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Show - I I GIANTS, OF E Af RICA. Strange Race Met on Southern Shot ' Ht'r are ro&es for a rose Fragrance for the fair. For the soft noontide bosom And thy twilight hair each pleading petal tell mjr paMon s woe; t rash mv Fiii)oii tounera To thy heart of snow. Crush them down with thy sweet kisses Down to diowsy death, Make thoir puie souls Immortal With thy hoh breath. Robert Lovem&n in The Gates of SI r AH f of Great Lake. who traversed Africa along its whole length, from the Cape to Cairo met with a strange race on the southern shore (Special Correspondence ) of Albert Edward Njanza. These fearThe composer, Wolfgang Amadeus ful experiences for the boy. Fame and some, ape-likcreatures, hiding b Mozart, was born In Salzburg, Jan glory abounded. In Milan he receivhind banana palms, are tall men. Site for the Apple Orchard. 27, 175H His father, Iopold Mozart, ed an order for an opera, and accomThe Roots of Legumes. with long arms and pendant paunches. was capellnieister in the sen-teThe site for the orchard should genof plished his work very satisfactorily il Recently In walking through a field Such Is the stamp of the brute oa one of the archbishops In Mobe on Illinois 15 roots a at with Professor Hopkins, erally Leopold slope, so that the years of age! them that thev may be placed lower of zart and his wife were spoken of as the trees shall not stand in the In the scale than any other African In Rome the Pope, Clement XIV., that gentleman remarked that the the handsomest couple in Salzburg conferred upon him the order of the roots of leguminous plants differed water. It is an old sa)ing that the native hitherto seen. Their face, body And we know from the portraits the Golden feet of the apple tree must not be In and limbs are covered with wiry hair, very greatly as to their value when Spur, a very high compliment, An while the hang of the long, powerful strange and fascinating beauty in the and thus the boy of 14 wore the title turned under, on hccouut principally the wet or it will not do well. face of Wolfirpng Mozart of the differences In tlieir volumes. exception may be made to this rule arms, the Therefore of Chevalier Mozart slight stoop of the trunk, is his memorj leterenced for for the territory known as the arid and the hunted, is contraiy to popular impresvacant expression of From one of his fathers letters we This his sweetness and love of humanity; sion. The Idea has been that all belt, as the water in the soil there In the face make them appear more like in while Rome learn that Mozart heard his testimony of vast genius. leguminous plants had large roota that never enough naturally to damage the apes than human beings. ,, , famoua Miserere the by Allegri sung From his earliest childhood Mozart Opplied a considerable amount of trees, and where Irrigation Is pracNorthwards, near Lado, tbe same in the Sistine chapel, and the renderto the soil when turned under. ticed both the water supply and the utter party came across the Dinkas, a race ing made so deep an impression upon professor had in mind the con- drainage are under control. If for of giants, standing six feet six inches the lad that on reaching home he The trast between the cow pea and red any reason a level piece of land has to seven feet in height, and magnifiwrote down from memory every bar to be selected It must be well drained of the mus.c a great work, which clover. The roots ot the red clover cently developed; and In the adjoinIf mubidans were forbidden to copy any contain three times as much mauuriali of It is In a humid region. A neglect ing Toroland which swarmed with eleralue as do the roots of cow peas, this important point often means phants of gigantic size, the natives part of. Last winter we published a number failure, and there are thousands of were simply stark-nakesavages of At 16 the city of Munich gave the it articles on the value ot the cow unprofitable orchards today standing Inexpressible degradation ot oung composer an order to write an 'lorn that turnip for fertilizing the soil, at with their feet In soil so opera, and the work was a great sue least so far as the adding to the soil they can never give a good account of cess. The archbishop of Salzburg emof vegetable matter Is concerned. Cow themselves. Lighting Fires With Sticks. ployed him now as concert master. horn In some cases drainage U natural, It is a matter ot historic fact that turnips do not belong to the Tne salary was 6mall and the archthe soil being underlaid legumes, but it will be easily undera stratum the Indians lighted their fires by rubbishop not only exacting but jealous stood why some of our farmers think of gravel that carries offby the water bing two sticks together. For most of the young man's success. So those so well of them for plowing under Of course this Is the best possible areara under Jerome, the archbishop, when we say that over forty per cent rangement and caunot be equalled by were hard ones. , of the manurial value In the cow horn anything that man can do. We have When Mozart was 20 he and his turnip is In the roots. seen orchards on elopes and ,yet on mother went to Paris (he having left With moot other plants It is far dif ground that was top wet for the best of the service the archbishop), where ferent, the great bulk of the fertility results, no matter how well drained. Frau Mozart was taken ill suddenly being in the tops. With alfalfa even, Even though the land be a slope if end died. Paris now seemed so hor deep rooter aB it Is, we find the value the surface Is not more than three or itble to the young man that he left of fertility in the roots to be only 40 four feet above a pond level the water the city and returned to Munich, per cent of the whole, or thereabout will be constantly drawn up through where he wrote his opera Tdomeneo, Of course proportion w ill differ as the the soli In such quantities that the is extremely difficult. which met with great success , crops differ in volume and the kinds root of the trees will not be able to people the trick Birthplace of Mozart. It not Impossible. Two of the methAs a child of fertility In the soil. In a rough get the amount of air they need. At 26 Mozart married Constance loved music passionately. The higher the hill, within a rea- ods actually employed by the Indians at play he was fond of musical games, Weber, and, like the people in the way we may say that about 30 per are a and always happy if some one would story books, they lived happily ever cent of the manurial value In the red sonable limit, the better, as the air are Illustrated herewith. There ot methods of holding tbe two play for the children In all their after until the too soon ending of the clover plant is found In the roots. It drainage will be better. This may variety will be seen, while the trick it interesting to note the great dif- seem a small matter,1 but It not Infre- sticks, It games. His sense of hearing was ex- life of this wonderful man. Is one anyone may do with practice. , to was detect able He ference In clover ot red value between traordinary. The writing of the Marriage quently happens that killing frosts , the difference of an eighth note In the Figaro and "Don Giovanni followed and crimson clover, as to the roots come in the valleys when they do not Ancient 8anctuary Chair. sounds small and tuning of a violin; bis marriage, and in these operas we The latter named plant has only about touch the trees on the tops or sides The sanctuary chair at Hexham. were to him anno lng although many find the strongest music Mozart had five per cent of Its manurial value In of hills. The critical time Is when the times these same noises were unno- written up to this time. The operas at the roots. Not knowing this, doubt- blossoms are out in the spring. In Eng., is best known as the Frld or Loud noises once made a marvelous success, and less a good many men have raised the lower places the frostB catch and Freld stool, and has been at Hexham ticed by other people were a source of absolute torture to gained at a jump a place in the world crops of crimson clover and plowed destroy the blossoms, while on the since SL Wilfrid built tbe abbey, , about 680 A. D. him. that they have always kept. The Em- under the roots with the impression higher places they do not touch It wag the center of the sanctuary, 5 At the age of years, Mozarts peror at this time appointed Mozart that they were Increasing the manu- them hard enough to be deadly. It skill upon the harpsichord was very court composer. Then came the "Magic rial value of their land. In the case Is sometimes only the difference of a which extended a mile in every direcCrosses marked the unusual But the little lad's shyness Flute, wherein Mozart is at his best of crimson clover the whole crop will degree or two that settles the question tion from It. mile north, south, east and west. The was musicians of playing before His wife, joining him in Vienna, was have to be plowed under If much good of fruit or no fruit Is to come from It. strong. When an orchard is set out on land base Of one ot these Is still standing. much shocked at Mozarts weakness. When Mozart was but 6 years old He was Iu the the found Is surrounded by higher land on are Any one fleeing from the avenger that tops generally Rehis working hard upon his genius and skill were so great and he had withdrawn from all greater portion of the potash and ni- all sides or even on three sides, the ot blood and getting inside these quiem; his fame so widespread that the elder trogen. There 1b an exception In the water drainage is almost certain to be crosses was protected, and any perand wrote, wrote, wrote unMozart planned to take the children pleasures bad and the air drainage Is also bad. son seizing him, a penalty was Incurhis young life was being case of red clover la which the greattil it seemed to Vienna to the court of the Emperor er portion ot the nitrogen Is usually A northern slope is looked upon as red of 80. This penalty increased to woven into the music. He grew stead Francis and the beautiful Empress found In the roots. It must be underthe best that can be selected for an 8160 Inside the town, a larger sum on the 6th of DecemMaria Theresa, both of whom were ily weaker, and ferstood that of the tbe proportions apple 35 man orchard; for tbe reason that the Inside abbey lands, still more in tbe laid of but ber, 1791, tbe oung fond of music. down his pen, giving careful directions tilizers found in tops and roots are trees on such a slope will blossom abbey itself; but for any one seizing It is related that even at this early for tbe later than on the southern slope and a refugee In the Frld stool by the finishing of his masterly work, subject to very great fluctuations, age the little Mozart was of so sweet the running In some cases as high as 40 the blossoms will not be so likely to altar, there was no sum large enough Requiem. and winning a nature that he made An old writer be affected by the late frosts In the to procure remission. per cent. Mozart left over 600 compositions, friends with the customs office He shall be boteless. Incap In ot says: the main value relative the spring. 15 masses, 49 symplayed a minuet upon bis little violin, Including operas, able of pardon. roots for turning under are Country Life. and presto, Pass, free of duty, said phonies. His symphony in G minor 13 Native Evergreens. The popular impression has which of one You can Schubert said: tbe officer. The UBe of evergreens for winter White Geese Out for Airing. He been built up In some measure by the The imperial family were sincere hear the angels singing In It. effect Is widely appreciated, on occurrence roots of nodules the foliage The unusual spectacle of a couple the lovers of music and with a court so wrote many quartets, and they are that are known to contain For this pur- of perfectly white geese out for an airnitrogen. says C. H. Ramsdell. it was not sur- among his greatest works, songs, sofavorably disposed The tubercles are however so small a pose the native pines, spruces, firs, ing with their owner Is frequently natas and and chamber music; finally reprising that Leopold Mozart should of the whole plant that cedars and hemlocks are available. seen about Medford. Tbe birds wadthe greatest in the proportion ceive a command shortly after his ar- the Requiem, Pines can be grown on almost any dle along at the man's heels, seemthis Is of little consequence. of worlds music. history rival to present the two wonderful But In the consideration of the soil. If the white pine will not do ingly Interested in all that goes on children at court at Schonbrunn, an value of the nitrogen In the root tuberwell, then the Norway might, and, as around them, but never swerving an Its Value. near all and Vienna, imperial palace cles another factor enters In, and that a last resort, the Jack pine can be Inch to one side or the other. was How the amateur on least solicitation this without the performance is the The spruce Is very availability of the ni- depended upon Frisking around this queer lot is a of Uncle Toms Cabin, the other trogen greater the part of the father in the tubercle. Farmers Re- effective as a specimen tree for tbe little terrier; but the geese do not Mozart at this time whs a wonder- night? Inquired the washing machine view. lawn. The red cedar and hemlock give seem In the least afraid of him. First fully handsome child, very attractive, agent, who visited the hamlet often a denser foliage effect than the pines he bounds ahead ot the group to Into close tab keep enough reasonably and manners bis natural quite frank and spruces, and therefore can be vestigate something which has arousPlowing Up Grasshopper Egg. He was a on the more Important local happenand instinctively good. used for backgrounds. In some localied his curiosity. Then, as If he had The of are laid eggs grasshoppers bit shy when he was presented to ings. of this latitude (Wisconsin) the just recalled an Imposed duty, ha ties In of the -latter in ! summer, along part reWell er hm!cautiously the Empress. Then he looked up, and arbor vitae grows native, and, as an trots back and takes up his position Her beautiful face plied the landlord of the Prunytown clusters about an Inch below the sur- evergreen hedge, Its use can into her eyes. face of the ground. Each cluster or baziy in the trail of the birds. Boston My nephew was sort of imwas smiling, and In a moment the tavern. be equaled. A sandy bank might be Globe. , f, Is surrounded with a frothy mamass j in and with malice so, it, lad had kissed her, although he had plicated covered with a growth of native junito which seems a as act proterial, none and for toward as Emall, charity been Instructed to kneel to his Peculiar Mexican Etiquette. excessive moisture. per to good advantage. But in plantAnd the Empress was much the feller said, Ill admit that It wasnt tection from press. Mexican etiquette Is peculiar as Is this kind usuof a few are trees, ing where the are ground so durned much worse than several of Plowing eggs pleased. shown by the following ally all that are necessary, as quotation Mozarts appearance at the court of tbe 947 previous presentations of the laid breaks up these masses and de- give a somber effect if too close'they to from a letter written by a Spanish stroys the protection; in some cases Austria was a decided success The play here. it turns the masses down so deep in buildings and are nnhealthful there woman while traveling in that counEmperor ordered 100 ducats to be paid ; try: "There is one piece of etiquette the soil that the young hoppers, even also. An Bit of Effective Furniture. to Mozart; the Empress gent the famTo the lover of the woods, entirely Mexican, nor can I Imagine wild' force cannot their If a young girl's room lk finished in though they hatch, ily costly dresses. The gift to Mozart whence derived, by which it Is oras is as the garden just Interesting to the surface. Almost way upward to Wolferl, as he was intimately call- white enameled ware, there is offered dained that all new arrivals, whatever one favusual the standard containing no grasshoppers will hatch in ground ed. was the clothing he wore in the a new and very effective bit of furniorites. One can, with little labor, their rank, foreign ministers not exdeIs has It been that Hence a fill double plowed. will mission. Is ture of which It that him In preserved painting grow at home in some protected cor- cepted, must, in solemn print, give noJs a severely plain settee in white sirable to watch closely the Salzburg, and is of fine cloth, tice to every family of any consideraner such plants as the tulllum, b see if not the are and eggs habits, the vest of silk of the same enameled wood, with a moderately violet, ladys slipper, and later tion In the capital that they have arlaid In places where plowing can be r and rived, and put themselves and their done. With tbe Rocky Mountain lo- the golden rad wild homes at the disposition of the resicust, this has several times served to aster. In fact, the golden rod and are sc easily culti- dents, falling in which etiquette the With our wild destroy a whole swarm. are useful as a border newly arrived family will remain unprincipal species there are certain pre- vated that they to beds. Thus that add' noticed and unknown. shrub larger of for soil kinds ferred egg deposition. when leaves art dull a color time at At Market Lake they selected generMosquitoes Kill Chickens. and rather the worse for the summer's ally the edges of slight depressions In that Big galliclpper mosquitoes the plains. These depressions or hol heat and drouth. In any shady corlows were low enough so that they ner a collection of native ferns is In- seem to have can openers instead of and instructive as well. Thus stingers are attacking chickens In the produced a kind of salt grass, and not teresting a sage brush. The absence of sage one can avoid the trouble from grass East End and they are said already to fowls owned have killed twenty-twmade them more conspicuous than the being shaded out by Mrs. Bridget Owens of Fulton difference of level. About the edges Frultmen sometimes blame the rail- street. A11 ol the chickens were atof these places the newly hatched because their fruit arrives In the tacked while roosting. The mosquiroad numerous. were Plowvery young in bad condition, according toes seemed to descend toward the ing could have been applied here with market to the report of the commission man, earth from high in the air In the good results. The land in Big Camas Prairie lies differently, and does not while the fact is that they themselves evening or after darkness and attack animals of all kinds. It is thought that offer many of these spots. Here the put it Into the cars In bad condition. does not improve by shipping it they breed in low, marshy places, but Fruit a showed marked hoppers preference fly high most of tbe time. Louisville for sandy or gravelly places along the ' . Herald. The Young Cslf. edges of creeks. I did not have an Its From the of be it may birth, day opportunity to judge whether plowing Unexplored Countries. could he done in these places. Ground given some bright, clean hay, for I The submarine cable has made the under cultivation is rarely or never have seen calves when a few hours used for by grasshoppers. old, trying to imitate tbe mother In world a much smaller place than It chewing bay. Now on no account was In. the time of our grandfathers, All the species seem to prefer a harder texture of earth and some will even throw the hay down on the floor of yet there are portions of the world choose the wheeltracks of roads. J. the calf pen, where it may become that have never been explored, destrampled and soiled and, consequentpite the remarkable energy with M. Aldrich, Idaho Station. ly, unfit or even dangerous as a food. which research has been pushed In Make a little rack In one corner of 8lack Methods Costly. the calf pen, from which the bay may I visited was clean be One creamery In small quantities. A calf and neat, yet, through the buttermak-er- s maypulled be safely given all tbe roughage Church at Kobientz. antipathy to the use of commer- It cares to consume. When ten , days color. Tbe coat had a broad border high back and arms, both curved, but cial starters and an alkali test, he or two weeks old, a little box may be of allowed the his to butter be placed in one corner of its quality unadorned by carving. The seat lifts of gold. pen, nnd The Mozart family left thqf Austrian like a lid, to show a shoe box, with dominated by the character of the In this may be put a handful of whole to euch an extent as to lose court and traveled through southern a removable pad la the bottom, which feeds used oats. After it has finished drinking In a very short time. The Germany to Paris. There they found can be lifted out and swept off like about 8500 its milk, a few oats may be rubbed was buttermaker also careless about child had of (he preceded a door maL This settee, with pale the fame on Its nose. It will soon find the box. butter the washed out being welgranular cushions to match the dominant color them, and every one eager to Now its ration Is skimmed milk, come the boy who possessed such re- note In the room, will fit into a small of the churn onto the floor and down whole oats and clean hay, all that Is which made he tbe managemarkable skill and genius. They were corner and prove both useful and the drain ment believe was unavoidable. Prof. necessary to Insure a steady, natural f f commanded to appear at the French decorative. growth zrd one calculated to prove J. G, Moore. court at Versailles. From Paris to Lonbone the and formmuscle requisite t Fine Miners for Quitting. don, through Holland and Switzerland, Corn Intended for seed should not ing elements so important in the conFor stopping work at Murton coland, after two years, they returned struction of a hearty, healthy animal. recent years. This picture will give liery. Seaham Harbor. England, with- be stored on a shelf or on a floor, While the home to Salzburg. proper amount of food, sys- a fair Idea ot the area and location a such on in In August, as out notice three dates the circulation position 8 was And old. then years Mozart and invariable kindness of these nnknown The black 148 been fined fl.25 each of air Is Imperfect and the kernels on tematic care his father, that year, published for a miners haveand must rank aa important factors In denotes the known places. which, acof the nnder ears side condemned the to regions often day mold. damages pay him four sonatas for the piano and a model a calf, clean, dry pen cording to a fair computation, have costs of court. The corn should be placed ou a rack! raising violin, thus introducing the boy aa a flooded with sun light and large more than 64 inhabitants Id the square this remarkable at to Out. Find age. composer Easy enough to afford ample exercise is a mile, or one person to each ten acres. Seed corn when stored may appear To the young, unmarried desirable to Insure best reThe next six years were full of necessity positive There seems to be no danger of overman of good habits and fine prospects perfectly dry, but as soon as the mois- sults, for nothing will prove more study for the boy. Some few composicrowding, The shaded portion shows to ture work out of begins the corn deIs who His were the father tal to detrimet Do health the and pondering tions published. problem; welfare the unexplored regions, which In time will on moisture the appear surface women to him a now to Italy. college take of young animal, or an old one for will be made farollsr to the 'world termined marry? Ask one of unless the circulation of air Is con tbat n.artei than fi'tb Italy proved one long series of delight them. Minneapolis Times. damp q.r-trs- . bj huiran endeavor start eroiiph to dissipate it. w i Ada K Mr. Edward Grogan Song. w 8 e e f ft 8 y 1 lenoe M APE-LIK- w s By Hypnotic Suggestion d w-- There had been no such excitement went through the whole course of the village since the arrival of the Examples for Suggestion that lingernew music teacher, Julie North To ed in Dicks niemoiy. believe that Dickie Armstrong could The docility of his subject Died him seemed a vith a desne to try new and original Teallj hypnotize people large draft on one's credulity. Dickie fields bad lived in Wakeiy the twenty four Are you engaged to be married.'" years of his existence had gone he demanded, fixing a stern eye upon i , through the grammar school, the most hei t mischievous boy in it, had been off So. came the prompt answer to college and come(home to practice Is there any man you really care law, without any one Biispecting he possessed mysterious powers. Since the fact had becopic generally known, the postmaster refeired to va rious letters and pamphlets that had been coming for the last three months, and gave it as his opinion that Dickie Armstrong had taken a course in hynotism by mail In the meantime the four months In Wakeiy had been full of novel pleasure to Julie North. Coming from a busy northern city there seemed something fascinating m the lazy, faappy lives of these Southerners. Her r landlady, one of the aristocracy, treated her like a guest The landlady's three bachelor brothers seemed to think their mission in life was to see that the new teacher should not have a chance to get lonely. These four, following as near as luxurious possible, the style of the before-the-wplanter, bad rented their many Inherited acres of cotton and rice lands, and considered they had labored as much as was good for a man when they made the rounds every fall to collect the Leaned forward and looked straight rent into his eyes. The three brothers were known through the section as Mr. Jack, Mr. for,, he continued,, never taking his Courteney and Mr. Pat, and no one eyes from hers Y yes, she said hesitatingly. ever took the trouble to add their last Whats his name?1 demanded the name unless It were In conversation with some one born outside the bound--arie- s merciless Dickie. of South Carolina. Then the Susie Manning cried out in protest Darragh brothers were referred to In Oh, Dickie, dont ah, ' dont! the same way one referred to the Thats not playing fair, Dickie; thats bora and fauna of the state as facts not honorable. She would be so morgenerally known. tified If she knew, and the black eyes The usual crowd of young people filled with sudden, sympathetic tears had gathered at the Darragh place But the harm was done. Before one night soon after the discovery of Dickie could repent or recall the sugDickie Armstrongs hypnotic powers gestion the answ'er came with start"Dickie, do give us an exhibition, ling distinctness. Pat Darragh, she now do, pleaded pretty little Susan said distinctly. Manning from the corner of the When they looked around they davenport where she was found Mr. Pat had slipped from the In ease oriental lounging room. Julie North looked her skepticism, After the crowd had left Mr Pat but seconded the request. tapped softly on the shuttered door Dickie trumped up as many ex- that opened from Julies room to the cuses as a pianist who has been veranda. to play. Please come out a few minutes, Really, 1 have never tried It on he Its not late, and tbe begged. .any one except the little negro boys moon is absolutely great. 1 toled Into my office. I dont know, She came out, her white dress traileven, whether it would take the same softly. ing effect upon you palefaces, he begged He led the way to a rustic seat as a reserve card. "I have always heard that blondes nearby on the lawn. "1 have been much worried lately. made the best subjects, replied Julie. tm the only blonde in the room, Miss Julie the Southern mannerism and I offer myself a willing subject of address sounded like a caress in For the first his Southern voice to the canse of science. life Ive made a real and in time my the performance Dickie started fool of myself about a womwith a quaking heart. The blc id hair complete hard when a man is thirty-eighseemed to cling to his fingers caress- an. It hits I realize so fully that I am on her them when he pressed ingly with the not In it when temples, according to the rules and young set, but I compared couldnt loving help and regulations prescribed by mail, I dont see how anybody could, he found it harder to concentrate his you he added in self justification. thoughts than when he had tried the ' Some few have been able to re office. at his subjects Susie Manning giggled, and Dickie sist, she was heaping the white sand in piles with the toe of her slipper. gave her a reproachful glance He leaned forward, his elbows on "The charm positively refuses to work when there is any giggling go- his knees and his hands supporting a I know Im too melancholy face. ing on, he growled. Mr. Pat leaned forward and offered old to attract a girl of twenty like her a caramel from the box on the Dickie Armstrong would, for in, . stance.. table. "That will keep you occupied until (Susie Manning could probably give the seance is over, he whispered. you some information as to Mr. Armshe Dickie grew red with mortification strongs powers of attraction, when he had tried all the prescribed rounded the heapa of sand with the rules in vain. air of an experienced mound builder that she had , Mr. Jack and Mr. Courteney were "She told me badgery, just promised to marry him. chuckling a Hla tone 1 and Mr. Pat was unable to feed Susie thought it was you! Hanning caramels fast enough to showed relief that Dickie could be check her giggles. labeled "harmless, and surprise that Suddenly Dickie stood erect and an Intelligent human being could be aware of tbe existence of the moon beaming. Hus sh! Be quiet! Shes all right when the sun was in plain view. He turned to her earnestly. to tell you 1 1 didnt intend thought it would simply worry you to know that 1 had made a fool of myself, but I have changed my mind. I am going to Charleston for a few months and the neighbors might be able to get a great deal of amusement out of the fact that I left home because you refused to marry me. The building of sand was destroyed by one quick stroke of her slipper. "Is It absolutely necessary that I refuse?" she leaned forward and looked straight Into his eyes. Why Julie! he said, and the lawn suddenly seemed a veritable Garden 5n before-the-wa- t. good-nature- d high-heele- d of Eden. Later, when she told him goodnight, she turned suddenly and came back to him. Pat, I must tell you something. She stood before him In a new and . strange shyness. You bad always seemed so humble, I couldn't make you understand. seemed a fine So the hypnotism Are you engaged to bo married I now, he whispered, and they saw Julies eyes were fixed and vacant Sho responded readily when he suggested she should sing a song She I I wasnt hypnotized tochance. night I was shamming. he exclaimed, selz You darling! lng her In his arms. Troy Allison la New York Press. '' ' ! lilac-colore- ood-roo- t, sun-flow- o 1 egg-layin- g 1 1 |