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Show SCIENCE AND TUBERCULOSIS one-eight- one-fourt- h old-tim- Appetite Juice. The taking of food Into the mouth is a signal to all the digestive organs to prepare for work. Even the sight and odor of food may cause sn outflow of saliva, and at the same time the gastric juice pours Into the stomach. Pawlow, of St. Petersburg, Iq experiments upon a dog, observed that when food was introduced into the animal's stomach through an opening made for the purpose It was not acted upon; the digestive juice was not poured out, and the stomach apparently remained Inert for nearly half an hour. On the other hand, when the animal was allowed to see and smell the food, the saliva and the gastric juice poured forth abundantly, even though the animal did not actually taste a morsel. It Is important that the food should be retained In the mouth for a sufficient length of time to make the proper impression upon the nerves of taste, so that the entire digestive apparatus shall be thoroughly prepared to carry the food substances through the successive steps of the digestive process. The thorough chewing of the food produces an abundance of what Paw-localls Appetite Juice, which is the best and most important juice formed by the stomach. Hence food must he well relished, and eaten with careful attention to very thorough ' . mastication. Vital Activity in Cold Weather. The vital fires burn brighter in cold weather. The whole tide of life moves with greater activity. The process of digestion is quickened because the process of oxidation is increased. The liver requires oxygen for making bile and performing all its varied functions, and the oxygen we breathe In cold air, improves the function of the liver, so it can do more work than before. The muscles, also, depend for their activity upon oxygen.. In an excess of carbonic acid gas I he muscles are asphyxiated, and so one feels depressed In warm weather. A person does not get out of breath so easily in cold air as in warm. The woodchopper can swing his axe with more energy on a cold day. Cold air aids in the elimination of the poisonous matters which are all the time forming within the body. When oxygen , is not plentiful enough to make the vital fires burn sufficiently to consume the fuel and waste of the body, then much of the waste material Is left behind in the form of imperfectly burned substances, which may be called cinders of the body. , ; Burning Up the Body Cinders. ' All food must be burned within the body to be of any value. If too much food Is shoveled in, the body furnace is clogged. If too little draft is supplied' the fuel is not entirely consumed. This leaves "cinders which are the cause of many chronic diseases, and of premature old age. The fuel supply may be regulated In the dining room. The draft Is dependent on the kind and amount of air breathed. Cold,, crisp, fresh air furnishes perfect draft. The blood takes from this kind of air, when it Is breathed, in, .just the element needed to burn the food. r - Six breaths of air contain as much of this element oxygen as seven breaths of overheated, Indoor out-doo- Wheres the Manf Thomas Hunter, the president of the New York normal college, was addressing a band of young women. Young women. said Mr. Hunter, "make excellent teachers, I know young women whose genius In this work is as wonderful as the genius of a great painter. Such young women, of course, are rare. But good teachers, extremely good teachers, are not rare. Any one can become a good teacher who likes the work. .But if you dislike the work, turn to anything else but teaching. We cannot succeed ever in what we hate. Bad teachers, when we find them, are persons who- dislike the work. They are like the young girl in the country town who said to one of ner friends: Tes, I am going to take up teach- ing. The friend looked amazed. Your she exclaimed. You a school teacher? Why, I d rather marry a widower with nine children. 8 would 1, said the other. But where is the Kansas City Journal. Englishman Who Lived for Year ot Less Than One Dollar. HOW THEY MAINTAIN THE OHAEMS Roger Crab wagered 1,000 that ht would live for a year on three shill. OF THEIR SEX. ngs aud sixpence and won his bet Tha Importance that Attach. to tlia Cara Indeed, he more than won it, for of tha Blood If One Wants Bright Eye the end of the twelve months he had and a Clear Complexion. managed to save threepence out of Every sensible woman naturally wishes his housekeeping money, his expen. to appear attractive. She knows the value diture for food, therefore, averaging of bright eyes, delicate complexion and Just over three farthings a week. Foi arms. Site knows also that this sum even the cheapest of ordi, lively spirits. basis of her charms, nary vegetarian diet such as ientlla at is the health good' GRACE OF ORIENTAL PEOPLE. and that good blood is the source of good for instance, was quite out of the ques, tion, and he had to content himself Traveler Notes Fact With Some Feel- health. Miss Mamie Cou way has a complexion with nettle soup thickened with acorn ing of Jealousy. which is the admiration of all who know flour, pudding made of bran and tap Passing us occasionally, going to her. Asked if she could make any sug- nip leaves chopped together, and so Jerusalem with butter and eggs and gestions that would he helpful to others forth. Yet on this diet Crab not only little jars of leben that showed their leas fortunate, she said : survived, but actually gained some thick creamy throats as they were not have would in few pounds weight; while as for Ms My complexiou held up to us, were small companies pleased you, if you had seen it two years general health, he declared that he of women in single file. As one blue ago. It was then about- as had as it had never felt better than he did at procession went by, the leader called could he, and it gave me a great deal of the termination of his to us: "Why should you ride and dissatisfaction. If yon want a good ordeal. English Exchange. we walk? ,Why Is your lot better complexion you must take care of your than ours? Given the opportunity health, especially of the condition of for leisurely argument we could not blood. My health was at that time your by any philosophy have made satis- completely broken down. I was nervous, Almost nobody takes th factory answer. We could only admit bad frequent headaches, a torpid liver the fact as they saw it, and recognize aud a great deal of paiu in that region. the universal world, plaint of dis- I suffered also from iudigestiou. It was . money ; almost nobody wants content. clear that my blood was in bad condition, the money. for pimples broke out all over my face. They carry themselves, these womTour grocer returns your money If you dotfi for there realize to that, It is hard en, like figures on an antique frieze. like ScbUllnge Best. As they stride along, holding in sure isnt the slightest trace of such blembalance on their heads their jars aud ishes now. Within and Without baskets of homely produce, they tread It was unfortunately quite otherHow often, while women and before time girls a aud and passed wise then, long the stony paths with the grace sit warm at sweet . firesides, their largeness of action that we of the Oc- I found anything that gave me any re- hearts and imaginations are doomed cident have grown to regard as be- lief. I became very weak and listless. to divorce from the comfort surround-inlonging only to the age of Praxiteles. The doctor's medicine did me no good, their persons, forced out by night recomof number a took I highly and The men are also admirable in the to wander with no better result. stress of through todark ways, to dare simplicity of their gestures, the big mended tonics weather, contend with the to Dr. use as I begun lines of their attitudes, the swing of As soon, however, snow-blasto wait at lonely gates and Pule People my for Pills Pink Williams I a saw their draperies. stiles In wildest storms, watching and youth fling had after I and cleared np, complexion his mantle over his shoulders and listening to see and hear the father fold it about him exactly in the man- taken two boxes there was not a sign of the son, the husband coming home cheeks face. on left My my ner of the classic Greek, sculptural a pimple Charlotte Bronte. in his finely unconscious poee. God became rosy, I gained flesh and have had save the day when these sons of Ca- perfect health ever since. Rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes an naan clothe their limbs in our merely signsof healthy blood. They Law Metropolitan ungainly garments! Americans drink the worst come not only in the case of Miss Coh way , Magazine. whose home is at 1241 East Eighth street, tea in the world. Canton, Ohio, but to thousands of , Superfluous Information. Pink Williams Dr. for whom women Its quite a heavy shower were Pills have made new blood. There is no There is plenty of good having, he said, cheerily, to the man surer way for you to obtain them, than to here too. who had entered with his clothes bny a box of these pills from any drugcorsoaked and his umbrella dripping. for them and They yourself. try Tour grocer returns your money If you dont gist like Schilling Best Yes, sir, replied the stranger, rect irregularities and banish weakness. testily, it is a heavy shower; but you Growth of Beard and Nails. Poet Seeks a Wife. have failed to remark also the interIn every seventy years the averagt It Is only to be expected that a matesting facts that the shower is falling downward from above, that its a wet rimonial advertisement In Italy should man grows a beard 25 feet long, hair almost 50 feet long and nails 23 feet shower, and that It is raining on both be poetic la tone, and consequently sides of the street. Also you have that poets should make use of them long. neglected to observe that this is the without shame. Hence, no doubt, the year 1905, that the earth Is round, following interesting announcement, A and that there are four seasons each published In a Roman paper: We couldnt moneyback year. But Im obliged to you for your poet, humanitarian, of sensitive nature, poor and alone, would consecrate his information about the weather. tea, if our tea werent better And the stranger walked away, with existence to the service of a gentle a glitter of vindictive triumph in his lady desiring to marry, who would he than tea as you know disposed to assist in the publication eye. London of his works, and to share In his sucTour grocer returns your money If yon dont cess. Apply, etc., Milan. Uks Schillings Best. What genOne Thing More to Find Out. I did hear of a small boy who was tle lady could resist so alluring a prosAtlantic Waves. somewhat seriously upset In his be- pect? The size of the Atlantic waves has liefs by the discovery that Santa been carefully measured for the WashBALT RHEUM ON HANDS. Claus Is a myth. His Sunday school In height ington Hydraulic Bureau. teacher told me about it. She was Suffered Agony and Had to Wear the waves usually average about thirty teaching the class the creed, and Masfeet, but In rough weather they attain Bandages All the Time Another ter George grinned the whole time. from forty to forty-eigh- t Cure by Cuticura. feet DurAfter the Sunday school was dising storms they are often from 500 missed he walked home with the Another cure by Cuticura is told of feet to 600 feet long aqjl last ten or teacher and she reproached him for by Mrs. Caroline Cable, of Waupaca, eleven seconds, while the longest yet thegrin.' Wls.. following grateful let- known measured half a mile, and did The other boys didn't act' that ter: in thehusband suffered agony uvt spend itself for twenty-thre-e My said she. way," salt rheum on his hands, and I had . Theyre babies, said George. "I to them bandaged all the time. used to be, but I know better now. We keep tried everything we could get, but Boh Jordan told me he found out nothing helped him until he used CutiSanta Claus was just your father and cura. One set of Cuticura Soap, OintTea is cheaper than water, ' I found mother out yet who ment, and Pills cured him aint entirely, God Is, but I bet I do before long. hands his if tea is comfortable and and have been as smooth Washington Post. as possible ever since. I do hope this letter will be the means of helping water is To Poverty. some other sufferer. la srsry pnekngs of Schillings Best Ten Is ft Come, link thine arm In mine, good Povbooklet: How to Bake Good Ton. erty, Penniless yeoman In the tattered gear! Told by the Small Mouth. Let's Jog adown the brazen world and Mean Fling at Scotchmen. Great and fortitude steer A man who says he is an EnglishFor ports where toil is aristocracy! dwell with the small mouth of which Utopia laughs not at our sackcloth. See! the lips are kept tightly shut Never- man writes to. the Westmlnstef Here's fair Sir Lackland and right many a peer, theless, It is liable to occasional out- Gazette that he has learned that in With doublets threadbare as our own, bursts of Scots 1567 there were only thirty-sifull near, in London, and that he now knows Would vow us love and hospitality! Important to Mothers. the meaning of the expression, thq Our gold's laid up in sunsets, safe from Examine carefully evary bottle of CA8T0RIA, good old times. thieves, e zefc aad ztire remedy for infante and children, And all our current silver's In the stars. Weve naught to lose save honest hearts, and aee that it who steals Shall get more treasure than he knows Bean tha or feels, Here's sweetest roots from out our Signature of is a dainty taste and scrip, good sirs, And waters clear and couches In tha Is Um For Over 80 Yean. The Kind Toe Hare Aiw.y. Bought leaves. a dainty feeling. Harrison S. Morris. Size of British Dominions. is dainty too, but , Coffee Out on a Limb. It has been figured out that the BritItaly, I see. Is going to present the ish empire Is sixteen times larger than another sort altogether. United States with a statue - of all the French dominions and forty , Tour groeor rotarns your money If you don't Caesar. times greater than the German emUk Schillings Best. "Whats that? pire. "Why, I asked a dozen men this First Pantomime. Millions In Onto. The first morning who Caesar was and not a regular English pantomime Salzere New National Oats yielded in Is one but answered me evasively. said to have been "Harlequin ExeMich., 240 bu., in Mo., 255 bu., in N. D., "Answered you evasively? 310 bn., end in 30 other states from 150 cuted, produced at the Llnoolns Inn Yes; didn't seem to know, you to 300 bu. per acre. Now this Oat if gen- Fields theater, Dec. 26, 1717. erally grown in 1905, will add millions of know. bushels to the yield and millions of dolWell, well, well; such ignorance! lars to the farmers purse I I can hardly believe it possible! By the way, who was Caesar? The most significant word Why he was er no that was Nero. He was er he oh! go to between you and your grocer Homebuilder Yellow Dent Corn grows thunder." Houston Post, r like a weed and yields from 157 to 260 is moneyback. bushels and more per acre! Its the bigA Cure for Eloquence. gest yielder on earth! Saber's Speltz, Beardless Barley, MacaFormer Attorney General Griggs of roni Signifies fairness. Wheat, Pea Oat, Billion Dollar Grass New Jersey was In attendance at a and Earliest Your grocer return, jour money It yea 4a Cane are money makers for Ilk. Schilling. Beat. public meeting where the chief orator you, Mr. Fanner. of the evening was d inJUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND IOC Arsenic in Daily Food. dividual who was quite deaf. He wore in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La The average person takes about out the patience of everybody in tne Crosse, Yis.. and receive their big catalog of farm seed samples. W. N. U.j 0.0003 grains of arsenic in his daily hall, and it seemed as if he would and lota food. Fish, rock-salwater, and win never conclude his remarks. In really Old Ago Pensions. Austrian are in arsenic. rich comparatively the midst of it one committeeman Under the Austrian poor law every turned to the other and said: Comforts of Travel. man 60 years old Is entitled to a penHe really thinks that he is a splension equal to the amount per The porter on the California Limited did orator. day which he has earned during his this winter will be prepared to press a It s a pity hes deaf, promptly regentlemans trousers while he waits. working days. This is a new wrinkle, introduced for joined the other; If he could hear himself talk it would very quickly the benefit of tasUdious dressers. It isnt absolutely necessary to carry cure him of that hallucination. Baltialong an extra pair of trousers, either; more Herald We drink it for drink; for the porter works while you sleep. On this luxurious train daily market - Tide That Led to Fortune. the for the afterglow: reports are received by wire; there taste, a is in tide There the affairs of ; are the latest morning and evening stamen, said the man who quotes Shakea good deal of taste and longnewspapers issued en route, fine and hich, taken at its flood speare, tionery, a library of western booksexertime glow for the money. A Whitley current magazines. leads on fo fortune.' ciser for those who wish to keep up Yes, replied the man who had marTour srooor return. your money if you doaT their athletics, and - electric curling ried an heiress. I remember the tide Uks Schilling o Born. irons for the ladies- are other travel that led to my fortune well. comforts. What tide was that? Gallantry to Burn. The Santa Fe Intends to keep It ' It always makes us mad to see fast It was eventide and we were sitflyer at the front. statements that the old fashioned ting in the garden. women were better cooks or houseFirst Use of Plnno. To Inspect College Gyms. There are 10,700 pieces of wood, keepers than the women of the presDr. William G. Anderson, instructor ent day. The woman of the present cloth, and felt and 1.185 feet of wire . of the gymnasium at Yale, will make day is good enough for us, or for any- in a concert The earliest inspection of the leading school and body. There are a few shiftless wo- recorded public performance on the took place at Covent Garcollege gymnasiums of the north and men, but the great majority of them piano-fort- e are admirable. Opelika News. middle et. den, England, on May 16th, 1767. the-glo- Methods of Fighting This Moat Insidious of All Diseases Best Plan Is to Keep Body In Proper Condition. The "Cold Air Cure. Cold air purifies the blood, energises the heart, puis new vim into the muscles, helps the stomach, wakes up the liver, lifts the whole being to a higher plane of life. The most successful consumption resort In the world is Davos, a winter resort in the Swiss Alps, near the where the snow Is six feet deep and the temperature close to zero all winter. Every winter hundreds of tubercular patients from all parts of the world resort to Davos to take the cold air cure.'' Cold air cures (there is no doubt about it), when accompanied by wise and skillful management, and careful regulation of diet. In the summer season this great healing force is available only in a small measure by means of cold baths, ice rubs, and fans; but in the winter season, the keen frosty air is everywhere, ready to lie put to work as the gieat uplifting power It Is when rightly applied. The winter season alone provides ciitinuoua tonic conditions. The de e air, containing from to more oxygen than midsummer, stimulates all the vital to a higher degree of activity, .re is a healing force which Is in operation day and night, and steadily lifts the patient up to a higher level until the ebbing tide of life turns forces of backward, and renovating the body resume their activities with e all the vigor. THRIVED ON LEAN DIET. would know, far off in the Sunrisei Isle. As he saw the men standing around For a moment he understood. of battle was refleeted in bis face, and the look that they had seen , as he stood alone on the shone in his eyes. He tried hard to raise himself, but the effort was too muen for him. Banzai, murmured the little chap as he sank back in the sergeants nM3 hill-to.- air As man breathes about eighteen times per minute this means a loss of four thousand breaths a day by living in a hot, close Indoor atmosphere. The amount taken In depends on the habits of life. A deep breath must be r earned. A few moments vigorous exercise will do it. The nostrils dilate, the chest heaves, the heart quickens, the lungs expand, and the fresh air is pumped into the body at a rapid rate. The draft is open. The cinders are burning up. The whole system is being cleared of rubbish. Dont be afraid of cold air. There's life and health out of doors. out-do- ' d Alcohol vs. Strength. The laborer, the traveler, and the soldier use alcohol under the delusion that It produces strength. When fatigued, the laborer takes a glass of grog, and feels better. He imagines himself increased stronger. His strength, however. Is wholly a matter of imagination. The use of alcohol makes a mn feel stronger makes him believe that he can do more work, endure more fatigue and hardship, and withstand a greater degree of cold than he could without it; but when an actual trial Is made, It soon becomes apparent that the ability is lacking. Numerous experiments have shown that alcohol decreases muscular strength. Says Dr. Bruntou, The smallest quantity takes somewhat from the strength of the muscles.' Says Dr. Edmunds, of London, A stimulant Is that which gets strength out of a man." Some years ago a series of experiments were made for the purpose of determining the Influence of alcohol upon the muscular strength. The combined strength of all the different groups of muscles in the body was found, In the case of a healthy young man, to be 4,881 pounds. The young man was then given two ounces of brandy, and the test was repeated. He felt confident that his strength was increased. In fact, it was found to be only 3,385 pounds, a loss of more A notable diminution than In strength was still present ten hours after the administration of the brandy. one-thtr- Real Healing Agents. There are many fictitious remedies. Some make a man feel better when he is really getting worse. The most valuable measures which can be employed In dealing with the sick may be said fo be baths, exercise and diet. The chronic Invalid can be made well only by being reconstructed. The sick man must be transformed into a healthy man by a process of gradual change. He has been months or years In tearing down his constitution and substituting an Inferior grade of material. Now this process must be reversed, and little by little, the old tissues must be torn down and new tissues built in their place. Warm baths help throw off stored up poisons, and cold baths hasten the destruction of waste tissues, increase the activity of the heart and of all the organs, encourage the formation of the digestive fluids, and Increase the appetite for food. By meqns of exercise the movement of the blood is quickened and the old diseased tissues are broken down and carried out of the body. Exercise always diminishes weight By exercise a normal appetite is earned and deep breathing encouraged. Pure simple food is the proper material with which to construct a new and healthy body. Man Is built of what he eats. The house Is no better than the material. Thus baths, exercise, and a natural dietary constitute a curative trio, each helping the other. WHOLESOME RECIPES. Tomato Sauce One quart strained tomatoes, one tablespontul nut butter, one grated onion. Mix well and boll five minutes. Thicken with cornstarch to the consistency of thick cream. Salt to taste. Cream of Peanut Soup One cupful f ground peanuts; teaspoonful celery salt; one small onion cut fine; TEA C 3 (Copyright, 1904, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) For days the tired forces had fought over the same ground, advancing and retreating, tasting victory aad then defeat. The big guns all along the front kept up a continuous roar as the Japs poured in a remorseless rain of Shells. The Russians stubbornly contesting every inch of ground, every trench and hill, were being slowly driven back, leaving their dead in pcores. The rows of silent bodies In the captured trenches told a story of dogged resistance. One position alone withstood the reckless attacks of the Japanese. Time after time KurolU had hurled bis regiments up the slope, to have then! retreat broken and shattered. It was the key to the enemy's position, and U taken, would turn an orderly retreat Into a rout. Full well this was realized, and that morning came the or der from headquarters to take the position at any cost. remThe weary, nant gave place to fresh regiments of little brown men in khaki. Preparations for the assault had begun from both sides the firing became desultory and then ceased altogether. It was the lull before the storm, and the only Bound that broke the sflllness Was the occasional murmur from the trenches and the tramp of a column as it moved Into line. Among the reserves, arriving from the south the night before, was the battalion from Dayo Zaka; fresh young fellows with a scattering of Roughened veterans, whose little eyes danced as they got a foretaste of the battle that was to come, with the whir of bullets and the clash of steel. Lynx-eyeofficers the solemn-facesquatted behind the line, and talked in monosyllables to the men; now and then they grunted out a few gruff words of encouragement, as some young fellow, counting his chances of survival, grew nervous under the sapping their nerve, and making them dig their nails in the wet grass and savagely grit their teeth. A man next to Amano turned to him to make a remark; with an oath he sprang into the air, and fell back, while the warm blood from the wound spurted over the arm and shoulder of the boy by his side. For a moment he lay rigid, and then, blanched to the lips, fainted dead away. It ran along the line, that the quiet modest little fellow in the Dango company had fainted at the first sight of blood; some laughed nervously, uthers cursed. As the sergeant poured a drop of brandy between the blue lips, there was a fear tugging at his heart, that after all the boy was a coward. In spite of bis timid ways the old man had vouched for bis manhood. Realizing the shame of It as he re- - powder-begrime- Among these was little Amano With his round baby face, and great brown eyes, gullelessness shining from them, he became at once, the butt for all teasing, and the general favorite of the men. With his quiet manners he had soon put a stop to the chaffing, except now and then the grizzled sergeant who led his platoon, could not resist the temptation to tell him some harrowing tale of bloody skirmishes or fierce assaults, just to see his eyes grow larger with wpnder and fear. As he lay at full length, waiting the general order for the advance, his thoughts turned to his home in far-of-f sunny Japan. His eyes filled with tears as he saw hts aged father and his tiny sister anxiously awaiting tidings from the front; as for Onoto, the gentle little sweetheart who had so bravely bade him go he brushed hts hand fiercely across his eyes, and stared hard at the lines and lines of barbed wire stretching across the brown face of tne hill. The sergeant saw his gesture, and understanding, gripped his arm in a Jin-8uk- They found him In the first trench. vived, Amanos face tightened and his eyes grew hot. As he patted him on the shoulder, his comrade caught sight of a face filled with unalterable determination. Deployed in line of skirmishers, the attacking columns had twice swept up the hill to fall back, crumpled and broken. Like ants they swarmed over the fences and , gullies,' only to he hurled back, decimated by the wither-in- g fire. . Orderlies dashed up and down the line, the bugles sounded, the officers squatting behind the line, scabbards on knees, threw away their cigarettes and closed up. At last came the command "Forward! and with a shout of relief the reserve sprang Into ac- tion. hill-cres- table-spoonf- one-fourt- - one-fourt- h 1 it - one-hal- Philippines. Yes, said the plumber. In sponse to a question by the wot who lived in the apartment, "thai an army knapsack. My son brou it home with him from the Phi pines. When I asked him to give me to Improvise into a tool chest did so. I did not want it simply cause it was an army knapsack or cause It had been with my son in I wanted It becatist Philippines. was light, strong and useful. Aft had fixed it up It exactly filled idea of a tool chest I bad carried my mind for a long, long time. Bi with a sigh, I shall have to giv up. Why? Inquired the woman of house. "Because. replied the plumber, takes half my time arswering qi tions ahout the blamed thing. K York Press. TEA Tit-Bit- On they swept gathering in the broken flanks as they went, up the ascent they dashed, cutting the fences and leaping the pits as they ran. For a moment the defenders held their fire, and then from every rifle-pi- t and trench poured a holocaust of lead and shrapnel. The line wavered, one pint cooked tomatoes. Cook slowly and then in mad frenzy dashed on. and long. When done rub through a friendly pressure. The advance sounded and the long Again and again they were swept by colander and add three pints of rich the rain of but a momilk or part milk and part cream. line arose and crept forward, the big ment from death, pausing the shock, they stumbled Let come to a boll and serve at once. guns took up the fight, and the bullets forward. t sipped through the blindly Macaroni with Komlet Boil until from the Untouched by the first withering was to lie order the f given tender one and cups of maca- air. Again fire, all hts gentleness gone, Amano roni, broken Into Inch lengths, in salt- down, and while the center halted and ran on, no feeling in his heart, save Rub one can of hulled welded itself with the damp earth, the a mad ed water. and tear out the desire to sweet corn through a colander or use two wings swept forward, and in a throats of those slay who opposed him. A the prepared Kornlet, and add to it bullet tore through his cap, and he one pint of cream or nut cream. Heat went down, only to be up again, his to boiling and thicken with one face covered with blood. Brushing it of flour. Mix with the cooked from his eyes, he kent recklessly on. teamacaroni, add one and The thin line reeling from the sysspoonfuls of salt; turn Into a pudding tematic volleying, was slowly giving dish and brown In a hot oven. away. The merciless slaughter was Date DaintieWash and steam for beyond human endurance, and at about ten minutes some choice dates. points the men were turning headlong remove one the seed, putside, Split down the hill. One man was followof a walnut ting in Its place ing another, and the glorious charge meat; press together and roll In powwas becoming a rout. dered sugar. First one, and then another, and another took it up; rippling along the His Troublesome Tool Chest. line it grew in volume, until drownWhen the journeyman pluns ing the roar of battle, a hoarse cheer went to a Harlem apartment housi burst from the dusty throats of the fix a broken steampipe his tool cl men. attracted attention. It was an ai There, yards In advance, almost beneath the terrible guns of the enemy, knapsack that had seen service in one-hal- t, TEA d strain. g was Amano. He stood beckoning them on with the twisted bayonet he had wrenched from his discarded rifle. Wounded and faint, he had stumbled on and on, until the terrible realization burst upon him that the men were falling back. Turning, he held out his arms, and with tears running down his moment the hill was a screaming mass blackened cheeks, sobbed out an apof murder-mamen. peal to them. The firing now became heavier, and They saw him standing there heedlittle spurts of dirt told that the enemy less of the flying bullets, and with were finding the range. Pale, with cheer after cheer, swept forward in a dry lips and distended eyes, Amano charge that was irresistible. Still walay, fascinated by the horror of It ving the bayonnette, he led them over He shuddered as a man on the right the crest. dropped his gun and settled back in They found him in the first trench, the mud. a huddled hunch of timidity. He was As man after man dropped out of shot through the lung and was going the fight, the strain cf Inaction told on fast. The old sergeant, sobbing like the men. Theirt was not to be car- a child, knelt and took him In his ried away by the mad exhilaration of arms. the charge, but to suffer the long ImHe opened his eyes and they were passive wait, wtt- - the bullets song tender, nrlet, the eyes his tiny sister seo-ond- ,TEA not self-contr- x TEA Tea TEA long-winde- d t, one-thir- d TEA grand-piano- |