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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1923-8-30, Page 5Delicious 11 st4 IfIAS TI -I ST SALE OF ANY PACKET T -.02.A IN NORTH AMERICA.. By PEARL FOLEY, .• (CoPYright.) 1 that • 00 00 Swinging by. otiiit Of. the Woods. A tliOl.i.0.hra )piltx,i in the heart ef the I ,WoOtte 1 uo, . . saro 0.9 the 'winds iron; the gaze of a ininiall eye, Palo to not Wit]) me, only salittitle, And the swish, Of a 1.11glitcb0ig11t bird 1 1 C1-1APTII1R XIV.--(Cont'd,) i her/ and She sat hp and allowed her- The trees keep eternal whisperings 1 Tu Hee turned wide eyes on the ;Self to be helPed to .the little table, i, round iny head, ' woman rind smiled faintly when her I A dinner -lay berone her eallerY And the gritSs makes nig WearY heaY I gen did not waver. Deciding 91"le 1 enough, it° terePti Ow mot field° 4PPe" a gentle bed, needed her strength for whatever kite. Wetermeloir sefida, fruits, uutS, Forgetting IS Saila) tu the 00101011 and emergency threatened, she Need her- land jelly were' the daintY liret C01.10FM. to out nd drink the food Wore THee forceherself to take tho guont °wood, her. With the nourishment Came I ruit "jolly and drink the delielowiy. And my benig is* calm with the mea - self a 1 u d ' fresh courage to Tti Hee. $1le beg o-1 rrePe'refi eweet lotus seed broth. The sureleiSS...ealm of the deed. to 'think she had been exaggerating woman etood eyeing her anxibusly, • matters greatly. That , Chu Sing and when those dishes were pushed.' Nought of the,sed, mad world is wo wished her. for hiewife she bud icnown isSide placed in front of her the tempt-, I thinking a for many months, but that he would.1 ing, breast or a chicken, • Hero whefe the,blue a the elear sky image of, her uncle And the , laughs above, dare harna her She thought now Was 1 Tlii Hee did. ber best, but the food 14wv, 9f her uncle, Weog Toy, over„ obtruded itself, overcome by fear for good air bldwa In 007 1iaad and highly improbable. '1e greatness and Q1191.Ced her. The ashillat:co.‘svYeads 'phrioisb•Pabtloyo tlinytiiicilgi. toNfrolFeenn hesilhe 1,, isuanzation „Ara too much for Aim g, tlailfiedVelesti'ellsYs ill'er4er:' go out ,,,,ywk VASHABLE WOOLLEN FROCKS, Hus fibre of the apples so that Hwy , her. 'Perhaps his motiye Wap her,. 1.1,11:fling to the servant she 'cried the flalne. Of my love.. ..lotisy of the foreigner. He WOUldn'tiPtASSiOnately: "Oh, please help mo to Na, the title is not an advertise- retain their shape. A slice of Pine- nent for a new brand of goods guar- apple added to a quart jar of apples onteed for the tub. 'Making woolensi will imPreVe their flavor. , ,vashable is a home process. And it ff°rnat° Ca'tsuP No. •P—Us° one pock ,ley iguase you to kno.W, if you hap- of tomatoes, cut in halves 00 quarters. Piece these in a -kettle and boil for a pen to be in the midst of peach - half -hour ,and strain through a hair - calming and have only half of youri SieVe. After removing skins and seeds, relishes put down for the winter, that' I return pulp to the kettle and add one - the time element is a small considera- tion. Roll the goods up at night an•di half dessertsP°°nful of caYenne l'aP- 505, one dessertspoonful ehch-of black shrink out. - pepper, , allspice, cloves mace and unroll them in the 'morning with the . Wool crepe, rep, kasha .,cloth (the mustard (all ground) and three des- sertsPoon Cols' of salt. Boli Slowl for new 'soft cheviot), serge, cashmere,i flannel, tweed, hoMespun---allY of °.1*tr or five hours, 'add `one pint of Qf, vinegar, bottle and seal. these you can make tub -Proof. Tomato Catsup No. 2—One peck of i course, when you buy your dresa I .. length you must allow a quarter yardi litre- tomatoes, one qua.rt of vinegar, one-half pound of sugar, two clovee 1 of garlic, six' tablespoonfuls of salt, extra for shrhilcing. Many stores have their gqods sponged or steamed tO one -hall ounce of ground mace, to prevent spotting. Some even ,,call it( tablespoonfuls of dry, mustard, .one "shrink!' goods. But if the spots on tablespoonful of ground eloves, one Mary's dress got beyond the cleaning 'bottle and you dipped it in the tub, yea,„ teaspoonful of ground allspice, one teaspoonful of cayenne pepper. Cover .1k the tomatoes with water and bring. to • 1 bl • discovered that all the shrii dare keep her a prisener another flaY, I get away! I must be lunne to -night' 1 came here aching, perplexed; loud Why, her uncle would scbur. the coun- or r‘ny uncle will die of grief." - in my breast - '. try for her, and Chu Sing was too 'the woman's stolid •.faco did not The tureen et cities and men—but StIreW(1 110t. to know the very least he 1 change. Seetningly unmoved by the nature hie 'biest could expectwould be a death penalty, -piteous appeal, she merely shook. her And quieted me with liar Woude're, the worn'an appeasing with fresh 1 '`I can't spend ape i ,, LYing apart they night here Her reflections were interrupted by head. ' ' bandages for lier foot. ., would kill-1nel" cried Tu Hee. "You 1 have sought vied°, m and found , "IVIissce's foot much 'setter," yen- look kind," she observedi scanning the . liltut wisdom ls lest. I staff conalsted of. ono o ic , , Griffiths, v,rim later became secretary Hared the seryant with satisfaction, as Iwo/Troll's face, "but it is riot merely --Winlfred Locichart Willis. A oo tiler cryst ailiz tie n of an , =bilious vision esine the great Olympic. As in the, eeee ,or Crest Dastere, which - Made so groat 0 bound forward la doubling ow MI4e '01! any Pro: vimm 010 Olgerpic at a single '090110. daa117/fal OW SOO of the biggeZt liner of her daY; , iffile Olympic tit 01100 'ilemorei triVi°d. her practicability and great Mmulttrity, in her we get , the first exannple of a perfect giant Pelaee tinor; ,g111011 W11$' 1,110 equal of the giant palnee hotels aehoree Tales of Renter. Iteuter's - the world-famons news agency, are moving from their pre. mises in Old .Tewryi to the building oh the'Thames Embankment reeently VO' dated by the Port ot London Authority, saYs am English writer. In 1849 Tulluci Reuter esdabliened pigeon post between Aix-la-Chapelle and •BrusselS. But, being an ambitious man, he trinsterred buairiess and opened ea office in the Royal Ex- change Building, London, where his ,T tit0 If Ito line a paaket in yam' peoirot iov 411 eldCr-voady treat. A delirious sCrif06- lion and an aid to the teeth, aopotito, digestion. she applied a lotion. 011 the bruised, gratitude•that,WOUld.be your reward,' ' ' to the company. . so.vollen ankle. „: . 1 she added, realizing all too well the . • At first' the company, confined itself Ilee ,winced as ithe leng,'deft fin- mercenary .traits of the, Servant class, ounstItute ok4criaL to marhot iittotattona, but, eveatually, gem,' wotind/a fresh bandage 'int() "MY uncle would gNe 'you money -4 'sulististut'es`Of or soiti3 fer all kinds Reuter 100med the.agency Ude a con' place. • "Thank you," Sbe smiled. "Yon make you „rich., . ' things.' canle into coalmen ",^ , eewS. Their first work aerass, 91.° ver) good to 111°. I shall 131 -it the. wwnan 'again her ing the worP4 -War and paPer Was tlio 'was. ;,,r1 Sealed hilts Purity Pooling() reinerhber'this.''i • bead. Yet it seemed to To Hee her: suhstant.e ivied most fre- Sea; frain' w Pire'llret See-, aiwey A pleased look flashed aerose the round gyeS grew softer. She derived ,,,,. . woman's face, but the next moment a little hope fro ni this. And then the seme inexplicable intuition kept' het must be lully'trusted by him or he beauties so popular on the green (111-°11.".,.. 10 GornmnY suits of clothes, 'she was the stolid; obedient 'slave. thought occurred to her -tliat-perhaps even, were made of papdr, and. only Tu Hee longed to nek questions, but Chu Sing had threatened her, She recently some California , ba thIng silent. - i • would never .have left her in sole AVOTO paper bathing suite that did not board in the wall and returned with a Desperate, Tu Hee threw 'herself e ' i ' 1 seem to have Melted even after the wearers really • went nto the water. The woman went to a small cap- efierge .6f his Prisoner. mauve silk dressing -robe. Plainly 13efore the woman and clasping her Now from. Germany, Ifortie of "ersatz,' Chu Sing intended every bodily corn- hands cried: "You !mist help me Yoti . coffins are being made of paper and or substitutes, -comes the news that 'fort should be hers while she remain- must'. You are a WODian. 1)on;t you tion:of a telegraPh . Before the, Great .Fire,.. Did Tewry contained a Palace belonging to ieriry. VI., on the site of which, swept clean by the lire of, 1668, was erected building which Is now the very heart of Reuter's.. this dingy Old building, with its was not gut. Woolen goods take their own' time to shrink, at least, twelve hours. Sponging or a few Minutes' steaming ,iven't cofffplete the job. If you are doing ,any amount of sewing, you really ought to have a sliiinli 'cloth. Duck makes the best kind of ore. It should be several inch- es wider than the ,m:rods, and a yard longer than a dre.slil. length. --If duel isn't aVailable, heavy unbleached mus- lin or an old sheet folded doable You see, the wet ebrink -cloth is rolled with the gooas There. is just one little, trick in the process: th0- . goods must be kept perfectly smooth. ',Spread the goods on a table- or the door. If it is double width, keep it folded deal° and the crease exactly, even-. Dip, the 'slarinlc cloth in a pail or basiii of water, wetting it thor- oughly. Wring the cloth loosely, and place it on. the goods alrnost dripping Wet. Smooth the'ahrink cloth over the goods and roll both layers over a smooth board or broom handle. The sliridlc cloth should be long enough to wrap seseral times,around the outside, After the cloth Is carefully rolled, ,e \ put it away for twelve hours?, It is the slow process that contracts the . yarn. When you unroll it, if it is . very datrip spread it, out to dry a little. Press, -while damp, on the wrong side. Woolen goods will shrink both in width and length. Soine goods have cotton or eilk threads woven in the selvage. In this caee the selvages will not shi•ink as much hs the body of the goods, Cut the selvages off before peessing.; or, if you Want to take an extra precaution, cut the selvage off before rolling the goodg In the shrink cloth.' '' Of course, with all this laundering and scrubbing hi mind, T am thinking of School clothes. Frocks whose 'pockets are destined to, be candy car- riers and whose sleeves will be desk • . boiling point, then drain web and ru through a sieve or press through a vegetable press. Put the pull) into an. agateware kettl,e, add the other ingredientg and simmer for six hours. Bottle and seal. The spices should be tied in a muslin bag. ed hisiprisoner. understand? I hate, hate this man e , A SPLENDID "WORK" COSTUME IN ROMPER STYLE WITH OR WITHOUT SKIRT. 4218. This design fills a long -felt want—combining utility, neatness and comfort with good style lines. The "Romper" snay be worn without :the wipers -I -my one recenimendation skirt, which can be readily fastened thi if desired. Serge, linen, gingham; snake .,them vvdshable. They may, be ? ,,,htod and crepe are good mnterials cot:ton—many mothers are holding to i for this mtmei, svinter. But woolen can be just as _,The Pattern to cut in 6 Sins: SA, the" gingham rule right through the .0010 d span „as einghein if the 8b, 38, 40, 42, end 44 inches bust yards of 86 -inch material. Without the .skirt 4 yards ,will be requii•ed. CATSUP AND C.A.NNING TIME. Pattern mailed to any address on When canning apples, pare- and receipt of 15e in silsSor or stamps, by quarter tile fruit the .night before, the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West then cover with eold water and allow isdeiaide St , Toronto. Allow two Tu Hee, shook ber ,„heud as the wo-' who has brpught me, here If You do heavy cardboard. -se , man held out the garment. Her glance not help Inc to escape I shall have tol In line with the governmental policy was 'rueful, however, as she surveyed kill rayself.". I .of eheapening ine 00E1; of everything, her own crumpled appearanee in the The svoman looked at her curiously' use of the paper cofilmhae been. legal - She decided her eonipanion was a cense after Marriage. Listen, the rain ized and the old reg-ulation forbidding anything but metal or wooden eeffins mirror. Heil dress .was 'torn in sev- and liaised her .gently to her feet, eral places, as well as grassestained. "Love not now, perha.ps, but it will turned frOm Stirveying herseH the canes: Ten miles neitt house. Escape . s will go into the discard.. In its ef- womaii stood ready with warrn.Water, impossible." ' , , forts to "further cheapen the cost of marvel at mind-reading, for when she comes in -rivers, the winds blow hurri- towels, and all the necessmies", such Tu. I -lee's face went white. ,,mo? dying and buroal the Berlin City Conn, oil, plans to tar costly funerals, and all as -rouge and powder and pencil, for. house, .v; ithin ten miles," •she repeated mortuary' trappings heavily. Not only O Chinese maiden's toilet. Concluding dully. "Then We are far,,f ar from the -that but will demand that graves it was, pcilicy to appear at her best, city?" Tu Hee made no p,rotest, but willingly "Twenty-five miles from Peking," putlersell in the skilful hands of her replied the esvordan. new maid. ' • To I-Iee moved across the room. She In an hour's timb she was the well- even used her lame foot and was net grocimecr child ofefortune again. Even' aware of, pain. I-Ier brain, was numb. her dress'had been made to assume its One .thought only reiterated through old daintiness: The womtin acCom- her'nfind. She was a prisoner twenty.: plished this .cinlese when she saw her live miles from home. She pictured new charge was firon- in her refusal her uncle entering the house, wonder - to don -any of 'the garments with which she endeavored to teinpt her. ' 'Tusllee was now 1111 ready for Chu Sing. The isorrors of the previous night had faded a 'little in his con- tinued absence nod in the glow of ad- venture. Her spirits did not sink, even with the insistent -beating 'Of the rain against the reef and win o -w. She thought Of her unele: 11e would be home from his. trip to -night. • Surely Chu Sing would not dare have her absent when he returned. Ah, no, she assured herself, he .would ,not dare! But --and a sudden chilleeron through her r-L-perhaPS- Sloe Was' Miles and mllee awayefemn tome. She had:no means Of knowing how far' she.had journeyed after she lost consciousness. Possibly She was in some lonely part of the interior. If she cool& only look frons the window, but 'it was too high to reach, unless— a Sloe. glanced appre- hensively, toward§ the door. The wo- /mho ,had gone out hall an 'hour pre- viously. 'Perhaps she would, be able to get an idea Of her surroundings be- fore her return. Tu Hoe's foot was not far on the road to recovery, which she discovered when slog tried to coax it to give;her a little.sUpport. , So it was by hopping on elm foot and -push- ing. a heavy carved Chair of the small window that.4he achieved her purpose. Her lame tinkle protested vigorously at beinglifted so far off the.floor, but, setting her teeth grimly, To Hee suc- ceeded in getting her eyes. on a level with the pane of glass. Eagerly she peered out, but, alas. 'only the sway- ing, creaking limbs Of trees and blow- ing rain rewarded her effort. . Ungracefully . she clambered from the chair, unaware' whether she was in the' suburbs or' 111 Peking itself, en. —and the thOught ,sent a shiver through her—out in the country of brigands. The,minutes and hours dragged into noon -at last. Tu Hee began to grow anxions. Why did her captor not come? The rnysteey arid inaction of her position began -to tell on .her. There was nothing to do but sit with folded hands and think, and to think was the.worst thing -she Could, do. It got her nowhere,. but simply opened the gates for vivid, horrible imagin- ' A sten sounded outside theidoor. Tu Hee held her breath .and waited, Ter-. 000 had her in its grip. She heard. a bo made shallower and the mon over them lower --to save the cost of grevedigging. 10 10 even proposed bo have mess 'transasortation oti the dead to the municipal, cemetery to 'order to lessen the coats still' mare. ' It will be requiretl, however, that where paper ceifine are used that the body be first in an atetight, wa,terproof ing why she' -was not waiting e wita,mjing, something like the wrap- thick walls, low ceilings, and steep staircasea,,comes allIday long, 'all, the year round, the news of the world gathered by an exclent and widelY- spread organization. Renter was created a baron by the Duke of Saxe- 0oburg-Gathe in 1871, and his title was recognized by Lord Salisbury In 1891, In the days before the cable, the agency had the new's of the murder of Abraham ,Lincoln a week betore airy - one else in, Europe. Its New York correspondent eet out in a fast tug after a mall steamer whicli had. „just stilled, and threw on.boarci a tin canis- ter containing a report. Reuter's also announced the relief of Maf eking two dare before the War Office receiveds"official intimationn The Wrong Side. 1 remember well, writes a contribut- , or. to YoutMe Companion, an ineident of childimod.thet hes held a lesson for me ever s.ince. I had gone to Mother' to ask. what I shOuld do to pass' 00 idle afternoom,„ She said that she was going -to *13811 'Windows and that I might She told me to Wash the. pantry svindow first, because it waS the dirtiest. I got the s.tepasidder. and began work on the outside. I worked alwaY till was sure tho window nnist be perfect - 17 clean; then, 'with a dry cloth I rub- bed Firms wiere -tired, But the ' whitlow clid not look much better than before; it was 5tilci Soiled.. At last I. aultoll mether what was the matter. She came at once and at tha lirst ,glance smiled and eau, "-Why, you have been, washing the wrong side!" That dtrt• Is on the inside, of the glass." I went into the house, and soon the window Was bright and clean, As I think oii the incident now the words c,oine. to. me: "Ye shall be holy; for I am holy." Ana I remember the words of Jesus .to his disciples; "Be ye therefore p,extect, even as' your Father which is in heaven is perfect." How far we are from holiness and . perfection! And yet nothing less than holiness -and perte,etion will satisfy Him. How are,we.to accomplish it? , , . After looking at. the. sorrow and miserY and despair of tf.1,11e-whe have tried in vain to clesinsie "the soul by penances and saarificeS' and'. Otte out. Ward means after another^we,go back td the Heavenly Father us to Our 'task and ask why,we have failed. And the Father love and compas- shin repliers, "You have been washing the ,outhide'enly. Take the blood oil Christ, the perftsot cleanser, and a.p. ply it to the sdul within and the win- dow will shine as bright as crystal," • 111 hall to throw. herself into his arms p111g0 that swathe Egyptian mummtees and then guess which hand conceal the gift hadbrought her. She look- ed dully at the Goddess di Mercy that gazed quietly down at her, and -with a little moan dropped al: the feet of the imag,e. Feeling returned to her heart and brain and she lay there sobbing like a child, se - The morning, full of sunshine and fragra-nee, peeped nit° the 'omivflexa t To Hee lay. But it did not bring hope ,,Tarler.presented to her as soon as 5118 o the 'bewildered girl. Her -resolution I was -seated. - as she rose from her bed was th de- " iTain't, either!" snapped the af- t -nand an explanation from the wait- Ilicted lady, who, though deaf, 7, -1 -as by ing-woman as to 'Chu Sing's where- no means dumb. "Folks that have got Lbouls. ,She knew him too well to _ , . anybaing to 50.7 can write it on that entertain as a - reason for his iMn- ,slate. And Caleb Walter, that's had to appearance the storm of the previoue 1 , • ,., , „.._. ,, means eager to see him, inkt she felt .1 was by any„ Put a curb on nis tongue -tor upwaict of thirty years on ,accounit of the high day. Not that Tu Hee she inust know -his plan concerningi telleper he took from his mother's her. So When her . breakfast was i folke, is now able to say anything he brought in she was feady to let fly her likes to um and 1110 feelingS b.t10t. I darts -of interrogation. She had learn- count' my deafness a -real blessing. ed by this time that her wily waiting -1/.1,w% your rheumatism?" woman must be taken unawares if she' - Her Blessing. :When Mrs, Farley learned that her old frfend, Mrs. bel. beconie "stone deaf," she Went, with a long face, to see her. "It must be an awful cross, Harniet, she wrote on "the slate whieh Mrs: shrink is out, as .described above, measure. A 38enneb. size requires 6% . . • , to stand overnight. This toughens weeks for receipt of pattern. Crowing in Defeat. A Pig Worth Having.. The Chlues'e' always like to tell a The famous pointing,..sow " Slut, story that shows wit triumphant over whose hIstor,y is told in the old Cyc- venni a solcfier fooled by a civilian is, lopedia of. SyOl'i, a truly remark - they think, alwitys a thing to chockle able anional,,, When young she had a al fn the following tale of two Chin- ase superior 'to most pointers, would eee soldiers it Is 11(4 leis veterans one 100 011 well as the best and' would re. lcey inseried.and warted for 11100 111135 that triumphs: therefore it is tunnY:, trieve 1)6,6 that had. run. When tee.1oto entertebot it was only a, Chinese. IBowin "low and respectfully, he set Getting the "Stitch." Sometimes, atter taking. 11100,0 violent exercise than usual, such es .running, you May feel a -pa;in in the side, near the lower ribs. It makes you want to halt. You stop for a while, and it gets better. This pain is generally lenoWn by i.the name of "stitch." It le really nothing to worry seriously over, ex- cept bloat it le Nwture's warning that you are overtaidug, your breathing ap- paratus. The act of running uses up the oxy- gen in our blood very quickly. To re- Wished to get the better o.. "It is a beautiful morning, Su. Do you think year master would object to my getting a little fresh air after breakfast? Please ask him, will you?" "Master Chu Sing not here," was the quick response. "Not here'?" repeated,To Hee, dis- simulating .surprise. "Oh, well, he surely will be to -day.' The storm has evidently delayed him,", "No."' The woman ehoolc her head decisively. "Storm 11.0t scare Master Chu Sing if thousand" devils raged in it." She paused, and then added in a low voice; "Su thinks very strange, Missee, Master Chu Sing 'net home, very strange." "You don't think: anything could have happened to him?" There was an eager note in Tu Tide's voice, which she could not stifle. • think MaYbe—strange, very strange," repeated the woman, pour- ing Tu lIee's tea. . (To be continued.) A Massive Timepiece. A Liverpool , newspaper. recently printed an. account of a. shipping ease -that was heard in the AduntraltY Court, In it Punch has discovered this charm- , ingly ambiguous sentence: She pro- ceeded on her way until seven, or rather later, when the officers, in the cabin heard a noise as•of a heavy body like an anchor or a chain being drag- ged along the deck from the funnel aft. It was the mate's watch. plenish we must breathe much more rapidly and deeply than we are accustomed to doing. Our main breathing, muscle is the diaphragm, which, though strong and broad..in itself, ends in small fibres where it is attached to the siX lower ribs on each side of the body. As. we breathe quickly ,and deeply, the ribs, too, rnove more rapidly, this movement sometimes straining. the fibres to which the diaphragm is at- tached. Then. it is- that we feel the "s titch." When. we get this pain, we hawe to halt uu.til the muscle „ fe•ele re.5ted again. That teaches us to go 1110T0 quietly when we make a fresh start. ton will only get "stitch" when you are out of condition, for with' practice You learn to distribute the strain amongst the variorri muscles, so that no particular one is effected unduly. with a tray ref steaming, appetiz- In the olden days in China .overy 1.Years old.slteisviould set game as well 1 heY 5115 food. eitY was fortified with a high Wall. The as ever, "though' naturally, site had be- , , . g gates of the city were opened each ,conie slothfuh for her weight ajn the tray on the table and with another Morning and closed each evening, and, preached seven inward pounde. bow glided from the room. since tleere were no cloaks to etrlite Shit was raised in the New Forest, This was too much for Tu 'Tee, the hour, thei keeper of the gates England, and was taken in hand for i Throwing herself on a couch, she Sob - would open tbein in the 111000105 when training by Thomas anti Richard i bed sorith 'flight and loneliness. What . the cock enew. ' Teenier, her owners, when. she was did it cal mean? "0 Uncle Weng, I Wile -a two cities disa,greecl the bear. tel was settled by sending out a lead-, ing warrlor-from tsach place to con- • tend in single-handed codiba,t mid -Way between. On one. ,oceasion two men were fighting thus -when cnie ot them; 'realizing that ho WAS being defeated, 1 the 001118 50.) bUt VAS' never known to ,,t,i_irted to'run back to his, city for pro- 1 point a bare. „Her paeS WaS rubstlY a toctIon, ICS aotagenist, pursued him ., trot; she galloped rarely and only holly, ' ' ,' ' ' ' ,' when nee niaster's whistle summoned As the fugitive drew near 01.10 city 1 1150. She seemed Us pleitsed aa a dog he happened to .thinit that the gates when she NVEIA Si1OW01 11 gins and was would' i)e closed, Suddenly Increasing delighted whert, genie, dead or alive, WS -Speed, he began at the top of hiS wa,s placed before , her, iello two Yoh.* to .crove like a raosterl Illoemers 'lived about, „Seven miles The, gatekeeper, who Was lying Molt apart, Many; times. Slut went by her- awalce insides s.prang to his Peet. 'self for 0110 lodge to the other, appar. Coelecrowl Moraingl Tinos to open ently hoping to be taken out shooting. Dogs did not like to Molt with her anti it coneequence did eat often ac- eomPany her, When she,joineil thent toy ateldent in the forest sloe would leese come to your little Autumn about eighteen months old,. u t he course of the first, deg eho answered Gladness!" she sobbed wildly. Hea- th her name; within a fortnight -she plavist brayery had falhsn from her and Would lind and point partridgeo.o* anti iris eliv.tte;eadf algoarAbiZmigsi'ag avCiolludriPppree8genbteig- rabbits.° She "stood" paitridgessblack, mind as she lay there clutching the . . game pheasants, snipe and rabbits in eushions. How long,she retrained thus She did not know, She cared no longer to °(...ount the Minutoe or hours. She felt the .gods had indeedabandoned her. .Iler ankle throbbed with pain, het she,ditinot mind, Indeed, she wel.,.• Corned. as is Sort of antidote for the torture,of her triimi. The storm had imireased to. Shrieking fury and pelt- ing hail. • Thiinder pealed and shook the walls of the • house; 'The thought entered her dazed mind that perhaps the ,gods were angry?, that the roara Of thnader were Vociferous protestg at her suffering. Perhaps they Would deetroy her Persecuiee—had already destroyed hitit, which accounted for his strange abeeece. A soft, hesitating tsnieli on her head broUght her ilnaginings to all end..She opened, her eyes wearily. It must be night, for the lamp Was lit. 0110 waiting -woman was speaking to liere I008 begging her to take some food.. Hee shook- her head arid tarried 'away, biut, the svointin pleaded: "If 1'1101 net eat you get sick and die:" • if I only eould!' sabbed TU flee. But tbe effort, to speak rou.scd _the gates! lol rmeh haSte.the swtnig them outward, and in. dashed the fugl, tive—ZaVea, not by the strength of his arms", but by the streifgth 01 Isis voice , anti by his ready Any .fruit stain oti linen that cam: not be removed by hot water Will dieappear like magit by simply soottors sting Hoe stain with erlyeeriee, ',et stand an hello' or 80 rub between the beck them whenever they pointed? but they refused 0 back her until :molten to, . Milk will seerch less easily and the pan is more quiekly cleaned afterward it it is rinsed with cold skate, before, handa and Wtsli its the ustial sosty 1,151, milk is. heated. , par,adas,Moter Fleet. , . ..„.,,There,'werei,i5i1.6.,114. 'Motor vehicles in. Canada 1n...1.922, 'aceerding to tile latest go Verein EMI, repent.. Ontario led other, Mite.. iceS in the number al a1ilc10S Collh w ed. by SEISltatjheIVEL, , Ouebee, • • 'Manitoba, ,, 'Alberta; Bi.itish• "She' stole' my husbahd from ooluoollto, Nova Scotia," "New. 'Briins. "WhY not 'preset:ate. her. 00 wlele and -Princ'e Edward ISland„ • laree:y?" • " Testing Fireproof Safes. Dropp•ing a red hot sate front a height equal to the fourth 'floor of a building..on a pile of bricks and solid concrete blocks, is only- one of several spectacular tests deemed essential in making really fireproof sates. It never is an old sate Mit always a brand uew ode, ando tlie testers are the engineers ancl scieatiets. employed by the Under- writrs Laboratorites, am organization whose label of perfection means much in the business 'world to -day. "Fire and Impact Test" is what the engineers call the most sensational trial of thefireproof safe. 'Phe safe la heated an hour before being drop- subJecteci to the fall, again heated • for an hour In a furnace registering 1,700 degrees Fahrenheit and when sufficiently cooled, 11 10 forced mien to' see what effect its experience has hail orr the papers and,books 1111140. Before the label of exeellence is granted to the maker, sample sates tire'tested in all kinds of ways for per- fection of workmanship. They are handled roughly 0,0 110 .11.10V1llg, the doors opened with the safe at varions angles anti eien they are plated in the inidst of a terrific bonfire to, see whether the elites will bulge from heat. . By a clever device, the interior heat is tested for hours while the sate is within a great furnace and this "endurance trial' lasts for twenty hears. . Every bit of material and workman- ship is scrutinized and often snEee of, ' the types labeled are bought In 1110 open 01001(01 Etna tested00111)0(11 I lie maker's knowl.odge to see that Om Standard is being ma i n lain ed. me." r petty ......i.e.mr7k7.:trano,romi7inrmirov::::%.1:71e,Ma•••!;.....sensim•*•••"nomenr. RipplintfaulTo or visa mason AI. - COMMENDATION saY..1.0 my aunt when I've eaten the grub she lute deftlY prepared, "Yeur cookery cannot be beaten., and, much like to Icing I have fare,c1, The onions were fried as'I wish them,the turnips Wen COOked 0101117 welil,-the plathes--015, ne.other coulcl diet them SO tempting to palate (WA 0111011 '1,110 0000 was a sevemtime winner, th,Cpie Vas 0 eight to bo Seal j 100coolsing 11 Fionfetirring .clinner you're eurcAy. 10 peaels and, Mtmeen." The praise that I „lavishly sprinkle convhiceS ray aunt site has class; Les not lIke the oyfnhalia -that tinkle, it'S not like the sonuding of lnase. Per Praise:Is:a blessing forever, and othwaye It's bound to prevail, lin anteing to higher endeavor, and strengthening hands that might tail: Tiro voice of my aunt, is tiseentling In sang as slie chases around; itho word,s 1 have spolten are lending a happiness truly profound. No doulrt else is ,thinking,. "By thiinder, tomerrove I'll , gisoos 1-tirg a treat; I'll &Ugh up a meal that'e a wenclete. 0 moal Hutt a eeraph might oat." all wblO are working eroutod me 1 hand .ont the languege of praise, and mutinies never confound no, and ealla aud• serene are nry,days.* Goldfish and Facts. . There are two tact -s, that owners of live goldfish need to be taught One Is that fish live where there is plenty of shade, and. their eyelids are poorly developed or entirely a:beet:it, accoed- ing to the International Encyclopedia and other scientific authorities. Therethro,• When fish are put into transparent globes which admit all the, light ,there is and from all diree- tions at once, the fisb cannot cover their eyes and cannot find a shady place in which to hide. - Stones, and 'other small obJects, suc11. as water plants, eau be put in the bowr in smell positions as to make little shade between and under snub The tictivity of liVe goldfish in glaSs glebes, so thotightlessy admired by their ownerS, 10 a frenzied activity, a vain effort to find relief from glare. • , 'the other fact is that there, is sir in the Watoy where 1.1611 liVe in nature. Ver0ted water is a nee.essity of life far hall. Water in globes it 01)11 an cI Air Jets. A plan to abolish 111 neopellers of aeroniiines- is the subject 11001 of lab- oratory rese.arch, Air campuessed end mixed s0l111 811.01 In a combustio11 chamber would Ise projected through a nozzle at the rear of the aeeeplane, and the reaction to ' I e would clidve the machine through the Ail, Thouell it is calculated that high. speed might 1100511017 be obtained through this method of jet Preomision, the met:Monism would be heavy, and experiments so far Sb OW that the eons m suptlen. foal' worth', be' in exer Of that recntireil for ordinary propel ) front air. The 2(4 swim about. Ito with „ gaping' mouths, gasping 104 breath ' and actually smothering CO0 want of air. it is Mined that persons 'oho enjoy seeing goldfish in globes and who teach children to atimire•them In prisr ons, will consider these facte. ' W6rth.01 Ontario's Mines, An increase .in the total valuat(on of mineral 'prodnction of over 82,000; 000, co. nearly 80 per eent..„. cons- lutred `With 1010 orst clearer of last yestr, shoWn 113 the ,first, quarterly report of 1623 issued by, the Ontario Department dr Mines. 'rile total value ot prOductIon for the three months ended march, 1128, was 19,241,868, ea against $7,227,322 in the same period 11.year ego, Silver .en1l gold were the only products ,to show a deerease In yahoo, Copper increased in Table from 11.810 In 1922 °I,o 1460,41.1 10, 1923; nickel in simtte experted), 8607,- 886, compared wan no production in Om first quarter of 1922. Willie's Logic. Tetieheree"1Villie, what le the plural of eine?" Will ie " Mem" "Anti the plural or ohnitz" "Twfrm,,, She -"foto yoe think my boothing anti it to good form?" 110 --"I'd Hay It was vice veraa." •