AGRICULTURAL. USEFUL FARM HINTS. Is tb mower ready? The old hen had better go. U thou ueth a dull hoe It provet wou art dull. loung- man. aon t be afraid to an her; brace up. Speak little, rpeak truth; spend Utile pay cssh. Some men are prone to make Sund ft weak day. He that brings up hla aon to nothin breeds a thief If you expect the land to support you It muat be well taken care of. Attend to the feet of the work horn aa carefully aa you do the feet of th drivera. Mind you the women folks are 'more real account than anything else on the farm. Don't slight 'em. Ducklings usually Mart their moult when about eleven weeks old. Market them before they begin. When you give your cellar Its spring Cleaning, add a little copperas wate and aalt to the whitewash. iou cannot afford to be a farmer unless you know a great deal about It but If you have the Impression that you know all about It saltpeter won' save you. Kinaness and the use of a curry comb and bruah will cure a kicking cow Never tried It on a mule. If you act the rascal with your farm by robbing It of all its fertility you administrator may find It difficult to pay probate court expenses. The sugar corn will ear better if not too much crowded. It needs sun and air around It to grow to perfection A aloppy watery mess should never be given young pigs, for by gorging themselves with It they will become pot-bellied, have Indigestion and the scours. There is honey In the comb, even in the curry comb. It will swepeten the temper of the horse, and, like the genu Ine honey, it is only obtained by In dustry, It is said that opportunity has long hair In front, but that the back side of her head Is bald. He that grasps her by the forelock can sleep well at nighta. Borne one has written that laziness and labor are brothers. If this be true one of them was surely changed In the cradle. Labor Is wedded to In centive. Laziness Is a rusty old bach lor. While we are lamenting our lost win ter wheat In the United States, we can console ourselves with the fact that the crop is very large In Argentine Dig a hole deep and wide In which to ' bury your prejudice, and after Interring It dig up plenty of good judgment and lay your plans with it Instead of with prejudice. Have a place for everything, and tee that everything la put In its place. A hoe left in the field and allowed to rust may not amount to much, but a number of hoes and a number of other tools, especially of they Include some of the more complicated and expensive farm machines, often add up a bUl that is formidable. How many farmers keep accounts with their crops, or knew the relation of cost to the amount they are sold for? On what err ps or animals a profit or loss Is made? Without these accounts he may have a fairly good guess at the profit or lore on any ppeciftc crop, cow .or heg, but he annot tell accurately, or be In a petition to make such charge aa will inure to his profit. Now -off with the farm horse's shoes and let his feet dewn en the ground. Even If used a Utile rn the road, shoes are not usually needed at this time of year. At least let the hind feet go bare and have tips on the front feet. The idea Is to get the frog down on the ground so It will grow and the foot ex pand as It should. The bigger a horse's frogs are, the fleeter he will be, and the easier his motion. They Insure a smooth, supple action by keeping the heels of the hoof well spread, thus giving room In It for the multitude of little muscles to work naturally. Serious Internal disturbances show themselves In the staring colt. When a hore's digestive organs are "upset" he Is uneasy, pawing, stamping and acting badly. Administer a pint of raw Un seed oil, or. If the case is not a bod one, begin feeding oil meal, a little at a time. Glauber or epsom salts to the extent of a large handful put in each feed, until a pound or more has been used, will regulate the system, open the bowels and cool the blood. Tut a little table salt with the medicine to Induce the patient to eat It. If the most and test hay Is desired It Is not a good plan to pasture the meadow in the spring of the year. Borne farmers erroneously think they can pasture the meadow up to a certain time and It will do no damage, and they expect as much hay as If they had not pastured any of it. The meadow sel dom does Its best when pastured In the spring, and sometimes It la dam aged by fall pasturing. It Is one thing to have a good meadow and another to know how to treat It. Owing to the loss of so much clover It la thought there will be a shortage In the hay crop. In view of this It may be an excellent plan to look up some millet seed and arrange to aow tome for hay. K you do, please don't aow It Will warm weather la well established, vcr It la ft hot weather crop. Then, oA let It get ripe. Thar If nothing more Inspiring In feriaiftf tka to atfla tern work whoa the soli works well and the weather Is as good as If one had planned it for his own convenience, unlets it Is being able to reap a geed harvest. Harvest time always has lis inccnvenlt net s. even it the yield Is satisfactory, for there Is always the hat and danger of treach erous weather. In spring the long tea son when e have been housed up sharpens the appetite for work, which, in turn, creates a denre for rest. As a rule we are always glad to begin farm wark and equally as glad to finish up in the fall. When we get up at three in the morning to break atalks, we feel as If we were ready for any emergency, and as we come in with the last load of corn In autumn we are then ready for Thanksgiving. . SCIENTIFIC CORN CULTURE. The following are the essential facts presented by Prof. P. O. Holden, as sistant professor of agricultural phys ics at the Illinois university, in his talk on "Different Kinds of Corn Cul tivation" at the Stephenson county (Ill.)-Farmers' Institute: "I will give the results of some ex periments made at the University of Ill inois. The results of experiments will not always be the same, as the sur rounding conditions may not be the same one year as the next. It is neces sary for the farmer of all people to use brains. These experiments were to de termine the effect of different depths of cultivation on the root system and on the moisture in 'the soil, the effect of the condition in which the ground Is left, and the effect on the yield of com. In root pruning a machine is used which cuts straight down in the ground at a distance of six Inches from the hill of corn and on the four sides of It. One row of corn was pruned and the next row left. The corn not root pruned yielded 80 bushels per acre; hat pruned two inches deep, 78 bush- els; four Inches deep, 63.5 bushels; six Inches, 4S bushels. When pruned on only two sides of the hill, two Inches deep, the yield was 78 bushels; four Inches, 76 bushels; six inches, 64 bush els. The deeper the root pruning the less the yield of corn. All this corn was thinned out exactly alike, to four stalks In the hill, and the pruning done four times In the season from June 10 to July 5 The number of ears pro duced in each of the conditions above were respectfully 414, 400, 3C4 and 3j4 showing a uniform decrease the deeper the root pruning. The average of twenty-one experi ments showed that corn ground culti vated two Inches deep retained 21.5 moisture; 3 Inches, 22.7; 4 inches, 22.9 inches, 23 5; corn not cultivated but cleared o weeds, 20.7, showing a grad- ueal increase of moisture with the In creased depth of cultivation. Th moisture to a depth of twenty-seven nches was actually measured. The dif ference of about 2 per cent of mois ture in the cultivation from two to six nches deep means eighty tons of water to the arre. Corn mulched with June grass retained 26 6 moisture. "Ordinary cultivation four Inches deep retained 22.9 moisture; deep plow ng early and shallow plowing late 24.1 moisture; shallow plowing early and deep flowing late, 22.4 moisture: deep plowing early with a smoothed surace ater, 24. 6. Tower cultivation retained 22.3 moisture; tower ridge. 231; ridge. 22.8; harrow. 22.0. The shallower the ultivatlon the lower the moisture. "The yield of earn per acre at the respective depths of 2. 3. 4 and 8 inches f cultivation were 88. SS. 4. 90.1, 84. & bushels; corn not cultivated. 93.1 bush Is; corn with the weeds left In, 53.1 bushels; corn mulched, 71.7. 'These experiments show that In av eraging up the decrease of yield with he deeper Inference with the roots and he Increased moisture with the deeper ultivatlon that the best results were obtained from cultivation three Inches eep. In four years' cultivation we ave found that corn not cultivated but carefully weeded out yielded more than 11 the other methods, but It costs more cut the weeds that the Increased leld amounts to. We have had excel lent results fro meultlvatlng only with harrow and a weeder. The moisture coming up from below by capillary at traction I quickly passed off Into the Ir when It strikes a shallow loosened urface, but if the cultivation Is deeper. irmlng a mulch, the moisture Is held by It much better. 'The effects of different methods of cultivation on the yield were as fol- ws: Ordinary. 911 bushels; deep owing early and shallow plowing te. 8S 5; shallow plowing early and deep plowing late, 88.9; deep plowing early and smoothened late, 89.9; tower, 88 5; tower ridge, 90.6; ridge, 94.2, har row, 90.9. FARMERS' WIVES AND POULTRY. On most farms the farmers' wives are supposed to do the greater part of the labor In caring for and raising the poul try. Some of them get their pin money In that way and some of them get quite a bit more than that, making a considerable sum for more substantial expenses. It Is tafe to lay that thei desire on the part of the wife In poul try raising Is profit. In view of this fact some women have beaun to 8Bk themselves whether they are getting much out of the bust- nttn, and whether they are bringing them up to the standard they should be for the best results. It Is one thing to be able to put a great many dosen fowls on the market, and quite another to get a great many dollars out of them. We once knew an enterprising young boy who had ft desire to begin the poul try buslnesa. In which he received but little encouragement. He succeeded, however, In borrowing hen that want, ed to sit from on neighbor ftnd ft alt ting of egga from another, ftnd ftll ho bad to put Into the taWrprtat wsa hit willingness to give It hla attention, and he did It and succeeded. A boy of that kind will succeed, for he Is made out of the kind of material which means success. There is no knowing what a boy of that kind would do if he had encouragement. We believe that farmers' wives as a rule are admirably adapted to the poultry business, and they should have some encouragement In It. Good build ings should be provided for them, and everything that will In any way add to the convenience of the good wife in caring for them. She may not be able to hit one of the chickens with a stone that she throws at It when it la scratch ing up the garden, but she will gener ally htlt the nail on the head oftener than the big stout man who would not stoop to "such small business" as that of poultry raising. After the morning meal is prepared and his lordship has gone afield, she goes to the poultry house to make the flock comfortable. She gets recreation out of It, for the reason that it is a change from work, ing Indoors. Soon she has everything In good trim and she rests by going back to the house to take up the work there. Then the sitting hens have to be removed, and she keeps this up all through the day in a merry mood, get ting enjoyment as well as profit out of the business. We believe the wives ought to be en couraged in the poultry business and they ought to have good poultry quar ters and a good breed of fowls to be gin with. Never should they be chided for the small business they are engaged in, for it is not a small business. We know of an instance where a woman paid off a mortgage with chicken money and if it had not been for her and her chicken money it could not have been lifted. Women are a part of the firm and they have a skill In many things that Is all their own, and some of them have more skill In this line than their husbands have In their work. We also believe that the husband and large boys ought to help the wife and mother do such heavy work as may bi needed when they can, and the potple and poached eggs will have a much better taste. Perhaps when hunger has full possession of the big boy he may get an extra egg or two If he Is helpful. The full grown man who will eat a plateful of potple and two or three eggs and then complain that his wife la doing no good with the chickens, ought to be compelled to Join the army In Ma nila and try shooting Filipinos, without eggs and pot-pie. Homestead. WHITE VC. BROWN BREAD. The very general Impression prevails that brown or whole wheat bread Is more nutritious and more wholesome than white bread made from bolted Hour. A aeries of experiments report ed In the current issue of the Experi ment Station Record, however, indi cates that this generally entertained opinion should be modified. From these experiments the conclusion Is drawn that the highly nutritive value which on purely chemical grounds, Is placed upon brown bread made from whole wheat, can not, except as to vegetable fats and mineral constituents, be maintained from the physiological view of the question because digestion does not find in the brown bread the ele ments which chemistry finds. In other words, distinctly less of the nutritive materials actually get In to the blood in the case of brown than of white bread. White bread, in, weight fur weight, more nutritive than the brown, and where people have Irritable in testines white bread is to be preferred. On the other hand, with people hav ing sluggish intestines and a tendency to constipation, brown bread Is prefer able to white. It is also preferable where the other articles of food and drink that are consumed dally are lack ing In mineral ingredients, and especi ally In lime salts, and If one's diet contains insufficient fat, or if one In bad health Is unable to digest fat in other forms, brown bread, which con tains a larger amount of It than white. Is probably preferable. Homestead. LATE INVENTIONS. A carving knife sharpener and fork guard are combined in a Pennsylvani a's patent, the upper portion of the guard having two disks carried on spin dles to rotate as the knife Is drawn between them. A folding stepladder has recently come into use In which the legs and step supports are hlngled at the cen ter to close up when not in use, allow ing the ladder to be stored In about halt the space of the old ladders. Runners and wheels can be easily brought into use on a new vehicle, the runners being carried by rock-shafts operated by levers to lower them below the line of the wheels, or lift them and allow the wheels to support the load. In a new bicycle tire the resiliency la obtained by hollowing the face of the rim deeply and stretching a strip of fabric across the face, with a ring of rubber or other flexible material sus pended in the center of the fabric, A pneumatic axle bearing for vehl. cles has been patented to take the place of Inflated tires on road wagons, beln le"1 "able to Puncture, the weight being carried by pneumatic rings placed Inside drums surrounding the axle. Ice cream can be ahlpped without melting In ft new delivery package, a nonconducting material being used aa filler between the Inner and outer walla, the cream being placed In a tight recep. tacle In the center and surrounded with Ice. To prevent bicycle wheela from throwing mud and water on the rider's bftck ft new device la formed of two arma pivoted on tho roar axis to sup port ft small roller .! ft position to take before It can be throws est. A CALIFORNIA GIRL, CHAPTER XXVII. When Sablna Emmott persuaded her father that hla health would suffer if be did not accept an inltation from Lady Bettaby to spend a few weeks at her hospitable country house, on the moors, she did not do so in the expecta tlon that she would meet Sir Koydon Garth, any more than she did it Oat of regard for the major's health, which was excellent. Shea had almost dis missed the hope of following up her ma. neuvering on board the Gemini on ac count of the difficulty in finding out how her plot against Lilac had pro gressed. The major's daughter was undoubt edly as fond of the handsome young baronet as the could be of anybody but herself; and she coveted the title of "Lady Garth." but Miss Sabina was far too sensible to lose any opportunity of making a good match through mere personal preferences, and she Jumped at the chance of visiting Westwood, which had become quite famous for the number of matches made there. Lady Bettaby, a good-looking widow of forty, with no children of her own to look after, had a perfect mania for match making, and Sablna counted upon meet ing at her house at least one eligible man, whom her ladyship would perhaps do her best to coerce into falling in love with her. Sablna, who made it a point of devot ing herself to her father when she had no other claim upon her time, was reading aloud to him a dull newspaper article on army matters when Sir Roy don's letter arrived, and, as Lady Bet taby looked up from its perusal and glanced out of the window, she caught sight of father and daughter seated in a couple of wicker chairs under a giant cedar on the lawn. What a devoted daughter dear Sa bina Is!" the paid In her cousin, the Honourable Newton Dene, with whom she had been chatting when the tele gram arrived. Newton Dene, being a confirmed bachelor of fifty, without means, had failed in every way to aitrart Miss Emmott, and was therefore able to crit Iclse her freely. uon l you think that she makes a little too much parade of her devotion, Declma?" he said, in his soft, spirit less tones. Her ladyship shrugged her shoul ders. It was a gesture that she had learned abroad, and executed excel lently, as she know. 'I wonder If .Sabina has ever met the baronet!" she went on. "I must go and ask her." "And lay your first mine two min utes after the poor invalid has claimed your protection! J than make a mem. in my notebook never to come here when y am 111 and unable to de lend myself." Her ladyship was already out In the sunny garden. As she approached the rcuple under the cedar. Major Emmott sprang up and offered her his chair. Lady Bettaty shook her head. "I have feme only for a moment to appeal to your good r.ature." she said "yours especially, Miss Sablna." Mis Emmott turned her head and glanced up at her ladyship with her bright little eyes. "Anything that I can do for you, dear Lady Bettaby, will delight me." fhe eld; and her ladyship shrugged her shoulders. "But this is to be kind to a poor in valid I have coming an old friend of nine who is Just recovering from a short but serious illness and wants brightening up. Tou would certainly succeed In doing it, Sabina dear. If you were willing to help me." The prospect did not sound Inviting, so the girl raid diplomatically: "I shall be delighted If we are still here when your friend ccmes. But papa was wondering whether we ought to tres pass upon your kindness any longer. We have been here three weeks already. When dees this lady you rpeak of arrive?" It Is not a lady," corrected her ladyship quickly, giving the Informa tion which Far.ina had teen anxious to obtain. "And you must not talk about leaving us et. Major Emmott," ahe went on, turning to the old soldier, ho had not thought of doing so "Just, too, when I need dear Sablna s services and yours! Sir Roydon Garth has had some serious disappointment, I bellefe, which has affected his health, and ( have sent for him tj cheer him up a little. Lady Garth is very anxious about him." 'Oh, Garth and I are old rlends!" said the major; then he glanced at his daughter. But I do not know whether Ir Itoydon will like to see us, dear." "Sir Rcydcn always seemed pleased with your tccleiy, papa," answered the girl, demurely: "I think that you will be able to keep him interested." The absence on his daughter's part of any aprarent personal Interest In the baronet's visit suddenly reminded I the old soldier of (he avowal she had . made when he Informed her of Sir. Itoydon's engagement to the Callfornlan girl whom the baronet had confided to his care. He waited until their hostess had left them; then ho twirled his fierce . military moustache. 1 am afraid, Sablna, that you do not care for Garth, he (aid, rather . nervously; "1 hope, however, that you will try to feet as favorably disposed towards him as you can. Although I i have never let you guess tho fact, I have always looked upon Garth as the man I should choose for you to marry." "But, papa. Sir Roydon would never think of marrying me,"' said Sablna, with demure modesty: and the Major glanced st her proudly. "I do not know. faMna. Tou ars In all respects worth ct him; snd now that he has found how mistaken he was In that Miss Marvel, I have no doubt he will be In a mood to appre ciate goodness and nobility of char acter at their true value. Tou will treat him kindly?" "For your sake yes, papa. Do you think It would look kind If I drove down to the station to meet him when he arrives tomorrow?" she asked in nocently. . When Miss Emmott was alone in her own room that night, she looked at herself in the glass, and smiled at the reflection. "Fate is playing into your hands, Sabina, dear." she said. "You Bhall marry Sir Roydon Garth, baronet." The next morning she dressed with more than ordinary care, choosing a delicate arrangement of green, with a neat little driving hat to match, and set out inthe dog-cart for the station, rejoicing over the fact that she had won her father's permission to a course that in any other circumstances he would have condemned. Sabina drove smartly, and she knew that she never looked so well as when managing a horse. When Roy, In accordance with Lady GaVth's arrangement, arrived at West wood station at noon, looking thin. careworn and dejected, he glanced round In vain for Lady Bettaby's kindly face on the platform. The ma. Jor's daughter, with due regard for the value of first impressions, had come down without a groom, and was holding in the spirited mare outside the station. Anybody to meet me from Lady Bettaby's?" the baronet 8Pked of the man who was looking after his luggage. The man touched his hat. "Yes. sir young lady in a dog-cart." Roy wondered who on earth it could be. "I suppose you will have your trunk sent up, sir?" said the man. "Yes, please." Roy walked out of the station with some little curiosity, In spite of his apathy, as to who the young lady could be. and a flood of bitter mem ories came back at the sight of the small, neat figure perched on the high dog-cart, and holding the reins with firm, neatly-gloved little hands. Sabina was right in thinking that her unexpected appearance would make an Impression; but it was not the impres sion she had counted upon. As Roy glanced at her, the scene came back to him of his parting from Lilac in the "Golden Hotel" at San Francisco, and he did not even notice the green cos tume which had been put on for his special delectation; for his thoughts were with a sweet-faced girl in a blue cotton dress, who had looked up into his face as he clasped her in his arms and made him think that she loved him. Miss Emmott was chagrined at the absolute indifference with which Roy accepted the fact of her presence, and she whipped the mare viciously as soon as the baronet had taken his seat by her side. The baronet did not seem inclined to start conversation on his own ac count, and Sabina felt that she must nerve herself for an effort, so In as sympathetic a voice a9 possible she said abruptly: 'I am so sorry about your trouble, Sir Roydon." "My trouble?" questioned the young man; and his tone did not encourage Mies Emmott to think that her sym pathy would be appreciated. But she kept on valiantly. "Your disappointment with regard to Miss Marvel." Has Lady Bettaby told you about It?" he asked. And Sablna shook her head with a very vigorous and bird like movement. 'No. I do not think that her lady ship knows. The voyage revealed to me that Miss Marvel did not really care for you, and your illness explains the rest. I know that you do not like me to speak of It; but I cannot help tell ing you how sorry I feel. I cannot un derstand how she could like Mr. Mow bray better than you. He was such an Insignificant-looking man, while you are" rhe paused for a moment, then added "so different!" as if she had been going to pay something else. The baronet's silence did not en courage her to rrcceed; and as she neared the house Sabina changed the subject by talking about her father and the pleasure that he would feel at meeting Sir Rcydon again. She was not sorry when the journey was over. "It is very hard," she fald to her self, as the was changing her dress for luncheon. "A man who puffers In silence Is rather difficult to deal with; and I wish I knew what has really be come of Lilac. Surely she cannot have married Mowbray, after all!" CHAPTER XXVIH. It did not take Evangeline long to recover from the shock or hearing that Lilac assuredly was to marry Mark Mowbray, end that the Callfor nlan girl felt herself bound In honor not to break oft the engagement which (he had entered into when she felt pure that Roy did not love her. The tone in which Lilac made her an nouncement was sufficient to tell her that all her love was (till Roy's. She put her arm tenderly around the heart broken girl's waist. "You must not aay that It is too late, Lilac, dear," she said gently. "It is not as If you were married already. You must tell Mr. Mowbray everything, and he will release you from your promise. It is not to be thought of that you should ruin your own life and Roy's Just because of a mistake." Lilac sat cold and motionless, a pic ture of atony despair, and did not an swer. "I can ask you now. Lilac, dear," her friend went on, "which of them Is it thst you really love Roy or this Mr. Mowbray, whom you say that you are going to marry tomorrow T" "No, no It Is too late to ask now!" moaned Lilac. Evangeline began to grow Impatient with her. "It is not too late until you are mar ried. You know that it would be wrong of you to marry Mr. Mowbray while your heart was with Roy. I do not bee how he can hesitate. "But I told Mark that it was quite certain that there was no chance of my changing; and he has been very kind to me," said Lilac hopelessly. "Of course he has been kind to you! Nobody could help being that!" said Evangeline, with spirit. "He cannot expect your heart in exchange for a little kindness can he? And, when you told him that you would not change, it was because you were fully per suaded that Roy was going to marry me waBn't it? I do not know how much of your story you have told to Mr. Mowbray." "He knows how much I care for Roy, and he understands why I have prom ised to marry him because he is my only friend in the world and cares for me so much." "Then the case is very simple. Your promise is quite conditional upon Roy's not caring for you, and, since he is really breaking his heart over you, the promise does not hold. Of course, you think that you must make Roy suffer rather than the other. That is the worst of us silly women! We always Jump to the conclusion that the thing is right which costs us most. But, thank heaven, you have a disinterested person to advise you; and I say most decidedly without a shadow of a doubt, tfiat your only right course is to tell Mr. Mowbray that you have made a mis take. I wish that 1 had brought Roy with me to tell you so! He thinks that you fell in love with Mr. Mowbray on the Journey. Men are so blind! And I did not like to suggest the real story until I had made sure that it was the right one. Of course I did not suspect it myself unti! I saw your letter, you silly, foolish darling!" She stooped to kiss the girl's cold cneek; ana, melted by the caress. Lilac burst into tears, and, throwing her arms around Evangeline's neck, sobbed as if her heart would break. For ten. minutes her friend could think of noth ing but soothing her. Then, when at last the overwrought girl grew calmer, Evangeline thought it was time to look for some return for all her exhorta tions. "You will ask Mr. Mowbray to re lease you won't you, Ltiac, dear?" she said gently, as if she were talking to a child; and Lilac nodded. "Go to him now," said Evangeline, who was still rather afraid of her friend's passion for self-sacrifice, and she was sorry to hear that the author was not in the house, and was not expected to return until late in the evening. He had gone up to London to make some necessary arrangements with his publishers be fore leaving England on the morrow for his honeymoon, and it would be several hours before his return. "And the marriage was to take place' tomorrow?" said Evangeline, anxious ly. "Yes at 10 o'clock." "Can I remain here with you until Mr. Mowbray returns?" she asked; and Lilac, well Fleased. agreed. She was afraid of being left alone with her own thoughts. "Come, and I will introduce you to Mrs. Mowbray," she said, rising and leading the way into the room where Mark's mother sat anxiously awaiting the result of the interview, which, from the first moment of hearing Evangel ine's name she had feared boded no, good for her son's happiness. The marks of tears oo Lilae'a face made her more nervous Btill, and there was a pathetic anxiety in her kindly old face as she greeted the heiress and Indorsed Lilac's propoeal that she should stay to dinner. Lilac herself had run away to wash away the tell tale traces of tears, and the old lady seized the opportunity ts question Evangeline. "1 am afraid that you have brought dear Lilac important news. Miss Garth. I see that she has been crying." "For happiness only, I think, Mrs. Mowbray," said Evangeline, whs was too full cf Roy s fate and her hopes and fears on his account to ceaslder the Mowbrays' view of the situation; and she went on to explain with her natural frankneeB. "Lilac has been acting under a false impressioa, and I have fortunately been able ts epea her eyes. You have hear, I believe, that she was engaged to my cousin. Sir Roydon Garth, and came ts Eng land with the view of making the ac quaintance of his friends before their marriage?" "Yes. yes!" said the old lady, too Im patient to listen to the history, with which she was already acquainted. "I hope that you have done nothing to make her regret the step she has taken In engaging herself to my son?" For a few moments Evangelise re flected. "She did not claim to be In love with Mr. Mowbray," she said tentatively; and the old lady answered with a quiv ering voice and an anxiety that touch ed Evangeline more than she cared to admit to herself. "No Lilac was quite honest with Mark; but she has promised to marry him, and if anything makes her draw back r.ow, J am sure that it will break my boy's heart." There were tears In the old lady's eyes as she spoke, and Evangeline felt very uncomfortable. "But you would not like your son to marry Lilac if all her thoughts were centered on somebody else?" she said gently "I am sure that she would love mark In time. She could not help it, because he Is so good, so kind, and he loves her so passionately. He has loved her from the moment that they first met; and when he thought that she was unat tainable he went about like a man who had no hope in life. It made me mis erable; and now. If anything occurs to bar his happiness Just as it seems as sured, I think that it will kill him." To Evangeline's dismay the old lady began to weep. "I cannot tell you how sorry I am to hear that Mr. Mowbray's happiness Is so bound up in Lilac," she said, wip ing the tears from her own eyes, "be cause I am sure that It would not be right for her to marry him, and I can not help telling her so. It would scarcely seem right If my cousin did not care for her; but now that she knows that she made a terrible mis take in believing that he did not cars for her, and that he loves her quits aa passionately and devotedly aa your son can, 1 do not see how she can go on with the marrlsge, or how you caa wish It. It seems as tf either Mr. Mowbrsy or my cousin meat havs bio life'a haplness ruined: im Lilac csr- tftlnly loves my coosta, wjuca all tho dsVeresje." (To bo ooattaaoeV.)