if Mv E v b I who adopted him and he became the- piaymate oi tne governors daugnter Greeba You have been a true wife to me and led a god life said Adam and have holpen me through many trou bles and we have had cheerful hours together despite rpme crosses But Mrs Falrbrother was not to be pacified Then let us not part in anger said Adam and though I will not do your bidding and send away the lad no nor let him go of himself now that for sake of peace he asks it yet to show you that I mean no wrong by my own flesh and blood -this is what T will do I have my few hundreds for my office but all I hold that I can call my own Is Lague Take it it shall be yours for your lifetime and our sons and their Bisters after you At these terms the bad bargain was concluded and Mrs Falrbrother went away to Lague leaving Adam with Michael Sunlocks at government house And the old man being now alone with the lad though his heart never wavered or rued the price he had paid for him often turned yearningly to wards thoughts of his daughter Greeba eo that at length he said speaking of her aa the child he had parted from I can live no longer without my little lass and will go and fetch her Then he wrote to the Duchess at her bouse in London and a few days aft erward he followed his letter He had been a week gone when Mi chael Sunlocks having now the gov ernors routine work to do was sent for out of the riorth of the island to see to the light on the Point of Ayre where there was then no lighthouse but only a flase stuck out from a pole at the end of a standstone jetty a poor proxy involving much risk for ships Two days he was away and returning liome he slept a night at Douglas ris ing at sunrise to make the last stage of his journey to Castletown He was Tiding Goldie the governors little roan the season was spring and the morning fresh from its long draught of dew was sweet and beautiful But Michael Sunlocks rode heavily along for he was troubled by many misgivings He was asking himself for the hundredth time whether it was right of him and a true mans part to suffer himself to stand between Adam Falrbrother and bis family The sad breach being made all that he could do to heal It was to take himself away whether Adam fa vored that course or not And he had concluded that painful as the remedy would be yet he must needs take it and that very speedily when Tie came Tip to the gate of government house and turned Goldie down the path to the left that led to the stables He had not gone far when over the lowing of the cattle in the byres and the steady munching of the sheep on the other side of the hedge and thro the smell of the early grass there came to him the sweetest sounds he had ever beard and some of the queerest and craziest Without knowing what he did or why he did it but -taking him self at his first impulse he drew rein and Goldie came to a stand on the mossgrown pathway Then he knew that two were talking together a little in front of him but partly hidden by a turn of the path and the thick tram mon that bordered it Rising in his stirrups he could see one of them and it was his old friend Chaise AKil ley the carrier a shambling figure in a guernsey and blue seamans cap with tousled hair and a simple vacant face and lagging lower lip but eyes of a strange brightness And Aw yes Chaise was saying hes a big lump of a boy grown and no pride at -all at all and a fine Eng lish tongue at him and clever extraor dinary Him and mes same as broth ers and he was mortal fond to ride my ould donkey when he was a slip of a lad Aw yes him and mes middlin well acquent Then some linnets that were hiding In the trammon began to twitter and what was said next Michael Sunlocks did not catch but only heard the voice that answered old Chaise and that ceemed to make the music -of the birds sound harsh What is he like It is like it is old Chaise said again Aw straight as the backbone of a herrlii and tall and strong and as for a face maybe not a man in the island to hold a candle to him Och no nor a woman -neither saving yourself maybe And aw now the sweet and tidy yert looking this morning anyway as fresh bs the dewdrop my dhree Goldie grew restless began -to paw -the path and twist his round flanks Into the leaves of the tramman and at the next Instant Michael Sunlocks was aware that there was a flutter In front of him and a soft tread on the silent moss and before he could catch ov vVw I H6 Bondmocn a j Cwtliaed 4 3 By HALL CAINS StGF S 1 i f SYNOPSIS Rachel Jorgensen was the only daughter Df the governor of Iceland She fell In love and married an Idler Stephen Orry Her father had other hopes for her and In his anger he disowned her Orry ran away to Of this union a child was born and Rachel called him Jason hen Orry was heard from In the Isle of Ian where he was again married and another son was born Rachel died a heart broken woman but told Jason of his fathers acts Jason swore to kill him and If not him then hla son In the meantime Orry had deserted his ship and sought refuge in the Isle of Man He was sheltered by the governor of the Island Adam Falrbrother Orry went from bad to worse and married a dissolute woman and their child called Michael Sunlocks was born The woman ded and Orry gave Sunlocks to Adam Falrbrother back the lost consciousness of that mo ment a light and slender figure shot out with a rhythm of gentle movement and stood In all Its grace and lovely sweetness two paces beyond the head of his horse Greeba thought Michael Sunlocks and sure enough It was she in the first bloo of her womanhood with gleams of her child face haunting her still and making her womans face lum inous with the dark eyes softened and the dimpled cheeks smoothed out She was bareheaded and the dark fall of her hair was broken over her ears by eddies of wavy curls Her dress was very light and loose and It left the proud lift of her throat bare as well as the tower of her round neck and a hint of the full swell of her bosom In a moment Michael Sunlocks drop ped from his saddle and held out his hand to Greeba afraid to look Into her face as yet and she put out her hand to him and blushed both frightened more than glad He tried to speak but never a word would come and he felt his cheeks burn red But her eyes were shy of his and nothing she saw but the shadow of Michaels tall form above her and a glint of the uncovered shower of fair hair that had made him Sun locks She turned her eyes aside a moment then quickly recovered herself and laughed a little partly to hide her own confusion and partly in joy at the sight of his and all this time he held her hand arrested by a sudden glad ness such as comes with the first sunr shine of spring and the scent of the years first violet There was then the harsh scrape on the path of old Chaise AKilleys feet going off and the spell being broken Greeba was the first to speak You were glad when I went away are you sorry that I have come back again T But his breath was gone and he could not answer so he only laughed and pulled the reins of the horse over its head and walked before it by Greebas side as she turned towards the stable In the cowhouse the kine were lowing over the half -door a calf held out -his red and white head and munched and munched on the wall a peacock was strutting and across the paved yard the two walked together Greeba and Michael Sunlocks softly without words with quick glances and quicker blushes Adam Falrbrother saw them from a window of the house and he said with in himself Now God grant that this may be the end of all partings between them and me That chanced to be the day before Good Friday and it was only three days afterwards that Adam sent for Michael Sunlocks to see him in his room Sunlocks obeyed and found a strange man with the governor The strange man was of more than middle age rough of dress bearded tanned of long flaxen hair an ungainly but colossal creature When they came face to face the face of Michael Sunlocks fell and that of the man lightened visibly That is your son Stephen Orry said old Adam in a voice that trembled and broke And this is your father Michael Sunlocks The Stephen Orry with a depth of languor in his slow gray eyes made one step toward Michael Sunlocks and half opened his arms as if to embrace him But a pitiful look of shame crossed his face at that moment and his arms fell again At the same in stant Michael Sunlocks growing very pale and dizzy drew slightly back and they stood apart with Adam between them He has come for you to go away to his own country Adam said falter ingly It was Easter Day nineteen years after Stephen Orry had fled from Ice land LI iii rt CHAPTER VII THE VOW OF STEPHEN ORRY Stephen Orrys story was soon told He desired that his son being now of an age that suited it should go to the Latin school at Reykjavik to study there under old Bishop Petersen a good man whom all Icelanders venerated and he himself had known from his child hood up He could bear the expense of it and saying so he hung his head a little An Irish brig hailing from Belfast and bound for Reykjavik was to put in at Ramsey on the Saturday following By that brig he wished his son to sail He should be back at the little house in between this and then and he desired to see his son there having something of con sequence to say to him That was all Fumbling- his cap the great creature shambled out and was gone before the others were aware Then Michael Sunlocks declared stout ly that come what might he would not go Why should he Who was this man that he should command his obe dience His father Then what as a father had he done for him Aban doned him to the charity of others What was he One whom he had thought of with shame hoping never to set eyes on his face And now this man this father this thing of shame would have him sacrifice all that was near and dear to him and leave be hind the only one who had been in deed his father and the only place that had been in truth his home But no this base thing he should not do Tet And saying this Michael unlocks tossed his head proudly though there was a great gulp in his throat and his shrill voice had risen to a cry And to all this rush of protest old Adam who had first stared out of the window with a look of sheer bewilder ment and then sat before the fire to smoke trying to smile though his mouth would not bend and to say something more though there seemed nothing to say answered only in a thick under breath He is your father my lad he is your father Hearing this again and again repeat ed even after he had fenced it with many answers Michael Sunlocks sud denly bethought himself of all that had so lately occurred and the idea came to him In the whirl of his stunned senses that perhaps the governor wished him to go now that they could part with out offence or reproach on either side At that bad thought his face fell and though little given to womanj ways he had almost flung himself at old Ad ams feet to pray of him not to send him away whatever happened when all at once he remembered his vow of the morning What had come over him since he made that vow that he was trying to draw back now He thought of Greeba of the governor and again of Greeba Had the coming of Greeba altered all Was it because Greeba was back home that he wished to stay Was it for that the governor wished him to go needing him now no more He did not know he could not think only the hot flames rose to his cheeks and the hot tears to his eyes and he tossed his head again mighty proudly and said as stoutly as ever Very well very well Ill go since you wish it Now old Adam saw but too plainly what mad strife was in the lads heart to be wroth with him for all the Ingrat itude of his thought so his wrinkled face working hard with many passions sorrow and tenderness yearning for the lad and desire to keep him pity for the father robbed of the love of his son who felt an open shame of him the good man twisted about from the fire and said Listen and you shall hear what your father has done for you And then with a brave show of com posure though many a time his old face twitched and his voice faltered and under his bleared spectacles his eyes blinked he told Michael Sunlocks the story of his infancy how his father a rude map little used to ways of ten derness had nursed him when his mother being drunken and without natural feelings had neglected him how his father had tried to carry him away and failed for want of the license allowing them to go how at length in dread of what might come to the child yet loving him fondly he had concluded to kill him and had taken him out to sea in the boat to do it but could not compass it from the terror of the voice that seemed to speak within him and last of all how his father had brought him there to that house not abandon ing him to the charity of others but yielding him up reluctantly and as one who gave away in solemn trust the sole thing he held dear in all the world And pleading in this way for Stephen Orry poor old Adam was tearing at his own heart woefully little wishing that his words would prevail yet urging them the more for the secret hope that in spite of all Michael Sunlocks like the brave lad he was would after all refuse to go But Michael who had lis tened Impatiently at first tramping the room to and fro paused presently and his eyes began to fill and his hands to tremble So that when Adam having ended said Now will you not go to Iceland thinking in his heart that the lad would fling his arms about him and cry No no never never and he himself would answer My boy my boy you shall stay here you shall stay here Michael Sunlocks his heart swelling and his eyes glistening with a great new pride and tenderness said softly Yes yes for a father like that I would cross the world Adam Fairbrother said not a word more He blew out the candle that shone on his face sat down before the fire and through three hours thereafter smoked in silence The next day being Monday Greeba was sent on to Lague that her mother and brothers might see her after her long absence from the island She was to stay there until the Monday follow ing that she might be at Ramsey to bid good bye to Michael Sunlocks on the eve of his departure for Iceland Three days more Michael spent at government house and on the morn ing of Friday being fully ready and his leather trunk gone on before in care of Chaise AKilley who would suffer no one else to carry It he was mounted for his journey on the little roan Goldie when up- came the gov ernor astride his cob Ill just set you as far as Ballasala he said jauntily and they rode away together To be continued EASILY EXPLAINED Pa- Well Whats the difference between wages and salary If a man Is working for 5 a day running a machine of some kind or laying brick or doing something else that makes a white collar and cuffs un comfortable he gets wages Do you understand what I mean Yes sir But if he sits at a desk and useh a pen and gets 11 a week and has soft hands he receives a salary Now do you see the difference Small Boy What do they call a king pa Father His majesty Small Boy Well if they call a king his majesty what do they call an ace J qp - vw r K LADIES COLUMN 1 SWEETHEARTS AND WIVES - f sweethearts were sweethearts always Whether as maid or wife No drop would be half so pleasant In the mingled draught of life But the sweetheart has smiles and blushes When the wife has frowns and sighs And the wifes have a wrathful glitter For the glow of the sweethearts eyes f lovers were lovers always The same to sweetheart and wife Who would change for a future of Eden The joys of this checkered life - But husbands grow grave and silent And care on the anxious brow Jit replaces the sunshine that perished With the words of the marriage vow Happy is he whose swetheart Is wife and sweetheart still Whose voice as of old can charm him Whose kiss as of old can thrill Who has plucked the rose to find ever Its beauty and fragrance Increase as the flush of passion is mellowed In loves unmeasured peace Who sees in the step a lightness Who finds in the form a grace Who reads n unaltered brightness In he witchery of the face Undimmed and unchanged ah happy Is he crowned with such a life Who drinks the wife pledging the sweetheart And toasts in the sweetheart the wife Queerqulll THE BEST WIVES At a recent talk Max ORell gave in England on the women of the world he remarked that he had found only two countries where men were in lead ing strings and women were the lead ersFrance and the United States The lecturer manifested a keen admi ration for the French women who he went on to say under all the varying circumstances of life freely offered her husband advice which he generally took She advised him in money mat ters That was why he retained his money The French woman too al ways remained Interesting She never even wore her hair more than three weeks in the same way She knew that thesame dishes became insipid if eter nally served with the same sauce In business she was her husbands ad viser and shared all his affairs English and American women often did not know their husbands were on the road to ruin or wealth Mr ORell then spoke at length of the American woman In America Mrs Jonathan was a distinct type An American girl from the age of sev enteen had almost every liberty yet American women inspired respect ev erywhere The different positions which women occupied in America as compared with England was due he thought largely to education American boys and girls sat together in the same schools and the girls took a majority of the prizes He also paid a compliment to the chiv alry of American men to the opposite sex which he said he had found in no other country COOKING RECIPES Sour Cream Pie One cupful sugar one cupful of thick sour cream one egg one scant cupful of raisins stoned and cut fine one tablespoonful of vin egar two tablespoonfuls of flour and a pinch of salt mix thoroughly season With nutmeg bake with two crusts same as mince pie Tomato Scallops In making tomato scallops place alternate layers of bread crumbs and tomatoes in a buttered baking tin The tomatoes may be either canned or fresh Sprinkle pieces of butter and salt and pepper over each layer Cover the top with buttered bread crumbs and bake until brown Cucumbers a la Parislenne Pare the cucumbers rather thick and let them lie in ice water Shortly before serving cut lengthwise into four or six por tions according to the size of the cu cumber arrange upon an oblong dish and cover with French dressing Pass with the fish course says Good House keeping Curried Rice Boil one cupful of thor oughly washed rice in two cupfuls of boiling salted water Boll for ten min utes and strain add a teaspoonful of curry powder that has been rubbed smooth In cold water boil the rice thus seasoned in a cupful of stock until ten der Strain place In the center of a platter cover with the liquor and sprin kle with chopped parsley Salad A very pretty form of salad may b6 made by lining a border mould with aspic jelly and then filling it up with finely shred salad lettuce rad ishes cress cucumber or tomatoes well mixed with either a plain French or a mayonnaise dressing pour some liquid aspic over the whole then put it aside till set When firm turn it out into a dish and fill up the center with marin aded lobster or crab piling this well up SHADOW POTATOES - i - Wash and pare potatoes and slice thinly into a bowl of cold water Let stand two hours or over night chang ing the water twice Drain and plunge Into a kettle -of boiling water and boil one minute Again drain them and cool with cold water Take from the water and dry them between towels Then fry in deep fat dry on brown paper and sprinkle with salt Prepared in this way by first boiling they are much more delicious than when fried without boiling It is more work but those who have eaten agree that it is labor well expended FILTERED COFFEE Put one cupful of ground coffee in strainer strainer in coffee pot and pot on range Add gradually six cupfuls of boiling water and allow it to filter For black coffee use three cupfuls of boiling water instead of six and serve without cream 1K EF f FRILLS OF FASHION CTStl A very strong movement Is again be ing made in favor of reviving the wear of the odious hoopsklrt in direct con trast to the present clinging style of dress Squares of oriental cloth make stylish and Inexpensive trimimng for cloth gowns If artistically used In combina tion with gold buttons buckles or braid Velvet flowers and shaded foliage in deep green and also In brilliant autumn leaf effects combined with masses of black ostrich plumes will constitute the leading garnitures on felt and vel vet hats for the autumn and winter sea sons There has arisen a sudden fad for the wearing of bright grass green tulle or grenadine veils They are worn fre quently as a rather conspicuous halo around the hat and are seldom pulled down over the face The upper ends are fastened with a single pin and the lower portion of the veil flutters in the breeze Shirt waists of soft sheer veiling cashmere and wool barege will fill up the interval between the linen and cot ton styles of the summer and the cloth and French flannel waists for cold weather wear These light wool gar ments are of plain fabric or striped or dotted with white red black or blue In several distinct shades The French felt hats for next season are as soft and fine as velvet They are fashioned in many ways some be coming others less so The Ladysmlth and Rough Rider styles are still prom inent Brown grey gold red and black are among the leading colors white felt models being retained to wear until cold weather with costumes of white cloth mohair serge and cashmere Women have revolted from the com monsense shoes to which they went over unreservedly a few seasons ago Even on the golf links this summer a moderately pointed and dainty shoe has appeared more often than the clumping bulldog toed extension soled calf skin shoe of last season The re sult isnt rational but it is becoming and makes the reign of short skirts more endurable from an artistic point of view Picture hats are evidently the ac cepted keynotefor autumn and winter millinery and it is to be hoped that if women will affect picture hats they will take them seriously Such a hat should be made especially for the wearer and every detail of its effect studied with the utmost care The droop of a feather the curve of a line may make all the difference between a ravishingly becoming hat and a fashionably hide ous picture hat and the brim must be bent the trimming adjusted to suit the individual wearers face and head A great deal of the color of pressed sea mosses ferns and flowers just now being used for various decorations on silk and satin sachets cushion covers etc appears to be taken from them during the pressing process A cele brated chemist says that if the sheets of blotting paper used for drying the flowers and mosses are first dipped into a weak solution of oxalic acid and then thoroughly dried before laying the flow ers between them the result will be much more satisfactory TALK ABOUT WOMEN The memory of Miss Mary Kingsley the African traveler is to be comem orated by a Mary Kingsley memorial hospital It is to be used primarily for the treatment of diseases peculiar to the tropics and it will probably be erected In Liverpool Miss Rose Cleveland sister of the ex president is arranging to enjoy her self thoroughly next summer She has purchased a farm at Islesboro Me and Is about to erect there a handsome summer cottage The whole will be one of the finest pieces of property in that section Mrs Clemens plays a very important part in her husbands Mark Twains literary life All that he writes passes under her severe censorship she is the most acute critic and if there is anything in what he has written which does not meet with her entire approval it goes straightway to the waste basket or is held back for revision Mrs Laura A Alderman owns the largest orchard in South Dakota Ac cording to W N Irwin chief of the division of pomology of the department of agriculture in Washington she has near Harley Turner county 150 acres in which are 8000 trees two acres be ing given over to plums Besides the trees there are 1000 currant bushes 1000 gooseberry bushes 500 grape vines and three acres of strawberries A little 13-year-old girl of Canton O named Vera Berliner who was anxious to play her violin before President Mc Kinley stole around to his house one evening while the president and his friends were on the porch and began to play Old Folks at Home Mr Mc Kinley brought her on the porch and had her play several tunes ending with Nearer My God to Thee The child is ambitious to become a great musi cian Mrs Henrietta C Oldberg of Albert Lea Minn has Interested herself for many years in the cultivation of flax and is now at the Paris exposition look ing into this matter Mr Lippon a Belgian manufacturer of linen visited Mrs Oldberg at her home and was much struck with the suitability of the place for manufacturing the flax fiber for linenmakers andThas offered to es tablish a factory there if she will assist him and offers to pay all the expenses of Mr Oldberg and her entire party if she will visit his manufactory and other places in Belgium where liaen is made gi FARM NEWS NOTES RAISING CALVES WITHOUT MIUC The oldest method known of ratals calves without milk and one that practiced with good success at the pres ent day Is by means of hay tea Goo clover hay which has been cut early Is taken cut five eighths of an Iscfe long and boiled for one half hourv Three pounds of hay are allowed fo each calf After the hay Is boiled tb short hay is placed on a wire clotla sieve and strained while the flaxseed and middlings to be mixed with it ar put into the kettle with the hay ex tract and boiled to a jelly Two gal Ions of the tea In which one quarter pound of flaxseed and one-quarter-pound of wheat middlings have beea boiled are given each day to a calf 3d day3 old At the end of 60 days that wheat middlings are Increased to- one half pound per day A bulletin front the Ontario Farmers institute says tha boiling extracts to soluble nutrltivar constituents of the hay and this ex tract contains all the food elements re quired to maice the animal grow and is moreover as digestible as milk Gains per day of two pounds per head and over have been reported in calves upr to two months old that were fed onr the extract of tea flaxseed and mid dlings To insure success however tha hay must be well cured- bright and ot good quality and the tea fed at at temperature of 90 to 92 degrees F Very often the extract Is weak in albuminous and fatty matter on account of being made from late cut or poorly curedt hay or the mistake Is made of adding too much water Under the circum stances It is not surprising If the calves do not make a good healthy growth The hay tea may be fed to calves until they can do without it its place being then taken by pasture or green feed in the pen Some discontinue it when their calves are three months old but continue the oil and bran In a dry state all the summer or these can ba mixed with water If this is considered advisable The steeped hay after tha tea is extracted is greedily eaten by horses and cattle but of course much of its goodness is removed in the boil ing CORN AND HOGS The United States Is the great ho growing country of the world Nar other country dan compare with It la producing healthful pork at so low a cost In producing pork the great es sential is a cheap healthy feed The Amerlcan maize or corn is the basi for the cheap fattening feed in pro ducing pork No other country Is sa situated for producing corn as tha corn belt of the United States Thar great profit with the American farmer is in the use of allt he grass and corn that can be safely done In growing and fattening his animals There are vari ous by products on the farm that In the economy of pig feeding are usefuL Nothing is more so than milk from tha dairy after having the cream separated from it Skim milk and corn meat mixed together is a better feed than either one separate as has been de termined by the experiment stations time and again It would be impossi ble to raise hogs for pork purposes on so extensive a scale as is done in tha United States if it were not for tha great corn fields and Immense crops that can be grown so easily and profit ably Secondly If we did not hava the means of feeding corn It would ba an almost worthless production as tha quantities raised would be so larga there would be no other way to con sume it We are now in shape to- an nually consume a two billion crop ojl corn in the United States DANGEROUS BREEDING One of the tendencies of breeders to day is to produce a fine pedigree A noted name In its pedigree helps to sell an animal if it appears more than onca the pedigree is still stronger and it is an easy course of reasoning to the con clusion that the more times this name appears the better the pedigree henca the more desirable the animalOt course such pedigree building means in-breeding one of the most common sources of disaster to breeders It is true that inbreeding has produced wonderful re sults in the hands of a few masters but it was necessary with them to pro duce their type Nowadays it Is- not necessary Type is not confined txona family or branch of that family it can be had and improved without resort to the dangerous methods of ecrlie breeders Another mistake closely allied to tha above is to give undue importance ta certain strains of blood In Shorthorns for example the presence of Scotch tops has such an Influence that It often sella an inferior animal- for the price ot a good one The buyer of such pays too much for a pedigree that somebody ha3 built he pays too much for family He departs from the rule of Cruick shank himself who founded the useful families now so popular on the best in dividuals he could find regardless otr fashion in their pedigrees He work ed upon the principle that the surest indication of good breeding is a good individual The individual was the im portant thing with him and it should be with all breeders then the fancier the pedigree the better A FUTURE MARKET It is a very common thin for South American buyers to figure in British auctions of pure bred stock and has been for a number of years At same time there are no buyers for South America at American sales Tha reason is very clear and it lies wholly- In lack of transportation facilities When the difficulty of shipment Is over come American breeders should find au good market for pure bred stock in th southern continent - J s82 i - sgr rrrss T