, ,.-, - - f.p,.., m nummigtyiapy w " , -v rH' (JLOUD NfiUKABKA CHlr. HBrtm mMVtlRHFWMM jjwii iiuiiiiiLjMiMiiiiii.T-iwnarjjjUilitjiiuuJLi-mjwwiTiw)yi M'u.'ig W'ifiijw ft K Bran Cookie Rccipo From Chef of Note Hubert Vn der Broeck w Hubert Van dcr Brooek, suncr- rising pastry chof of the Hotel Slatler, nt Buffalo, has (Uncovered way to mnko brnn cookies, and lo in ratiier proud of his achieve ment The ingredients are one-half cup brown sugar, one-half ,cup butter, ne heaping teaspoon ground cinna mon, one-half cup Sultana raisins, one-half eup-chopped walnut meats, two cups flour, ono level teaspoon baking soda, one heaping teaspoon lking powder, two and one-half iaps of brnn, ono egg and one-half rap water. Beat sugar and butter to a r -cream ; add egg and beat well ; acid water, mixed with baking soda and Hour, Hifted with baking powder; then add the other ingredients and snix thoroughly. .Drop by teaspnon iuls on greascu baking 'sheet and lake in a moderate oven. Sujlleiunt for thirty cookies. ...,. lt-s IIUII .1 I'll, l' I' '. ! birds, minnlcd In- i,. 't.vi ii,,. she stitrteil mil in i.ic Sue . . biterc-dcil In iiiiMs ;dlc M-U'iin pi pared bird fond In in it in niiilinii herself while Art vyiis rl ill n liccknmu Aluse, with nothing Milwtiinilnl. inn s llniinciul standpoint. In Iiit lurin palm. The hints were so fiiHcliniilii that Miss I'npe decided in devote hci self to feathered friends uml let Ar drift on over the mountains. 10k chance. Abnormality In Mankind, ftegnrdless of whether "genius Is to mudnoss close allied," eccentricities tie- doubt could he, round In all great' men Hut If the truth wero known would not soinnlhlng Just u trifle abnormal ho discovered In everybody? Is It not too much to expect that the drain (mould always be well balanced under the terrlllc strain to which modem coudltioiiB of life subject It? What n- dull plnce the worbl would he If overybody ulwnys did tbo convcntlono. thing I 10xclmrir J Cosmic Dust. ft bus been only lately discovered that cosmic dust forms layers nl the li'nttom of the deepest seas. Between Honolulu and Tahiti, nt a depth of 20 fathoms over two miles nnd o lHir a vast layer of this ninterlnl ex Hjttt,. MICK1E SAYS fTMESSK, OUR u- MUYMS ARE CjffSW KC Gvnwtf fll).f6t I HOU'D BE S'PWSEO WOVJ (QUWKUS 'M CUEMV M VOW NU. K WOVJE, RV40 tOST KDNN, BOM & O&ED GA. OR cngage a uouse VAMO NMH AU'UAO'. ViO OOKNsV'.VfcVJOOLOl VJMtf A.DS lap ftticUM I owe' Tbe Martin of Safety Is represented by the amount of 1 Insurance you carry. Don't Hill yourself into h fancied Security, j Because Are has never touched you ' It .l..n,.l T.II iIm.i ... ,l..l j ikuuvnu tiuiiun i lint nil 11 llllllllliu J Tomorrow -no today, if yon have time and ycyi better find time conio to the oflieo and we'll wrlto n policy on your house, furniture, : ; stare or morohaudiso. '' IjATbu may he too late- JO. C. TEEL Rleilacble Insura.rvce (1 iS& I I " WWHftl ) WHO'S WHO Dy MARTHA EATON I by McCturv Nowiiiinper HyuJIcale.) .lohn 'entworth was in confusion. For three months n widow with two cluirinlng daitglilers had occupied Hum bler col luge, the grounds of which ad joined his eftlntc. Conservative, Hear ing middle age, Wentworth was mak ing his maiden voyage upon the sen of romance. The daughters wero twins, hence his confusion. , Kqunlly charming, they made equal Jippeul (o his old-school cbly.alrj;. One girl was so Identically the embodiment of the other that Wentwortli became puzzled ns to which' he tdiould offer marriage. At taut something happened which promised to-ald him In his decision. In the Into jwlllght, as he sauntered through his orchard, ho saw a familiar figure hurrying along the footpath which led from Humbler cottage across the meadow skirting the lower or chard. It was one of the twins, curry ing n bucket of "goodies" to lame Mrs. Hrode. Thereafter Wentworth strolled In the orchard every evening, and every evening a familiar figure hurried across the meadow with a laden bas ket. Wentworth let his derision fall upon this twin, thoughtful and unselfish, do ing errands of mercy In' the dim of twilight. She wns the girl for him; but the question arose as lo which of the two she was. Not such a simple mat ter to learn ns It had llrst appeared to be. On two evenings Wentwortli Inler ceptod Mies Twin In the pathway. On the first evening he said: "Oood eve ning, Miss I.uclle," to which she re plied: "(tooil evening, Mr. Wentworth." On the second evening he fld r ''Oooil evening. Mls LouNe," to .winch Ihe young lady replied: "(inodov'&hife.Mr. Wentwortli." I Was It MM I.uclle one evening and Miss LouNe the next, or was It MM Lticlle every evening, or Miss Louise every evening? "She doein'l wish to be considered more praiseworthy Hutu her sister." On the day following the sixth eve ning, Wentworth called on Mrs. Uroile. "Blessed If I know whether she's Miss Luclle or Miss Louise. I only know she Is nn angel. I afckcd her once which one who was, and she said: 'Oh, never mind, Mother Brode, I'm Just Miss Hnmbler,' so, you see, I can't tell you, Mr. Wentwortli." . On the seventh evening Wentworth cnlled nt Humbler cottage nt about the time when he thought Miss Twin would be on ier mission. He was received by Miss Luetic nnd her mother only. So (he mutter was settled at last; in' morrow he would seek the hand of Miss Louise, the little klnd-henrted masquer uder. But no. In n very few mo ments Mlsa Louise appeared too, and both girls vied lo give him u pleasant evening. John Wentworth was Mill In confu sion. On the eighth evening Wentworth, near desperation, again paced In his orchard and iigaln saw the familiar fig ure hklpplng across the meadow. The girl glanced In his direction and then went on so hastily that her sunbonnet wns caught In a low-hanging bough. Wentworth saw her disentangle a strand of hair. After she hud been some time gone Wentworth went to tho offending bough and broke a twig which was bound with hnlr. He now held the solution of his dllllcully securely In his hund. To morrow's sunlight would tell the tale. Miss Luclle's hnlr was brown and was lighted with -gold by the sun; MM Louise's hnlr wns brown also, but un touched by gold. Alas! morning brought frustration. The sun shone bright, to be sure. It lingered on the hulr-euglrdled twig In Wentworth's hand; but the hnlr was neither gold nor brown. It was red, red, Iti:L. Wentworth worl.cd on a mental prob lem during tliut morning, and Inter went to Mrs. Hrnde's cottage. From questioning her he wns able to arrive nt a pretty dellnlle conclusion regard ing thu owner of the red hntr. lie learned that the widow wns In strait encd circumstances, and that she kept but one servant, a cook, who was tidy, quiet and never wenl out. On the ninth evening, .rather lale, Wentworth walked back and forth by Hnmbler cottage and saw through un shuttered windows the widow, the twins and a red-haired girl. By and by be rang the widow's doorbell, The twlnp greeted him effusively, while their mother, In evident confusion, pre sented him to her of the auburn hair, "My daughter, Lois. She bus Just come from Detroit." Wentwortli spent a wonderful eve ning, eating delicious little cakes which the twins MTved, and watching red linjied Lois. Yes, he could readily see lunv one of her uiim'IIIsIi mil lire might easily jbe persuaded to stay 'in the kitchen, and cook, so that the more at tractive Msters might keep up uppeur nnces nnd secure u wealthy husband. Lois' jijcrry eyes were- on him and he uto the lust cake. "Mrs. Humbler, I huve loved one of your (laughters for u long time." Went worth's eye- glanced upon Luclle ivnd Louise. Until joung ladles were ros unit expectant, find more so when Wentworth continued: "Now 1 am going lo take- my right nnd kM her." "V .ir i. Kid. my dear Mr. Went worth?" breathed the widow. "Yes, l'o eaten the last cake and I muy klbS the cool,," And he did, on the red hair. SIGHT THAT IS MARVELOUS , Tower of Vision of Sorio of the Small est of Nature's Creatures Far Above Mankind's. Bees, humming birds, and other hone; bounds detect pollen dcpolts not 1 sense of smell or even by Instinct, but by ti innrveloiisly perfected sense ol hlght, which "imblcs them to differ ent lute between color variation (nil nllely too llnu for pcrecptlrtn by hu man vision, according to Piof. Frank K. I.utz and F. K, HIchtnieycr, who rend papers on the pollination of flow ers by Insects before the American Academy of Science at Pittsburgh re cently. In order to minimize the po-odhility of hybrid plant development through 'the pollination of two unrelated plunt species, nature has provided line grudu tlons of color lmp"rceptible to the ha muli eye, but readily discernible to In sects, according to the new theory. Na ture ulso bus developed In different representatives of each species of bird and Insect tin individual fondness fot u given color gnulnllon. When a bee, for example, .stalls out on his dully routine ue visits only such flowers iih nppcal to hN Individual color tastes. In this iimmier he pollinates only such flowers iS are Identical with each other both as to species mid us to ex act color grad:ill n. Occasionally alter u family row, or an tiuiiiiul election, sin Irresponsible bee or bee-ess i,-ty run wild ninonc nil sorts of ri.lnih and conditions of plunts, iiicnb. phiylng hob with na ture, and cii-nil ;: anything from a sunflower villi imn.v petals to a (louble-joiuii (I ; i rill. Such hybrid creations, nn- c: i cd imitations, aml frcqitciillv they are the basis for a j new spet leu. However, such things rarely happen, lues heli g, on ti- whole, rnther me-i thodlenl mid reliable Individuals. 1 1 1 1 1 there ihi'i unyihlig to be done about ! It. uiijvMiy. Insult to Injury. Tin- Tr.-VX net In. In accordance .to one of tin." InoNpllc.iMc rules which Inexplicably govern n ! I lute commut ers' trains, stopped Jim outside the terminal, and several hundred return ing suburbanite- sighed wearily, foi they were hungr.v Time passed uml the .":i:t made no movement'. The sighs of hunger In creased. Then, as though the malevolent rail road uic-'i had planned It, along came an Omiiha-boiiiiil train and stopped on the next track. Thus It wns that hi three couches the returning suburban lies, crowded and Jammed Into their straight-bucked seats or standing., were awarded- the view of travelers who lounged comfortably in parlor car and In elaborately appointed smokers-. . . , ,' In the fourth coach matters were even worse opposite , it the (Uuing ear bad pulled up. A julscruble qtiur-ler-hoiir it wns when the hungry com muters, already late for dinner, strove to keep their eyes and thoughts from the smooth, sleek goers west, who con sunieil warm, fragrant dishes n few feet n way. Chlcatrn Post. Odd Foims of Rent. A quaint survival from the early Thirteenth ivniiir.v was witnessed at the Law Cnris- In London, Hug., re cently, when the city solicitor nnd the secondary m-ide their annual attend ance iiefore the king's rememhraucer to render rent service on behalf of the oily corporation for two properties at one time held under the crown. For the llrst of iIicm', described as a piece of wasio In-d called the Moors, In the county of Salop, hut long since out nf the possession of the corpor ation, ihe city solicitor cut one faggot with a hatchet and another with a bill hook, and for the second, a tenement called the Forge. In the piti-lsli of St. rieuieiit I lanes which was pulled down by a mob In the reign of lltch urd II, and never restored, llu' city so licitor counted out six hoichocs and 01 nulls. Childish. The Woman win lo see some chil dren who were hi the hospital In u in or purl of the illy. When she went in there was undue excitement. "Say, ma'aiii, you came In a taxi, didn't you?" "No," the Woman said. "I didn't." There was evident surprise nndSlls appointment. "We saw a taxi outMde .linimle did his bed's near the window and when you come In then we snbl we knew'd you'd come In It. There ain't been anyone come In a taxi." And the Woman decided the next time she would drive up In a taxi If there wns so much prestige iittnched. New York Sun. Air Service Over English Channel. For Ihe first time In history, more Hum 1,000 people have crossed the Kngllsh channel by air In one week. The total number of passengers uml crew on the continental airplanes from August t-l to i0 was 1,07(1. of whom 7!U were pujlng passengers, the re iniilnier being crew. These people wore carried In 'JMl machines, the British ships carrying O'-'O passengers In 17.1 machines against 7'-' foreign ma chines which carried 1 1 1 passengers. Mob Price for a Tiny Skin. Russian sables are Hie best se'm for many yea's, prices for the skin of n sluglo member of this .-.mull species of tho weasel trlbu varying from sum) to "?"(, but Ihe com of a con! would bo ilia .vio,i'''i upward. Nutria fun ob tained from llio M:!ti r ihe coyptm nit, a native ,' ;.i- -.1 i. .ie Argentine, :;ro plenUfi i .i'iI.i- ,o p ,,,i,. t-u tTlnnntn;s f vol.ui, oiia, etc, rpwswsss5ft5 i HER STORY By MARGARET A. SWEENEY ( by McCluro Nownpapor Hyiiillcatc.) One night In lute December a snap ping cold night In 1018 Mrs. I Inland told this story thnt I am about to re peat. I'hoehe Unbind, my husband's aunt, was then about seventy, a sin cerely pious woman who wns tempo rarily making her home with us while her two sons, both surgeons, were overseas with tho Yankeo division. My husband hnd Just finished rend ing aloud a newspaper article about n house in our neighborhood thut wns supposed to be haunted. The urtlcle gave the history of tho house nnd a list of Its former owners, wluT had found It advisable to sell the plnco soon aTter moving In. The Inst ovvnc'r had bought the place for almost nothing, and after n .week's trial he, too, movetrout, and told the world, through the newspapers, that ho would have the place torn down In the spring. "That ghost talk Is nil bosh," my husbrnd declared. "A house gets a name for being haunled, and then everyone thnt moves Into It Is on the lookout for spooks nnd nnd their lmuglnntlon does the rest." The newspaper fluttered, and we, Mrs. Unbind and I, continued with our knitting and wolfed to henr some more news. Then Mrs. Ilaland looked at me. over the top of her steel rimmed spectacles and said: "A good deal ol It Is both, no doubt, but there nre, 1 am sure, troubled souls that for one reason or another return uml make themselves seen or fell." Mrs. I Inland put down her knitting, and lu'r serious, kindly old eyes nar rowed and she loo's a long look into the face of Time before she spoke. ' "It will be "u curs next May May 10 since I was married," she begun, "and we started housekeeping In u little house that Is still standing In a Miuill village a mile oi two beyond Hurl ford. Conn. My nearest neighbor was ii Mrs. Wright, nnd fdie called up- n us almost as soon ns we were set tled. "She was u tall, thin woman, and 1 leiiieniber well the huff-colored chnllle dress with little blue tlowors In It that she wore that day. She had her little girl with her a sturdj child of six or seven, her black hnlr braided In two stiff braids: that hung down her little square back. "I was twenty then," she continued, "and I think jthnt Mrs. Wright was about thirty-eight she was Just forty when she died, and we bad been neigh-, hors for two years. ,n thnt time' i had" lenrned to lovo Mr(s. Wright sV vViifrllko n mother tojiio. She wns not h well woman sotne heart affection nnd her husband was. a drinking man. She shielded him all she, coujd. She was too proud to let the "neighbors know that he hnd at times beaten her and bis little daughter. - "She was not long III a few days, and I was In and out all the time, and not once did she complain. Bessie, her little girl, seldom left the Tiedsldc, but that last day, when the child was out of hearing, Mrs. Wright -said to mo, 'I I don't mind It nl all only for Bessie my poor Bessie!' It wns hav ing to leave Bessie that troubled her. "When It was all over the husband disappeared no ono knew where, so I took Bessie home with me, nnd for n week I tried hard to lessen the grief In the childish heart. Then one eve ning, ns I was about to send Bessie to bed, her father came In swaggered In without knocking growling nnd wild-eyed. Bessie at my knee, repent ing the Lord's prayer, burled her face hi my lap and I, felt her little body quiver. He wanted Bessie to come right home he guessed he had 'a right to his own daughter.' "Well, ho took Bessie took her screaming drugging her along. I could not reason with him nnd my husband hud gone on some business to Hartford. My Instinct wns to follow Bessie, but I was afraid of this mini, and ns 1 stood there In the kitchen, near the open door, prnylug thut my hiisbniu! would come soon, Mrs. Wright wnlked In. . "I saw her as plain ns I see you now. She wore her buff-colored dress with the little blue flowers In It, and she looked neither (o the right nor left, Just passed mo ns If J ware a piece of furniture, anil w'alkpd strtilght Into my bedroom. "Something the mystery, the awe of It overwhelmed me and brought me to my knees, nnd then suddenly I arose and ran out of the house nnd up the road toward that man Wright's, "When nearlng the bouse 1 could hear Bessie still crying, and I went In I went In as brave as a lioness defending her cub. uml I faced him and I shouted at him thnt my husband nnd all the men In town were mixing tar and getting fenlhers, nnd that If he wanted to save himself bo hnd bet ter clear out. "I think It must huve sobered him, for he ran so fast, and till this dit.v I don't know uimt made me tell him such n n terrible He It Just popped Into my head, "I took Bessie home ngnln with me, mil I wtss s ;rc- :.ui heyond the shadow of a doubt that the troubled soul of Mrs. Wright bad found pence.!' RecordJJimlor Prosecutions. The record o,1 hnving prosecuted more murdcieiM than uny other man living belmiif n Sir llnrrj Poland London's ol'le i Imri Inter, vho lo now In his nl' et tb tu ,v..n', aid bus been produced li. thu li.-i twuMj'sIx .vears SHOWS SUPREMACY OF MAN Single Dlast of Dynamite Has Power to Destroy What Nature Took Centuries to Build. The next time you puss one of tho .'xcavutlons thut nre being made In thu solid rock here, there and every-1 where In New York these days fori foundations of new buildings, stop, I look and wonder, says the New York Sun. Kvery foot of rock that Is de stroyed by these workers with pick i and steam shovel, drill nnd dynamite, I nature spent u hundred years to muke. For stratified rock forms ut the into of about one foot In n century. So I it follows that If you see nn excava tion through stratified rock ;il) feet deep tills means that within u few weeks' time .'1,000 years of nature's 'labor has been -destroyed through the' brain nnd brawn of mnn. - ' This Is one thing to wonder over when looking ut such nn excavation. But It Is not nil. When this rock wns being formed man had not appeared on the earth. Yet the earth In those dim ages of the past teemed with living creatures. Creatures that, through the passing of untold millions of years, developed from weuk Invertebrates Into huge, weird monsters unlike anything known today. They ruled the earth, the air and the water. And part of their do minion was this region of New York where man's dominion Is now su preme. Some of these dentures us ihey walked over this region, stepped Into shallow water nnd left the Imprint of I heir footstep- In the mud, which, us If burdened Into rock preserved the Im print, a perfect outline on the sur face nf the stone. Others, sinking to the bottom of deeper water thut wns I hen where Is now dry land, were hurled In the mud. As this mud turned In lock, their bones fossilised Into the water from the 'and and Ihe streams, settled to the bottom and, In Its turn, was Imi'deneil Into tone. And so, layer -ii layer, ihe rock was formed, miles in deplh. A't Ir rot-mod It lm-piis-uiied and turned to fossils the bones of ninny it bizarre creature thut no man ever saw, but whose likeness uml history muy be found hi these lecords of si one. A bins! of dynamite! The rock falls shuttered. Men lift the pieces Into contulners. The great cranes, ns by miigic, lift the containers nnd dump the cimtenls Into the wngons waiting above. Who cures If the work of 110 centuries Is destroyed? Soon this great hole will he the basement of a skyscraper. U will be filled, nil day and every day with men currying on their busy hustling activities with no thought of the strange.anlmuls that mndn this very spot their home mil lions of years gone by. ti ; 'hi ( Pulverized Coal. With the commerchil advent of pult verfcuil coal many engineers who mnde preliminary tests .with the sub stance drew conclusions that t would never become an Important fuctqr In power development. At that time, the remarkable ability of the Internal combustion engine became known nnd coul-powcr engines, ns a whole, were given but a short period of life. In vestigations have proved, however, that conl as a power factor will live for many years to come, ut least In this country, ns the United States con tulns more than half the available coal deposits of the world. Pulverized coal has one decided ad vantageIt burns almost smokelessly. Injecting the pulverized material Into the. furnace Is accomplished by much simpler menus ulso than with lump coal. Boiler repairs are less frequent In factories using pulverized coal than In those employing lump conl. Advcrtiting. Advertising bus become such a mon umental feature of newspapers today, that It Is souuswiint refreshing to see how tiUHiphlstlcutcd appear the ad vertising at tempts of a couple of cen turies ago. The following Is taken from a copy of the American Weekly Mercury, dated November 'JO, 17: "Whereas, Mtithow Btirne of Ches ter county served John Cnnim two years (thut N, to or 1- months), at slocking weaving and other work, dur ing which time John Cumin's stock ings bore many reflections, and now the said Mathew Burno goes about selling stockings In John Cumin's name, ns tho they were his make, which Is false and not true." It Is sincerely to be hoped that "said Mathew Burne" felt thnl he got his money's worth from the Insertion of this notice. -s Plantigrade. Interesting Is the origin of the word "plantigrade," frequently used In the science of zoning v. Its classic origin Is the l.alln "pluiitu," the sole of the foot, and "gradus," meaning u step. The species homo, with the excep tion of the man with ti broken Instep, ' t not, however, properly speaking, a plantigrade, because he does not walk on the entire, or nearly the entire, sole of his fool. TIip high Instep saves men from be ing designated us plantigrade, Chi cago .Joiiniul. Suspected. The general manager entered the president's olllce, mysteriously. "Thnt new assistant to the superin tendent," he said, "reports every morn ing on time, works hard all day, never flirts with the stenographer, attends strictly to busbies and Is tbo .lust to leave at night." The president turned whlto and tiembled. "It Is as I expected 1" he exclaimed. "A detective." New York World. I KWA81ND I , i ; j By RUDY H. MARTYN : ( by Mcl'luro Neuupmiur Synllca(e.) WVVrf Hoscmiiry flushed nnd stnmmered over the contents of the purcel which hnd come by mull; the stout little box nnd tissue paper wrappings had en folded a shining new, nickeled key. Lest anyone should nsk silly questions nhout It, she dropped the key Into her pocket ami tho papers on u blazing stick In the kitchen range. And situ wns nngry all over ngnln with Hen Buker. "What mi old stlck-ln-thc-mud," she scorned. "I suppose he's up to somo stunt with this key nnd thinks he's being funny I Well, what ho gets Is a freeze tight." Illness nnd n lean purse hnd driven Hoscmury to vncatlon nt her uncle's farm on the Hockdnlo road. At the end of a previous summering there she had vowed never ngnln to set , foot In the remote vicinity of Hen Baker, whose folks owned n farm out Hnld Putc mountalnvvny, nnd with whom she had found cause for quarrel nfter u true-swcetheartlng season. Now time nnd physical wenkness nnd hunger for the rent outdoors bad modified Hosemnry's former decision to deny herself the hospitality of her uncle's home. By cross cuts it wns fully two miles from here to the Baker place nnd more than twice that distance over the tortuous, sldehlll ronds. As her strength returned Hosemnry roamed further uml further from the farmhouse. When the chance Item In a local paper informed her thnt Ben , Baker was away on business, she de- , tennlneil to venture n day In the woods beyond the pasture. As Hosemnry went along the wood , path that- sunny morning she found the woods amazingly trnnM'orineil. The . trees mound the furmhousc hnd been so well trimmed that she bad not cor- rectly e.stlninted what damage the sleet ami Ice storm of the previous winter hud wrought. Kvon here In the woods verdure coveied Its row naked ness, and the fresh sap color of the broken limbs bud weathered. But every tree guvo its own mute slgnul of devastation. Hosemnry roamed on nnd on, marvelling nt the ruins. She remembered what Hen used to tell her nhout the winter storms uml knew thut n glunt umong them must hnvc been this- way. , Ho) quoted Hiawatha: Ami whenever UivoukIi the forest KukciI and roared the wintry tempest. Ami the branches, tossed and troubled, Creaked and groaned and split asunder. "ICvvnslndl" cried they, "that is Kwastnd! He Is feathering In his 11 re wood I" And for n fancy she bad remem 'tiered her "Hlnwath'a" and called hlnj ' "Kwaslnd." "For his strength allied to goodness." -Curiosity drew Hosemnry on tovvnrd the oak knoll where thpy, had often kept tryst together. And when the path opened abend she stopped In amazement. The oaks hnd been sawed off, chopplng-block high ; only one hnd been trimmed and left to cast its shade on the red roof of n bonrded cabin. The foundation was of native stones and a trail of stepping stones wound from her feet to the beautifully grained oak door. It was the material ization of what Ben and she bail imnglned for 'themselves right here. For the first (line some special sig nificance of the key In her pocket dawned upon Hosemnry. Did it fit this door? She skipped along the step ping stones and turned It In the lock. - A staunch work bench occupied one end of the Interior, and a half-finished piece of furniture stood beside it. The other end hud u wide stone henrth, flnnked by settles of the snme beauti fully grained plunk that hnd fashioned the door. Wrought Iron dogs, piled with kindling, stood below the yuvvn Ing mouth of the chimney. And because, In the midst of her spirit of mischief, Hosemnry felt u sweet possession of the plnce, she touched n lighted match to the kindling nnd watched It burn. And the corner .of the settle where she curled herself wns so comfortnblo that she hadn't moved when ashes be gun to gray over the smoldering em bers. A quick step on tho threshold startled her to her feet. '"I saw the smoke, Hosema.ry, nnd 'twns to me the sign thnt you'd qomel You enn't guess how I'vo wnt,ched for smoke from thnt chimney. Sure nnd certain, I built the cabin for you nnd me I Sure and certain, ,I'm .nn ,ohl stlck-ln-thc-mud that doesn't-iwdnt 'any girl but you 1" said Ben Buker., , Rosemary gripped the settle bnck. How splendid he was I And full of purpose I He must never know how silly she had been I "I was Just thinking this plnce was ready for the touches of a1 woman's hand," she admitted. "Your linnd," corrected Ben Baker, specializing her generality. "My hund, then, KwnsInUI" ngreed Hosemnry, . . "Don't ever let mo fly off the handle ngnln, denr." ho said, contritely.- "Keep mo Kwuslnd, mid vvrlto It large when I get heady: ' i Straight between is lies tho pathway, Never kiowh the m.wj upon tt; HhiKhif,' lilrila, thut utter fnlHohoodu, Story-tellers, mlst'lilcf-maUers, Find no cutter ear to llston, Cannot breed Ill-will between imi For vvo keen each othor's caunnel, Spcnk With nuliod hearts togother." Worth Considering. "When vvo lone ono portion of Hit body others become more active." "Well, Ii 1 thought it would help my brains tiny I might chop off u log." 0 S Vfr 4 '"-V tr i- irr