OCR Text |
Show iirotite ' th OP?. receipt Wl- ' - RESURRECTION GUVER our peach deaaerta abundance while there a a loui amount of thia fruit mi us have Open 1 lei clnnimoo folk posofuls cupful flour WilKiw Brim tlnwrrr. 1X1 claims and told a portion of tha While you're doing that I'm goHand over those notes, you. tack to s financial house or opera ing to maka a thorough and acWarren Lovett Lupe sullenly look them out of hia Junior But this company. field go wag curate the powerful Welllnslon. study of tha material I've pocket and threw them on the cot Patfcea k Lovett, Incorporated Mine of remote that Investment houses were got here, so that if we don't locate What the devil did you want ChlcaEo. which emasea In queatlonablc not Interested; end mining compa-nie- a the lode along this principal band, with those? Craig questioned. tranaactiona, plana to maka a aecret were reefing their we'll know where to look next. coup In tha Canadian Arctic, wheie a alia everywhere Lupe refused to say a word. iiislciid of putting t,n more cannw yean before i rich but inaccessible As soon the party had left the "I ought to have Corporal North-u- p vas. Bald milk e a cookie dough type of from last six ingredients, lows: Mix dry ingredients, n in butter, and add the slight-iteMix and milk. and egg board or pat and roll out on nine-inch . canvas. Fit into late. Peel the peaches, restones and slice in even Arrange in circular fash rer the dough. Sprinkle with and cinnamon mixed. Beat Jr.n mining add three WcUinfloo. haa been dlscuvered on good who Is onsagod to Warren, decides to accompany him. They so by plana. Pat meats Potoon." a prospector, who tells her there are only 300 proepectera In the Held and that became of the difficulties, they era hanging ou by a thread. Pal to disturbed French-Canadia- n table- fuls cream and drip over and d the peaches. - Bake- - in hot-fabout 30 minutes or until is browned and peaches are Uiirty-thrr- river, which flows Into Dyna mlta Bay. Patricia, high apirtted and beautiful daughter of cruaty old Jaeper ' tgg yolk, or when Warren MI) not dlecloee what bin secret mission In. She meets Sam Honey, well, a friend of Poleon'e. Moved by Uie plight of BUI Fomter. a prospector who. though fatally III, struggles to hold hia claim. Pat decides to help him. Informed by Lupe Chlwaughimi. retainer of Uie company, about Pal i befriending the prospectors. Warren tries hi dissuade her. He telle her that Craig Trl-tohalf-bree- d and Otherwise Vise ty call it AonMMM hnHN moving when to ley nay." Man i to thirty n girt umntt a future. Over forty, ike uunts urt with a man. ,M yen heard about the gold ircter who couldn't deep ni ghlif imi he had a lode on hi mine, didey cruelty t Men tubes hit into cave with an echo to that cant here the but ward, pkydrel culture expert recomil wretlling ei en aid to health, popple a day meant no doctor rh n There wet a girl futoned up at en old maid be--I the wouldn't Hop talking long gh to let anyone propose to her. utionary tale; se Days Cough our Danger ir matter how many ave tried for your cough, chest irritation, you can or fpurf now with CreomnMon. us trouble may be brewing and jnrmnt afford to take a chance any remedy less potent than gindaon, which goes right to eat of the trouble and aids nolo soothe and heal the inflamed us membranes and to loosen phlegm, expel the germ-ladin if other remedies have failed, en be discouraged, try Creomul-Yo- ur druggist la authorised to id your money if you are not ughly satisfied with the bene- nbtained from the very first a Creomnlslon Is one word not and it has no hyphen in It or it plainly, see that the name i bottle Is Creomulsfam, and the genuine product and you want. (AdvJ Greater Value instruction is better than William Penn. Of I. A OW LONG GAN kite WIFE 0 HER HUSBAND? to work at marriage to make a of It. ilen rOU have Ur S lift iw lia lollUh. unsympsthrtic, that's tlie way thay'ro mads d you might aa welt ratlin la Visa your backaches and your rna Krasin, dim't taka it out your hull wnd. He can't poadbly w how you fbcL ycrUimgBnwationaooa woman told snottur how to go amll-Uwouch" with Lydia E. Pink-in- 's Vasotalrio Compound, it Ipa Katun tone up the u loMnins tin diMomfbrti linm a functional diaordera which nn mutt aodura In tha thro kali of Ub: 1. Turning fboa Ibood to womanhood. 8. Pro-rb- is ftir motherhood, a. -middla ace." boat ha a thro quarter wife, LYDIA M. PINKHAM'S tOKTABI.B COMPOUND Bod l "OalUag Through. !T RID OF UGLY PORES J OF DATS NOW... DENTON'S L MAGNESIA MADE HER FRUK, YOUNG, BEAUTIFUL ea kunt a ckanoo when b Poll akizUaxhira. Man lora IV -- wawiiWyOTBnCBBpHaOH, Manuoais aoaa mlraclos , WNVScrvtoa. K tes spoonful baking powdet V cupful aucar I Ubfespoonfuls "poooful with whom aha had ones bean In love. I now deputy mining Inspector for the Resurrection river area. A brilliant geologist, he had resigned to disgust from her father'! company because of Its devious methods. Later she meets Craig, but he la cold. Interring that she Is merely feigning Interest In the prospectors. Her com pa salon for the hapless prospectors growing. Pet deckles to build huge community house or Den. When the Job nears completion. Warren tells her to abandon it She refutes attar a stormy scene. Craig leaves on a three, month Inspection trip to the north. Pat learns that her father has withdrawn her allowance. Warren tells her now she will have to go home. He refuses to advance her a loan to aid tha proapec tuia. She moves her tent across the river near the Den. She learns now of Warren's plan. He hopes to starve the prospector out and make them sell their claims for a sons. Pat tells the prospectors of Warren's plan. Still attentive to Pal. Warren wages a subtle campaign to get tha claims. Just before Christmas, Craig returns suddenly and Pat la overjoyed at hia chanced attitude. Ha brings her a present of hire and apologize for his former suspicions. Concluding that she cannot ever marry Warren, Pat returns her engagement ring. He reveals that Craig Tart-to- n la already married. Warren Lovett warns Craig to stay away from Pat, saying he knows about his previous marriage. Craig tells him his Mil Inform Pat about the misadventure If th oc- gold deposit would turn the trirk. Gold was at a high premium among the metals; and down the eily country, mines which had been doted for yenra were running full blast. A sliver depusit. or cupper, or even platinum, would not da It took gold, or possibly radium. But so tar or at leagt so the special government geologists had reported no gold at all had been discovered in the Resurrection field. From a little cardboard box on a shelf Craig picked out seven carefully labeled hunks of gray-rocone evening, and laid them on hii work table, and aat looking at them while he smoked a thoughtful pipe. "Hmmph!" he muttered, once or twice, No gold on Resurrection. Hmmph! Those seven hunks of rock came from a range of hille, the Wolf Lairs, about 50 milea northeast of the Bay. Last apring a city rusher called Phil Kessler had gone prospecting through those hills and had brought back a sackful of ore specimens. In that collection mostly ores of yellowish mica, or fool's gold Craig had spotted seven fragments of a gray gneiss. Sticking one carelessly under the microscope, ' he was surprised to find that it contained wire silver. Interested then, he ran an assay. The test brought out not only cobalt and silver In paying quantities but a heavy gold content $200 to the ton. Kessler had no idea where he had picked up those seven hunka of gray-rocA greenhorn at pros- low-gra- casion arises. CIIAPTER VII Continued Patricia's face clouded over at his mention of the Den. The men like It a lot, I guess," he said listlessly, turning toward him. "But but Craig noticed, then, that her eyes had a suspicious redness about them, as though she had been crying. "Something's gone wrong, Tree-ahiWhat is it?" Nothing, except that 1 I'm sunk! she quavered. Two big tears gathered ir. her dark eyes. Everything has has gone to pot in the last few days. I'm broke, I haven't a penny lift, I can't keep the Den running any longer; end these men are cracking wide open. Warren Is buying claims right and left, and and 1 don't see any wuy to turn or anything to do She slumped down into her desk chair and buried her face in her arms. "Gracious heavens, girl! Why didn't you tell me about all this? I didn't suppose you cared Pamuch what was happening, tricia sobbed, without looking up. "But I do care! Craig asserted, bending down, patting her shoulder. Sorry ter the black days that she had gone through, he reproached himself savagely fur not helping her sooner. As he bent over her. with his lips so near her hair, a disquietude truck him, and Lovett's warning about his associating with Patricia in a personal way went jigging acrois hia mind. Until that instant he simply had not imagined the possibility of such an association. But now he did imagine it. with something cf a shock. It came home to him that ha once had loved Patricia Wellington passionately; that in the God's lake daya she had been to him a living pagan poem; that in hia thirty-on- e years he had never loved any other girL All the bitter things which he had later thought about her and which had made him try to forget God's lake; all hia harsh judgment of her as a worldly creature without ideate or courage she had given the complete lie to them by her valiant battle for these men. Trecshia." he said gently, "this is aa much my fight now as yours. I'm not returning to the barrens. You've been all alone so far, but now Im going to take part of the burden off your shoulders. a. CHAPTER VIII weamytexiaatdwM smbaasty PddbwImalMaiawilhDnlw'irkcUl mwkebla dlHerooe. With 5? .Jv w jdrordUahennw.BSTSTbt wwMhtilMa WitoMtt t?Wpw.BrtyMlmswBDninra VM Mtlaal Au wish ewy mm m mia TRAORDINARY OFFER hy hew, Facial ea u anrwade aaedfat 2i?jyghe ' Wa will mfyoiii U112 an P.NTONS ial Magnesia SELECT PRODUCTS, Iwc. W-2- MIL, teas htaadCNft N.V. a Eaelcaad Bad $1 be&2X? racial latiodaotory t 11 . lElft,., Craig's first step, that same afternoon, was to give Patricia his entire worldly fortune $900 of salary to keep the community house afloat That evening and all the next day he talked and pleaded with the disheartened prospectors, till he finally checked their rising wava of despair and swung them back into line. He also wrote to the bureau at Ottawa and resigned. He hated to sacrifice hia Job, but thia move would give the men three months of grace, for It would take that long for hia successor to reach the Bay and begin inspecting the claims. With these preliminary steps out of the road, he tackled the big crucial problem, the necessity of raising a lot of money quickly. The men had to have clothes, outfits, equipment; and to feel the power of money behind them. They had lived on hope til! hope was burned out He estimated that he hed to raise at least a hundred thousand dollars. Under ordinary circumstances he would hove formed e corporation among the owners of Ilia richest Bay, be himself settled down to a siege of intense research with his survey notes, ore fragments, microscope and assay outfit. Though he hardly ate or slept thqge days, he did manage to squeeze out a little time each evening to spend with Patricia. It was fine to drop down to her cabin for a visit, after long hours of tedious research; and fine to have her come up to hit place for a book and then linger ter a chat Her mere presence seemed to warm up his cabin and take away its bachelor austerity. He happened to notice, once in her cabin, that ahe was no longer wearing her engagement ring. When he asked her about thia and Patricia told him of her Christmas evt talk with Warren, he experienced a queer leap of heart and then a sharp uneasiness. Was God's lake reaching out for him, riling out of the dead past and claiming its own? Was this Arctic trip of hers the accident It appeared, or was destiny overtaking him and Patricia Wellington? I've got to ten her about Rosaha decided. lie, "She's got to know about that" One evening, when he left Patricia's cabin earlier than usual and went up the dark hollow, he looked ahead and saw a light in hta own cabin. It was not a candleglow but the yellow Shaft of a flash. Slipping up to hia window, he peered through at the Intruder. The pane was frosted so badly that he could not recognize the man but merely could see a dim figure leaning over the work table, apparently charta and examining the Wolf-Ladiagrams. Craig eased over to the door and waited, flattened against the logs. In a few minutes the door opened, and the intruder stepped into the darkness. Craig reached out and seized him by the shoulder. I say, friend, don't hurry away. The man whirled, tore loose from Craig's grasp, and bolted down the hollow. Craig lunged after him. At the granite boulder he caught the unknown intruder again and grappled with him. The man swung, struck him in the face, struggled to tear free. Craig drew back hia arm and drove in a blow to hit enemy's jaw. The man toppled backwards, cracked his head against the boulder as he fell, and sprawled on the snow. Craig bent down, struck a match. Lupe "Lupe!" he gasped. ir The metis leader was limp and unconscious. A trickle of blood from his nose was dribbling down across y his temple and staining the snow. Thinking that the fellow might be badly hurl, C'rntg curried him to the cnbin. laid him on the bunk and lit a candle. As he started to examine the Lune's ryes flickered open. After a few dazed moments the metis eat up. Craig brought him a wineglass of Here, swallow this. Sorry brandy. you busted your head against that boulder. Lupe. Huw d'you feci anything bad wrong?" "I'm Lupe grunted. He got to his feet somewhat groggily. g Why were you here in my cabin? Craig demanded. Lupe refused to answer. Lovett sent you over here didn't he? to pilfer around in my papers and find out whnt I'm doing. Lupe merely stared at him. iron-gra- Patricia Straightened Up With a Jerk. pcctlng, he had wandered hither and thither all over that range, knock- half-bree- d, ing off samples from any formation that took his eye and dumping them r into his bag. without numbering them or keeping any records whatever. With a host of duties on his hands. Craig had thought no more about the lost strike till now. He looked thoughtfully at the even hunks; looked at his original assay sheet and at his careful recheck on it. Gold ore. $200 a ton. with enough cooalt and silver to pay all mining and milling costs that was a priie deposit a sure If he could locate money-makeIt and if the deposit was not a mere pocket any operating company would Jump at the chance to buy The glint in the fellows eyes puzan option or part interest zled Craig. It was a sinister glint made he all that night Sitting up hatred. a thorough study of the chemical a look of He stepped across to the table to and crystalline structure of those see whclhi--r any of his papers had gray gneiss fragments. his This structure, he found, was been stolen or destroyed. To r had charts his renot surprise did He distinctive. rather member encountering it anywhere not been touched at all. The only thing hr missed was a little clip else in the Resurrection field. Somewhat encouraged by this pos- of notes from Patricia hasty little which she had sent him e scribbles sible clue, he went up to the when times et a they were both busy, out got storage building; and which he had carefully treasand charts notes of bulky packet were from her. which !ia had made on a survey of ured. because they He turned to the the Wolf Lairs two summers previously. A three-daatudy of these old notes, charts and fragments brought him a surprising discovery. None of his samples showed any tracea of gold; but he found that thia gray In 1815 Thomas Keniett evolved and gneiss with the odd chemical method for the preservation of a was rather crystalline atructure in hermetically sealed cans or food e A common in the Wolf Lairs. aa they were then called, stratum of it, with a green canisters, writes Gilbert C. Klingel in the Balbrownish a and on top dolomite whole timore Sun. Satisfied that hia methgranite beneath, ran the od was satisfactory, Keniett then length of the rangi office In Washoutcropped applied to the patent Though the gray-roc- k for a patent for "preserving at other places in those hills, he ington vegetable and other perishwere a animal, figured that the chances The patent office con-- I foods. able the deposit gold dozen to one that sidered the matter aa something of occurred somewhere along that ' a joke, and was to skeptical that it principal gneiss strrtum. not until 1825 that the patent On that presumption he called wai Issued. However, the final pawas three and Sam Poleon. Kessler, carried the signatures of other experienced prospector into per Monroe, President of tha James them told his cabin one afternoon, of John Quincy AdUnited States; about Kessler's lost strike, and gave of state, and then secretary ams, them instructions: attorney-generApWirt, William teams two take dog You fellows ofTce and the the patent Wolf parently to the and whip northeast were not overburdened Lairs on the Jump. Pick up that Presidency at that time with Inventions. I've got the at band point gneiss In 1832 Kr i nett itartcd at the foot marked here, follow it through its of Federal hill, In Baltimore, the every take samples whole length, records first cannery In Maryland. Interest-ingl- y four chains, keep enourh, the first food to be with back of everything, and hurry canned was oysters, but it wo take it you let Don't data. your not long before he branched out and more than a month at the outside. helter-skelte- sneak-thievin- r. tight-lipoe- man-to-ma- n Wolf-I-ai- Land-Offic- half-bree- Patent for Canning y (?. i William Byron Mowery By Peach Pie. 1. Ruth "Wyeth Spears i larket. SEW Ten Years by aixe-abl- air-tig- stick you In the police butter-tub- , Craig said. "I'd do it, but It (trikes n. that if anybody ought to be jailea, it's Lovett. You were only doing hia dirty work for him. So Im going to let you go. Clear out and stay clear! Get back across the river and tell Lovett that if he can't fight clean and keep Inside the law. he'll find himself facing some of those consequences' that he warned ma about! CHAPTER IX After a day of hard work, Craig had called past Patricia's cabin around nine o'clock and taken her on a long night walk to a rocky Islet three miles out upon Dynamite bay. In the last fortnight their daya had become so crammed, their time so limited, that they had begun taking walks at night aa a way of lumping together their association, their outdoors and their "war talks. Now and then Craig peered tothrough the ghostly half-ligward Resurrection mouth, trying to glimpse the shadowy Lupe Twice, while Patricia and ha were coming across the bay, he bad heard the squeak of a racquet beam on tha dry snow behind them; and he knew that somewhere among those hummocks yonder the metis leader was hidden, watching Patricia and him. It was seldom, during these night walks, that he and she talked of any personal matter. Little by little the easy friendship of the New Years period had receded till now it was definitely gone; and in its stead a tension had grown uj. between them, a sharp quivering tension that threatened to snap at a word or a glance. Not mortally sure just how Craig felt toward her, Patricia had kept Bouncing from one extreme of belief to the other. At times ahe indulged in the aweetly anguishing notion that Craig considered her only a friend and ally. At other times she believed, ecstatically, that his friendship bad become quick with passion. n In the night silence the howl of a wolf came floating down from some granite ridge far Miles distant, but up Resurrection. clear and vibrant on the frozen air, the cry was packed with all the loneliness and savagery of those Arctic wastes. As it died away it was taken up and echoed by a score of other wolves. Craig broke the long silence, Treeshia, Warren told abruptly. you that I was married at Vancouver, didn't be? Patricia atralghtened up with a she managed. And jerk. then she suddenly realized that Craig had brought her on this long walk, out to this islr : under the cold stars, ter the express purpore of telling her about his marriage. Warren Mms to attach a lot of importance to that fact," Craig went on. Well, it is important, but not In the way he sees it On the surface there's iltUe to tell. Out there on the West Coast I married We lived a girl. Rosalie Layton. together for about a year. Then we broke up. I gave her everything I had. totaling around a million and a half; and came north. The marriage has not been formally dissolved. I thought she'd get a divorce, but she apparently hasn't. Patricia winced with jealousy at his words. "We lived together ter even though his about a year, fames said unmistakably .hat thia Rosalie Layton meant nothing whatsoever to him now. "I've told you the facts about my marrisge; now I'm going to tell you the truth," he said. For a moment he looked thoughtfully out across the frozen bay. "When I went over fat the West Coast six years ago. Treeshu. 1 was in a cynical and disillusioned mood. I hod just taken beseveral stiff jults the break-u- p tween you and me. for one thing and I wasn't old ennuKh or steady enough to absorb them. I guess I went pretty thoroughly to pieces in a moral sense. When we dont have any goal or objective, we do go to pieces t TO HE CnTIM EI)t long-draw- "Y-ye- s, , Crazy Fateh Work at Homo in a Modern Setting crazy patch is the oldest embroidery stitches and then repHE of quilt patterns, yet there ii move the bastings. The backing something amazingly modern in is tied to the front with silk emits angular lines. So whether your broidery thread as comforters are living room is traditional in style lied. Little or no padding may be or newer than tomorrow you will used and a plain band around the be interested in the revival of edge is effective. Every Homemaker should have crazy patch work for what our a copy of Mrs. Spears' new book, and grandmothers SEWING. Forty-eigcalled aslumber throw. pages of p directions for making A corner of one of these old silk crazy quilts is shown here et the slipcovers and dressing tables; relower right. The pieces were storing and upholstering chairs, small many not more than Ilk couches; making curtains for evinches wide or long. A variety of ery type of room and purpose. stitches joins the Making lampshades, ruga, ottoembroidery pieces. Both plain and figured mans and other useful articles silks were used, the plain patches for the home. Readers wishing a with copy should send name and adoften being embroidered flowers, fans and other amusing dress, enclosing 25 cents, to Mrs. motifs note the beetle embroidSpears, 210 South Desplaines St., ered on one patch. Several col- Chicago, Illinois. ors of silk embroidery thread were generally used but in the most artistic of these quilts one color predominated in the embroidery. Larger patches with simple feather stitch and herring-bon- e stitch at the joinings also give a good effect. The pieces are sewed to a foundation of some firm soft material. Outing flannel or an old wool blanket are good. Pin a piece in place over the space to be filled, trim the edges to the right shape, STARTS WORKING IN as at A, allowing enough to turn under, as at B, where the patch SECONDS laps over the one next to it. Baste the turned edges down, as shown. When a number of patches have been basted in place, sew them down to the foundation with the rs ht step-by-ete- HEADACHE REMEDY Household . I Questions Small Molds for Pudding. In place of one large basfn for a steamed pudding, try several small molds, placing them all in one large saucepan. They will take half as long to cook as one large pudding. Dried Peel.- - It is nice to dry the skins of several oranges and lemons and grate them, then putting them in a glass bottle in the refrigerator to be kept for flavoring purposes. It certainly saves time in the future and one is inclined to use these flavorings in interest- ing ways if already at hand. Preserving Bright Color. Cooking preserves or jelly rapidly helps to retain the bright color of the fruit. The addition of pectin shortens the necessary cooking time. Polishing Linoleum. Dissolve a lump of sugar in the water when washing linoleum or oilcloth, and a brilliant polish will result. wur. H kite Ua is stato I et SUSS-epe iuHh Mate auBtagmiM. TSI BA VEX Awkfa ll to MM at All people who suffer occasionally from headaches ought to know thia way to quick relief. At the first sign of such pain, take two Bayer Aspirin tablets with a half glass of water. Sometimes if the pain is unusually severe, one more tablet is necessary later, according to directions. If headaches keep coming back we advise you to see your own physician. He will look for the cause in order to correct it. I ; I ; J i; virtually 1 cent a tablet Character Making The man that makes a makes foes. Young. Mil Just for a Change. It you can- not afford to buy anything new (or the house and you are just a little bit disinterested this fall, try changing the position of the furniture and see if that bored feeling will not depart. Patent hard-boile- Spanish-Amer-lea- . If IS Um at IS Mae Opening Jars. A strap with a buckle on one enij can be used to good advantage in opening glass fruit jars. Run the strap through the buckle and tighten it around the cap. This enables you to get a good grip on the lid. Crab Savory. 1 crab, 3 tomatoes, 1 lettuce, watercress, 1 egg, Foods Was Delayed pepper and salt. Shred the crab meat finely and mix with a little the U. S. Office j mayonnaise. Wash the lettuce and leaves around and at the arrange numerous vegetabegan canning bottom of the dish. Place some ble, including spinach. The can- jl crab in the center, then season ning of those days, as such, would pepper and aalt; add alices hardly be recognizable to the mod- jwith d of tomato egg and ern canner, but little by little tha watercress.and methods were irriproved until they reached their present high effiUsing Kerosene Safely. One of ciency. Today the successors of Ken sett the safest ways of using kerosene pack more spinach than any other is to mix it with wood or coal firm on the Atlantic seaboard, which ashes, then use a few spoonfuls of la to say they pack each year a con- this mixture when starting or residerable mountain of spinach, if kindling a fire. Thia can be stored one may Judge from the huge piles for regular use in a gallon bucket on the cannery floors during the or other suitable container. course of a single day's packing. Spaghetti and Cheese. A nice Thirteen Presidents Soldiers way of preparing spaghetti that Thirteen of our Presidents were does not require lighting the oven. soldiers: Washington, Monroe and Fry one chopped onion and one-ha- lf Jackson In the Revolution; Jackaon, pound ground meat in olive W. H. Harrison and Taylor in tha oil until nicely browned. Add two War of 1812; Taylor and Pierce in cups tomato puree or sifted tothe Mexican war; Lincoln and Tay- mato pulp, one teaspoon paprika, lor in the Black Hawk war; Grant, salt and pepper to taste. When Hays, Garfield, McKinley and Ben- nicely blended serve over plain jamin Harrison in the Civil war, boiled spaghetti and over the top and Roosevelt in the sprinkle finely grated cheese. war. THE REfiSOH BITER ISMM WORKS SO FIST Dnp a Bene AwMa n WNU Service, i ! ; i Msny doctors recommend Nujol for Its gentle action on tha bowels. Don't confuse Nujol with unknown products. J INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL THE CHEERFUL CHERUB I like ktJTUTfe much . Theyre race end round end so Pt end sweet-- I love to peel the. akin til They're such a. k handy fruit to eat HTC"! ! i 1 |