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ane €6 7D) POPLM are funny” said Mr, Jar reflectively “Wo get away from the P simple things of life in our thoughts, and yet, after All, life only oon-/ cists of something to eat, something to wear and @ place to sleep. All mankind must have these threo things, and al] mankind gete them in a varying degree of better or worse.”’ “What ere you talking about?" asked Mrs. Jars, “T'm talking about this discussion about ‘How oan we make others love us7 that's running in the papers,’ sald Mr. Jarr, 6 “T think {t's very Interesting,” sald Mrs. Jurr. “Of course, you don't think #0, ) Deoause all q man thinks of {s whether he has @ good Ainner or a good bed “And don't women want to have pretty things to wear?" aaked Mr. Jarr, “Of course they do.” was the reply, “but that 1s only to make a woman look | more attractive in the eyes of the one ahe joves.”’ “}iuh!® snorted Mr, Jarr, “I guess “not. A worhan dresses fine not so much to please those she likes, but to make those-she doesn't lke enviou “That isn't so!" said Mra. Jarr) promptly. | “It is true!’ sald Mr. Jart. “How many times have I heard you say that} you felt mortified! because people you don't Uke have met you when you were wearing an old dress and an old bat?” | . “That's because It appears to afrd anything better,” said Mra. Sarr. * "Treating any one like as if he were ‘one of the family’ means you let him eee you in your old duds or give him a picked-up. dinner, but the more yor’ 4 Uke a person the better, you dress tor them and the more you put yourself out for them.”* . : “But that'e no efgn: you do not love them,” eald ‘Mrs. Jarr quickly, “and {f they do not care enough for you to'take you just aa you ere or to’ put up with what is good enough for you, then their friendship and regard aren't worth having.” " "Bo it is a vital question, then?” nem to fink you are shabby and can't i: said Mr, Jarr. ‘For those that love. us we make no added effort to, please, Those that do not love.us we dress for and entertain In tho hope they will love us, We want others to\love us, then?” “Certainly not! said Mra. Jarr, “If peopie do not love-me for -myseif, Pm gurely not gotng to out myself out to make them love me, I don't want such weve!” ‘ ‘ i “Oh, but you Ao!" sald Mr, Jarr, “The question betrays a very human trait. Qévet of us want everybody to love us, but we do pot care to tako the trouble to love everybody.”” { “We'd be very foollsh to dq oo," extd Mrs. Jarr,..‘"The few we Go love” ‘worry the life out of us. If you aro out of my sight I'm worrying over what You are doing or if anything has happened to you, and t's the same with the | ehildrea. It's a good thing we do not love everybody. We'd bo most unhuppy.’’| “But if we loved everybody, perhaps we wouldn't worry,” sald Mr. Jarr, “It! fe loving one person so acutely that makes all the trouble,” “Loving everybody and not worrying wouldn't be loving,” said Mrs, “People who only jove themselves get along the best.” “But are they happy?” asked Mr. Jarr. ‘Certainly they aro,’ said Mra Jarr; “It's omly when we love others that r2 unhappy.” “Do you know," sald Mr. Jarr, “that the older I grow tho more I by that I don't love anybody—— Except you and the children, of course!” added hastily. But {t was too late. Mra Jarr waa hurt. “How can you talk that way, Eaward JarrT mhe aid, and before he could} answer sie turned as if to walk way. meant to say,” said Mr. Jarr, ‘that as we grow older we realize’— ‘No, don't try to excuse yourself," sald Mra Jarr.in a hurt tong, “I'm gad that at least you admit it” “Admit what?’ asked Mr. Jarr. “That you don't care for me, that you dont care for the children, that you only care for yourself! said Mra. Jarr, “I didn't say anything of the kind!’ sald Mr, Jarr hastily. uch a person as you are to take offense when none Is Intended. ou started to say ft, to eny that you didn't case for any one but your- replied “Mrs: Jarr. Dog gone Jt exclain @scuss anything with you ‘ “That's right! Abuse me new! Tell _me you hate me and are tired of mo! I then abuse me!” sobbed Mrs, Jurr, “I tell you I don't care for anyboly in the world but you!” sala Mr. Jarr. Wall, €0 I case for anyt>dy In’ the world but you?” asked Mrs. Jarr, “Cersinty nett eald MO Garr. “Then you don't care If other people lov Fe= or not?’ =| "It would be nice," said Mra, Jarr. “It might make you appreciate me @ }ittle inore!* eran Jarr. we "I never saw ed Mr. Jarr, “What a silly fool I am €0 try sod t t *| Rie Veteran “to Tite “stent companton. 4 An Interesting little problem concerning the number of his travalling com W pantons. 4 Bays Willie: 4 “I observed that three-quarters of the number that rode ahead of me added to one-third the number that came after me equalled the number of all the “Kids on the whirltgiz. How, many whirling “Kids were there? For anawer are to-morrow a Eyening..World_ oe > HINTS FOR THE HOME Fudge Cake. 0)": cup sugar; two-thirds cup but- ter, three eggs, one cup milk. two and one-half cups flour, two heap- ing teaspoonfuls of baking powder; on ‘quarter oup of chocolate, one-half cup of Enagilsh walnuts, broken up coarsely; / cream the butter and sugar together, + @4q the cup of milk, and stir in lightly the flour, into which the baking powder has been sifted. “Stir In the chocolate, which has been dissolved by placing in dutter and crushed berries, well awee' ened. aE Currant Marmalade. TX pounds of currants, six orunges,|_ one and one-half pounds seedless Taisins, five pounds granulated sugar. | Cut the oranges in fine pieces, being: careful to remove the seeds Mix fruit with sugar and cook forty minutes, Put in pint jars or Selly ¢lasses, Coo! Summer Dish. ~ xh Un BYNOPSIS OF PR ment weit the Liamne for a for Younger brother Herkeley,, and w/ yan Bupposed by his friends to have been kil Knew Cectl oC. Ttocking rafuses ti Dens, Sins weateely nv Annee. spectators was panting; their pipes | Were flung away; their kepls tossed off theirheads, the sausic. clashed Gat and faster and.mors—flar des fred yolcesthey danced as only tan:dance who serve under the Fre fag and Two @'Afrique and a veteran of the Tenth Compan: HJLE taking hia morning constitutional in the saddle Wittle, discovered | hett the cannon, bon pere.” tempt you?” such -#-ifte,* er-uChasscur who had paused a. nio: ment to get breath In the headlong whirl: x HOPE You UkE DE WAY 1 DELIVERS YES SAH! YOUR TRUNM! POWAH FUL HEAWY, SAH! ; YES SAH! OH, TAKE If) WHY_ SHOULDN'T WE TID STREET CENT ANYWAY! £2 To tip ME “LAYNDRY Stes By Permission of George Munro's Sona) | dawn!* CHAPTERS. | ritish rex! 7a Bedouty ni away on Martie Geol, off a eee ot a onoblemed: earn Rake. encapes wo onllet in the & to Algerty Asseure d'Afrique, nm railway accident. Alone of all ia dearest fri My tknown Leleve hin gullty. |“ the Idol of bis feliuw-ao! rola and lthe corporal, wh ble, Cecil for he i fhe hatre! ’ tialemary. vit rial in mitaey Unconach wal wing the love of C Heautiful, eccentric regimental She dances for his benefit, but ho ance, ‘Then ale trier ‘soldiers to Join in the fitted thr er and fire. He Went | noisy, alls on CHAPTER X | Cig: . (Continued. Tl ne nacre! A Woman’s BR. | of he signal woll kno sion to Join in nich every one of her aa t nal of per: vertlko for him across th arted we tn —— “Unsexed? Pout! “Honk ete with. ound, the chorus of the Marsolllaise Batalilons thundered from a hun- men \ The words were flerceness of Afric: African ‘sun, Chasseur live under the looked wn—the the Chaca only fan lameod for ilfe at Mazagran, | Why aren‘t you dancing? muttered The Chasseur turned and smiled a) ‘I prefer a bamboula, whose music is “Bravo! Yet she is pretty enough to dancers with “Yea; too pretty to be unsexed by! Was not to be Ho turned and touched on the shoul rat Cara and impetuous tt ure | ehe wus “Come, we are to be with the Djled py! 5 HE PROMPT GIRE,. Ib, ule’a unnecessary dolay, ® cup and setting in hot water. Add the nuts, and, last, the egss, which @hould be beaten whit ‘@rately. Angel:-Pudding. N® pound Englilsh wainuts, eeven ounces of powdered sugar, three teaspoons \baking powder, mixed with sugar, nino\ounces dates, whites of five ogga, well bonten, Break walnuts five and cut dates in small pieces, add ugar and-whites of egga last, Bake in moderate oven twenty to thirty min- tee, Gerve with whipped cream, Strawberry Pudding. ME-HALF oup sugar, ‘bne eggs, one tablespoon of butter, cream to '| bwo cups of oun ¢4 pute crvaity - AKH one quart of ourrant Jutce, a snail plece of stick cinnamon, put on fire. When oiling stir in one- hate cup of sago; cook five minutes and atir all the time; sweeten to taste, Pour in ¢rutt dish, put in foe box, ‘When cold erye with milk or’ cream. Jellied Chicken. . LLOW jelly to cool in a ring mould, Wher ready to gerve turn out and fill the centre witha salad made of celery, ououmbera, and radishes ont up in small vleces and thoroughly taixed with mayonnaise, Bean Salad. OOK string beans until tender. ‘When cdld cut tn small ploces, add |} & good alized opion and broken Wngdsh sralnut meats, with French Airecaing and serve on lettuce leaf: With add one-third ot a ' on time aff in reality fs. ° ‘The force of character. He profers one. more, the @lrl who nover makes him wait? [her escort by a moment’ delay. {She ts Joy forever. May sho live long In the land! | very much. allached to a lady ten yearn my senior. I think I am only infatuated with her, but find myself miserable when I attempt to break the acawhiitance, 1 did not go to seo her for ‘vo weeks aud it | married, but says Advise me to dor Tf you woman's face, may I not haye a man’s It is only a fair exchange. tiuke“tare-or my. trtons!"* | Fo Overheard Insult. spoken she had too much } in her of the spirit of the Zephyrs and with whom her youth had heen spent from her cradle up, not to be rous when roused the bound, and in the midst of the mad whirl again before he could attempt to sutton or effuce “the worda. #8 had overheard, and the last thing he saw | of her was in & cloud tof Zouaves and Spahis with the wild jangle of the muale | | shaking rlotous eohoes from the rafter But when he had passed out of sight, | Cigarette shook herself free from the petuant impacience; allured by Slane by entresty baal: amens..ifem, whe fot ther delicate pedriy teath Scat that we waa | thought, with a amile, “That Mig” WHS HOR Otten, —that thy; "tn that—wortd;-we-used- “to forget no. strolling. player for them with a tambourine, and with that declaration made her Love or Infatuation, Dear Betty: AM twenty-three years, anf AM | infuence of morphine. whose friendship with and whose superior intelligence In all) much fire tn the yo such missions rendered him peculiarly! AFMY not to scorch them as they rose. | jeff himself and the one man faithful ands that required macy and address as well as daring) like a little terrier’s as she muttered: thoughtfully reeking ballroom Into the warn lustre of the Algerian night; as he went who had been nearer flashed full in his eyes the own sparkling one: ) & contemptuous Taugh” ae -etrucky Ups with the cigar she | year, When young sho be: dlotel to the use of ulcohote stimu- Janta and tobacco, and {s often under tho | The trooper obeyed Instantly: they| Were ordered to visit and remain with | wom the naked plateau; professedly submissive, but not #0 much’ time, so but that the Bureau deemed tt well to profit themselves by the services of) o Knowledge of Ara-| the fret that ahe had ever kiown, and |slaughter of as terrible an accident tiirty mites @ camp the tribes diplo- the! out of than while have a Tam with the | no. was off at she flattery or | at, | contemp: to ‘caper way out, HY me Introduce you to the prompt’ girl; the girl who Oresnes carly; is rented und ready to go out for the evening when her sweetheart calls, Inn't she a dear? , Anyway; she seoma very charmiing, for there 1# a section of the mas- cullne drain that resents behind-handednoss and. appre- clates promptness so much that the girl who Is always ‘ects that partioular group of cells In such fashion that she seems even inore bewitching than she without a min- mpt girl is a mental Joy to a man mith any: ‘plain, prompt girl to a pretty, procrastinating And where, indeed, {s there a young man or any sort who does not edmire Let us take another look at our dependable sii: our girt who {8 always on img the address. ‘hw other day 1 wrote time; our dear, serone, unselfixh, smiling, wweot-hearted girl, who ‘would rather remain in doubt as to whethor her hatte-on-atra{ght, even, than to inconvenience oad Wo aro engaged to be married and she “promises to sive up her bad habits after we got whe “wants to enjoy lifo while einaie, What would you DOUBTFUL. a Uke a! £ Ge net wonder that you are bt | VAristocrat! Ifyou think 80, ‘you shall alone into the little open court under the stars, 80 cool, so still after tho heat, and’ riot, and’ turbulence within. There she dropped on a broad stone sep, nad leneet her head on her hand. —"Unaoxed! unvexed! What did mean? she thought, while for the first with a vague ‘sense of his mean- ing. tears welled hot and bitter Into hor sunny eyes, while the pained color burned in her face. Those tears were y Were cruel ones, though they last- | d “but little time; there was | Bohemian of tho a her foot on the stones Sho tas and her teeth were sot | pamdonately, “Unsexed! unsexed! Bah, M’alew | ft right; you shall find teas ‘men hate, and } as soldiers “take find your thor Cigarette oar take her revenge theirs!” CHAPTER XI, A Matter of Barter. BRTIE— CECH went hls way B through the coamopolitan-groups of the great square of Algters, A| Uttle further onward, laughing, smok-| ing, Chhtting, eating tcex outside a Cate} Chaitant, Were & Group of Engishmen= a yachting party, whoo. achooner lay fn tho harbor, He lngered a moment and lighted @ match Just for the sake of hearing the old familiar words, As he bent hls head:above the yesuvian, no| ‘one saw the shadow of pain that passed | over his face. But one of them‘ looked-at_him cur! onriyond-earpentiy: The dence! hy murmured to the man—neareat him, “who the dickens ts that French soldier | Uke?" The French soldier heard, and, with | the clgar in his teeth, moved, away) quickly, He was uneasy in the. city—| Uneasy lest ‘he should be recognized by | auy passer-by. or tourist, “I need not fear that, het though, “Ten ypatal—| the blackest ruln fn ten days, and the Cecil, whom he had used to know well In Paris and at the court wf St. James, | held an Inspection of the African troops. from his old acquaintance, and, ax he had, saluted, had glanced involuntarily tat bbe tacathat ho had se ene times in the Salles dew Marechaux, the Mvening Wworta’s’ waiiy magazine, monday, July 29, 1907. Home, Sweet Home! On Obedience. HIS morning a mother was feeding a two-year-old child dirty cakes, green I bananas and milk out of an unpleasant-looking bottia, When she offered lemonade on top of the feast the child resisted, firmly refusing obedience to the coaxing and commands of her foolish parent. It would be a good thing if older girls had the sense and will-power to refuse the imiigestible mental and moral messes which are often offered them by thelr elders as food for the mind and soul, “I don't want you tains up with any of those now-fangied, notions,” says = father to his daughter: so she opens her mouth obediently and awaliows the old doses of suporstiticn, “I munt you to be and act like other girls,” says’ the mother! #0 this girl continues to accept the dally diet by which‘ others grow in favor with the petty, commonplace mimixabout them. Some daughters merely pretend to embrace the doctrines they are expected to belleve and continually act a part, for the sake of peace, training themselves {i Cowartlios and hypocrisy. Ovedience ts a virtue only when rendered to wisdom and righteousness = pertor to our.own, and the admonition, "Children, obey your parents," should often be qualified. : Respect Due to Parents. Groat respect and love we owe to those who have made the hari struggie with Ife for us, who have given us birth, nourishment and tender care, who try to save us from mistakes and to secure for us the richest blessings. Paremts by thetr experience and love are usually equipped with much wisdom for our guld- ance. But tho mature girl of true character, while weighing thelr advice, acts at Inst upon her own belief and judgment, In America, perhaps, young people are not in as much danger of subjecting thelr willy to thelr eters as in other lands. Often # ta quite the other way. We froquentiy see, for instance, a young, upstart treating her forelgn perents with contempt, because she has been the first to pick up the language and ous- toms of our country. And many a little “Miss Newlywed” {fe te-day ruling an American household to the utter demoralization not only of that household, but also of her own character, developing a thirst for absdlute power which ‘will only bring the severest disappointments ‘and punishments tn later life, It wat not entirely a Joke when, ths other day, a gentleman wrote in the eutograp) album of his little daughter: ‘Your obedient father, John Brown Smith.'' Howyver, acting upon one's own judgment, carefully made up after respectful consideration of the judgment of others, is quite different from ignorant dsre- spect and blind, tyrannical wilfulnesa ee Where Obedience Ceases. : Bhakewpeare in hia play “King Lear’ telle with beautiful pathos the ster) of @ daughter who, while loving her father tenderly through all vicissitudes tit Geath, yet refuses to ba untrue to herself, even from filial devotion, King Lear expects abject obedience to his command for flattering speech, but Cordelt: lovingty protests: "I Inck that xtlb and ally art to speak, and purpose not.” As we read the touching play our hearts ache with pity for the “Poor old man, a! full of grief as age; wretchet in both.” Still, we feel Cordelia’s truth to tev father to be nobler than mere hypocritical obedience, Our chief duty to our parents ts to so live that tho Ife they gave up #hall not be spent in vain, Carrying, reverently and safely, the heritage of the pas we mum add to tt our own particular truth, beauty and goodness and transm't to posterity a richer inherttanoc than we have ourselves received. c It may soem heresy to believe in disobedience; but the heresy of one geriera- tion {a often the orthodoxy of the next. I¢ sure of right convictions, Jet us ten- derly, lovingly dare to be true to those convictions, confident that though i ma." bring mlsunderstamsing and sorrow temporarily, at last {t will de recognized a+ the highest proof of fillal honor, as in Shakespeare’s beautiful story of Kini Stave was closed. Besides, I am safe enough. I “am dead!* io was “dead,” Therein had iain all i#_socurity, ‘Thereby had““Beauty of the Brigades’ been buried beyond all discovery in "Bel-a fairy peur,” of the | Second Chasseurs d'Afrique. When, on |the Marseilles rails, the maceration and ever befell train rushing through mld- night darkness, at headlong speed, had to his fortunes unharmed by little less than @ miracle, he had seen In the cal- amity the surest screen from discovery or pursuit. The ‘‘Lost Plan.”’ Leaving the baggage where ‘It’ was jammed along the debris, he had struck across the country with Rake for the Be and the city, and had entered Mar- petiies-aa—weary foot travellera, before half the ruin on the ralla had been soen by tho full moon sun. Thence he had slipped; for Algeria. The world tought him dead)..ax wach the journsie—reeorded him, with. the whanieful outlines ‘pf imputed crime, to make the death ‘the darker; Gs such his name was forbidden to be uttered at Royallleu; aa such the Seraph mourned him’ with passionate loving force, refusing to the last to ac- credit his guilt—and he, leaving them in thelr error, was drafted jnto the French army under two of his Chris- Yan names, walch happily bad'’a for- eign sound—Louls Victor—and laid aside’ forever his identity aa Bertie He went at once on service in the interlor, and had scareely come in any of the larger towns since he had joined. His only danger of recognition had cnoe been When a marshal of France, past the brilliant tam he had ai oply—-a—femcbida-—Sistance and even under the roof of Royaliew best Ife among us ten hours after its - 4 ViverNnTs % ADVICE 7° LOVERS doubt, A wise rule in tha: “If¢—in doubt, DON’T. You would pe wreck- Ing your whole, !lfe were you to marry a woman addicted to Igquer and the morphine habit. She think phe ory break these habit bur to got Interested in some other woman. An Impattent Swain. Dear Betty: HERE {s a young lady whom I love very much. She told mo that }me to write her a lester, She also told her a letter and she haa not angwered it yet, Do you think sho Is decelyink met I Know she loves me dear! R. ™. If: sho loves you dearly sho will not decelye you. Her letter js probably on| the way, or it may have gone astray. Bo patient. Write her ayain, and It can the fact | that love has net already made her do so ls @hough to prove that # ean't. Leave town or. use your will power {fo make you forget her, Try ahe Uves in the Bronx and asked} The great ohlef's keen blue eyes were jto smile, and, of course, I bow to her. L often watch her as she goes down the | street, Bie gazes back at me five or six times, Do you think she loves me? Would it be propor for me to send her poatal cards? IRVING H. I shouldn't at all wonder, Irving, i¢ |nho does. A° girl who will’ Behave’ tn ile fashion is surely Interested In you rostal cards, I think, will be a nate investment. I wish you luck. Why-not ak her permission to call? | He Objects to Plumes. | Dear Betty: HAVE been married two years to @ vee} nice follow but he seems to have queer {deas, The other day t Dought a beautiful hat with two peachy plumes. Ho refusea to allow me to wear, it unless I take the plumes oft He sayy women shouldn't wear plumes, wich I think ts absurd, Advise: me, HEARTBROKEN There Bre two sidew to this question, you get no response then you milght 2a "She may bs tik A Canada Case. Dear Hetty: Ww. introduced to a young lady, Since then I tiave met her on the atreet very often, All ehe does te ‘ ag to all difficuities that arise between married lovers, From your standpoint, ERIE THAT wet tay berwcen trem + Lear and Cordelia is By Ouid De scrutinizing the regiment. ready to] lke creature, a trader tn ourtoatties grinned with a certain tifica’ A disappointing this Tithe'limbed. eae : Chasseur, The toya don't | note a chain loose. a belt. awry. @ sword specked with rust, if such a ain there were againat “les ordonnances’ {hall _the glittering squadrons; and swept over him, seeing jn him but one among thousands—a unit in the mighty axeregate of the “raw material’ of War, ‘The marshal only muttered to a gen- jot ona. spent balls .or filseus one te ota e Cie Ses lite witeane jon gore } Of use, Bf. 19’ Comporal* ead eral beside him, ‘Why don't they all! ‘Very well—no matter,” ala Cect!, ride-Ike that man? has the seat | simply, ae he paused before some deli. of tho English Guards.” But that st/ cate ‘lite statuettes and carvings was In truth an officer of the English | miniature things, carved out of a pleos Guards, anda triend of hia own, who | Of Ivory, or a block of marble the sss pared past him asa private of Algerian | Of @ horse's hoof, such as could bo forse the French leader never dreamed, | picked up in dev river channels, or rora the extremes of luxury, indo: | broken off stray bowlders, @lenier oru- cifixes. wreaths of foliage, branches of of Arabs and Moors. dancing-girls, and tinv chargers fretting ike Bucephilua. They. ‘Were perreculy concelvel and executed. 26, indulgence, pleasure and extray- | cl noe Cecsl came to the extremes of | wild te, guren hhardahip, poverty, discipline, wuftering | dainty neads o: and tall.’ From.a lite where every.scnse | Was gratified he camo to a lite where every privation was endured. He b . ’ , ied the €ashion, hecame where he had] J Friend's Sacrifice. to bear without a worl the curses, , oaths and Ingults of a corporal or a| He had always bad am D'Orsay-lke sous Houtenant. He had been used to | Rift that way, though in common with every SoMCNCy aM —datgnt, he cam Atte ais he —had—attorie —neg where he had to take the coarse black | ®!! culture of it, until, cast adrify on. bread of the army as a rich repast. Ho|‘® ‘orld and forced to do somethin: Tad” thought tr toa” much trohie—te- murmur fintteries In great ladies’ ears, he Came where mornt. noon and night the Inexorable demands of rigid rules compolled hia incessant obadionce, vigh- lance, activity and self-denial. He had | known nothing trom his antidhood-ex- the skili of the French soldiers 1 Such expedients to gain a few. opin, and haa solaced niahy a dreary fn barracks and under earees Bat the -toy-seulpture, til! he had a singuMr ort of tt He had common! given Race the office of: selling then: cept an atmosphere of amusement, re- firement, Ddrillancy and {dleness,” he | nd.is commonly spent all the proveed came where gnawing hunger, brutalized OLDS re ACIS SEY ARIE LOW Ts He lingered a moment, with regret 1:1 his eyes; ho had scarcely a sou in hig | pocket, and he had wanted some mone» sorely that night for a comrade of a hing wond—a noble fellow, i Jest, ceasel: toll, coarse" obscenity, agonized pain and ‘pandemoniac mirth ternately filed the measure of the days. é Ramon, a French artist, whi & Sharp Ordeal. evil hour of desperation, had jolned thi A ah i¢ contrast, a darker ordeal | Army, With a poet's temper that mad> rarely tried the steel of any man's_en-| Its hara. colorless routine unendurabl, cranes -yet-under: it he-veriied the amb had. bean shot In-.the.chest mw truth "Bon sang ne peut mentir,” No! night sitrmish. Spartan could have borne the change | ‘You Will not buy them yourself? hi» more mutoly, more stanchly than-didtasked—at length, the color flustiing {1 the “dandy of the Household.” jhis face, He would not have presse t To-night he turned up into the Rue|the question to save his own life trons Babazoum, and paused beforo the’ en-| starving, but Leon Ramon would have trance of a narrow, dark, tumble-down, | no chance of fruit or a lump of Ice to pioturesque shop. |cool his parched Hps and stil his agons A cunning. wixen-tead peered out at|!zed retching, unless he himself could him trom. the gloom. wot. manex..to buy. those luxuries. thar "A-ha! good oven, Corporal Vic-7are too splendid and toy mercttul to-ba provided for a dying soldier, who knows ~ |. at the words, crossed the ail! |#o littl of hia duty to his country as tert” entered ~~ = bbe Vonture—to-dle—ta—ie—bed—— “Have you sold any?” he asked,| ‘Myself! screeched the dealer, with There was a slight constraint and|® derisive laugh. ‘Ask me to give you hesitation in the words, as of one who| my whole stock next, M. le Galonne! can never fairly bend his spirit to the ‘These trumperies will le on hand for = yoke of barter, | year" (To Be Continued.) The little, hideous, awart- | erica a aR OED Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. Jo \st of exercises and a formula for H. wrinkled, o Oily Hair. ldeveloping the bust. 8,.—To izet rid} of the oti: | Bad Breath, 6. S. R—I¢ the bad breath does not come from the teeth it may shalr once a week * come from catarrh, indigestion or or once in ten) stomach trouble, &o. You should !ose days with a soap! no time in consulting your physician. Jelly (ham? 0| Deformed Knees merry mei RHAWER—Go to the orthopedia ness in your | fair, wash the soap, dolled in of a city clinic and water unttl {t be- Sean e ‘ts orneaialtnn tile r question to an authority ly). Uso a jitt borax in tho first water when wast and rinse thoroughly in| four or five clean waters. When’ the thoroughly clean, make a . nan camomile flowers and ri out dn the tea, which shou | put ¥ jon that trouble, Dry Hair. D.= Anything you may use to dry hair jess brittle wiil tt a tte darker tn color, t »f noticeably 0, The tonic pro- J scribed was excellent |Wants Darker Halr. Ing the hair, your huaband ls yery unreasonable to object to your beloved plumes, On the other hand, you should loye him enough to regard his wlehos in the matter, Buppoxo you compromise mat= tare “et wearlig another hat when you qo out with him, and the bat with ‘peachy plumes'' when you go alone. Exercises. M. D.—Wasn your hair in the HLLIE, A B. Cy lL AND! wage tea, which may \turn ity a ial slightly darker, I think you) OTHERS.If you will send a/ {hs sllgtity | darker he yee welf-addressod and stamped en- hair, however, as red het is ¢6) yelope repeating cucries, I will send you very beautitule Sena a id ie r take, Dag: were OW, or anything made out ef ;to maintain himself, he had ‘watohe t _ Olin 7