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Show unlll!ali !l,ch n,aRnltude. You are untamable, but you are proud. tW0 naronf Vb?ft W48 ta,ked wl,kout ap- Wlth una,terable flxedneagnf purpose. of The duke'wa: deter ?' I yfefujq ufH, Princess ,4kW y tt. Ud, ton If HAROLD McGRATH AKdeea 7JlJ M yh V.'l SM Bo." and Muka," Em rtelttd (Cirlikk ty IMA. toj Mobbn-Mnrr- ltte, ln t' 8YNOPSI3. lit .Boft no, Ho, onl, , Warrl urton, American connul 'SSI-he- l tell how reigning Grand l, a attempt to force hla nelce. Prin- to marry Prince Dopple- - Hiidegarde, n old widower. Warrington doe even by alght. the prince 'Ll, homeback riding In the country him and he eeka accoin-,2,5- s nadarta, i thick crnor f neat fc hli n 10. after uraton a dilapidated caalle In Vrint and the other a friend, Hon. Hetty of England. They detain him to between the mock marrlag Lirf and a disgraced army officer, .ii bock, done for the purpone of foiling rand duke. Btelnbock I attempt to rescued by and he tM prince for disappears iirrlnitton. Btelnbock an old Amerl-i- i fid. jix Warrington friend of S K In Is, to, res Here two women and an old man One woman la Princes Hilde-ni- b ind reache 'f,1 ,k Bar-1- L Warrington tell him of the prin- Warrington gcharfensteln show adiet with a picture of a woman In- It was on III neck when he, as a ,r wa picked up and adopted by hi father, whose name he wa given. beUeves it to be a picture of Ids - a iiilber. CHAPTER IV appear 08t Tint- 'Igatloti Ileal s la tit N'asi the a tseatj tucol 18 yem sault aa n, Has1 lentitw ed to i deal 0 f of tie tu so, You a genealogy with your And a woman nowadays mar-- ! It'a only the man, the man. crass, dogs and cattle that we buy their pedigrees. Come; you ouht ibive a strawberry mark on your " I suggested lightly; for there m,ere times when Max brooded over :e mystery which enveloped his birth, hi reply be rolled up his sleeve and atd a mighty arm. Where the vacation scar usually Is I saw a red I leaned over and atch, like a burn. e. buy 3f French is Continued. Tn poor old Dutchman, you! u Iroonla Bradley TSI 10 umined car, with It It was a four-pointe- d a perfect circle around It it seemed to me that this u not the first time I had seen Jhls collar mark. I did not recollect ever King It on Maxs arm. Where had I mehow, It then? kb It's a curious scar. Hang me, hut v " seen the device somewhere be-yra!- known, ed tron oa hr an west eat till ge from a filling mantel le Blithe side dropped irachme commie 4 the filing a lares for tie her 1 don't know; possibly I saw it on arm in the old days. He sank back in his chair. Silence, ring which the smoke thickened and pup whined softly In bis sleep, the night the cathedral bell hour of morning. . Tf you dont mind. Artie, said Max, ivulng, Til turn in. Ive been trav-n- g for the past fortnight" Take a ride on Dandy In the morn-Hehold your weight nicely. I t go with you, a$ Ive a lame 'it en Ky, erlonslj ie fro 1 ieets." Vans will to irtes estfield. 1 ent the pun to gard uatrji a itlon the rsltto Berlin j defal who. id Berlin, ted w up fiM 1th tW ltd, Rto 00 kegs to al Ptl' house. same evening the grand duke's !t knocked on the door leading Into princess apartments, and when door opened he gravely announced W hla serene highness desired to ;lk to the Princess Hlldegarde. It command. For some reason, Mvn best to herself, the princess to obey Jam e hee on tin opened Connfl' :am u Ini dl the PeH. r5s;,i AC, mlrif It "kf that I shall be there present-- he said, dismissing the valet . d the entered her uncles study called because of Its dust-ladeShelves, though the duke some- n disturbed their contents to the leg of an unbalanced chair ' table he laid down hla pipe and missed his Bmall company of card tody peri. klfl( not oxt)ect to see you so soon, tan. A woman's curiosity some ci has Its value. It. takes little to It but a great deal to It." tu have not summoned allay me to smart speeches, J simply because been educated up to them 7 leniently. 70, I have not summoned you to a word much in evidence In , fit since your return from Eng-Fto- For once I am going to use a J&rt ? P nUnd."Prerogative. I have changed f,rlnc,HS Hlldegarde delight. She could put !! o his words. The carriage h month." trembled but one will not take place "rapturouBly. I hole lid "Is He 'Dead?" She Asked. That ? 4 mompnt, grimly. p,ac next week. arn you "It shall not to force me to the tke 8,rL trembling this u'uv 4 'L hk ColJ furF ou tre too young in irit .j1'1, and too old In mind to be al- ?at,,loS8 In harness Pasture. am km."0 Very wel,-He took up his 1frasuIrlm,'(1 lt 11 was rather em-..to 1,)lk ? ek." hall To 4 todr wed the girl In the Doppelktnn eye, next 'n rather embarrass-To,- , ,me t0 the altar, evenly. H not," he replied, "create a . KORTHAVEST Plnt Apartmant May B Kpt a Little Car. DISHES THAT ART WORTH ADD-INTO THE DAILY MENU. Cooteberry Pudding a Splendid Dessert-Brown Chicken Friceeeee Flounders In a New Way. " k Green Gooseberry Pudding. Boll a pint of green gooseberries till soft, and sweeten to taste. When quite cold mix In thoroughly four eggs well-beate- and one ounce of butter. Butter a mold and sprinkle It thickly with equal parts of sugar and fine bread crumbs, then pour In the gooseberry puree, being careful not to disturb the cailng; cover the top nearly half an Inch thick with crumbs and sugar, and bake for an hour. When taken from the oven cover with a cloth, and only turq out when wanted. Serve with clotted or whipped cream. Mushrooms Stewed with Cream. This Is a favorite recipe. Prepare a pound of mushrooms by paring off the ends. Clean and wash well and if very large cut In halves. Drain and place In a saucepan with three ounces of butter. Season with salt and pepper and cook five minutes. Add two sauce tablespoonfuls of the white made from a tablespoonful butter and one of flour, blended, then cooked with cup milk to a smooolh cream. Add also a half cupful of sweet cream to the mushrooms, cook three minutes longer and serve in a hot dish with eight heart-shapebread croutons for garnish. Sauce for Mushrooms. Put three tablespoonfuls olive oil In a sauceof pan with one teaspoonful each minced parsley and anchovies and a clove of crushed garlic. Heat five qaln-uteadd to mushrooms that have been stewed In oil and serve. Sauce for Stewed Mushrooms. Peel and remove the stalks from some large mushrooms, wash and cut in halves. Put two tablespoonfuls butter In a saucepan with two tablespoon-ful- s flour. When blended add a cup and a half hot milk and stir until smooth and thickened. Add the mushrooms, season with salt, pepper and a little powdered mace, and simmer gently until the mushrooms are tender. When cooked, turn on a hot dish, garnish with fried croutons or bread and serve. Brown Chicken Fricassee. For a brown chicken fricassee, Creole style, cut up the chicken In the usual way and fry In equal quantities lard and butter until nearly tender and brown. Dredge a little flour Into the gravy and brown. Add a pint of boiling water, a small onion minced, a quart of potatoes and a small bunch of para-ley- . Simmer gently an hour or until very tender, and serve with rice. If preferred the rice may be added and cooked with the stew. Flounders In a New Way. Flounders are good fried In the ordinary way in crumbs or In flour, and especially nice If melted butter seasoned with lemon Juice and chopped parsley Is parsed with them; but here is quite a new way of cooking them: Wash the flounder and wipe It dry; lay it In a roastlng-paon top of two of minced onion, and sprinkle it with salt and pepper and a tablespoonful of chopped parsley; put it into a very hot oven and baste with half a cup of boiling water mixed with a tablespoonful of melted butter; when brown put the fish on a hot platter and put a teaspoonful of flour of hot water Into and a small half-cuthe pan, and stir and scrape over the fire till there Is a nice brown gravy, adding a little kitchen bouquet to darken and season It; strain and pour this over the fish, and serve at once. Harper's Bazar. three-fourth- on account of Us location It can be kept cool with not a great deal ol difficulty. Air the houae thoroughly In the morning before the aun gets hot and then cloae the windows to the very bottom and pull the (hades al) the way down. Close the door leading Into the kitchen to keep the odor of the cookIf the ing out of the dining-room- . room despite these precautions geti hot and sultry wring some cloths oul of cold water and hang them In front of the window, which you have partial ly opened, and allow the breese tc blow through the wet cloths until they are dried. Quickly cloae the win dows and place a dish or pall of cold water In the middle of the room. At soon aa the water become warm re move It from the room. Even on the moat sultry, muggy day this method will aeldom fall to coot and refresh the air of the room. Add Ing a drop of two of oil of lavender tc the water will give the room a doll cate, indistinct ordor and will drive away any Blew which chance to be there. lThe Home.d zi d s Salt sprinkled around the drains la a simple and Inexpensive disinfectant. If hooks for the bathroom, kitchen and pantry are dipped In enamel paint there will be no trouble from Iron rust. Maple alrup which haa fermented gnd become aour can be freshened by heating to the boiling point and adding a little aoda.. Stir thoroughly, then skim. It la said If the upper sash of a window Is drawn down to the sill, the lower one pushed to within two or three Inches of the top of the window. It will give a good circulation In a sleeping room, yet the drart will not be noticed. To clean swansdown make a warm soap lather and in this gently knead the swansdown till clean. Then rinse in fresh cold water to which a little blue has been added. Shake well and hang In the felr to dry, shaking from time to time to make the down v fluffy. Lemon Ginger Beer. This beverage should be made a couple of days before using. Pour two gallons cold water over a lemons sliced thin, add a pound and a half sugar and a scant ounce ginger root Let this come to a boll then add a tablespoonful cream of tartar. Strain and set In a cool place. When nearly cold, add a yeast cake dissolved in a little lukewarm water, atlr thoroughly, then set in a cool place over nlghL In the morning mix well and bottle, corking air tight, and lay the bottles on their sides in a cool place. A small bottle of Jamaica ginger extract may be used In place of the whole ginger, if preferred. half-doze- ruined you. And I was fool enough to send you to them. This is the end." rebelllously. "Or the beginning, "Doppelklnn is mild and kind. "Mild and kind! One would think that you were marrying me to a horse! Well, I shall not enter the cathedral." "How will you avoid It? calmly. . "I shall find a way; wait and see." She was determined. "I shall wait" Then, with a sudden softening, for he loved the girl after I am growing old, my his fashion: child. If I should die, what would become of you? I have no son; your Uncle Franz, who Is but a year or two younger than I am, would reign, and he would not tolerate your madcap I ways. You must marry at once. love you In spite of your willfulness. But you have shown yourself incapable of loving. Doppelklnn Is wealthy. You shall marry him. decidedly. "I will run away, uncle, "I have notified the frontiers, will be tranquilly. "From now on you watched. It is the Inevitable, my bow to that. child, and even I have to She touched the paper in her bosom, but paused. went on "Moreover, I have decided, BetHonorable the send "to the duke, to England." ty Moore back "Betty?" per"Yes. She Is a charming young too sympa-thetiis altogether she but son, do. She abets you In all you not does Her English Independence After the conform with my deas. father her wedding I shall notify My friends, Everything, everything! God Kes to the right my liberty, will she whom every woman- -to love of these me rob uncle, And you, my I should tell you hat things! What If me Is now Impossible? with marriage her lips growing thin. much sur- I should not be very princes of a dozen wealthy countries We are not as the common people; w can not marry where we will. I shall announce that the marriage will take place next week. "Do not send my friend away," she pleaded, apparently tamed. "I will promise to give the matter thought Good night Lsft-Ove- r Eggs. Eggs that have been bard boiled and sent to the table and untouched can be sliced and dressed with mayonnaise. Fried eggs can be run through a food chopper, mixed with potatoes and cooked in potato balls. Poached eggs should be reheated and cooked done and run , through a' rlcer to add to salads. Boiled or fried eggs If run through a rlcer and mixed with finely chopped meat make good croquettes. If the yolk of an egg Is used and the white la left, beat It and stir Into apple sauce. A broken egg can be covered with water, placed In the refrigerator and will keep for several days. She turned away without a word and left him. When he roared at her she knew by experience that he was harmless; but this quiet determination meant the exclusion of any further argument. There Waa no escape unless she ran away. She wept on her pillow that night, not so much at the thought of wedding Doppelklnn as at the fact that Prince Charming had evidently missed the last train and was never coming to wake her up, or, It he did come, It would be when It was too Cherry Pudding. late. How many times had she conPut Into a saucepan two tablespoon-ful- s fresh in the rode she as of butter with two tablespoonfuls jured him up, fairness of the mornings! How manly of flour; blend well together over a he was and how his voice thrilled herl gentle fire; add one pint of milk very Her horse was suddenly to run away, gradually and stir until boiling; pour' he was to rescue her, and then de- over a quarter pound of bread crumbs; mand her band In marriage as a fitting add grated rind of one lemon, four reward. Sometimes he had black hair tablespoonfula of sugar, one teaspoon-fu- l of vanilla extract, quarter pound of and eyes, but more often he was big and tall, with yellow hair and the cherries cut in halves and three bluest eyes In all the world. eggs. Pour Into a mold well and edcorated with cherries greased CONTINUED.) BE (TO at the bottom. Cover with buttered paper and steam two hours. Animals Fight In Shack. Changing the Bed Linen. From Bristols woods, In Souther Arrange to change the bed linen on Prospect, a village near Waterbury, Conn., a wildcat pursued a big deer the day you sweep your bedrooms. The until from exhaustion It fell through soiled sheets may thus be drawn over the roof of the side hill hen shack of the newly made beds to keep the dust Edson Black. Guinea fowls set up a from the spread and pillows. It will great commotion, and with the deera take but a few moments to remove these sheets and shake out of doors desperate struggles for liberty, cooped 80 before consigning them to the clothes up In a shack 15x12. with nearly a hamper. that a racket such was there fowls, He trusty watchdog awoke Black. Nut Candy. went to the henhouse to find 32 fowls Boll one quart of sirup, three cups of glass to pane death, every trampled butter half size of please look at this,I then, and you and all the roosts broken and the deer( granulated sugar, wllf undprBtani, .by egg, two tablespoons of vinegar until Its neck. flanks; broken a of the bogus dying hard when dropped in water, add Doppelklnn." She thrust were lacerated from the clawi of the It is hands. his Into In the half teaspoon soda the last thing; tert Ideate were which of tracks wildcat, spread nut meats In tins. Pour candy The duke read It careKfu'l3rJ?1 coop, where It remained until fright-- ' het over the nuts. Iji thin muscle In hla face ened away by the approach of Black. uo with a terrifying smile. !" looked well-beate- n NOTES with A cool dining-rooI one of the greatest blessings one can posses in summer, but tf ones room is not cool p the saddle at dawn. All I a couple of hours between Til be In ed Ust I. the third ile." 4 DININQ-ROOM- n table-spoonfu- ls upon wtned CHAPTER V. eomt is. "Where, eagerly. our s er, 9 haver You ll him. y , 'lerer HAVE COOL s, t. ;r ivek lose TABLE DELICACIES ( 1)0 J ,lJ Elopes sthi 'M,e.a.a? "My reason overshadows it. You do produce this. You virtually placed your honor and reputation, which I know to be above the! you! But you keeping of a man reproach, luto who would sell his leave me no other method." oul for a thousand crowns." "You loved my aunt once," a The girl felt her knees broken note In her voice, give way, and he sat down. Tears slowly welled up not unkindly; in her Tlove kw totlH. eyes and overflowed, blurring must have peace In the house. Observe what you have so far accom- everything, uk P and went over to plished la the matter of creating tur- . his desk, rummaging among the pa-- , moil. The duke took up a paper. per. . He returned to the girl .with a My sins? contemptuously. "Let us call them your transgres- letter. Read that, and learn the sions. Listen. You have ridden a treachery of the man you trusted." horse as a man rides it; you have ridThe letter was written by Btelnbock. den bicycles In public streets; you In It he disclosed all. It was a venomhave stolen away to a masked ball; ous. you ran away from achool In Paris It In Insulting letter. The girl crushed her hand and visited heaven knows whom; you "Is he dead? she asked, all the bithave bribed sentries to let you in terness In her heart surging to her when you were out late; you have thrust aside the laws as If they meant lips.To Barschelt, briefly. Now, nothing; you have trifled with the what shall I do with this? tapping state papers and caused the body po- the bogus certificate. litic to break up a meeting aa a conse-queno- e "Give It to me," said the girl wearof the laughter." ily. She ripped It Into halves, into The girl, as she recollected this day quarters, into infinitesimal squares, to which he referred, laughed long and and tossed them Into the waste-baske- t Joyously. He waited patiently till she I am the unhapplest girl In the had done, and I am not sure that hla world." mouth did not twist under hla beard. "I am sorry," replied the duke. "Foreign education la the cause of all "It Isnt as If I had forced grand Doppelktnn this, he said finally. Those cursed on you without first letting you have French and English schools have your choice. You have rejected the Sf.jrrr." . t YVhat do you mean?" What a terr!- - mu suppose anything lake place without my !e.thl Bb8 lh0Ul1' wed DopPI-tl hearing of it? k And a dishonest, !?she !h eq,"Iy determined unscrupulous rascal!suchSome day I The Sentleman shall thank .t11, ?01;, wUh the the American consul perbump may flgurs for his this out to suit himself, sonally part In the affair. I was waiting to see when "Have you no pity? you would' f;:sriC' S? 1 "Poor, foolish child! Wash Silk Waist. Make a strong suds of white soap, borax and lukewarm water. Put walaf in auds, let soak for 15 minutes, then lift waist up and down and rub soiled places with hands; do not use a board. Rinse In several cold waters and In the last a little borax and piece of starch, size of a walnut, to about a gallon of water; then hang up to dry. When ready to Iron, dampen thorough ly, let He for a few minutes, then Iron on wrong side with warm iron. I have treated a white china silk waist Uke this dozens of times and It always came out as white as new, with r slight stiffness which looks like new. , Curried Pork." Cut two and a half pounds of fresh pork Into square pieces, fry them In a stew pan with a piece of butter. Chop four onions and fry them also, then mix them with the pork. Add one tablespoonful of curry powder, season with salt and pepper, pour In one pint of water or stock, set over the fire until Lolling, stirring constantly. Draw to one side and simmer slowly s for about of an hour. When done take out the pieces of pork, boll the gravy and about half the quantity and pour It over the meat Serve with rice. three-quarter- . Stringency Pudding, It is not an especial mark of economy to save the stale bread for pudding, and then put In an extra amount of eggs, butter, and sugar to make It good. The success lies In making the pudding cheap. Pour boiling water on a half pint of broken bread. When soft mix In any kind of fruit stewed or fresh and add a bit of butter and one egg. Spice and sugar to taste and bake 20 minutes. Make a sauce of the beaten white of the egg, flavored and sweetened. Improved Shortcake. great improvement on strawberry shortcake la made by adding three sliced bananas to two boxes of the berries when preparing them for the cake. This brings out all the delicate A flavor of the berry and Imparts a most delicious flavor to the whole cake. Bleach Grass 8talns. A good way to remove grass stains Is to spread butter on them and lay the article In the hot sunshine. Cold water, a tablespoonful of ammonia, and soap will take out machine grease where other means would not answer on account of the color In 115 miles of track 117 bridges have been built across the Mussel hel river in Montana by the Chicago, Milwaukee & SL Paul railroad. An unknown man riding the brake-beam- s was ground to pieces at Livingston, Mont Fragments of his body were scattered over five miles of track. Twenty-eigh- t new locomotives, worth about 8500,000, are said to be tied up at Denver aa the result of the strike of the shopmen on the Denver A Rio Grande railroad. Application for a receiver for the First bank of Rawhide has been made. The appointment will be made on Aug. 6 and In all probability A A Codd will he named as the man. While hunting deer In the woods near Lovell, a small town near Tekoa, Wash., on the Ceoeur dAlene resets vatlon, John Gates, an Indian, was killed by the accidental discharge of Invitations have been sent to William II. Taft and William J. Bryan, the rival presidential candidates, to attend the Interstate fair and exposition In Denver In September and deliver addresses. Capital la now developing the water power of the Cherry Creek r.ectlon of Nevada, for an Irrigation project In Coal valley, and an area thirty by fifteen miles In extent eventually will be under cultivation. Mack Thayer, son of William Thayer of Fenton, Wyo., accidentally shot himself with a .22 calibre revolver. The bullet entered between the ribs and lodged under the left shoulder and Thayer will recover. Albert Penny, a Union Pacific shopman at Laramie, Wyo., has fallen heir to a share of an estate valued at The property la located In New York and Penny's share will amount to about $800,000. Mrs. May Belle Cottrell, charged with having raised a check given her by Colonel D. P. Jenkins, nestor of the Washington bar, Spokane millionaire and philanthropist, haa been released from custody on $2,000 bonds. The last spike connectlpg Butte with Chicago on the Chicago, Milwaukee A SL Paul coast extension was driven at 6 o'clock on the evening of July 27, by D. A. Macintosh, one of the contractors. The spike was one of brass. The big prize fight arena of the Butte Athletic club, on the flats below Butte, was destroyed by fire of unknown origin on July 81, entailing a loss of $3,500. In this arena all of the big prize fights of Butte have been held. An unknown man who was stealing a ride on the Overland limited was ground to pieces beneath the wheels and hla body strewn in bits tor over a mile, three miles east of Wlnnemucca, Nevada. An Inquest did not develop his identity. of Sheriff Campbell Clssoula, Mont, while visiting a friend at Taft, near Missoula, happened upon two holdup men in the act of robbing Henry Smith. The sheriff gave chase and caught both robbers, after an exciting and long chase. The Montana Bankers association held Its annual convention In Billings last week. The feature of the opening session was the addresses by United States Senator Thomaa H. Carter and John G. Maronit, presl dent of the association. Three lives were lost by the capsizing of the yawl Elizabeth, In the Everett, Wash., harbor, about two miles . from abore. The drowned men are George Morton, aged 21, his slBter. Mamie Morton of RvereU, and Miss Florence 8cott of Victoria. Stephen G. Grubb, s Civil war veteran, whose action at a critical moment probably saved General William T. Shermans entire store of ammunition Just before his famous march from Atlanta to the aea. died at Tacoma on July 30, age 73 years. John Murphy and Joseph N. McNeat were instantly killed at Nimrod station, Mont., on the Northern Paclflo railroad, and Gus Wassen was seriously Injured. The men were riding the pilot of a work trains engine when the front trucks climbed the rails. A Jury at Fort Benton, Mont., acquitted Fred Larlmore of the murder of W. P. Turner at the latter's ranch near Beatrice, lost April. Judge Tat-ta- n scored the Jurors severely when the verdict was read, and Intimated that had a verdict of guilty of murder In the first degree been returned it would have met with hla approval. Jesse Flfer, a street car grlpman, killed hla daughter Hazel, Mrs. Dennis Nihoul, a confinement patlenL fatally wounded his wife, Mrs. L. Flfer, seriously wounded Mrs. Ethel Warren, his sister-in-law- , at Seattle, and then took his own life. Flfer was crazed because his wife had left him. Rex Beach, the novelist and playwright, who has Just returned from a bear hunting trip in Alaska, Is confined In a Seattle hospital, under the care of an eye specialist, with a serious attack of iritis, which, It Is feared, may result In the permanent loss of 0. . eight-year-ol- sight d James Gallagher, a liveryman M Twin Falls, Ida., has caused the arrest at Denver of Georga Kern and George McLaughlin, whom he accuses of having swindled him out of $5,000, wagered by him on a wrestling match, which he now declares to have been a fake. Frank Barker, a deserting lance corporal In company D of the Third at Fort George Infantry, stationed Wright, was arrested at Spokane last week, chaged with the murder of Ira Nesslnger, near Clear Iiko. He confessed the crime, but claimed it wat the result of a fight. |