It stimulate- app-ctlte and aids digestion. It makes your _ - lood do youmore " - H" I " good. Note how I relieves that stutty teeung alter hearty eating. Warm is the sun on the high pasture- lands Whereou rests the sweet lissome clover; There's laughter and song where the farm-house stands, There richest peace and content- ment still hover, Rayslof the noon-sun fall burning and glowing Upon the long hill, near the wild- wood and dell. A lonely bird sits where the tellers are goingâ€" It carols, “Sweet Summer, sweet Summer, farewell!" Shrined in my heart are memories ten- der 0f all-perfect Summer, now folding her wings; Across the worn threshold, there, falls the old splendor Of Summer's calm close in the great soul of things, Nayâ€"but she will not mourn long for ceressesâ€" Nor stay for the thrush-song far down in the dell,â€" Her spirit is hiding, she feels no dis- tressâ€"- The lonely bird carols, “Sweet Sum- mer, farewell!†â€"Charlotte Carson-Talcott. Mlnard’s Llnlment Heals Cuts. Courtesy Means Safety. Courtesy is the essence of safety on the highway. Courtesy is usually the display of good judgment at exacting times Incruse the (eedinx vam- of all fodder: by cut- ting mom with me Climax Cuuer. The (‘limax out: dry Itnw or buy just as well 1: men mm. It is ohelber to run. requiring less Down. 13 but]! nu: mom. costs leul for repair; Tell us whit Dower yuu have and let u: and you “mucus Ind Drlces‘ Sue money by burn]: on 0! these alumna now. The BATEMAN-WILKINSON 00., Ltd TORONTO - ONT. l’llH We Supply Cans. Highest Ruling Prices Paid. We Make Payments Daily. We Pay Express Charges. Farewell to Summer. BOWES CO., Limited Toronto thew it hftcr every meal PART I. One of the pet theories of Frances Baird, detective, was involved in what she called the Law of Logical Exclu- sion. When she worked on a case under that rule, she concerned herself not at all with questions as to the per- sonality or motive of the guility man“ She simply went down the list of all- the persons in any way connected with the affair, checking off each one as' soon as she encountered a fact whichmade it impossible for that one to have i been guilty, and then, when but one remained uninvestigated, romptly ac-l cused that one without othering to ‘investigate him at all. In other words, her process worked in exactly the op- posite direction from that of the law; she considered every man guilty until he was proved innocent, and the last‘ man, as I often laughingly told her,I “guilty whether he was proved inno- cent or not.†“NonsenSe,†she used to reply. “We have, say, only ten persons who, con- ceivably, could have committed a cer- tain breach of the law. One by one. we ï¬nd that nine of them could not have committed it. Obviously, the tenth one must have committed itâ€" so where’s the use of investigating him at all? There are some cases so dell-I cate that you have to put yourself in‘| the place of the murderer and work ‘forward. There are others so mysterâ€"} ious that you have to start with the‘ personality of the victim and work} backward. In both sorts of cases, you’ll have, of course, to get at the motive before you can start moving. But in the ordinary rough-and-tumble case, what’s the use of bothering about why a crime Was committed? The real question is, who did it? And if you’ve any curiosity left after dis- covering that, you’ll get at the whys and the wherefores easily enough. Any other method only befogs your vision and impedes your action. The more obscure the motive, the less you want to look for it!†Although she demonstrated the value of this practical advice in at least a score of cases with which I, too, was conected in a more or less pro- fessional capacity, its bold contradic- tion of all the methods advanced by the mere writers upon such subjectsâ€" its flat denial of all the systems proâ€" pagated by the plausible detectives ï¬ctionâ€"was, to my mind, never conclusive as during the month July, 1904 17 refer to the curious affair Mount Hebron, N.J.â€"-the murder Emerson Pardoe. I was at that time employed upon the Philadelphia Globe Expressâ€"the same paper, in fact, for which I had been workfrxq when Miss Baird ren- dered me such valuable aid in the affair of Mail-Pouch No. 27â€"and had been three days in my native town in Pennsylvania, enjoying the start of a sorely needed vacation, when I picked up my paper one morning and read of the crime. Stripped to its barest de- ltails, the aï¬air, as reported by a none- ltoo-competent man was as follows: By Pmccss M Exciusion am! rel unen- IM‘ NURSES Tor-0M0 Hoxni! an with Bellow clt!’ BY REGINALD WRIGHT KAUFFMAN. Ind ugly to nunlll receive ly slIoquoe a II New Yurk. ommitted a cer- w. One by one, them could not Obviously, the committed itâ€" ivestigating him ne cases so deli- put yourself in derer and work! lthers so mysterâ€"l ) start with the ictim and work sorts of cases, 2, to get at the ,n start moving. ough-andâ€"tumble 3 of bothering Was committed? who did it? And Ly left after dis- get at the whys sily enough. Any fogs your vision ‘tion. The more he less you want The local police, the correspondent added, were utterly at sea because, though it seemed that the murder must have been committed by some one within the houseâ€"or, at any rate, by some one with a key to itâ€"â€"there was absolutely no motive discoverable on the part of any such person. Theg two brothers, though of such divergent tastes, had always got along pleasant- ly; Miss Packer, a good-looking wo- man of twenty-ï¬ve, was highly esteem- ed in the community as a pious person ‘and a zealous worker in the church; 'the coachman had never possessed a ‘key to the premises, and the maid, of course, had a complete alibi in the per- son of her sister in East Oran e, whose room she had shared on t e ‘fatal night. In short, the affair was jso obscure that three of the best de- tectives in New York had been sent .for, and George Pardoe had offered a lreward of $10,000 for the arrest of the murderer. the Sun rubles. In Houlhll. |the centre of the apartment with his .back to the door. At precisely 6 o’clock in the morning George was aroused by loud cries from the library. He jumped into his clothes and ran downstairs, to ï¬nd the house- keeper, Miss Packer, in hysterics, and - Emerson dead on the floor with his throat cut. Miss Packer declared lhat she had come down to open up the houseâ€"the maid being absentâ€"at the accustomed hour, when she came upon the body, which, George was certain, was cold when he got there. About the place there was every sign that a severe struggle had taken place, but, though a desk in the library had been rifled, nothing else was missing, and all the doors and windows throughout the house were found to have been proper- ly secured, just as they had been left when the storm came up at 10.15 on the previous evening. V- Thériniystrefy was too much for me to stand; I flung my vacation to the winds at once and wired the ofï¬ce: Fegly, Globe-Expnqss, Phil-adellphia. ‘ .L'CaA‘y, uAuuc-unyxncc, A ........ r ..... Can leave in thirty mmutes and reach Mount Hebron by evening to cover Pardoe case. Shall I go? > And after twenty minutesâ€"Which I devoted to the packing of my suitcase â€"I received one of those answers so eloquent of the newspaperman’s dis- regard for length when the company pays the tolls: Samuel Burton, 113 South Second St., Columbia, Pa. Your good friend Ledyard was sent out on the Pardoe case last night, and seems to me to have scored heavily with his story in to-day’s paper. How- ever, he’s just sent word that they’ll probably pinch the woman, so there’ll be the sympathy game to play, and as that's not Ledyard’s long suit, you can go and help him out if you want to. Fealy. So Ledyax'd was on the scent. What luck! That settled me. In ten minutes I had put my needed vacation behind, me, and by evening I was standing before the Pardoe house just outside the little town of Mount Hebron. “Hello, Sam!†It Was Ledyard himself who greeted‘ me, coming forward from among a group of other reporters from New York and Philadelphia, who were lounging under the trees before the gate of the long driveway. “What news?†I askedâ€"the news- paperman’s greeting the world over. “Why, it’s about all over but the shouting. Hallam has come over with two of his men from the New York force, and they’re going to pinch ‘the housekeeper. The only thing that’s worrying me is whether I can get ’em ‘to do it in time for us, instead of hold- ing over till toâ€"morrow morning and ggiving the evening paper men the ï¬rst chance at the news. We’re asking ’em to act at once so as to give us a show, for, so far, its been an evening paper story all along. “But have they got the evidence to arrest Miss Packer?†' “Sure. It’s a cinch. I’d tell you, only I’ve promised Hallam not to say a word before I write my stuff. Oh, you needn’t worry: I’ve got the whole stuff.†Ledyard generally thought he had the whole story, and his attitude .of “run along and play, little boy,†would not ordinarily have bothered me, but in this case it really did seemrthat I was an eleventh-hour man without the ghost of a show at 'the eleventh-hour man's proverbial reward.» However, I resolved to work right. ahead on my ued Burton 1y thi] :1 take ed the Delicious! age FLAVORS FROM THE FLOWERS. In our grandmothers’ day many‘ dainty dishes were prepared, the spe- cial attraction of which came from her flower garden. 01" late years this seems to be a lost art. Seldom indeed do we ï¬nd a modern housewife who knows the secret of making rose con- serve, or a rose geranium cake. The girls of today have a fad of making anything popular which found favor in their grandmother’s time, so I am giving below some of the recipes and secrets that were used by the quaint maidens of long ago. Pure, Fresh and Satisfying. Sold in aluminum packets: â€" Try it. Rose Geranium Cakeâ€"Do not at- tempt to flavor a dark cakeâ€"â€"either fruit or spiceâ€"in this way, but choose some delicate white cake, which is very light and feathery. When you butter the pan in which the cake is to be baked, lay three or four rose ger- anium leaves in the bottom. Pour the batter directly on these, and bake as usual, Let stand for twenty-four hours after baking, and with the leaves still laying on the bottom of the Has N'othing to do With the Age- “She says she is still very young-" “She‘s had thirty birthdays, I know." "What’s that got to do with her 9n INSO ls ideal for any wash-day method you use. You do not have to change any of your usual atepsâ€"iust use Rinso where you used to use ordinary soap. if you like to boil your white cot- tons, Rineo will give you just the safe cleansing suds you need in the boiler._ if you use a washing machine, follow the advice of the big washing machine manufacturersâ€" use Rinso. Just soaking with this new kind of soap loosens all the dirt until a single rinsing leaves the clothes clean and spotless. However you do your wash. make it easy by using Rinso. Rinse is sold by all grocers and department stores cake, before using, and you will be delighted with the dainty flavor from the leaves, which will have permeated through the whole cake. Nasturtium â€"â€" Nasturtium petals, leaves and stems may be used in salâ€" ads. They are ï¬ne in mint salads, and when used in this Way, it is preferable to use the leaves and stems in the salad proper, and to use the petals or blossoms as garnishing. The green seeds are ï¬ne to use in mixed pickles, as they give a delicious- ly spicy taste to the pickles. They may also be chopped and put in salads. When used in cooking of any sort, they should be picked while green, and before they reach maturity. Levi-i211 from which he produced a ï¬nish- ed sheet of paper by a series of pro- lcesses which, primitive as they may seem to us now, were the forbears of paper manufacture to-day. / China monopolized the art of paper- making for about SQO years, until the secret was learned from her by the Arabs, who improved upon the Chinese process, by using linen or cotton rags .instead of mulberry bark. I For Sore Feetâ€"Mlï¬ard’s Llnlment. The credit for making the ï¬rst paper is due to a Chinese named Ts'ai-lun. In AD. 75 he made the ï¬rst hand sheet of paper from the bark of a. mul- berry tree Before thls leaves of trees and vari- ous barks used in crude form had been good enough for the Egyptians, Ro- mans, and other nations, The Chinese. however, did not use the crude inner bark of the tree as the ï¬nal material on which to make his records. He used the bark merely as a. raw ma- Soon after 1800 the ï¬rst paper to be made with wood pulp came into the market. Nowadays, to meet the enormous de- mands of the press and commerce gen- erally, over 400 varieties of wood and grasses have been called into requitiâ€" tion. Linen and cotton rags are used only in the making of the ï¬nest note- paper Who Made the First Paper If you use a Washing Machine, soak your clothes in the Rinse suds as usual. In the morning add more Rinse solution and 11701}: the machine. Then rinse and dry-â€" you will have a clean sweet snow - white trash. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO 8.4-2?