HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-08-12, Page 2• e •
THERE'S A BELlownts, 'SOME
11
about the flavour a
0
*that can only be produced by the skilful blending
ot really fine ',high -grown' teas. This peculiar
charm of flavour makes it unique among teas
and is the secret of As 23 years of increasing
popularity',
FINANCING um WAF
A Comperisee of the Methede A.doete
ed by Germene 'end Those of
England.
The minutenees and detail of ,Ger-
inan,misrepresentatlens are .quite ex-
traordinary, and One is not surprised
to And that they have taken consider- sively papercurrency is that kr far
- abie trouble to Mislead the public on as foreign exchange Is concerned,Gete
" this continent into the belief that the man:bills, are at a .
Condition of their national *lenges is Diseount of .Some Fifteen Per Cent.
4n itelMe Way huperierte that of the Oneething, and one thing onlyeeraild
British Empire. In point of filet the rescueGermanyfrom condition clan -
two' positions are scarcely a 440et -geratisleelike 'flatted' inseleency, and
' . for comparison, but geeslearlya mat- that is success sufficiently decisive, to
• ter for contras. efiable• her to exact heavY .incleMni4
German eieehees ties. Anything short of that Would
not only fail te avert financial algae-
ot war finance are curiously like their ter little short of ruin, but would
conduct of the war itself. They are leave all industrial and conmerelal
based on the Supposition that Ger-. situation of unparalleled and alMost
Mane must 'win. If and When she is insurmountable difficulty, e
.
The Ariteih• Position ,
.WQMa4 Against Wontan
or 4. Terrible Accusation.
CHAPTER XXVIII. ,
Steletieds ineatally helpless, Ails*
stood 'staring at her father, realizing
in a vague, ntidelitied way that her
last hope had dropped from her, 74
,not blaming him e understanding, as
She did, the terrible Influence which be
could. no more have resisted than be
COU/t1 the Wilt of God.
serve. In the second place it deprives
the new paper currency. of competi-
tion with coin. In that way, if the
Matter is "conducted with ethe skill of
which German organizers, are thor-
oughly eapable, there is no -reason why
during the war, it sliduld; not remain
et what might be considered par, for
the simple reason that it has nothing
with wbleir it Can be compared, One
indication froM; outsidethat le
in respect ef the effects of an excite.
• defeated, and defeated he assuredly
"wIll be, lied instead of receiving war
indenudties she bas to pay them, the
financial confusion cannot fail to he
aPPalling, ,,e'reom 'the days wheu cer-
tain of out early English Ithigs "clip-
ped" the coinage to make their stere
• of gold and silver go further, debase.
menand Inflation of currency have
' been. the familiar incidents of 'clever
. . but desperate .national finance. , •
By the exeicise of great pressure
the German Government have accu-
presents an almost complete centrast
to the German. First, there has been
no complete- mobilization of gold and
no sygematic effort to force gold from
private persons into the ' Bank of
England, Second, the total of . notes
issued for all Purposes is Much more
than covered e for 'e by the gold in
the -Bank- of England:. Thirde•letesidee
an this gold there remains a largo
.amount' in the heeds of the . banks
railleted in the Feichsbank some • other than the Bank of England, and
$120,000;000 of Gold; • the general. public. ' In other 'weeds
" British finance is definitely on a gold
' This seeme to have beim skilfully and basis. The British Empiiie is. finance
;
., eftectively done, and undoubtedly '
itg the War by borrowings. from its there is extremely little" gold irr'Ger- own -people on alegitimate- • -- •
•' --veiny' apart - Irani, this' Well. tideeertieed
t -. ' Interest-bearing Basis, • ' ',
: • sere.. But of the Reichsbaiik nOtes
, . . thereoneand ;it the eine of the warthere xieed
'
• , •eeniare isqued seme_gg70,000,,!-
'beme confusion, but an FaiPettainabk
' OLIO and in: addition to that. an un-• increase, in Public .debt and. revenue
• • •-linewa amaant d " . . ' \ ' ' •
' ' • Notei Issued: by the "Governiaent eequirenieets-., This description ,will on the .whole
agahist which lie gold at 01, is ,held.
adequately apply to Canada and the
This is complete mobilization dear to other; groat dominions of the British
the German ' mind and terribly • ef- singer' lele-By A. J. Glazebrook, in
' fective for the first blow but leaving
Toronte•Thdly News. • ,
no, "unseen reserve." . • • .
• Probably the debts "On'ballincei'lue
by Gannet. bankers . to London and
. , ..
.' Paris, together with interest on
:•
'• eleans necessarfier unpaid 'during the ' ,.... ..... ,.,... , ,
' war, all of whichealitomaticiilly• fall . nehici.,:*. 0: bliesisey, flijaadi ei
Berlin'a• Plans 45 rears Ago. .
• clue on the conclusion of,pe.ece,,samountift theieleiliilisaite it.t);iten Ek. tie.entgheto. &it'd .0ei
to It total far exceeding the um . A„
,.. • - • .Germany's leelde-enethat the;aPpqax . '-.1 iii,-filidali'aitnvio-
. '""--' -'• -.".: ""."'"'" " aa - s _ d td dis "e1;176-ta,1:1; hita"iis litzi irlenid. becy's:iitt:
ce of tret a 'hyeskilful Moe had e P t zit ' ,.,. . .., 4
bilization diSaPPeats att er an 7 •,it ye4.t..„....4.11 , run _eth, artoi_io
•: It is -neceesaeyeto-remember- --th .
,
- -- - e *„ Germany is almost entirely •,....that t nre "41. 4 'r 7 -'e e I il' n y-• - • • itrita 'Elittrilliti.t.,
•. ' '. ''• ' „ Deprived of All Foreign Tra7 a ..
•,.. lea .v,...b.m.,014,c1,...• r.omttOintp:olf.a
-.RI
. td 'Mite., ,the, sepremecy of . he sea
: 7 . She is in effect, together with ALenseteefrei Mei age, and be knelt' ea:113146bl: "i in' p
. 'Hungary, reduced to almost complete esen ee1He 4.ete
' . . financial lied . •comMerciat isolationtheel kil l .7,447..ii.i0-# ,ta, h4iiiia , ii.a
.,.T /,:E '.,
• % Tender these conditions, and ee long ee,e-eneee.4c.e3 le; saying '0 Blearela
. ee,t,,... as they last, various things are pos- ",10 ,i 1 .,x(i.*,,,i1a.tic,4 te,autely.,.
, • sible_ that will become. melte hams! ei";f-
OM outside world. are resumed. For eii L'vgi „td Vee s With; ', 1.urged
' eicaMele,ethe forcing of all kola. into . , ,,--„_., ‘. , ..... ..,.• s. •
41.44,..,V.V.:.,,i . 'piing; to bleed -their
, mediately that relations With ies intek and deaye thetie; bill '7
the heeds of the official band; the en- I the ieeeeesteY 6 intery. tea lung in
: 'dee draining of an the .ordinary • re, scho1eite-rtettleek eerea'theteAtegeeevereeen-
• "Poeitcaie.s of geld coin, has two Mee Ine"" "'''''" '''''. YY•b '''' "`'''"" 1' .4's-":
, nertant effects. First of . all it gives the .1.
, N • ...• • . . '
' fi,E• terileee it "fide. that they
h••, -.7 -4111 -impressive sound- tee-theehankeret-I.2'-1;27...,-*.:ai:::Y,*t 2.g:?_2,',:to 1st
represented and the Reiehsbank's re-' 14t0'''' "Mrs' . ' - - - •
. • , • '
,
•
• P
"For the love of Heaven, arrest and
hang -met I am a murderer! , Not
alone of one man, but of a woman --
my wife, as well -and worse than all,
I have tried to murder the soul of nty
own child! Arrest me -I am a rear-
erer
"There was a wild commotion in the
Precinct Station. Quicker than
thought a policeman was upon either
side of him, iinagining they had in-
sanity to contend 'with; but Dowd
ValwortheAhrew off their hands.'
• "I am Wither mad nor drunk!" . he
cried, excitedly. "Only a man stricken
with ' remorse in the eleventh hour.
Let me alone! 1 have crane here of
my own accord, and have given my-
self up. / Mt not going to try to, es-
cape. Don't stop to to think .of me,
tut go -there at once -to mei house,
or her -my child! You Will find her
in -in that m
She Mild not speak to repudiate
' the awful „lie he had uttered, and
What couldhave been the use even Iiad
the done so? She heard the old
clergyman's vole° speaking words of
reproach which she did not even dim-
ly understand, and then that faded.
, She waited, 'Waited; she could not
have told whether it evati for moments
or hours; but the silence seemed
freighted' with horror; then started,
like one in a dream as once ,raore
Nathan Simonson stepped toward her.
• "You have disappointed me in more
ways than one," he Said, with his ever-
- "Hut can't they trace us by a cer-
rine ?"
"NO* YOU 001. shall take particle -
lar care that they don't. Don't OAP
to question my methods, but if youwould, MVO yOtineitt go at once,""
Valworth picked up his het. For
the first tinie there wined to, be
something almost- Wire In. los man-
ner,but Simonson was tee =eh oc-
cupied With his burden to think of
Ailsa lay.there like a dead thing,
cold, lifeless, and with but a single
glAliee in. her direction, Valworth
stumbled from the room.
.I10 went down -stairs like a drunk-
en man, though he licallint one drink
that morning, holding himself un by
the rickety balustrade, and let him -
golf into the street. • •
He looked about Iiim In 'a dazed
way as the cold air cut across his
face: The snow was heavily,
1 ft
,present l'X menet going :to in :cutting s get rather. than ,
either reproaeh or rebuke you, but the flakes,' He drew back under ,the elide
time bee, come When ,ettenr irreveeehle ter of the doorway and shivered, •
decision Must be made. • I am going • What was It that be had done? • •
,to send Your father eat again, is t, For the first time in years the \rale
to hater a ininiSter or an officer of 1, ereitY Of his sin seemed to strike -
the law? The Answer remains alone Portiere" because he had added to it
with. you." • ' ' • : this crowning disgrace. , . •
.haehee'eeeenea. her eyes niceone , had foully besmirched the char-.
hei ' asleep. She put her hand atter of his owe child, his Ailsa, the
to her mouth, and her finger -nails fairest,purest.flower that ever Mos -
knocked: against her teeth, with a somed in the filth and mire of penile
sound that startled her. ; Butt • there '• tion, He had to regrets for the blows
teas still no more idea of eltling in that e had struck er, or e wan
her heart than there- had been upon' and deprivation that he had -paused
her entrance th her; but under all that temptation she
tru"Ylontiet dynefitY:a;INswotet the imeliodsrlYdeste thilladel:ealnbainCect.g4adr4 -aanact S13°U:nei and havec charges within the power Jef thought of doubting the purity of God
mortal man teemalce could move inc as to have doubted her now, yet he
now. You hike already done your had lied -upon his own child! lied
werst. Let my; father answer for a to save himself, and accomplish 'the
er4seusleteoree sehnezahyastimeur for his
ends of a Man Whom he knew, to be,
tili a dastard and a scoundrel!
holy life."
,She "leaned' back "a ainst the 'wall long years he hated himself with that
. ' • , For first time in all those long,
and closed her _eyes, et,seemeel.,teher
that all herstrength had gorie, at
once. The excitement of the night be-
fore, the misery she had suffered, and
this together, would have. proved to
much fpr e stronger woman than she,
and she realized that unconscious-
ness was threatened.
As she leaned there, white and ex-
hausted, Simonson smiled again, and
taking - a -stealthy 'step IciWarde " her,
he uncorked the vial and carefully
extending his hand, Placed it directly
beneath her-mostrilse------ee
The sweet, pungent odor, filled the
room. Ceeefully he held his breath.
For one Moment she dicrieit"seein
to comprehend, whatthedense .oder
was that impregnated the atmosphere
about her, then slowly elle opened her
eyes and gazed straight into his own..
She saw the triumphant mile, the
hideous Sneer of the heavy features,
the glow in the bulging eyes, and
the vial in his dirty, outstretched -Be-
n, told her the eteuth.
She staggered up, but the dizziness
that oppressed her caused lier, to fall
loathing that only such self -censure
can know. .
' And then, too, he seemed to realize
for the first time the terrible influ-
ence possessed by Jew! —
• Slowly, with painful distinctness,
all the years of his past life rolled
before him, ghastly in its memories.
He was again a young man, handsome
and respected, the toyer • of a pure
young girl. He eawhee his wife, saw.
himself slowly but surely falling from
his. 'respected estate, saw. her heart,
breaking,.....knew....himselt. murderer,
realized all the woe and shame•he had
brought to that child whom he had
betrayed into. her present position,
and suddenly a low • cry issued from
his live.. •
• It was Nathan Simonson who had
done it alit '• •
The scales had dropped from his
eyes. • He rushed out into storm
like an insane creature driven by
mania. e •
• He had forgotten the cold, forgot-
ten the cut of the sleet -forgotten
everything; except that ,new and lint
recognized zepentance upon him.
hhaaneka.ltatecaroinsssehtehre edyeeosr.hSehipelepsagsysed
, asheifr •th. allowtircilgehattruil allilnflwuaesnete_o
halnina7wwi-th
-tetecleat a filiriefronsehareyesien- -nen, what- exactitude that was surprising,
she swayed and tottered -further ---he retailed all eAileirseewords-that
further yete-till She lay cold andstill which she had-,said'of Simonson's in -
in 'the -the m-Eirc-she -moetabe fatuation-efore her enothere,---tt -was-
horred. trim!. Ghastlyhorribly true!
Dexterously -Simonson inserted the How he hated.the Jew! •
cork in the vial with his teeth, then He was stumbling down the street,
.drew it from him, never • drawing his, eyes more haggard than before,
breath until it was beyond his reach,. his Sillies almost palsied. ,
"Quick, Valwcath!". lio '
exelaimecr. • Hee stopped abruptly and gazed up
"We must lose no timein getting her at a building -a plain brick structure
away from berg. Duntaven will know of no pretension, but printed in black
.
well enough Where to find her when letters on an electric light that hung
her absence i neitieed, and will come before the door were the.worde:
directly bete. You know that, in • •
Precinct Station."-
spite• of all our talketelhe contrary,
'thatem gannet .detain -her 'against her
-consent, and he must not .find , her
here, and •I ;defy him or all -the • de-
tectives in New York at once to find
her there," " • e .
: "A carriage?" stammered Valworth, then' with ,one ,mad, headlong rush he
stupidly." ... ‘," entereclethe- buildingrandecned out to
• "Yes a carriage. Quick' e man behind the desk:
He hesitated. •
His hapds were blue with cold, his
teeth chattering; but be did not, know
it. Ire looked irresolutely at the sign,
CHERRY
. • • , ,
• . , . .
•
JELLY,.
. --FrOnra reciot-o/ChOrieriratr-
ciztelg, Chief Cc** to Queen_
• •
• •-"`"'";-7 Victotia.TaliskeeibtJ46,5"..— •
•' titan .2 lbs. CitatticS and a
; • • handful of tad currantS, and
' • • 'brulactionea, and kernels In a
• Enoitar ; place in Amall pre-
, , • parr:With i lb., John
•Redpath's „sugar loafe and 34 .
pint spting,4vAter.: boll ort the
stove -ere abut 'tributes, '
AakIng"oare to retnoVescutn as
. it elses our Into beotrer
,• felly -bag and filter. inusaatwar.
vux 'twee With Wia ounees"
.„ !sing! ,aze. anti pour, . Into gm or • .
. . - .
, .•,......,,.: - : •.,,,-- "...V' ./
• ..
ktt)
to preserve its luscious flavor for the winter days to come:
For over half a century Aga has been the favorite sugar in
• Canada. for preserving and jelly-making—and with good .
easonr—Because-it'ir-Osoliitely 10,-WiTifithi same,
you can use it according to your recipes, Year alter year,with
full confidence in the results. '
Fruit put up right, with 49409,1 Extra Gram&
ated Sugar,..will-keep7 as long as You wish, and
- when opened *Month or IC -0k hence Will
delight you with its freshness. and flavor,
"Let. Ago% sweeten it." _
Get your supply of sugar in Original REDPATH
Packages, and thus be sure of the genuine -4-
, Canada's favorite sugar, at its best.
Put up in 2 and 5 lb. Sealed Cartons and in
• •
10 20 50 and 100 lb Bags , 140
„ ,
'CANADA SUCAR REFINING CO., LIMITED, MONTREAL
• . • ••••.•- •••••
, .
,
seeeeelleie
•
•
an's power; e creature
who -has- acconmlished-all-this- ruin
and misery! She lies "there like a
'dead thing in hie arms, but he has not
• killed her. God twit. her, he is keep-
ing her ,for eemething a thousand
times worse than that! And I have
-helped. him -been his cursed accom-
plige-but I have awakened to the
reality of 'my horrible --crime. Never
"tiled me! Go there and rescue her!"
The sergeant behind the desk came
ou ,• en ace is an upon
00*•••-•
MA -GIC
BAKI N
POWDER
.14 USED BY THE BEST umtgas
AND CATERERS avElotwouRe,
Atiscialt clit.FS IN THE LARGE
HOTELS; AND ON DINING.C4E8,
.STEAMSHIPS ETC-
EN.GlI.LEIT COMPANY umiTED
wiN mpg° TORONTO. CtliT.
Ivl ON/II CAL
•
4011/I of thienollution of his teraeleeliet
stood, there for a long time, looking
down into the white, motionless face,
his thoughts his own, but the entree- • . tmtenance, give ete Teeteefeedeeeeie WARR/PRS, OPIP/'14'/YZ
sion of his hateful to
FR
ing eildenee the triumeh he felt , Otieff 504D/RR.0 /4'R.E.SP/reei TORS /4/kiP OVERA42•45o
in her posit -ion e But the burden of 1 "'
her ' physical -weight. grew too groat
atlast,and he placed her won •tne.
filthy bed that would have revolted: her
could she have looked upon it , with
sensible AtyeS!
Again he stood, looking down upon
her, fashioning their future life, per-
haps, in his own evil a life in
which Oral played no part, sledging by
the cynical Cynical &tre& of his licentious
lips; but he seemed to have forgotten
:time, for as the Moments relied' bee
and. Dowd Valworth dfd not return,
no. apprehension disturbed
Once he eaid the tips of his dirty
Angers upon her white cheek, noting
the difference with a smile of misuse.
uient, straegely'out of place, but
otherwise be was as 'motionless -as
she., . _-
_
He; aroutfed. hiniself. with. 0: heavy
sighsigh by and by, and went to the win-
dow to look out. •
Itwas so much above the ground;
however, thathe couldsee nothing
but the clammy pots of the neighbor-
ing houses, with their cleanly cover-
ing of nevi fallen, snow, while the air
was filled with the swirling flakes
blown hither and thither by the an-
• '•
.••
•
Meals Without Meat.
'The feed supply is a serious MTh-
lemiin the European nations involv-
ed n the present war. Frances Key-
: Fee contributed to the London Chron-
ecle-an •interesting eminnuniention un-
der the heeding; "Bat. Less Meat!'
tler euggestien rimy prove of velue in
countries happily free from war, but
-none the less" disturbed by high prices.
The article" ie at fodlows:
Less meat! Ho* is it possible?
is the questien that becomes an asset -
tion made by the overage man ane
woman. • The fact is neither knows
anything- about -the matter; In the•
middle and lower classes meat has -be-
come en essential factor in their lives,.
Irrespective ,of •the neeeesity roe the
advisability from a health point Of
view. They; do not know the good it
may do in some- cases," nor the harni
it causes in other -s, but they eat it in
ignorance of any substitute, merely
bii theY consider it • •suetiiiiiiiig
and because they think nothing can
replace_ goes__ fatthereee says.
one.. "It keepenee going longer than
anything els' says enother. , And
this is the general belief and ,the
general experience in this country;
where so little is know e among the
people of the relative values of food,
of the nutrition derived from the ce-
reals, yegetables, fruits, thet grow
on this and other lands; and that are
linported so freely; of fish, the birds,
the wonderful supply'. in nature of all
that man requires to build up a sound
body .and Mind, without worshiping,
the fatted calf.
• Ilealth-Giving.' Vegetables -Half the
-populaeion-of 4hteworlci- lives Oi34nCr
and works as hard as the British, who.
think they =zit have Meat to give
-weight to arms and -brain: Did ---the
eked GreekeandeRomens,oweetheir
strength to meat?' Neither were
meateeaters, as we understand the
tenet to -day'. Yet muscle and brain
must have been well fed to. have,
achieved the work of these acknow-
ledged 'athletes •and philosophers. Did
these men want three meat,meals a.
daY? ,- Birds, _fish,aicLfruit sustained
thein, and sustained them well, if ,we
' can . believe the story of their deedd.
'As for the Chinese, the Japanese, the
Indians, their powers of eaderance
are. proverbial, and they live almost
exelusively en rice. •
, To -day, when it is a matter of im-
"pertatme-te the uation,- Me -seen how
little the people • of Great' Britain
know of the health -giving properties
of vegetables, eaten• in England .as an
Obligate accompaniment to the meal
not considered of sufficient import-.
nc ee_t_o_teke the...Smite-place-4
...e n-
.
menu.
We read in: scientific articles deal-
ing With the important subject of, the
requirements • of the bode; of . hot/
• much fatessugar; etc.; ideriecessary' to
make .blood, and „hone._ _This is • said
in technical language, but if the re-
lative value of' each article of food
'Were clearly stated; it would be of
greater , use to, the million. • • They
_weeld learn_ that there are 11.egetables
chiefly :composed of water, such AT
Marrows, that have no •nuiritiv.e_quelie
ties, and that ther`e-tre others -,-,-11
spinach' and glebe artichokes, full of
irorr.----These-areeeteeetidne, that tam-
, entist might deal, with to the advant-
age of the 'woman in her home. But
those Who come by their knowledge
from expeeience, More than from
study, will agree that there*, nothing
• more sustaining • than rice,'" beans in
every variety, lentile, eggs, that re-
place - the • ordinary • butcher's
meat, if eatenein _quanti •
with a ',green Vegetable or salad, core.
ed fruits, milk puddings, cheese, to
• satisfy a large appetite.
The raw material is tile game hi
• England as 15. m France, -but how,
is eiteepropured?: •-•:: -All eth-eectrerage
man or 'woman lcnows of macaroni is
what is called macaroni cheese, With
a crusthard as. ti brick. 'Vegetablee„
boiled in -water; 'flat -died iheverleis;
eke, an unsavory mash or only con-
sidered feed for children. The Eng,
Helmet,. as a treech. :Chef mice Mc-
plained, clings to itis .ineat beesine it
is the only article of foodE
cookittiinkenrow* ihtohwouttoFpletsehrt.afT.h
roernr.gelni:
heed =de a study of diterig without!
meet, for the majority abstain fromn. ;
it, on religiogrounds, once, and j
sontetimes twice, a week, • but nobody
complains of the subetitete in Prance;
The meets are made with as much
care for a "maigre" dinner as .for one I
where butcherei meat may figuretir
moire Will be dna* vegerable soup'.
or macaroni to sten the vital,. a dish
of vegetables, an omelet, a salad, a
sweet;.and the variety is endless. Col- ;
or,n thas We know,, is ah important factor ;
ie making of moms, for We have •
to please th,c dye without any amen"- !
ent:etrieing for effect, 1114 earefully
stinlying the green, red,;and white in I
vegetables and"saucts that ienstitutei
gr7-winde- _ _ _
For the first time he seemed to
realize that Dowd Valworth ought
to have returned/ and looked_ about
him with that shifting glance that in-
dicates• apprehension.
"Can anything have happened to
him?" he questioned of himself, in his
deep, guttural, unmusieal voice. "Or
is there some slight difficulty about
getting-aeturrraget- That it, I
suppose. X half wish I had gone for
it myself. _ I wonder if •I mould dare
leave her here--while--Xegoto- fetch
one? Confound his stupidity! He is
growing into_ an imbecile too rapidly
to suit even me. I wonder if I
would dare leave her?"
He returned to the bed and once
more stood leoking down upon her, thi
feasting his ttonous eyes ee upon
her perfect beenty.
"Mine!" he neettered.
Prairie! And I'eliall'know too well how
em
to.: protect y ..oWn. interests. .Curse
it. all! I Wish Valworth would •come!"
'He walked to the dem' of the .outer
room,. and opening it, listened in the
„hall. • k • •
There, were only the , children's
'voices. coming in shrill little screams
fr�m e • eieitlei the occasional in
.terruation of a 'mother calling to her
offspring, and 'the slaxia of • a door,
eramed-pethape %y 'the wind.
There -yeas no sound of the return
of e Valworth, however,'
the door softly behind him, the. old
.Jew..stole back to the bedsitie of the
girl.
She hadnot 'moved,
-"lie looked down "upon- her silently,
but remained only- a moment so. He
lifted his head, and listened intently,
utmost eagerly:
There was. surely.the sound of a
footstep Upon the stairs. That was
the, top floor, and none of the other
rooms upon it were rented.. Surely it
must be Valworth, Once More he
hurried, but with noiseless tread, to
the door, and opened it carefully.
,•A surely it was he, but
What was the changein the man'scountenance? What' was that ex-
ultant light in his eyes? What was
the meaning of that strange smile
upon lips so unusual to theme .
But no sooner had these mental
uestiens 'formulated themselves in
imonsonie-braiiirelumehe-putetherre
aside, smiling at his own folly:
"Have you got it?" he questioned,
eagerly. "Have you-"
But before he could complete the
second query the two Mel who had
accompanied Valworth had allot into
eight, and Simonsen staggered back-
ward, his eyes bulging more than
ever', a Imlay whiteness overspread..
trig his grimy face.
He had recognized -the, grey -blue of
heeueiformedeofficer • ele _ ; _
le be .
•
MANY USESFORGUNS;
They Hey° Even Been ehe 'fearis of
effective 1substitiite. e , o c
. • . 1
SaVing Lives.
•
Guns would not , ,even if war-
fare were abolished. For example,
the signal gun of a ship is used to an-
nounce her arrival on a 'coast. It
would he difficult to:The
alp erloe
ailkY
the gun, too, whiciree-tredley-Vectricity
man's shoulder, soothingly '
"If you ihtend to 'accuse yourself of
a crime, my good fellow," he eaid,
quietly, "You must take care, Re-
member. that whet you hieete-e"-
/ot -.-th.clete"bt:HistiVdti; dr�p
all thee! What do I care what be-
comes of me? Go there to her! To
her!' • He verif for a carriage to,
take her away: When eta not re-
turn. he will take alarm; and find one
himself to take her. away, then the
power of the police would be nothing
coMpared with his infamous ability!
Go there! 4 Then, if you do not find
her, call me a 'madman, if you Will!
Only go there! 'ott have not the
right to refuse to see!" •
"Give me the teldress, and. I will
Send one of my Men at once," re -
tented the sergeant, •
"Not once but two or Wee. He will
not 'Yield Without ta !struggle, and you
know nothing of hi terriblo.power.
'I warn you now there will be a hor-
rible- struggle -something which you
do not. expect. Take Plenty of Men,
Mid let there he eo mistake. Wait!
Let them take me With them! I wish
to BMW the intend demon that I
heve eeetiped his devil's grasp nt
last!"
,•CIIAPTglt XXIX;
tike a dead tlung &lea lay. in the
male of the man she hated and feared "
MoSt en earth, fertexiately Undone-
• 4,
11
from -Greenwich Obeerviderzeie"the
Most effective .meane poesible of 'an-
nouncing the eicaet time to. surreued-
ing • towns, while nothing:, more ien-
preserve e-eteld-be found than. the
gen' fired -ter " ' tiii bile Mourning
.and the salute kiven on occasions of
Ptiabitlin steg3,41. eeint14.e. s- 'Well as take
them. In desert countries) where it
is diffieule to collect water elle of a
Mere dampness of sand, gun barrels
are often sunk into the ground.
thie means moisture is colleeted Itt
the bore eine many lives have been
preserved by a timely draw at the
,
nUlAzzalela'ver,. captured vvith a crew of
slaves in the tropics,. tom. once put in
charge Of a Mize ere'. Dining the
voyage Water ran out and slaves,
gavere and prize Crew 'weed all dying
of thirst.. Then a sergearit bit on a
brilliant idea. •Taking all the Avail-
able gun barrels, he plugged the
breech ends Of -a fewof them lilted
.•
their bores with sea water and Set
them: end up among the coals of the
galley fire. Then as the steam rose
he ran it ,through the other gun bar-
rels till it cooled. The cooling stream
&fleeted in •the shape of excellent
fresh water rend by thie meane scoree
of liesWeits sera, -
,
r 4
•
te•• re' •,
"(et ••••• •0 •
' ••• • • '••'•
•
the scheme of the ordinarY Other/ e:
varying hringing forward these colors
to make an appetizing, .anticipatori •
sensation. To make my meaning clear, :
a 'cauliflower covered with, a becbantel
sauce should not follow a dish Of '
rnacartMiTallItalienzie; for both dishes -
are White. " eTemateeseeipe and Tette,
green beanie spinache, Salads, take,
their places at the meal; like the corn
-
posing of a Bakst "Stage picture, with,
a touch of black hi the truffles to help.
the modern note.
The• Potato Omelet -Who has no
eaten the savory potato omelet at a
country Inn in Feane. teed wondered e _ _ e
why It was not known irrEnglandt • , • - ' ' `-1
•Could anything be simpler than :the •
preparetion .of this homely, classical -•
dish, extolled by Brillat-Savarin, inag.1 ,
i
istrate, artist and eelinary expert, ine•
his delightful! "Physiologie du Gout"? 1E •
Small slices of potato, lightly brown-
ed in sufficient butter to make the, •
omelet 'when` •the beaten eggs. =el•
poured upon them, surrounding there!
like a golden stream, mingling their
softly clinging natures with the morel •
'--!----- -
resistent potato embedied and folded'
ire the vrarmth Tof-the leveling fryirig-t•
pan... • And this is Only one •of the, '
many ways of preParing egg's in a'
copdensed form that appeale to the
,
traveter, andfwould be welcome, at - 7"
tome if the.cook would -use her braint( ' -
for her ownand her employer's good,
I am told that servants, as a class
do not ,anderstand economy, and are
not interested in a scheme • that
touches their mistresses'. • peckets.' .
Meat is their god. • They even
fail to imagine that there might come .
a time wheil -there woad be no meat,
-obtainable:- ---e - - :"•--7• .' .., ---. •
•
• .
_Useful Hints. •
Don't forget ‘ta-elose-the-refrigerat_t_
of door each time you use the box ,
the ice will last much longer.
Melted butter poured on the top pi• •
canned tomatoes before they are seals •
ed will keep them sweet.
• Ham soaked ep milk over night
will be exceedingly sweet and tender
,fereelealefast imet Ettorning; : '• 7 • -
• The bone should be .left in a roaet;
it will help to keep the juice and wile • ' •
add flavor and sweetness. •
If the alemininn cooking utensils
turn blacks try boiling tomato pair...*
•
ingsein them and they will brighten.'
•
It is heel not to eeorve the same
disk twice a week -unless it be -a vege,
table, as every . one • likee" a variety.
"Rainbow jelly" May be made •as
yeti do marble take, by pouring sev-
eral different kinds of jelly 'into the • .
same mold. Of course, •each, should
harderrehefore--the next'is put in.
• Children's :shoes should be half- • -
soled after being worn three weeks,
they will be in better shape • and •
*ear much longer than if first wort
into holes and -then half -soled. m
-An:- ordinary funnel will ake, an • .
eiceellent holder for the ball of string.
Hang it up by its ring and put. the - -
hall into the upper part, draWitig the
string through the funnel •
- -A charming 'serving tray is made• if-
•
ofethe printed blue and White towel -
lingefromejapan, coveted• -with :glass ••• •-
,
raid- framed ie soft grey. Richer
inade wuitslied7ineelothilse- CsahrakileT'
eseYemirro
weir. „ ,
When you Wash lace curtains,.
don't rub them. Put into told 'water
with •borax; bring to a boil and boil'
fifteen or twenty miriutes. Rinse ;
through and stiffen in a final water,
svuehaihchic ihhasit flee' cents worth of gym •
' "
tetill-C1-41-itieCe-13attd thelube soi*--1K1fOririeti, 4'41M:ha
burn it an hou
of sand anct r before e • ;
Persian powder. , Stand it in a dish
:rmibedtnte.htv TclinTres the iitostMeae
'idglds sleep. - ret-•
an i
• .4 -
Precipitated chalk 'is eXcellene for
cleating tarnished sneer' ' Place a
little in a eetteet and add iust enmigh -"' "'-
liquid ammonia. to moisten it. ' Rub •
this lightly -over the silver, and the, ,
stains Will quickly disapp,eine Then •
wash in hot suds, dry carefully and
polish with a clean chamois .leather.
,
• •
lefew Cutlery Cannot Stain.
gelid; .concern should be heartily wet-
, •
EVery device which helps to relieve .'
wornee, of the great . and continual •
burden of maintaining the home, as a• '
e
coined, and, Sir Chiozza Money filttVr
one of the best thitigs that have' been .
invented in this connection is the nest
stainiese steel. knives made of ell
have net to be cleinetd in the • old, .
dirty way; they merele haveto be e •
wiped. Many British 'titres ere ItoW
making the gainless cutlery, ancleit
eught soon to .he hi ithiverstil nee. e
telt apparently the trade is not delete
OM of beinging about this welcome";
consUrnmation, 'on tho 1,trourul that ite- .
the new eutleie lege longer •leett
levee will
•
be requited in the future.
•
•
•.