and lay in well salted water for that the meat from a seven-pound ' the edge of the forests and that in- thirty feet high. A dozen men lunch- yet heard a syllable about the war. an hour. Wipe dry. Dip in flour or fowl will make a quart, cut up, for : apeetors shall establish the safesL ed in the c~est ~vlty o~ this colossal Tristan da Cunha, the lonoly South meal and fry on both sides. Allow salad. •method of doing it. Scores of cases statu.te wh1lst 1t was ID course of Atlantic island, says the secretary to 15 minutes for cooking. The slices To brighten brass curtain rings : eould be cited where a settler, often- e~tlon. the British postmaster general, has can bo egged 11nd . crumbed before which have become dull, soak them in" lmlocent of any harmful intention, not received a mail since the out- frying and are nicer than when they paralfin oil for twenty-four hours; started a fire in his property to pro- • break of war. Tristan da Cunha is are merely floured. Then polish with a chamois leather. ' '"fide for a hundred dollar crop and The Greatest Cake Ever Bodt. entirely dependent on chance com- 'Valfles-Put two cupfuls of flour In place of a tape loop at the """ \ended up with destroying scores of I Housewives, how would you lik<1 to munications from the Cape, 4,600 one teaspoonful baking powder and of a ki~cn towel work a large 8;;.. thousands( and in one case three mil- b!"ke a cake of .the foll?wing dimen- milea away. Sometimes it is a year half tenspoonful s&Jt into a mixing let hole. This will be found s~- lona) of dollars worth of timber. s1ons a.nd ingredients: E1ghteen yards or more without its people hearing bowl. Add three eggs and butter the er and more lasting as it cannot :In the area covered by the st.Jlong, e1ght yards broad and more than from the outside world. It is a Bri- size of an egg. ~ter you have sift- come off like the loop.' ~ ~urice Forest Protective Association o!'e-balf yard thick, containing thirty- tiah possession •. and its people, num- ed the flour make ' in small cakes and The best iron stand is 8 brick. It · ,m Quebec Province, 231 fires were en-Is~ bnshels of flour, 200 gallons of bering about e1g~ty, all Church of bake slowly on 8 griddle. Brown is a non-conductor of heat, and far ~tered and fought last year and of • ~tlk, one ton of butter, a huge quan- England, are ~amly descendants of j well on one sido and then on the preferable on that account to the thla number no leSB than 80 were due I bty of yeast and 5,000 eggs! Such ah_lpwrecked sa1lors. They are of other. most elaborate open stand to careleSB and unthinking settlers. In a cake, probably the largest ever miXed origin-English, Scotch, Irish, Chicken, Southern Style-Clean and Ink stains can be re~oved from 1813, out of 306 fires, 1~1 were traced made, .was s~rved in Ju!'e• 1780, by American, Dutch, Italian, Asiatic soak chicken in cold water. Cut i oak furniture l>y rubbing a little j to the. same ~u~e. Had 1t not been for ~redenc~ William 1., ~mg of Pros- and nevo. There is not one "enemy halves. Dredge in .. tfour and lay i~ spirits of wine into them, allowing the h1ghly-e1ft~lent system of fire- sm, to h1s army followmg a huge re- alien." Another place that has pro- pan greased well 'th k ' b tt it to remain on for 8 little time, aDd ~. the t1mber burned through past. The 30,000 soldiers, already bably not yet heard of the war is Whl'le th ch' k WI. coo ki~lr u ekr. then polishing the attempt to clean off a few agri-1 glutted, could not eat the entire cak:,'j Yq 'to . te p y ' t ha e 1c en IS coo ng ma e · -'tural 1 h d •- f 't d' trib Ul s, m eas rn eru. qui os s some corn fritters ·usin canned corn. Gingerbread is made doubly good ""' acres ast year would ave I an remna~.., o I were ~· ut perhaps the most romantic mail ser- Season with s.o.lt • and g er and by the addition of a few spoonfuls of mo!B than equalled the co~ of the 1 among the •!'habitants of ne1ghborin1r vice in the · world. Its letters are cover with flour, enough~!Phold the grated chocolate before baking. 'l,'hia entire 80 farms. Every provtnce shows towns and villages. taken by British mail steamer up the com together Fry . th makes it richer and does not afteet annually just such unreasonable re- ___ _.,. __ _ Amazon to Manaos, and thence right 'th h' k · .m ~ sam.e pan th 11 eorda of waste by settlers who take across South America up the mighty WI c IC en. Put m thm strtps of S avor. , . bruah . burning into their own hands The Cat and Bag Joke river in a river steamer. It Js only becon; this will give a delicious flavor . oap is very apt t~ turn white lD Ontar-io there is practical! n~ Tholll!h many people frequently t:aa a few hundred miles from Lima the ~ the meat. Serve the chicken on in- pamt yellow .. For c!eanmg, use warm reatrlction upon settlers' b~sh- the expression, "Let .tbe cat out of the P.clfic capl 'tal of Peru, but the 'wall dlvidual meat plates allowing half water to which a little kerosene baa bumlng tl d th . bag.. Its oriK{n Ia not pnerally cl\icken to a persor:. Gamlsh the been added; this will remove m011t .. __ 'dopers. onsh ~.. edprovtlnce kno'wn It ta ntd to have once been of the Andes is an almost impassable 1 • h . · . persistent stains ...., pal up m c a•n:u an use ess · · barrier. The "quick" route, there- Pate Wit a fr1tta' . and a abce of If bef tttn' th 1 -~ of strips of woodlend The Quebec au a favorite trlclt among conntrT folk In bacon. .· , ore pu g e o... &TB· th riti · .- England to substitute a cat for one of fore, from Yquitos to Lima is all the h ·. . ham bread into the oven, you clip 0 ea have a good law and make the young ptgs when the latter were thousand~ of nailes down tlle Amazon Spinae -Pick a peck ?r- spmach a spoon in water and pat the top • aerlous effort to regulate the setting taken tn bap to market. Theae bap and across the Atlantic and then "via carefully and let It stand In. cold . ~a- of the !tread with it, the bread .rut.. oat of II~ by ~blillhing a closed tn old phraseoloc, were known u LlYerpool." · ter for an hour or :two . . Put •.n bOihng 1 not have a hard and ragged cruaL-< ,-n dunng wh1ch no fire shall he 1 pokes. If any greenhorn waa foolls4 saltec!- :wa~. !Uid tat boll until _tondcr. Reduce labor by llimp4f;ying duties, Mt unless by permit issued by a fire enough to buy "a p}« tn a po'ke"--tha& One Year Old at Birth. Chinese ' keep record of time by mfiBJUI of cycle• of twelve years each. The ftnt year of a new cycle is the 7BB1' of the rat, the second the year of the ox, the third the year or the tlcer, etc. A child born in the year of the tiger belongs to the Order of the Tiger. A Chinese child Ia also helcl to be a year old at time of birth. B4rven daya later, if asked the age of hla ehiW, the 1at!Mr will reply, "a year and aenn da)'L • T&Jr:e up m a colander that. 1t ,m.ay not by shirking them.-. l"ianttldl \raqer. The enforcement of .11\lch a Is, to pur.c:baae _the _BD111!&1 wi~oat •- dra':" perfectly. N in ~ hot d1ah With houses with objects of beauty, but ,law Ia obviously difficult and a large log lt-th~ tric'k wail rieeesllfltl, bat a p1ece of batter Ule s1ze of an ~gg. let them be few in number. CurtaU 11rtaff will be required to. give it the If be opened the aaclt to aaUsfy him. A;dd half ~poouful salt and a .httle the elaboration of meals without de- neeeaa which the situation demands. I self concerning tbe nlue or hla dee!~ vmegar. St1r well Cho~ the spmach creasing either perfection of aenice Britiah Columbia supplies a first- ed purchase pu~ wonld be aure to fine and add the dreuUllf. Y~u can or food value. rat. example of an act covering the Jum,~ out. The cat was let oot or the e:dd a Email cupful of cream if you It ought to be more generally permit system for settlers' slash. No bag and tba trick was cllaclosed. like.. known that wheat flour ill probably fonst engineer in that or any pro- + Cucumben m Brown Gravy-Pre- the best possible article to throw Ybtee attempts to hamper the farmer pare half a dozen medium alae over a fire caused · by the spillinc or unnecessarily in. clearin.r his land. At . A Pretty Episode of w.,. cucumbers- Cut in thick slieea and igniting of kerosene oil. Flour Ia the same time 1t is Blltabllahed that Pierre Loti, ~e Prnell ~~ put in ice water. Let stand half hour nearly always within convenleut 110 hapbuanl cldaen, In a barr7 to ..... In L'IIIa8tratloa a p'lcllilebbau-.....;llllll and drain. Simmer in unseasoned beef reach. Jjiijf-Jilj wdte· mar, iJWJ -ltave <mJ a.ecoaM -~ ~ ~ In ·~ stock until taDcMr. Smop oot the cu· Perspiration ataina may be ..-...a npt to 1- tM' prcm- halt a an- to the fnDt. TIM so.toa Triii- CWIIbera and ia7 Ia a yeptable diaL froa the arma of wltite woolen · or lt.t dollan of cood timber and an- lleript haa a traltlllatioa of the uti- Cook OM tabl•poonful lour In a aiJk c1nuea by a)IC)IlCiq with - - the ..tety of tcnnta &Jid 'rillaceL c:Je. Tlala btdcleltt Ia tabn from it: Banlou are nobby tllinp in ~ ·tabl~l bUtter. Adcl the ltoc:lt ;;;ter to wh~amiaoiila 11aa hieD Front May 1st to October let Is the "There were also villagent who _... _ -- ' · "d~ season." Wherever possible journeyed with he 110ldiers along this PreUr Lqod011 Glrte Fieht FIMB While Mea Plaht tile Ene111y at .the Fron~ Another tes.tlmonlal to the faet that the women of Great Britain are rapidly ·accustoming themselves to the n.ew order of thinp, wlterein thty have taken the place in a great Ilia ny walks of life vacated by the ... w1to hl!lve aone to the· front, is this ph o'tograph. In a London draper's abo p the girls have taken the placea· fll tht men who composed the ftre briga de of the establishment. During the drills, which are taking place dallf.t they answer the call aa quickly as did the male members, an4 they are u capable of handling the hose aacll · nozllie in a stubborn blaze as any mal e firefighter. · - .~ .. . . '\ the area to be burned Is examined by I crowded highway. I HDteinber one a forest guard. The duration of the ; very pretty pealla!'lt woman who, in .pentlit averaged last last year from the midst of the 8nslish commisaary IMIV'BII to fifteen days. In certain dis- wa1r0na, was dragging, by means of a triet., owing to dangerous weather, cord, a little wagon that contained hlp winds and numerous fires, the two sleeping babies. She was toiling, penDits of the district had to be ean- 1 for the ascent was steep at that point. eelled altogether. Of 11,623 permits A handsome Scotch sergeant, who was luued to settlers In 1914, only 128 amoldng a ciprette, seated the while ftrw escaped beyond control, which with his legs hanging from the near- Is about one per eent. This ls a re- e~t wagon, nid to her in the sign ~~~~~rbbly small proportion of damage 1 langut RC, 'Pass me _your end of the to the credit of settlers, for in some : cord.' She understood, and accepted dlatricts of Canada the settlers are 1 with a gentle, confused smile. rwponaible · for thirty to forty per l "The Scotsman wound the frail cent. of ail forest destruction. Even ea!>le about hill left arm, keeping his of thill one per cenL in British Co- rignt hand free for smoking; and it lumhia, under the permit system, was he who guided the two babes of quite a number were due to extraor-~ France, -whose little earriage tht dlnary accidents; in apveral eases sud- truck dragged like a feather." with the fruit you order for praervinc. Tell him, too, that you want it in the Pe.c:kage8 ori1inated for ~ Supr - 2 or 5 lb. Sealed Cartons or 10, 20, 50 or 100 lb. Cloth Bag.. n• you ..,m be aura to aet theGENUINEREDPATII- C....da} favorite })t~ for th1ee --~D!~tb! I t ~~~t; r:l Can ..,. 'truat cood. CAIUDA sucaR IU.TJ~CO., MoirrWJ,. &35