000000000000000000000 . . . yucky A) lg2sliz.. 000000000000000000000000 ESLIE JACKSON had come down to breakfast that morn. ing feeling particularly jolly. It was a fine day, for one thing, and a half holiday for another, He promised himself a long ride on Star- light, his cousin Frank's pony, lent to him while his cousin was ill, and he sat down to his porridge with the ap- petite of a healthy schoolboy, Mr. Jackson began reading his let- “Ah, here's one from Bournemouth,” he said to his wife; “now we shall hear when the folks at the Priory are com- ing home.” Mrs. Jackson paused as she was pouring out the coffee and said: “Is Frank better, dear?” “Apparently Frank is quite well again,” said Mr. Jackson, “but you shall see the letter, Hullo, here's an enclosure, ‘Master Leslie Jackson. Here you are, Leslie; it's from Frank.” Leslie took his mote and opened fit slowly, for, somehow, he felt there was something in it he did not want to read. : “Dear Leslie,’ the note said, “mother Is writing to say we are coming home on Saturday” (‘‘to-day,” thought Les- lie). “I am awfully glad, even though it does mean lessons again, as it's rather slow here, and I am all right again now. Could y®u ride Starlight pver on Saturday? We shan't be back till late, but Dad will be at home, I want awfully to go for a ride first thing on Monday morning.” Leslie read no more—the pages suddenly became blurred; and he could see nothing dis- tinctly. This was what he had been dreading: the summons to give the pony back. It had become so dear to him that now that they had to part be almost wished he had never seen it. For ten long, beautiful weeks that pony had been like his very own, and pow it was all over and he must be returned. “Come, Leslie, get on with your breakfast,” said his mother. ‘What's wrong, my boy?” Leslie straightened himself, tried to speak carelessly. “I’ve got to ride over to the Priory this afternoon,” he said, “to return Starlight.” The last word was hardly audible, and his lip quivered. “Well, you've had him a nice long time, haven't you?” said Mr. Jackson, cheerily; “longer than you expected.” “Oh, Dad,” said Norah, Leslie's sis- ter, “can’t you buy us a pony like Star- light? I wish you could; it would be so jolly.” “I dare say it would,” said Mr. Jack- gon, rising from the table and pinching kis daughter's rosy little cheeks; “but that ship of mine hasn't come home yet, and till it does I can’t think of ponies, you know.” “Oh! what a long time that ship is coming,” sighed Norah. “I should think it must have lost its way.” The morning passed quickly, and the afternoon so much looked forward to bad come. Leslie begged some lumps of sugar, and putting these, with an apple and a bit of bread, in his pocket, he went out to the stable yard. Never before had the pony looked so well, so glossy, and altogether attractive. “Why is it,” thought Leslie, “when we like a thing most, we have to give it ap?’ Norah's dog, Snap, ‘came running up, barking as he jealously watched Leslie give the pony the dainty mor- sels of the little farewell feast. **All right, Snap,” said Leslie, “you needn’t feel jealous any longer. Star- light’s going away, aren't you, Star- light? Worse luck.” And he laid his cheek against the pony’'s soft nose. “Well, we must be going. Come along, Snap; you will be company home for me.” And jumping into the saddle he rode off. The ride to the Priory was far too ghort, and, although he loitered as much as he could, almost before he was aware of it he was walking Star- light up the drive leading to the house, He soon caught sight of Uncle Joe, who had come out to meet him. “Hullo, my boy; brought the pony back?” said he, cheerily. “Frank will be glad to be able to ride him again, 1 expect. I must say he looks uncom- monly well; not suffered at your hands, I can see.” He patted the pony’s neck, and looked up smilingly at Leslie. “I expect you don’t much like parting with him after all this long while?” said he. Leslie felt an uncomfortable lump beginning to rise in his throat, and was angry with himself for being so stupid, #0 he stifled it down and answered: “Well, yes, rather; but it’s been aw- fully nice to have him so long.” Uncle Joe was looking at him keenly, so he went on hurriedly. ‘What time will Aunt Emily and Frank be back?” “About 8 o'clock, I think. Come along, we'll go round to the stables, and then you shall tell me what you think of the new cricket pitch.” A few minutes brought them to the stable yard, and Leslie dismounted. “Goodby,” he whispered into Star- light’s mane as Uncle Joe was speak- ing to the groom, and the pony seemed to know, for he rubbed his nose against the boy’s shoulder. Then he ‘was led off, and Leslie and his uncle turned down into the paddock. Presently they went indoors and had tea together, and then Leslie and Snap started on their walk home. A few days later, as Leslie was out In the garden feeding his rabbits, Uncle Joe and Frank rode up. Frank, of oourse, riding Starlight, and looking ever so brown and jolly. “Well, Leslie, where's everybody?” said Uncle Joe. “In the house, I think. I say, Frank, you don’t look much like an invalid now. I'll hold the horses w. you go in, Uncle.” ¢ and “All right. Come along, Frank; wie must not be long.” In a few minutes they were oul again, followed by Mr, and Mrs, Jack son and Norah, and, while goodbys were being exchanged, Uncle Joe sald to Leslie: “Oh! look here; we want you to come over on Wednesday. I've a small job for you-you won't mind that, eh?” “No, of course not,” sald Leslie, “it it's anything I can do.” “I think you will be able to manage this,” said Uncle Joe, laughing. And then, after a few minutes’ more chat, they rode off, Wednesday came, and Leslie walked over to the Priory early in the after noon. He was greeted by Aunt Emily. “Why, Leslie, dear boy, what a long time it seems since I have seen you,” she said. “Uncle Joe and Frank wil soon be back. Come and help me water the greenhouse; I want to hear all the news from home.” So Leslie ran to and fro with cans of water, chatting to Aunt Emily, and presently they saw Uncle Joe and Frank coming up the drive. Uncle Joe was leading a black pony so like Star light it might have been his own brother. It had a smart new saddle and bridle, and as Leslie was wonder- ing who could be his happy possessor, Uncle Joe said: “Ah, this is the job I spoke of, Les- lie. I want this pony ridden over to Willowside' Place. What! not know where Willowside Place is? Oh, well, I'll soon tell you; but, any way, you'll have to pass your house on the way there, so I thought you might put him up for to-night, and ride him over in the morning.” “Yes; only to-morrow is my birth. day,” said Leslie, hesitating, “and Norah and I were going to fish. But perhaps it won't take long?’ He looked up at Uncle Joe, and at the same time noticed Aunt Emily and Frank were looking very much amused. Uncle Joe's face, however, was perfectly serious as he replied: “Oh, no; it won't take you long. Dear me; your birthday, is it? Dear, dear, what a pity no one reminded me ber fore!” He really seemed quite vexed. “Well, we must make it up in goed wishes, eh, my boy?” Leslie smiled; but he could not help a feeling of disappointment, Had Uncle Joe really forgotten his birth. day? Why, Uncle Joe had never for- gotten—never—as long as Leslie conld remember. Perhaps it was because Aunt Emily and Frank had just come back, and he had had more to think of. Well, if he had forgotten, others had not, for when Leslie was saying good- by Aunt Emily gave him a beautiful pocket-knife, literally bristling ‘with blades, and Frank presented a splendid new cricket ball, a thing Leslie had been wanting for a long time. Uncle Joe seemed really sorry he had nothing to give. Then he said: “Look here. I have written you full directions as to how to get to Willow. side Place in this.” He held up an envelope. “I knew you would forget before you were through the first field if I didn't write them down. Now, where's your pocket? There, that’s safe enough; you won't want to look at it before you get home. You'll find the pony quite quiet. Goodby, old chap.” So Leslie mounted the new pony and rode away. It was getting dusk when he reached home, and Norah came running out to meet him as he rode into the yard. “Why, Leslie!” she exclaimed. “Brought Starlight back again. How's that? How long can you keep him? Do tell me!” “All right; don’t be in such a hurry. For one thing, it isn’t Starlight at all.” “Well, what pony is it?” said Norah, excitedly. “It’s a pony Uncle Joe has asked me to take to some place to-morreaw morn. ing. He has written it all down here.” And Leslie fished out the note and handed it to Norah. “Here, take it into the house while I go and call George.” With the help of the man the new pony was stabled for the night, and Leslie went indoors. He came blinking into the lamplit drawing room, where his note was lying on a table. “Norah has been telling us about the pony and your unexpected ride home,” said his mother. “Where is it Uncle Joe wants you to take him?” “Willowside Place,” answered Leslie, Mr. Jackson looked up from his book, “Willowside Place? Never heard of it, and I think I know the country about here pretty well.” “I'll see what Uncle Joe says,” said Leslie, opening the note and beginning to read. Then he gave a kind of gasp, and looked up suddenly, his face beam. ing. “Here, father, mother, listen to this.” And he read out loud: ‘ ‘Dear Old Chap—Don’t you know where Willowside Place is? Well, no more do I. And if neither of us know where the pony ought to be taken to, I should think you had better stick to him and say no more about it. I think you said to-morrow was your birthday —all good wishes and many happy re turns. Yours affectionately, “ ‘UNCLE JOR.” Mr. Jackson burst out laughing. “Well, of all the comical fellows!” he said. “The idea of choosing that way to give a present!” “Oh, father! and the pony is really and truly mine, to keep for always?’ said Leslie. “Yes, my boy, really and truly yours,” said Mr. Jackson. ‘You must ride over and thank Uncle Joe for hid splendid birthday present.” “And I thought—I thought he had forgotten all about my birthday,” said Leslie. “Ah! Uncle Joe never forgets,” said his mother, smiling. “It must be nice to be Uncle Joe, and be able to give such lovely presents,” said Norah. “I suppose his ship came HE woman who finds it a heavy T burden to oversee one household with one mald will find it aiff. cult to comprehend woman can adequately take charge of 600 sleeping rooms, forty or fifty par- lors, linen rooms through which pass dally hundreds of dozens of pleces, and marshal anywhere from 200 to 300 servants, of all races and dispositions. Yet that, or something like it, is done by the housekeeper of every big hotel, The preparation and serving of food in the big hotele is confided to men, but a woman as housekeeper seems to be a necessity. Men are not up to the mark when the cleanliness of a house and its linen are in question. The hotel housekeeper seldom ap- pears worried or flurried, and it 1s doubtful if she goes to bed at night more worn than the average house- wife. Professional training, system and command of money alter the whole situation. The housekeeper of one of the larg- est hotels in this city has under her two assistants, a corps of men clean- ers, with several head cleaners, each responsible for his own territory; an- other corps of women cleaners, a corps of parlor maids, another of chamber- maids, and one of maids’ maids. The last look after the rooms of employes. It is a little army that the housekeeper heads, with its captains and lieuten- ants, each responsible for certain things. In the linen room are half a dozen seamstresses mending linen, In the house linen laundry are four men and forty-five girls constantly at work, and in the personal laundry as many more, It is always wash day at a big hotel. The housekeeper herself has her desk in a big, bright office, but there is no section of the great hostelry that does not pass under her eagle eye some time in the twenty-four hours. For her living apartment a handsome little suite is set aside, with her meals in the hotel restaurant—arrangements which would probably cost her $250 or $300 a month under other circumstances. The salary of such a housekeeper is from $125 to $150 a month. The first warfare of the hotel house- keeper, like that of her domestic sister, is with dust. But with money at com- mand the inventions of the age come to ber aid in a way that they never do to her home sister. At the hotel referred to a sort of pneumatic dust- pan is used. It hasa very long handle, containing a compressed air hose. This is run over carpets and upholstery and the dust is literally sucked out of them, not to be dispersed in the room and to settle again as when the broom is used, but to be drawn into a discharge pipe and ‘thence be discharged into a closed dustbin, leaving the air of the room dustless. A similar device is used to suck away every flake of dust from chandeliers, carvings and odd corners. The dusting process for the entire mammoth structure is the most important thing which the housekeeper oversees each day. But cleaning never stops in one of these giant hostelries. All day cleaners watch over their al- lotted portions, removing burnt matches and litter the moment they fall. Then there are countless odd jobs for the housekeeper to attend to. If one of the big suites not in constant use is to be occupied the housekeeper per- Housekesper of a Biz Hotel Knows No Servant Problem EIGER IRON HOSOI0H MOSOIOROR OEIC how one. sonally superintends its cleaning and putting In order. If furniture is to'be moved anywhere she oversees it, If a maid is 111, she sees her and sends the hotel physician, She keeps account of all Mnens issued, all reserve mats tresses, blankets, pillows, ete. She al ters the arrangements of rooms te suit occupants. She answers a thousand and one demands of 'guests, some of them quite reasonable, some enough to try the patience of a saint, if the saint has not a sense of humor, Three times a day a gang of men takes to the supply room on each floor three dozen each of large and small pieces of freshly laundered linen. Every day tablecloths come in with great holes burned in them by cigars. These must all be darned; but the darning, too, is all done by machinery. In the supply rooms are kept scores of miscellaneous articles—extra cots, curling irons, hairpins, stationery, any- thing a guest may happen to want in a hurry. There is, too, a medicine closet, with hot water bags and simple remedies for guests who are not well, but not ill enough to call a physician. In the linen laundry the machine reigns supreme. The soiled linen is fed into great hydraulic machines, which cleanse it by constantly chang- ing streams of suds and clean water. Next it goes into ‘extractors’—great cylinders which revolve at the rate of 2200 turns a minute, and take out every particle of moisture, a change from the rubber wringer turned by the weary arms of so many laundresses. Then the linen is fed into a slowly revolving ironing machine, from which it drops gently on a table, where it is folded and stacked in snowy heaps for the supply room. In the laundry, where the caps and aprons of the maids and the personal laundry of the glests is washed, hand- work comes in again, for the machine has not yet been invented which can replace the fingers of women in ironing dainty lingerie. The machine is used for washing, but the last touch of ele- gance is given by a “family ironer,” who earns $100 a month for work no better than many a housemother or her maid puts on the underwear of her family. But a hotel where many a guest’s laundry bill foots up $40 or $50 a week right along can afford to pay its ironers good wages. A woman guest ‘at this hotel sent down $70 worth of work at one time recently. The housekeeper at the big hotel has the pick of the best help. She knows practically no “servant problem.” The average salary of a good maid is $12 a week, which may run up to $20 in the case of a fine parlor maid. The maids’ work is so arranged that they have some hours each day to themselves, and their evenings are their own, ex- cepting for every fourth evening, when they must be on duty until midnight. The girls have their board and room in the hotel, their rooms are cleaned for them, their caps and aprons are provided, the hotel doctor treats them in illness. Moreover, the situation lacks the loneliness which obtains in a house where only one or two maids are employed. With all these advan- tages it is no wonder that the best | help flocks to the hotels and the private | home is deserted.—New York Evening Sun. Welsh Attorney and Jury. Baron Bramwell once appeared for the crown in a case in Wales. The counsel for the defense asked permis- sion, as the jury was Welsh, to ad- dress its members in their native tongue. As the case was simple, the baron made no objection. The Welsh barrister said only a few words. The baron also was brief, but he was some- what surprised at a prompt verdict of acquittal. “What was it,” he after- ward inquired, “that Mr. L— said to the jury?’ ‘Oh, he just said, ‘This case, gentlemen, lies in a nutshell. You see yourselves exactly how it stands. The judge is an Englishman, the prosecuting counsel is an English- man, the complainant is an English- man. But you are Welsh, and I am Welsh, and the prisoner is Welsh. Need I say more? I leave it all to you.’ ” Jiu Jitsu in England. The talk of jiu jitsu in this country recalls a story told by Walpole of “a great amateur, nay, practicer of box- ing and wrestling,” who willingly im- parted his knowledge to those who consulted him. A somewhat sedate peer visited the baronet one day, and, walking with him in his garden, made the polite remark that he would like to see a specimen of his host's re- puted skill; upon which the other “seized him suddenly from behind and threw him over his head.” This is surely the carliest recorded instance of jiu jitsu in England, and merited the superb reply of the wrestler to the infuriated peer: “My lord, this is a proof of my great friendship for you. This master stroke I have shown to no other person living.” Giant Tomato Plants. The largest tomato plants in the world are found in California. One grower has three plants which have reached a length of thirty feet. In three months from the time the seeds were planted the vines had climed to the top of a twenty-foot tiellis. The trunks of thes¢ plants, gays What to Eat, are one and a half inches in diameter and the foliage is thick and luxuriant. Enormous quantities of tomatoes have been picked from them and the fruit is of unusual size, home a long time ago.”—Barbara Lucy, in Cassell’s Little Folks, possessing an extraordinary fine flavor. I - MESH WIRE BASKETS, Among the most useful of Kkitcher conveniences are the little open-mesb wire baskets that are generally used only for frying things in deep fat, Few housekeepers realize their value ar time savers in other directions. The best way to wash fruit is to place it in one of these little baskets and hold it under the faucet. Lettuce, water. cress and other salads are easily washed in this way and may be drained without removing from the basket. AN ENGLISHMAN’S TEA-MAKING. This is the way an Englishman makes tea. As this particular English- man has been making his own tea for the last fifteen years regularly at 0 every afternoon he really should know the best method. Here is his rule: Don't pour the boiling water on the tea. This scorches the leaves and they cannot exude their full fragrance. Fill your teapot full of boiling water, then put in your tea leaves. Cover tightly and let it stand for a minute or so. Now stir the leaves with a long spoon and allow the infusion to draw for about four minutes more, and your tea will have all the delicious aroma of the real tea leaves, Strain the tea off into another pot, as the Jeaves, if left long. er, will add their only slightly less soluble bitter flavor. The clear tea car be kept hot over a spirit lamp. The tea leaves can be used again in the old-fashioned way, of course, but the fresh tea is really the only beverage worthy of the name, ~New York World. HOW TO EAT RAW EGGS. Believers in the raw egg diet contend that the egg should be eaten as soon after it is laid as possible. Several different methods of serving the egg are in vogue, the most popular of which is with vinegar. A very little portion of the vinegar fs required in a glass merely to give a zest to the flavor of the eggs, says What-to-Eat. When served with vin- egar a drop of the fluid is first poured into an empty wine glass. Into this the egg is broken. Then the top is covered with another drop or two of vinegar and a sprinkling of salt and pepper. The egg is then swallowed whole. Persons who have not tried the diet will be surprised at the ease with which the egg slips down the throat, as well as the pleasant taste it leaves in the mouth. It is declared that half of the benefit of the egg is lost when the yolk is broken in eating. The eggs should be eaten before meals, especiale ly before breakfast, but not every day. An everyday diet is said to be dan- gerous because of the superabundance of sulphur it would produce in the system. It is advisable to discontinue the diet for as much as one or two weeks at a time and then to keep it up steadily for a few days or a week again, Troublesome Teeth. When Scandinavians come to this country they freguently have trouble | with their teeth. Later, owing to the | difference in diet, they lose most of | their bicuspids and molars; but for-' tunately, few Scandinavians have the | trouble that Tillie did, and few lose | their teeth in so disconcerting a mane | ner. “My 11 fest patient,” said the so- ciable dentist, “was a Swedish girl, who came in one day to get her teeth extracted. Her upper jaw was abso- | lutely bare of teeth, and the lower set | was in such condition that there seemed to be nothing tc extract. i ‘ ‘What are the teeth you want out? i I asked. “‘In my stomach,’ returned the girl! suddenly bursting into tears. | “ ‘In your stomach? I gasped. | “ ‘Yaw, meester,” she sobbed. ‘Last week my hov buy me all new toots on top vor twanty-five dollar, on Chicago. Two days ago my sleep so godt, 0-0 goot! Ven my vake opp, mys toots she vor all go down mys troat. I! tank maybe you can get them out— mys lady she is tole me to come.’ ‘ ‘Nonsense! They couldn’t go down | your throat.’ “‘Yaw! Yaw! protested Tillie, clap- | ping a hand to her belt-buckle, ‘She , iss there now. She iss chew, chew, | chew, all the time. She iss chew all | my inside up. She iss hurt so moch . my iss don’t can sleep.’ “Tillie was evidently sincere,” said the dentist, “and I was beginning to | think that I had a lunatic on my hands i when the day was saved. My office! door was flung open and an excited | boy rushed in. | “‘O Tillie, he cried, ‘mother just found your teeth tucked under your ' mattress! You must have taken them ' out in your sleep.’ | “‘My goo'ness!” exclaimed Tillie, | apologetically. ‘My hov some bodder | vit mys toots every day since I come | on America.’ ” | { Poets. Yes, poets are born. No effective | way of preventing it has been dis-' covered yet.—Somerville Journal. London’s lord mayors have, during! the last decade, collected more than $100,000,000 for charity. y | flannel, or, if stubborn, with a piece of "Cloves or salt sprinkled on a pantry shelf will rid it of ants. Oily water can be cleared by adding a few spoonfuls of cornmeal. Salt dissolved in alcohol will often remove grease spots from clothing. Paint that has dried on window glass may be removed with hot vinegar. A faded dress can be made perfectly white by washing it in boiling cream of tartar water. Rub grass stains with molasses and they will come out without difficulty in the ordinary wash. After each brushing the comb should be run through the brush and then carefully wiped off. Stoves may look nice for some time by rubbing them thoroughly with a newspaper every morning. A spoonful of mustard in a gallon of water will kill insects in the earth, This is good for potted plants. Machine-oil stains can be removed if, before washing, the spot is rubbed with a cloth wet with ammonia. To prevent the hair from falling out wet it thoroughly once or twice a week with a weak solution of salt water. A small portion of orris root put into the ordinary washing water will im- part a delicate perfume to the clothes. Mud stains can be removed from silk if the spots are rubbed with a bit of linen wet with alcohol. A little thin cold starch rubbed over windows and mirrors and then wiped off with a soft cloth is an easy way of producing shining results. Two potatoes grated in a basin of warm water will give better results than soap in washing delicate flannel or woolen goods, ribbons, ete. White paint may be cleaned by rub- bing it gently with a soft flannel dipped in a paste of whiting and water, and adding a little soap powder. Spots may be removed from gingham by being wetted with milk and covered with common salt. Leave for an hour br so and rinse out in several waters, Piano keys can be cleaned, as can any old ivory, by being rubbed with muslin dipped in alcohol. If very yel- SEVEN YEARS ACO, ' & Rochester Chemist Found n Singalarly | Effective Medicine, Willlam A. I'ranklin, of the Franklin & Palwer Chemical Co, Rochester, N, Y., writes: “Seven years age | I was sullering very much through the § fallure of the kids | neys fo eliminate | the uric acid from fl my eystem. My | back was very lame and ached if I ovems exerted myself in the least degree. Af times I was weighed down with a feels ing of languor and depression and sufe fered continually from annoying fre ularities of the kidney yw procured a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and began using them, I found prompt relief from the aching and lameness in my back, and by the time I ha taken three boxes I was cured of irregularities.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. ¥Y. Lifetime of a Bell. Comparatively few ® people know that ringing a bell ruins it. That is, a bell has a definite length of life, and after so many blows will break. A 9G0-pound bell, struck blows of 178 foot-pound of force, broke after 11, 000 blows. A 4,000-pound bell, broke after 18,000 blows of 350 foot-pounds force. A steel composition bell weighing 1,000 pounds broke after 24 blows of 150 foot-pounds, but its make ers said it was calculated for a light« er blow. Deafness Cannot Be Cared bylocalapplications as they cannot reach the diseased portionofthe ear. 'Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constie tutional remedies, Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube isine flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper= fect hgaring, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflame mation can be taken out and this tube ree stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of tem are caused by catarrb, whichis nothing but am inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness(caused by catarrh) that cane not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send fog circulars free. F.J.Caexry & Co., Toledo, O, Sold by Druggists, 75, Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Crigin of the Crescent Bread. The origin of that Viennese bread shaped like a crescent, which is found in most places on the continent, dates back to 1863. At that time the Aus- trian Capital was being besieged by the Turks under the terrible Grand Vizier Kara Mustapha, and as they failed to take the city by assault, they decided to dig a passage under the walls, and so penetrate into the town. In the day-time the noise of the siege made the sound of the tun- nelling inaudible, and at night-time the defenders of the place were asleep, all but the sentries and the bakers. It was the bakers who, as they baked the bread for the garrison, heard the pickaxes of the miners com- ing nearer and nearer, and gave the alarm. In the fighting the Bakers’ Association took their share with the utmost bravery, and as a reward for their services the Emperor gave them permission to make a special cake shaped like the Turkish crescent.— Londen Sketch. Trees Almost Fireproof. The giant sequoias of California, which are thousands of years old, have been preserved to this day because of their enormously thick bark. From time to time, in the course of ages, vast forest fires have swept through the big-tree lands, destroying every=- thing, vet cnly scorching for a cou- ple of inches depth or so the almost fireproof bark of these huge trees. The flames, having carbonized that much of the bark, could not penetrate farther, for the earbonized portion formed an absolutely fireproof cover- ing for the remaind:r of the interio# bark.—Chicago Journal. BUILDING FCCD To Dring the Dab.es Around. When a little human machine (or a large one) goes wrong, nothing is so important as the selection of food to bring it around again, “My little baby boy fifteen months old Lad pneumonia, then came brain fever, and no sooner had Je got over these than he began to cut teeth and, being so weak, be was frequently thrown into convulsions,” says a Colo rado mother. “I decided a change might help, so took him to Kansas City for a visit. When we go: there he was so very weak when he would ery he would sink away and seemed like he would die. “When ! reached my sister's home ghe said immediately that we must feed him Grape-Nuts and, although I had never used the food, we got some and for a few days gave him just the juice of Grape-Nuts and milk. He got stronger so quickly we were soon feed- ing him the Grape-Nuts itself and in a wonderfully short time he fattened right up and became strong and well. “That showed me something worth knowing and, when later on my girl came, 1 raised her an Grape-Nuts, and she is a strong, healthy baby and has been. You will see from the little pho- tograph I send you wkat a strong. chubby youngster the boy i: now, but he didn’t look anything like that be- fore we found this nourishing food. Grape-Nuts nourished Xir back to strength when he was so weak he couldn't keep any cther food on his stomach.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle “reek, Mich. All children cen be built to a more sturdy and healthy condition upon Grape-Nuts and cream. The food cone tains the elements nature demands, from which to make the soft gray fill- ing in the nerve centres and brain. A well fed brain and strong, sturdy nerves absolutely insure a healthy body. jow, use a piece of flannel moistened ' with cologne. } Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, “The Road to Wellville.’ fa ha oh tinu e's he nstitu Ypan ORIEN The o! Asia 1s at Cons and inc It is on the Ori of wom It Las Oriental of then them ar tresses A SKIN A nat to wrinl ent tv Ip to First w warm nse in wipe dr In a sms let it re: then rer The ski and sup <3 Wome the new Jong an | noftest c | fhe mos ace ski must be off the i gerie wi gharm peen at Which 1 ds “a n 4 | pompose | jelest g reliotror Were ar was all ether sc: white vi ! AF’ If you your fa and beg ‘kitchen ly suppe morning thorougl were to things a: of the “him.” paper pr | babies a have fin] the pape » he will 1 out if he quiet an | per. It | the way sentimer frock si can if t done, sa gown co to be fru Mmply c try it, tr HAVE “What the quer .- Mrs. Noi given a « man raj thought” the chai whom tk < want to dark blu notes de deeper | thought, colors d ever, ju could fai be very sense—b! ity and ¢ low, of intellect that ani cast spir . After mind” © gray se bespeak ambition that “mu ger sign: hurrah f sign of . love. In the Jeast a 1 and only at work Yet the is upon many of women | of wom gins in ¢ and girl where tl lower gr the grea goes int social de gested a “civic a posed by day by Women ing publ