The "17hited Qepulchre The VV Talc of O Pclcc By Will Levington Comfort CojijrUlit. tA hf Will LIntt ConiHs i CorrHchU l)T. br J. H. Ltrrmcorr Courisv All I lihts rwJ CIIAirrr.R XIII. (Continued.) "Still, t must leave nothing undone to night. I want tli years bright for you, and t must try once more. After all. the mother of my beloved can tlo no wrong." "People might be safe away up there on the Morne d'Orange," she said. fr.tr-full-, "but you must pass to and fro through the cltyS" Gently he turned her face from the hid den city. "look yonder Into the splendid night 1" he whispered. "Keel the sting of the spray. Hear the Nws sing! It's all for us l.ara, the gilded track to the moon, the locllet of earth's distances and the sky aftenvanl I We can't leare this great thing undone. Listen, dearest; when the dawn comes up the Madame will be lying seven or eight miles off short. I'll take the launch Into the har bor, and climb the morne once more to the big plantation house, bringing your love and mine to tba mother-bird whom 1 owe for all thing good. If she will not come with me, I shall comnund I'ncle Joey to take ber to Fort de Franc. After that " She was clinging to him and sobbing. "After that?" she repeated. "We steam for Fort o Franco then," he said, "and Father Dainlea mt spare us an hour from his labors. After that, belored, you and I and the honey moon out on the swinging seas!" Just now J)eeuy Macready appeared on the bridge. "Ijira. I want you to know this In ny," said Coustable. "I found him lu a stoke-hold, and haven't been able to get rid of him since. He's ray steward at aea, my butler ashore, and 'Yours solid' anywhere. Denny, I'm going ashore at dawn " " TU crool t' hear, sorr." "That point Is pretty well covered, Den ny I want you that Is, I'm leaving Miss Stansbury in your bands." "Shsh wait till I putt on me gloves." "How are jour charges faring, Denny ?" Constable asked. "Is ut th' little cans, you mane?" "Yes, the natives." "If I on'y had some goats, sorrt" "Why goatsr "Sure, r been potherln' with lime rather an' sea wather an' wather straight an sugar ar milk whin goats could do it all, an' bettber." Macrcady went below, leaving a laugh on the -bridge which was no little thing. The Madame crept In to the edge of the moke. The gray ghost of morning was stealing Into the hateful bate. The ship found anchorage. The launch was in readlneaa below. It was six In the morn ing. Pugb, the new third officer, was Just leaving the bridge. Constable and Lara Mere standing at the door of his cabin. "I know that you could do no greater thing than this for me," she told him; "but when a woman comes Into her own as I hae It is terrible to be left alone o soon. There are warnings In the wind, menaces In the silence, dangers In every thing. It cannot be that I have found you, my lover, only to lose you again. Oh, come back to me quickly, dear !" "Three hours shall see us on our way lo Fort de France," he answered blithely. Trust me to hurry back to you. I'elee la still now. It may be that the pressure ta eased " "There, klsa me, and don't wait I The very name' of I'elee Is horrible t" She moved with him to the ladder. "I thought I would be braver than this, Pierre Va teurl" He whispered a last word and descend ed. Krnst had ben relievo!, and another sailor waa In the launch, one for whom preparations had been made In the dim ball. Constable was happy. He waved a kiss at the pale, mute face leaning over side, and the fog rusliwl In between. CIIAITKU XIV. The launch gained the inner harbor, and the white ship at anchor were seen yague phantoms In the vapor French steamers, Italian barques, and the small er West Indian craft all with their work to do and their way to win. Constable beard one officer shout to another, in quiring If Saint Pierre was In the usual place, or bad switched sites with Hades. The day was clearing rapidly, however, and before the launch reached shore the bate waa so lifted that I'elee could be seen, floating a pennant of black out to ... Tn ilia pit a lance frame ware- - -" bouse waa ablaie. Tba tinder-dry struc ture waa being destroyed with almost ex plosive speed. "Walt for me here," Constable said to the sailor, at the launch scraped the 6ugar Landing, A blistering heat rushed down from the expiring building to the edge of the land. Crowds watched the destruction. Many of the people wero In holiday nttlre. This was the Day of Ascension, and Saint I'lerre would shortly pray and praise at the cathedral. Kven now the bells were calling, and there was low laughter from a group of maidens. Waa It not good to live since the sun shone again and the mountain did not answer the tainted bells? It waa true that I'elee poured forth a black streamer with lightning In Its folds; true that the people trod upon the hot gray dust of the volcano's waste : that the beat waa such as no man bad ever felt before and many sat In misery upon the ground; true, Indeed that voices of hysteria came from the hovels, and tha breath of uncovered death from the by 1 rl swi ways but the ,la spirit was not dead. The bells wen calling; the mountain was still; brlglt drew were abroad for the torrid :hlldren of France must laugh. Constable fell In with the procession on the way to the cathrdral. Reaching there, he cllmtxi to a huge block of stone In the square, and hurled broadcast the germ of tUght. Many had seen him be fore, when hll face was hngganl. He was smiling now. There was color In his skin, nre In hii eyes, a ring In his voice. Fear was not in him. A carriage was not procurable, so he walked toward the Morne il'O range. It was setrn-thlrty, and the distance was two miles to the plantation house. At eight, or soon aftenvanl, he would b there eight on the morning of Ascension Day: at nine. In the launch again, speed ing out to the smile of the bride 1 Twenty times a minute she recurred to him as he walked. There was no waning nor wearing iae a wearing brighter, perhaps of the Images she had put In his mind. The night had brought him palace and ganlens and treasure houses : everywhere he turned, new riches broke upon him. That her face had lain b tween his bands; that his bauds had brought that face to his own: that her whispers, kle, confidences, her prayers and passkms and coming years, all found their center awl origin In himelf. like bright doves that had a cote within his heart these thoughts lifted the poor man to such heights of praie ami blessedness that be seemed to shatter the dome of hu man limitations, and emerge crown and shoulder Into the Illimitable ether. The road up the marne stretched blind ing white before him. Panting and spent not a little, he strode upward through the vicious pressure of beat, holding his helmet free from his head, that the air might circulate under the rim. At length, upon the crest of the morne, he perceived the gables of the plantation bouse, above the palms and mangoes, gold-brown In the dazxllng haze. I'elee roared. Sullen and dreadful out of the silence voiced the monster, roused to bis labor afresh. The American began to run, glancing back at the darkening north. The crisis was not passed In favor of peace. The holiday was darkened. Tba Madame would fill with refugees now, and the road to Fort de Franca turn Mark with flight. These were bis thoughts as he ran. The lights of the day burned out one by one. The crust of the earth stretched to a cracking tension. The air was beet ling with strange concussions. In the clutch of realization, be turned one shin ing look toward the sea. Detonations ac cumulated Into the crash of a thousand navies. On the porch of the plantation house, twenty yards awayM stood the mother of Lara, ber eyes fascinated, lost In the north. At ths steps be fell, caught ber skirt, ber waist. In bis bands. Acrosa the lawn, through the roaring black, be bin her, brushing her fingers and ber fallen hair from his face. He reached the curb Ing of the old well with bis burden, crawl ed over, and grasped the rusty chain. In candescent tongues lapped the cliteni's raised coping, and running streams of red dust filtered down. It was eight In the morning of Ascen sion Day. La Montagne I'elee was giv ing birth to Death. CIIAITKU XV. When the launch entered the denstr cloud and faded from her shthf, Miss Stansbury retired to the cabin. Over nil ber thoughts of the unhallowed parting from her mother the night before, and the clean, valorous act of her lover now, hung the defined terror lest I'elee should Inter vene. She heard Maeready'a step at the door; the calm olee of an oUker en the bridge; the morning bells. The pale winding sheet was unwrappod from the beauty of morning. Thrjuh a port-hole she saw the rose and gald on the far, dim hills. Her eyes smarted Irim weariness, but her mind, like an auto matic thing, swept around the great cir clefrom the ship to the city, to ths bouse beyond the morne and bark again. She saw him In the launch, In the midst of native groups on the shore, In the plantation house, begging her mother to listen. Importuning I'ncle Joey to take her to Fort de France, returning through the streets with people following the crowded launch, ami then the Joy of emp ty arms filled. Hut sometimes I'elee would burst Into the deepening channel of thoughts, effacing the whole, and leaving her, a shrieking, dishevelled creature, In the midst of a chaos which would not an swer. She went on deck. Laird, the first officer, Invited ber to ascend the bridge. Ha was scrutlnzlng through the glass a blotch of smoke on the city front. "What do you make of It, Miss Htansbury?" be asked. The lenses brought to her a nucleus of red In tha black bank. The rest of Saint Pierre was a gray doll settlement, set In the shelter of little gray hills. She could sea the riven and castellated crest of I'elee, weaving his black ribbon. It was all small, silent and unearthly. "That's a Ore on the shore," she said. "Kxactly," said Laird. Shortly afterward tha trumpetlngs of tba monster began. The harbor gret yellowish-black. Tba shore crawled deef r Into th shroud, and waa lost alto gether. The water took on a foul look, as If the bed of the sen were churned with some beastly passion. The anchor chain drew taut, mysteriously strained, and banged a tattoo against the steel-hound ejc. lllue Peter, drooping at the fore mast, lltrntl suddenly Into a tpasin of writhing, III a hooked llxanl. 'flie black, quhrrltig culumus of smoke frM the fun nels were faum-d down upon the deck, adding soot to the white sinoor f mm The uricanu. I.ara felt Macrcudy pulling at her arm. "Ye mtitiht go below, miss. Ye know me onlhrrs." She rebelled with sudden vehemence, declaring that she would smother down there. "You can do no good her, sure. Don t make It crool fur me?" "Make haste below, miss squall coin- I log!" commanded Ulrd. '"" ISSWKSa the Udd.r. crushed by the oilWr'a vwmls. , and the Iron fingers of fear closing about her heart. A hot, fetid breath charged .. . . . , -II. - .-lit. I... the air. Tne water iiaiirru. smr ' - imi! nf n-orltls. The disordered sky in toned violence. Price had set the foun dations lo trembling. Ura drifted Into the open polar region. Despair. These men were all his friends. She must not hinder them. They had much it not tinnier mem. inry unu iuv to do. Her part was self-effacement, lit the darkening passageway she nearu for a ilrarn yenra, mid not only nminrsi I.alnl shouting orders above, beard him j to out up the provender without r" command the uatle women to "tumble be- ( turning n rincnstitlo!i for It. but nrn low," and the sailors to seal the ways Bjown fo n(, ( ((, XVTl more cnwn after then, heard the deep "t. ,S.nf I nfter their own ability not to produco and"barometer ,,."", mi, I milk. These umy Mlrly l- called dairy Mow vr.es mThTnaTe' ,5 ' "" Their ownera claim groat Ihlnpi oaths 'f nun tailor. Th. ship ro.e and for them without t-elng able to substnn settled like a feather In a breeie. "late the truth of wlmt they imy. Shu was Incapable of swift action.! Hut the family h( Is not the only Macready lifted her Into the cabin and (,n f ,rtrv ,i, There nre the K'"n slammd th door, rushed to the jrts and (iri ,rlHW,,, r,,, mt ,lUH' generally screwed them tight with lllinlnK finders, )mV(i (,u, t)Jn omn,,,mv f their own led her to a chair and locked It In Its () Mf vw T,ry nff ""That's the deere." he said breathless. M' IJiM lw mtitWr.HM. mwiiien y lwm.K-h.sa.hi-rkfromth . demolUh.il ngnln nnd again, to mountain raise so much a. a Uoo.h fn their own Mtl.hirtl.iit. but they nro still your cheek, sure I'd nlver be able t' face N found nil over the land. Mr. Constable again, but go on sthoklu j T. ,ftry , n thing that ran b foriier an' ler." dlsieiied with to the a.lvnntnge of "It's very good of you," she answered .,, OWIIPn, n( ,jIP ,, The warfare dully. . ) ngntnst them will ! kept up. nnd llttl" She sat very still, not daring to relax H, nr rrl.itf the rigid t'nshm of her h h"Jh.; (,Mp,r. It may. I.mr. bre X'Sfr 'rromrthrltrew'."; -. Ve .taut as long t. eliminate dlirkne thumlerl vibrations which ren- Mom n It t...k t'lirl.tlai.lty lo drive the derrd soundless all that had passed be- Idols out of the pagan world. Farmers fnre. Comets tiasneu oy me i" "-. Th ship shuddered and fell to ber star- i...i .i.t. twain !...- ... . Klght bells hsd Just soun.Ie.t wnen in Klght be I. h..l just aounurs, .-, harbor 'and the molten vitals of th. mon-1 Perl.am the Ut way of demonstrntlng ster. w'rapped In a black cloud, filled th the danger of dren'lilng cnttle Is to ad heavens, gathered themselves, and plunged ,M. tl0 n-n.ler to throw Imck Ills head down upon th city and the sea. As for M ar MHU,u,0 nm attrinpt to awal the de Stael. eight miles from shor and ,W -in) . wtt nnd to ! n dim . Un .. th. fni,n. she seemetl ... . . . .m ..... . . iweive uir '"----- - . to hav. fallen from a hablta .1 planet . Into th fire-mist of an unfinished world. She heeled over like a biscuit tin. dipping hrr bridge and gunwales. She was del uged by blasts of steam and molten ston. Her anchor chain gave way, and. burn ing In a half-doten places, sh was sucked tn-sbor. (To b continued.) An Idol "! " Traalo lllstorr. There nre many thins which hapin-n which do not readily letxl themsclvea to explanation. When Mme. Carnot, widow of Sndl Carn.rt. died and her will wn read, a cIbumj In It catmsl conaldernble comment. Thla wn lo tha effect that a certain amall Hindoo iuoi cnrvM from n hnnl atone, which would i fminil nmonir her uroiierty, must bo tnkeu out nnd cruMied until completely deatroycil. Many tnnrvel.sl at thla ap- pnrently alnRiilnr rcjucat. for tho Idol tnken out nnd crushed until completely Mnieil n linnnlea. ugly llttlo thing ; but her Instruction wero carried out to tho letter. Tim Idol Imil !ecn prwentwl to Radl rrtint venrH lieforc ho lind ever V.ll(llUi ;nnn ....... .." - - thought of the Presidency of Frnnco by . .. . ...i. t...l l.-...i.i.li l friiTfi tn. n iriei.u wn u " . - din. letter h lenrned tlmt there wn n ecnd nttnelie.1 to it which nsiH-rieti that whoever would retnln It In hi IHiMiiMlnn would rlau to tho fulleat height of power In III chosen profes sion, but die of n atnli wound when nt tho zenith of hi career, Carnot traced tho history of tho Idol and found that for MX) year tho ruler who had po. esl It had nil died cither In battlo or by asaaaslnntlon of atnb wound. Yet j he lauKheil at tho atory, called the facta , adduced by hi March n mere chain of coincidence nnd rctnltied tho Idol. Ha jii i.w . ,1i,ni-rtp In tlm tinmlN of an ansnssln, hence Mme. Carnot' atrnngo re-quc-at. HT" N, U.ele... I.tlher. Wlldcn .nlnlnx H.ock nre no niwv said n Now York broker who , imntllca cheap mlnlntc .lock tho other day a ho hum; up tho telephono receiver. -Hero' n man who Jut offewsl me 50 for cnoush mining rtockn to have n. face value of fM.WiO. Ho wantit pnr- .I...I.. ..., n I mliwUu 111, L'Ot If tllfiV OIllV tlcnlnr wlint atock lie tjot If they only had n paper value of J.AOOO. I cloacd the deal nnd aholl innke monoy on It, too. What did lie want with audi stock.? Well, I haven't the illgbint doubt but tlmt ho I Retting rendy to go Into tho bankruptcy court nnd want to allow III creditor where his money ha been dropped. Wo often got R-tich request nnd are twually able to fill them." ' aMKBaaaMHattssivM To do It no more, Is the truo Hneot mce. Lutber. . llalrr t't"l. Cow become favorite wllli Ihrl owner not altogether by reason of th milk tliey produce. Wo have ktimvi cows that their owners thought n grosl ,,, ... !., ., ,i, liikIIv ilianosk f ,,, ',,,,,. 0..o cow llu.t till -lor .member , vo bu, a IWj lmrt of milk n iln) but ah.- wn n H of the fnmlly. Shi would prefer tin company of mcmlict l of the fuliill) .. .. ... . .... - 11... miner iniui mm oi imer run, n nms were belns tnlieii to imsturo she would Insist mi wnlltlng by the side ol the one In clmrce of the herd. It ll hiird to order n row of this kind sent ti this butcher, and many jmviIo will not - ii" iu uiMcnti, me nnuimm m- i- uevicw HlmU In llrrnrhril ('Hill. Doctor Dstvld ItolK-rta. Slnte Veterl- tv,,,.,.. -,,- ,. ni,vlce cull tasK, nun you win mm mui" ..... , , , I...,,,,,,..!,.,, WM. ow with the mouth oiieti. It I for this renaou that drenching cnttle Is a ' dangcrou practice. However, If a cow'a head be- raised ns high n xwlble and her mouth kept ojs-ii by the drencinng little or horn, n jMirtlon of the liquid la very apt to pas down the wlndplpa Into the lungs, sometime causing In stant d.-nth by smotnerliig, at other time musing' denth to follow In n few diy from congestion or Inflammation of the lung. fHve all cuttle their 'nedlclne liypodermlcnily or In feed. If uey refiiH feed kIc It dry on th loiigue. The proH-r mellnxl of giving a ntr medlclno Is to stand on the right side of the cow, placing the left arm nround the nose nnd at the anmo lime 0n,n(t ,I(.r ,,!,, nn,j wh n oon In (() rght jnil p(C0 , ,,.,, . . . ... . , imwderisl form, back on the tongue; she txm men awni low with safety. llamlf for Siirllnir I'olatoe. tn MnriliiL- txitnliHii n time saver ran i ... ...---. , o iiinile of board nnd common wire. 'rl... IdM. i.lrn Blitiiilit Imi ulrwwitll n.lil - "" - - nlxiut the thleknc of ordinary clothe ro aoRTino roTATor. nc, '-,n alde-lxmrd should bo about , 18 Inche wide to keep the H)tatw ' from rolling off tho ldi-. The wire r...,,,,! to a iiuller at tho ton to ,,; w n - , , , ... ' , . . . Mna m lh0 lA"' Tf fmUn VonU . . . . . dnrkcuetl ... . ...... .. nc w,(h Juift e10UBh , for iw1 (() (() mU ,, fee, c cornmenI( I(, ong crnckw, ,VMCI,t and ahorl. ( , ffl mUtM, , un, ,r. ,, ,, KalMU Fprf ofCI ,,r. , ,, t,,oy wU ,,lt ,, UliJ cen) T,mt 8 ,0 nay uUi the) ,mo n ,,,,, ,, feC(, ain im bo. fon )Witltne, nnd n enrly In the mon..nii . noaalble. Supply them win, irrlt nnd water and keen the ? - ..r..-- - ... prcinlse Can. Half dozen fowln to- geUier wlU fatten more quickly tb.ua a yjk dirge niiuitsT, n the win nor . i" tvmpiuiy Cook nl Nitntot-. rlif wru breml. crniUwl nirn nml '"' "'", iii.iv iilso be fed (Iho lu green aluffs. as U Is loo lllllliK nml wlU 'I" "" '",",,l Fowls erowdnl till should ! Ill title niii.llll.UI In two week" Hlllll lip longer, they are likely to begin li moM iifi.1 will go Iwrk rnllier H"i liii'rw In weight lllirat World, .Niilrllilrnl In llll. II..II..I... v.. .i rmiii i lie Htorra Au- IMIIII till ...'. ,', - rlciilliirnl Kiperlmeiit Station. Con tiivlleilt. Is n tiiimt excellent one on Ilia origin or sount-a of those sinnll or prtlilHins mllitl iKii'.rrla, wlilth " found so nbiindnnlly In ml' 'l'1"' biillelln iilso eontnliis some rnlher starilliig stiitcmciita nnd '" whole some suggestion. Aiiioiik the alntemeiila whl.li oiigiu lo mnke the memge limit "It i mid think nre the follow Ing - "A iiiart of milk nt S' l cquhnlent ii. r.ui ...in.. I.. .. iu.niil .if tMif ut t1. in ini .mill .. ii -.'t.... ' - - -- TliH menus tlmt le worth of milk gh-s n lilllili fiHHl energy III tne ihxi) ns ia Worth of ln-vf "I'lie nemge Indhldiml consumes tlini' or four times as much tnent In n day ns the luxly netimlly nreils for re ixilr. nnd for Its highest pli)sbl ditloii. "If the American jH-opIe would eat one half lew imat nml oiiiiiih one half more milk, they would sue bImmiI M-WMtfs-ii. lu iiHUiey and lit IikhIiIi. enough lo miike the doctors' bill look small." Imtiriitril llntf IV h, A large bog u with xvt' for IhiIIi Meeplni: and feeillug enii U arranged with n ri.Hr on one half lo cloture a rK" with Hit thin!, riooa. dry lnil. The site of the whole wn Is H fret by ll feet. o that the llxire.1 section of the H' I H fivt stiare It I made of strong malrrlals, usually 3 In. by 4 In. sin IT. ami rest on cleat In the bottom of the -ii. Wafer for Cows. It I claimed that a cow need eight gallon of water n day, nnd will con sume that much If It Is within reach. Milk Is coiiikmiiI of about H7 s-r cent water. Cow conflliril lo pasture In which there I no running water and the cow nrn watered morning and ijtght. It would necessitate that a row would havo to drink four gallons at a time tn order to Im aitttdtnl. A tha cow doe not know that she must drink four gallons, she will naturally us Icm nnd reduce her milk supply nccirnllngly. Th Slllk Jfarlilne. There I mighty little sentiment about n row. She' nothing but a deli cately organized mllk-inaklng machine. Her nervou organization I well de-tcloM-d, though, and Is easily disturbed, hut If she I well supplied with milk making material and Is let atone stie will turn out a rimmI rroduct and plenty of It, provided, of course, she I built on the right line. A xir machine of nuy kind I a nirso to the owner. Mult? In Irrigation, Two hundred fret of (tin leico on the San Joaquin Itlvrr In California gave wny and flooded -!.(' nrre of growing rro, musing n l. of l.'.n'io.oui. CroH worth Jl.'t nil acre nre nnt rnro lu an Irrlgnti-d dlstrlrt, though the llguri-N nlxe glien would I.Nik like n mlfprlnt to an Itesterner. AIhiiii ?) uen of the Inundated area wero In celery, nod thu mine would run fur hImivo thu inerngo slnlrd. Kl Pnao llemld. Milk Vrssel. Dso no wimmI.'U milk vessels, and nftcr wiishliig milk Msisela n-t them out o dry itcnldliig hot. Never rlnso out with cold water after tlm Itnul milling. U-nvo them hot, so they i dry quickly nii not get musty, Nofr on llrclmril Work, Select only slnndiird vnrletlr. Spray frcuciitly and thoroughly. Clover crop prevent noil waHhlng. Sell direct to tho consumer whenever KItlll0. Form strong symmetrical lirnds on ul I trie. Prepnru the ground the fall previous to planting. Supply an abiin.lauco of plant food at all tluu-H. Clover crop perform many useful function. Fruit fanning has been styled Rontle men'H farming. Poultry and fruit growing mnko a good combination. The finest fruit I grown by thinning thu fruit on tho tree. Sow clover crop no that they will bo thick and cover tho ground. Keep up to (Into by rending what tlit most successful men havo to ny. Fruit growing and fruit eating rank people sunny, happy and sweet 1'itr OpeMliitf I'rilll Jars, Any H'rioii who bus eter slruggleq with a fruit Jiir that hnd the lid stuck will Im griileful to III" Idaho iimti who Im glwii u I lie fruit lr opener. I hi ili'lii' Is i-sti-slrui'leil on the prltielple ( a wtlr of pliers, mid IN Jnw which are seiuMreil. lar and made to Ill nnnind the top of a Jar, nr er hiled In such it way ns to uhlnltl n llrm grip. Here tofore II WHS llllHMbl In get n gixwl plirrtiMi hi th t.ii. ns Hie llNIld "mi I, I slip lufnro the top Winili turn If the littler slurk ery badly. m mil Then, too, the oH-ner ellmliinle ah danger of cutting the Intuit on th metal of the top or the gla of th Jar Many n rno of bloddiiiliig has develosl fnun a wound iiImIimsI to this wny and. Inking it dlfferosit U-w of Iho ense, many n family ha s down lo the lWe wltbinit ir're ! eaitwi the )r n.lil wit ! mml In the old it) n prolooipMl sotiklhg lu Imi! water wa the oly rwly fw an obellllHle tup, Pane t'nr nl l.naf. To llirrt aWf)i. ttwHlwl IxiU'r add one tinsMH4 ehn)esl iml4i and (lie half aotir aplde. two nltle) fbiiir I'isik to n clear Ifown, ndd m pint milk, one cop leit water. In whl.h the gbtie fnm tkltg (Mil ha n im-ll.il Mllr until Ui4llHir hot. add i-holim) nut meat sIhI one tMe. leliHili Jllltsi ami tioe-twlf lrsMim salL Ail IlKllrr. Cook two mrl qMe ami one (Hirt rliulHirh until temter. Itub nil thrtMwh oaiHl.-r If set In the oven It will rook without sM,tterlng the slme. Swreteu with sugar and flavor with rlmiaiiH.n. Cor grax tnitlrr tnkn two lart snil .ii grnKi and one irt njt run through isamler. Apple ghe a much belter flavor to tlm gmi. f'bnfHilat. I'sli. One run aiigar. half-t'iin butter, balf- rup milk, two egg, two eiiw flour, two tenion baking iwipr. Ilefore Is- cltiulng the rnke take ha f a rake of rhooolatr, put It on the slme to inelt.lrt It rome to a tail), n.ld the lolk of olio egg, then Miiir on the rnke batter wbli hot. Hake lu long shallow tin. Put together with boiled Icing. Herman HnrUalapf. Half iilinl of butter, tlirrsi tnMe s)miiis sugar. pliM-li of salt, rind of leHHUi, i-ake of roiupn'ait yeast, ill eitltnl In a cup of lukewarm water, twelve miner flour and two olllier cornstarch. Stir half an hour. Put Into form with InUi In renter and let rise until light. Itnlslua may ta added If wished. ('ska Cnalartl. Soak n coffee rtipful or Irss of tlm rnke left over from the pudding lu a siitllrleut quantity of milk to nearly till n smiill pudding dish, Heat Iwu rgg with a cupful of sngur; n.ld to mlitunt with nuy deslnil ilatnrlng. Put lu n small quantity of rnlslus, corrMtil or ell ron ami bake until brown. Serte Willi (T(Hllll. ilrril t'herrlrs. Nine ihiiiiiiIn of fruit, I siiiihI of augur, 1 plot of elder lnegnr, 'j oiinro of (Inmimou lwrk, Vt oiinro of wholo dote, Let Iho sirup eouie to n boll Niforo putting lu Iho fruit; riMik Iho fruit until Iho skin break; then tnko out tho fruit nml boll Iho sirup down until thick; nir out thu fruit hot. Corn unit IVppsrs. One of thu use for rolil iMilled corn left over from n pre vlou meal I n n entree with green peper. Wash tlm pKrN, remove their sc.il and IhiII them for ntsiiit twenty inlntile. Then chop them flue, mix them with th" corn cut from thu rob and bent lb two together In butter, wilt nnd pepper, Mnsheit I'oImIii fur Tried I'Uh. Piiro and boll tho mtnloe a usual, In milled water, then drain mid pre them through a sllrcr or egelnblo pre. Add a generoii phvo of butler, plenty of hii It and cooked liimiil'K, premicd through n hlove, nnd moisten n limilnl Merv.i III n KCIllirilt.l llll or on the plnlu with thu llsti. Iced llle I'lid.lliiK. To n quart of rich milk mid two tit hlespnonful of rlco mid twelve of hii gar, with n pinch of Halt nnd two beat en eggs. Hake, stirring often, till tho wholo I soft and llko thick cream, then cool nnd put Into n pall and act In n larger pall, putting Ico lu between- &' It stand three hours.