The Clinton News Record, 1914-03-12, Page 11Foolish Young Mall;
•Or, the Belle Ot the Season.
ClIAPIlEIL
t'Vuti3 111118 suementhave never fully
..441.1183Ytl8tga001,ari aski it mancall bet:
n-',1;31hinktt -Lli nornag ng .1. sett -3-
'1 . might; have bebn ta, 410
rent breakfast, uty soinfutraablo dig-
• andtwan, cooped up in it train for
seven hourn, that 1 am now driving in 0
Pelting amiu through, 0o 1:11.1, as 1 can, see
lier the lain!, what tappears to be a
!lug us4denier.o, 1 aek myself if I lian 1,11 1
poMMOion at my o1isp 1 domand of
711Yself "aVh-Y I should eommit wolf lurid
folly. Louts night, 1 wan 01111)10 over tho
titre with a boo lw-rpr it 'wag cold, though
�1C fro 00:141 an; this,' the stnetticitat shivered
and dragged the ,collar ot les, overootte
atill,liigher-"at peace 'with all the World,
'with 'Onier perriug plaeidle by, my 'side,
ande• tny eerie wrapped in that eereni'tY
Which belongs to 11 man* )vlici has long
einee rid himself ef 'that incenveuient ap-
pendage -•-ii, 001)601 ont0 and 1100 Ititeupoit
the Tight, brand of olgarettee, and
He palmed toesigh, to groan indeed, and
eihifted., Itinieelf uneasily la the well -pad-
ded eeat of the luxurious mail-ph,aebon.
• "When IVillettne brought me -Your note.
eseitten-were you sober, Steffosd?
,11wndiy askieg anc to join you in this
' 'Stied beeinece, 5 .to myself as 5
pitched 4,he note on the fire. Omar emil-
e,l1 leo'tale very cig.areete mulled. I entd
To ftlYself I evened see you blowed fleet;
thee, nothing would induce me to join
you, that emit! about the Lakee. eeo
Taubh ;tad too often le eentetre epeis them
In the. eaur10 ,pavt, ot Attlee in, fact, I had
710 aces() 10 aeo Ilto Lakes.. at any time
or under any conditions. I eold Omeeethat
I would oce yoi in the leen'Teet pit of To -
Phot 'before 1 would go with yew to-wiliat.
ever the Tnineeuf .thls plaoe Is, And yet,
, hero I mu."
e, 1 The epea,Iter paused itt his oomplain.t 11,
.1 empty 1 pool 01 05)751,00 from his rnaekite•
• Web., rsflllenceeeded-in turning it over
", • life" own leg. He greened again, and ,,con-
tieued:
'"Anci yet,. here 5 am. My dear Stafford,
't I do non, lvtat to upbraid you: 5 eau simply
, Making to myself a oonfeeseeit of weak-
- times whith would be pitiable in a etraY
••••deir, Ina which 411 a man of V39 Years,
with 3115' experience of the world and re.
s putaliion far Commoni senee, is simplY
eri-
'uunol, I ,do not winh to reproach you; I
am quite +mere that tie irepinaeli, not even
the specie:Cie of my prenent inieery would
toueit pour callous and, 3termi(1 me to
•.frankly add, your abominably eollieli na-
, vire; but I do want to ask anito ealmlY
and, without any display of temper: What
.-the deuce you wanted to emote this waY
round, ,and wily you wonted me with you 1"
The epea.ker710110)3(115' built, man, juet
beyond elle vague lino of young," glanced
so with hie dark, eeniewhat eembre and
yet softly eynioal eyed at the face of his
.compattien who wee driving. This com-
partien eves uninietakably young, and
there was not a trete of 07111MSM in his
grey -blue eyea, which looked out upon the
rein end Inlet. with pleasant, cheerfulnese.
Ito was 1101ther eart,ienlarly fair nor
'dark; but. there was is touch Of brighter
color than-116nel in his atort, crisp hair;
and no woman had yet, found fault -with
the raonetnehe or ehe Ilea beneath. And
, yet., theugh Staffeed Orme's facie was •ra-
• Iles too handsome thin otherwise, the
• nigns fweakucce w'hieli ono eeeeIli so
• nmaly good-looking faces did not met.
Indeed, there -was a aline of strength, nob
to mty eternuess, in tie) well -out lipa, 71
glieit 51 emwer no,a inesterfultioTes in 11110
grey eyes and tlie beeves, abovethem
w hich impressed, erre at first sieht; though
vitae 'one rate() to know hlitetho impres.
sloe Wee; ,0.011 lost, effaved by the. eliaem
for wheeh Stattord was famous, end whieh
. 'wee eiterpotually recruiting his army of
friende.
:Me doubt, 11 10 eaey to be oharmitiewhen
• the gado have mad° you good to look uP-
on, and have filled your lento:es -with gold
Into ate bargain. Life woe a pageant of
pleasttre to Stafford Orme: uo -wonder he
eang islet entiled epee the Way and bed
710 )40): of Minipanions. Even this luau
beide Ildniund llowerd, wlicse Dame
was a byeverd tor eYniejent, Wale had
neyer, he met, St:Ilford Orme, pane
au Ineli out or hia 01f -contained way to
pleeee or benefit fellowman, wae the
elave 01 Ilie Young fellow'imporioue will,
. end ,Iltough, lie altel Made litulestnte dam.
plaint of 111s boudege; did not i -u his heart,
rebel against lb.
Stafford laughed shortly as lie looked at
• the raireewept aline amen(1 which the two
good horee.s, were ,talciug the well:appoint:
fed pliecton.
, "011, I knew you would come," he said.
k "It wee Suet Ithie way: You ktiow the goy-
. ornoi• wants and ,asked I/10 10 COMO 4011,31
z tO 1,11/13 0430 place ' Illo al, 'BrYnaen-
' nierO-• -
-; "Pardon me, Stafford; you forget that
I have been' down Son:the:where I 101011 to
Heaven I bad Teitteinedl-auci Chet I 01113
gretarned yesterday afternoon, and that I
; kttow nothing of these sedden &thrums
elect exemeione of your ettoomed permit,"
. "Ali, no; se you don't!" aosented Stat.
ford; "thought I'd tole you: enall have
tell you now; 111 tut it as ehort as
poeeible." Ito paused for 11 inement and
gently drew the lash of •the whin over the
. wet baeka f the two borees -alto were lie-
&ening inttently to the voice of their be-
loved a:career: "Well, term d•ays ago I got
1 a letter from my father; It was a long
00107 3: think it's tato Met leng letter I ever
: received from him. Be informed on 'that
for ‘some eime past be hoe been building
,a little place on the eaot side of Brynder.
more Lake, •that he 'thought, it would be
reatlY by ;the ninth ef this month; iced
would. I go dONVIL-oS is it up 1-,l3iere aiul
• Meet him, 418 he 'was coming 10 England
and would go stpaiglit there from levee-
: pool. Of course there Was .tiot time for
' me io renlY, and equally, of course, I pre -
eared to obey. I meant going et,raight
down to Yetyndeemere; and 5 ;should have
done so; but two days ago X received it
telegram ,telling une the t the plaeo would
not be ready, a.nd thee he would not be
. there 1101,11 '1,110 t
e elevenh, and aeking ..ano
to fill up the darts -real by 0011111710 .401011
some horees end marriagee. It, oecurred to
ma, with eve of ,three brilliant 17(011043of
gentile which you have so often. remarked
ill um, my deer 1100n0i, that 5 s,vould
drive dorm, et 05) 0110 met of the
g130t Gann) At traps direct and got,
,thie turn -out as fat tie Present with me,
With another of these remarliable desires
of eimitle, 17 aleo oaeuerecl lo ale ten6 I
&holed be lonely with only Pottinger
here," he jellied, his head • town.rds
who eat irt damp and et•olid silence
'e . "A IsoI i• t otk
yen
come Kind
vf Ifl0, wesn't it?"
"Meet infernally 65id. Howtard,
with n 01511 50)1 a ton 'Beet You
, nay idea stint your; talaer was balding
' thie VAN) place?. By theeray, 5 emelt- line
•,areitied 1717r 'Seenheit building alielltieg.'that
--Our(1 110dOlporibcd '
'eyee, are eightraseetited Stafford, w1'll1
ii„ened. etI'lieur,d: coming down .thet, wee
releciepaiMid.ota aelfind.of pe,
'go'eT.'eart. "thee, eerie et, thing
Yeti knew tire governorn etyle?" His
linenve -wore 01 151011,0' knit for juetea eme
crud, then ho thecw, es it, -were, the frown
oft, w;.lar flsmile. "No, I knew notating
aborit Ili -new as little a,boub Ft as 5 do
of ;1170501011,51 blinself and luleeffadee,"
Ifowa,ra nodded emneWhat gravely.
'When Yeti eeme to think of it, Halyerd.
isn't it, etrange that father and 8011 shonld
knOW PO little of -,eueli other? I naee not
seen the eovernor for :r Puget how many
years. Ile laws laoeu ottt, of England for
the lest foueteen. ov fifteen, -with the ex-
eclition 4,r a few sides Y10110; 0,11110 71 the
' Ocoee:tee of those Vieite X Ince either at
•eehool 00 the .00011.ineut el. tramping about
erne .or 11, ,red; and to WO 71I0001'
raet: 11111(101 nooany euenleion that,
los Yetered pnehnt had no paeticutter do -
Tbe Dye ;that; Colors ANY *ONO.
ef Cloth Perfectly, with the '
leo-Oesece oi Mistakes, Clean god
ealk von, Inenegist oe,Dealer: Sone for '
The Johneoiultlelaardson Co. Llented.l‘lontietd.
0100 (10, 1,lo giequeintameel.Wltht1110
dutifillt.thlltspring;-laitywily,,, if 31e-310, 115
would lava tarrangt)dt tioneetiligtt, ..S.013111
'poottl .; 1011 (7 etherjstelbee
this condi-id' 1171M
S a parol.406,1)0011 With;
00)1100011
""lthose are ,srantely tho.terms by which
should dosigntite o liberality whiehtan
enty be demribed ,as criminally 1av1t111,'
and an- indifforeare 'to your inera1 pro -
gem; which intent anero properly hele110
00 1111 unregenerate Turk than te en Eng-
lish barsinet, Gonoidering the 'oppotrtunf-'
ties of evil afforded you by ,the 1)-0Meadon
ef a preetieally unlimited raalowamee, end
4. braeee cheek which etimenly be• describ-
ed as coloesel, the 'feet that You liave emt,
long eince gone, heed -Ione te the' devil
/1110 1310 Vita '111311petilal anti eyel,ires)len-
Um wonder," ; ;
..Statfordt usimed end sh•rugged hie ehonl-
,ders with .eheerful acquitee,enue, , •
"Should neve goue ita naneneO ever do
meaty times, old .man, if it hadn'tbeau
for yea," he said; "but you've always been
at hand 'Net, at the eritieal moment
,
p0101 0111 'to, me that X, 100.0 playing ehe
giddy goal and going to sineeb. That's
why I like to kayo yOU 181131 dna 00 a kind
of ruide, menetor, and been& Ton know."
lloweed groaned and attempted to get
eich of another sniuiature pool of water,
and .suceeeded-eas before.
"1' know," he .assented. "My virtue ff.s'
ite own apwerd-eand. punishment, If I
had 'allowed you te. go your way to the
proverbial doge, after whose some,ty gild.
ed youths like yourself appear toebe al-
ways hankering, rale:mad .net, be eitting'
here vtith,told water sunning .down 1015
back anth'surrounded, by Nature in ' her
glom:ale:se and dampest aspeets, Only puce
heve I deviated from,. the life of consist-
ent selifOhnees zvb 1011011 every 0011eible
man should 0.•101, and Roo how I 11,111,/11.111-
iehed! . I do not 'wis1t to be unduly in.
010.11(1110, but, I should like to know where
wo are ,going, and why we do cot make
fem.& derout hotel -if ttioare laqsuCIL a thing
111 theee desol'ate
Staffordelitteded him ehe Teins eo that
he himself might gob out. his cigar -case,
and with some libtlo difficulty, and 1100
sistccl by POtainger's soaked hat, the tw0.
gentlemen got their 'Legate alight.
"There tea% a, decent hotel for miles,"
explained Stafford. "There is only o,
smell inn et a little place called 01038.
ford. I looked 11 out on the map. I
thought we'd drive there today, put lin
for the Might to give the horsee a rest,
and go to this place of my goveraior'e the
next day, It's on the oppoeite &Ida of the
lake."
He jerked hie whip to the right.
"Which side, what lake?" asked Howard,
hopelessly, nee nothing of the lake.
nothing but mist and sodden hills, ble
wouder the 1000d '11001' instinctively.
arouses one's auhnostty. When I think
of the number of welieneaning anti in.
'mired icliote who have written reams of
poetry About thie plane, 5 feel at this pre.
sent moment ae ft I could eleerfully read
even a Wordsworth, a Southey, or a
Coleridge; and I look back with remorse
upon the home, the iiitrobs et adrairation,
I Imve expende(1 upon what X once deem -
'eel their inspired pages. If I womember
eightly, most of the Lake paste went off
their leade; When I geze around Me I
must, admit time X sitain met ettrprieed,"
Stafford laughed absently; he was quite
aeousteoned to Ifeward's 03114075.1 Vein• •
"'They're all right enough," he said.
"That is, I suppose they Are, for X never
read any of 'om eine° I deft soheet Oh,
yes they're right enough 'about the beauty
pf the, pleee;, you ohould nee it on 0. 11110
day." ;
"Hao anyone 80011 it on 41, flue day?" ine
quired Howard, with the innocent ail. Of
0110 ()imply [Melting i'ofoonlation. "I asIced
a, countryman in ,theetraie if ft always
reined hore, and he (replied, 'No; it
600101111100 snoWS.'"
"That's a clieetrint," Tema:eked Stafford,
with a- laugh. "But it's all 11011501100
&boat 110 'always being wet berai' theY
toll me it's fine for weeles together: that
you eau never tell any inatant whether
,itet going to clear up or net; that the
weather -will change like 04 woman—
Clood-heamene, look at that!"
Es nodded to the east, as he spoke. 'en-
notieed by them the sky had been clenee
Jug gradually, the inlets sweeping, 4110.
.101111(5 away; 0. breath ef wind eow -waft-
ed them, like 0 veil t,ltrown weds, from
hill and valley and lake, and a scene of
unparalleled betbuty lay revealed beneath
'them. The ereah Jake shone like a ettp-
Phire; Meadows of emerald, woode of
darker green, bine of panne and grey,
eilver end gold, ruse from the Memel end.,
the edge of the great aieula Jewel; the
.11111e toworiny, tier on tier late the 1,511'
88.14 of azure blue swept by clouds like
driftieg 8114311%
'1310 4A170 melt gazed in silence; even
13011415°r, 10 wlimn his '04006 generally
reprogented all that vas beautiful in na-
ture, gaped with evidoopen mouth.
"Ilow'e that for lofty, you unbeliever?"
demanded Stafford. "Ever seen anything
Like that before?"
Howard had been conoiaLl'aillly startled,
hue of con/emelt° 0004(0111041 11 Id amt1Md
admiration behind a mask or eYnieieth•
"Rather a crib from -Val Peineep, 30111
11, 'with a Suggestion of a Drury' Lane
pantomiMe abOlit it? Good heavenel and
therels the Fairy Palace ell complete," be
added, as the 7311:910 gill riding, there 1100
discovered on •the stone of the other side
te long and extremely oentete hoildit;g, 11,0
pure whitenese of which ,1106e reflected in
the marvellous blue and opal of the lake.
"Cam that be SIT Stephen's 'little Place'?"
"Ten afraid it is," naid Stafford. "It,
looks like the goveenor," ,ho .0411077, with
touch of gravity.
7Wel-1. it'd a very big, or. rather, long;
end it's 3:50) 111)17101 but otie'e 11001551 (1(0 .ati-
init Oat It, doesn't anoll the landscane,"
Said Howard; "in fact, standing there
amidet the dark green trece, well its pin-
naeles an& .terracee, 11 lo irather au erne-
ment than atherwiee, I on ODOM) 111e00 are
1101Vol6 on those velenty .liteenel, and the
interior, wager my lite, matchea elfb
exterior. Fortunate youth to poseess 0.
03:000118 (00' a father!"
"Zee: I ,Funposo tile governor must. be
treineudensly coileb," staid Stafford.
"The men who care build seich m pelmet
as that, and illaVe eool cheek to call it
'a little 1111505,', ettukt in 0010711011 decency
be 7, multieuillionaieen
Stafford nodded and smoked thought-
fully foe ,a, minute 41,11 Pottinger left the
;berme ,heado and elimbecl into hie Rent,
behlad, and the mall-Phattenenevect alerts
the road, -wheat began le dip 401'411 at 411110
kllOW eo little &belie My father," Mild
etafford, .
"A.nd yet, the world knows GO much." 3.11-
mo0'ked Howard, throwing open 1l3 '17.0
terproof and, bwsklug in the eine whielt
shone tes, warmly end. 11,0504401)141011y 1111 11
•it had never Itetu'al euelf ti, thing as
rein. , nOne can't Oka. up, a, paper wilt(
.ont. seeing dsente" Mention .1031 117,0 Oell1ien-
O1'in Wei "gront.f naMe. ,Oite day Ate 10.3)1
Paris uegetietieg o, ' State' • lea n ; anOthei:
3011 'read he le annexing, appeoprlating,
or 'whateveT Yee cell it, 41 Va611 traet in
Africa, or Agin; on elle third you are in-
formed with all eolemeity that he baa
beeorne a director of a itew bank, fulmr,
(1.01.00 einnPanT, O1,07 nor nr• ,tanne
10)1001116 111 W111031 Itotheolintle and
Bailees +eel Chnt000lveO. 1100 naa
0575( 01. you , Woe in eorrood thee Sir Stephen
Orme has been ewe:Stott etand Inc
an itnportant conetiteeney..bui, ehat, bo
wes centpelleil deeline. beeenee • of
the, 1(11988117 of his -numeroue IS0M8.
'Nero 'mar be a, 1)10 041 famous a,nd im-
porte,nt individual •10 the world Watt ;veer
father, my cleat. Stuffier& m t•b vq, I omit, e((('11:Pio ratd et, Oilsemoteent. ' •
"Chaff (may," 'saidefitelford, goachbunter-
telly "At 1113' vete lie hale been 01. jolly
• liberal father to me, DICI. Yen,ihot
Suet before he (IMMO home be Placed -
11137113b 01100 el hie hank for me. I mean
01,131, and above iny, alThwanee?"
. (To be continued.)
• '
A little girl once dosei'ibed
snake aS, "31, thing thaVe a tail all
the ',va'y up to its head:" "
UBE IS A. ST5Y-AT-U.0
The announcement that Sir Ed -
Ward Grey, the Foreign eoretoiry,
will accompany ,the King and Queen
on their forthcoming visit to Pari/
recalls the oft -stated fact that Sir
Edward has never eei, foot on for-
eign soil. It has been said 17111117 1140
"Nisite(1 Madrid in 1908 and Berlin
last year. 117 (1 announced now Chat
sSir E ward Grey, •
neither ottliese visits was made,
few years ago Sir Edward 'said in. a,
speech :
"For twenty-eight years 5317' life
has been a continual.struggle to live
at home." '
It is generally reported that Sir
Edward speaks no German and very
bad French. JIfr. Venizelos, the
Greek .Premier, aaid some time ago
that he 'had the greatest difficulty in
understanding Sir Edward Grey's
French.
.74
TOPICAL TOQUES.
Headgear Worn on the Eve of the
French Revolution.
Ladies .whose devotion to fashion
is greater than their senee of beauty
and bedorningriess wear to -day some
amazing erections -upon their -heads.
But their folly sloesnot approach,
either literally or figuratively, the
height _attained in fashionable
France ort the eve of .the French -
Revolution. Monis. Emile Langladc
has recently described anew fvome
of, the extraatagances in headgear
that the rival milliners of that era,
Bealard an•cl inveuted.
Th.e puff of •sentiment, the topie11,1
toque, the granny cap, and the
r•oyal fantasy in. feathers followed
one after the •other, each more ridi-
culous ±1)101 171111 loot, When "senti-
ment" ruled, the puff, comprising
sometimes 1114 many aa fourteen
yards of gauze, intermingled intri-
cately with the wearer's curlod,
puffed, and powdered locks, con-
tained oaserted objects typical of
her tastes and affections -locks of
lter relatives' hair, or that of her
favorite hero, toy animals repre-
senting her pets, small dolls of her
friends, miniature boats, carriages,
annaical • iustruments, plants and
vegaables. The topical toque was
less personal; it derived its name
and character from current events,
and its decorations might be -sug-
gested by a play, a book, a battle,
the queen's hite-st caprice, the' love
affair of a eourt lady.
The pouf 8, 3117 revelte, for in-
stance, commemorated- a, raid of the
Parisian populaee upon the baker-
ies, -when the price, of bread Iliad
soared too high; the pouf a "'inocu-
lation, the king's recovery from his
inoculation against smallpox; the
3100,10 0,1 la bataille, Henry of Navarre
and the field of Ivry; still another
pouf depicted a naval encounter be-
tween the 'French and English, in
Which, tossing upoo 1111 oeeen of
gauze billows, two s.hips of the line
appeared engaged in desperate con -
their miniature masts, spars,
riggilig and ettriann perfectly exe-
cuted, and their maintrucks tower-
ing .a good lave feet above the ccon-
plucent face of the patriotic. belle.
The fashidns WC)! 0 indeed, as A
nonterrip•orary records, "too absurd
for burlesque.; the ,satirist and ear -
were redueed to more record
4,0, the actual." . But neither ridi-
cule, alenunciaticin, nor sober prO-
tesb served to check them; the
'el'age had •to run Cavi-
40115*1:1r miong.h, one of the litob • and
. --
mosit,p,opular ereatitins 04,655
invOl Vert :an. 711,1k310W5
l•e'rigineirt.of the extent of the popto
tar disapproval: It was called the
'granny cap,'' -bonnet a la bonne
matroina-Lancl it had a concealed in-
terior spring. FaShionable dames
and gay young girls were thus en-
abled to coinply with the most ex-
treme deinand's of style, ,and yet
,escap1 reproof from conservative
el d ers or im po 1(18 1)11 per sOnageS.
10711711 nO taste for frivolity. At their
approach a touch depressed,, the
lofty structure to. modest, dimen-
sions ; ,another at their departures
and -presto I pop I. -up it ' sprang
agaia as impudent ea ever.
In two weeks of the month ef
Ee•bruar,y, "Winnipeg's bnilding per-
mits totall,ed a Million dollars. •"
Hub (during a • quarrel: "You
talk' like an idiot 1" Wife :
got to talk so that 5001' '075111 under, -
stand anolq• -
don't allppose you have a fiver"
Von. 4an31 tcr !load me 1" -flYottr: in-
sight does -you credit, How did you
guess1'' ' • -
A girl's big. Wm -Cher slaid. bet a.
wa r sting ' her -,hot when some
other tai's brother enters she for-
gets ,all arhont the admonition,
Nine new companies, with 0 capi-
talization of just 5111161 14, million,
were ineonporated in Manitoba dur-
ing the week ending February 14.
•
Trattscona,, *an., sold $400,000
wiarbit of bonds at 6 per cent. The
pr%e iwceived was $03.95. The
money will lie used 'eonstructing
Had the 'late *r. iltethusalali
,lieen, a 'womati,the world would ne-
ver have known iniw old the really
,
avimikAiolls^411.1106,410% enough to stew thent. Add, salt and
I
1
pepper to 'taste andot small pi'ece 01
batter,
' Carrots filace.,--Sly. mediuM-siz
ed carrots, one. and oneJliall cups
,.fiegar, one-fourbli cup water. Sorlib
-.
. oa,,,wit...u44100,11.4i4'..•••••TOxv.4.4.114 e'a'rrots, lie'bi aal (1501,- 1 , boil li
water thirty-five mine, t leeieve
With the, Pinnanole, treat the Are,: drain, cut in one,,inoll
• Few of us wiil quarrel ,,1i1, 11,. slices and pl ;ice 11. buttered balc-
us'2'eriton that the pineapple'ranIcs av61' i'110111 a' '15'1.11P
With the 01107140 made IV boiling ;the ,sugar
banana, the .153)5(8, as toget,her; Bake t wenty rt ate
010 of oar .-everlastingly welcerne 'm'sl'ingtw6ry fiso minn/es, Fresb-.
_fruits. ").i, is; as ,,ret,f,resil ,wg th6tens•ort T,,Dalciag in sour /ant<4.
g.g,./)ft). fouit an.c1 Jelieftio in ' C Padding.-Bcine, '11 alce
flavor elran ,the banana or rno.St ap- Penn& 0011"-I110,
nle,s, and moreover it lias an actual • Boil fifteen minutes, drain, ,dry over
thereupetie' value, polo piii,_„appie the tire and 1110/01T fine. Add ri(u 0113)
ittiree is soothing- to in/lamed mem- 03 tf're'sil milk, PoPPer .rDikS
131:ane$, and, t,hereforo, 10 111T5 0f ail of 'three eggs, and laetly the howten
antikic.be in ooriaio 'nf whites; Pour into Weltislytittered
throat. pudding dish, and nteam an hour
„ Pineapples ean he got in the and a 'Sarve '1:arLar 01
fresh' si,ato most of the year, but the other fish sauce.
canned Hawaiian pineapple is al- "All"' cuP of c°cifish
most eonsib, fine in aamor and can cut in small pieces, two cups sliced
be substituted ;for the fresh fruit in ra,a. potatoes, cite egg, ;a d;aeit of
all the following recipes save that, PerPer'Put codfish and potatoes
``'• .`
In salad, _, can„on to boil •togetiher. When potatoes
."`-` are done, take froin ('1131, ((111113,
fIll'enselia.PPle Prelerable t° mash and stir in the egg larnd pep-
Frpineollemaimareshoj)ei„Put fxainglabiiia:anand
irecnirelvhenhabdi,opthelnixtrinboit
ltppe
skin of a ripe, big pine. 13y the wa to a golden broWn remove frola the
, make it remove the eyes and frnwi a 611
b1
e890
0
r" Wilen7enclted
,deve;rieye kboitoperneno:alithohuledp ihattevaep pai e I ei o
T, fire and serve wibh tomato sauce. •
Tomatoes and Codlish.•=-One cup
among its utensils, he old nieblYMcd3
of removing the ,eye's with a sharp tfilili•ees: oic.100d10,finLolltio, non 3101, ielfilvnit tviifFlu nr Y8 oaaf
silver knife is tedious and by 11
0,flua, Ath
O, wi
11)01011(1 so satisfactory as the newer
method.enouglo ±050183: ±17; a'dd ripe
• Ohop the pine. 'anti weigh it. AL tomatoes of meditrna size and cook
law a pound of sugar for every nearly aa 'SeasP11 ±o taste
pound of fruit. Mix the sugar and with PePPer and serve on SliCe6 '34
chopped lrait and .ao.ear them • toast dipped quickly in and out of
croekery boWl, to stand 0v:r. nignhia. h°staiwiantenr'patties._,Remove, 803701017
Then cook it slowly
1.°1 "if an from medium-sized can, put n bowl
hoar and put it through a eller& fo„,o4a„,.„„. ,soon on.an seen beaten
i
'Phis is difficult. But the pineapple 1,,,,"Td
should be finely chopped and the
action of the sugar on it 'all night cracker crumbs until the -mixture is
softens it to a remarkable -degree tibia enough to form into cakes.
it to a .sa,ueepan and simmer it slow-
•Alber Imo' 4Rivoll cakes in cracker crumbs and
parsleyFry or lettuce.
as does the tooking,
been put through the 04 return "" '- •
well and serve hot with
ly, stirring it all the, ;time, for half
or three-quarters of an hour, un-
til it is a clear pasto that is of max-
malacle consistency when it cools.
Pack in small jars and,cover.
Pineapple Fritters. - Pineapple
fritters can be made in a great
many ways, either of raw or can-
ned 'pineapple. Home °tinned pine-
apple, that is shredded or" *hoped
before it is canned, ean be mixed
with good batter and fried in small
fritters, which should then be roll -
101 sugar. Raw pineapple can
be eyed, pared and cut in thick
sliees, and these slices cut in finger
widths." 'Steep them for an hour in
maraschino, dip them in batter,
brown them and roll ithein in sugar.
Hawaiian canned pineapple slices
can be drained, and then dipped, in
batter and browned. •
A pea batter is made from one
beaten egg,. half a, cupful of milk, a
cupful of sifted flour isifted with a
teaspoonful and a 'half of baking
powder, a pinch of atilt and a, tea-
spoonful and a half of grannlated
sugar. Beat this batter thoroughly,
until it is smooth. All pineapple
fritters are best simply rolled in.
granulated or powdered sugar, and
8erved very hot.
'Pineapple salad can be varied al-
most as much as pineapple fritters.
The smpliestl" sort is perhaps the
beet. 'Drain slices of Hawaiian pioe-
apple and then cover them with
French dressing, Serve them on
While lettuce leaves.
Diced fresh pineapple can be mix-
ed With diced mangos and apples
and served with French dressing as
a salad 'or shredded fresh pine-
apple oan be mixed with *hopped
nuts and served in lottnce hearts
with mayonnaise.
For Dessert. - Pineapple, of
course., is roost acceptable for des-
sert, and perhaps it its"never MOre
delicious tha» when 1± 10 served
raw, in some. way;
When ehoosing a pineapple to
serve raw always he sore that it is
Trite ripe, and jnicy. 111 13 said that
if the quille in the top can be eas-
ily pulled out of the pine 'apple, it
is ripe. If its odor is sweet and
penetratin.g, ±11 ±1 doubtless in prime
condition to eat,
Pineapple can be 'shredded and
served with almost any other fruit
117) glasses, covered with ,syruP. 31±
is good with hulled strawberries,
with raspberries and 'currants, with
diced oranges and grape -fruit or
\vith bananas loliced or diced. Sc./rne-
times ±1 1111 diced ,and slightly. sweet-
ened and •serverl in. placeof. grape-
fruit as otti appetizer. 'Whoever
pineapple is aeri,ed in any oe
f thes
ways 11 ,should be thoroughly chial-
'Canna( pi01540m 8 can bo. mace
.Matly desserts beiide. fritters.
On'e,11 'prepared, in tiltis way %Pub a
'ring pineapple -±n each
plate. On this pile some etiffly
whipped, slightly sweetened cream;
into which have been :Folded some
crashed macaroons and preserved
strawberries. This .shoidd be very
cold when IserVecl.
Pineapple tapioca is a 'simple des-
sert. To make nse ilihree table-
spoonfuls of tapioca. If it, is the in-
staataneoirs kind, it does not need
snakibg. 1041 is. the other" kind,
soak it over night. Cook it in wii-
ternritil it is clear. Chop the 0011 -
tents of 75317,11 of pineepPle fine aod
add it, with three-quarters - of a
cupful. <14sugar, 000 111)11 clear taoloca.
Coelc tor two'or three Mirottes and
then ,SerVe with ercani, 13111131.11
lied or Plain. -• "
:For Pineapple Sc,uffle- ruse';',,tavd,
eapf Uls Of crushed or ,g4aited, fresji,
65 oantrad, pineapple- anjd.l,a,;eupiclil'
of wateIl• 'Sega )1111lgt4lltirill41:re 10514i
addhaJ,1o17cdiphal, iii4anianiatis
taPiaca.. 'Cook: hi
until the. 'tapioca is Clear and tlitfit
'add half a -cupful Of sugar. Pot,
the inixture it: a double boilei etia
then add ithe Whites of' thfee eggs',
beaten stiff,... Cover 107)11 181. stand
over heit water untit,set. hot.
"with ,stigar ,and amain
(18110±14 4414.,11.$45,5,•;
Caffkt,' .StieW4-41Q11,17(1i1-16 daPl'Qte '113.
.6O1td.r.,awith
Hints for the Illonte.'
310 0, little salt is pat on bhe dishes
in which eggs, are served the egg
will wash off easily. -
If floors of tt closet are wiped
with gasoline Or benzine after being
-scrubbed insects will be kept away.
'To brown pies and cakes quickly
just before removing them from the
oven throw a handful of moist sngar.
on rate hotastpart of the 61'en and.
close ,tlie door quickly. The cakes
will be brown in a few minutes.
New iron saucepans 'should be"
rubbed inside, and out with greasei
left for 48 hours, and 'then washe0
in hot soda and water before being
pub into use. This tempers the iron,
and renders it less liable to crack
,and xuat.
'Do keep moths out of your closets
,and chests without giving the
clothes an unpleasant odor sprinkle
oil of cedar freely inside on the
wood in the corners. Be careful
that it does not touch 'the clothing,
or i1 may leave 8; stain.
' 13y planning meals ahead house-
keepers can undoubtedly save con-
siderably. Not onl- Oda they avoid
waste by so doing; but they can
order in vegetables and other foods
in larger quantities, and will often
get them at eheaper rates.
An old remedy kr mildew 07110 110
cover the spots with a paste cit. soft
soap and Sts,reli end lay ,the artiole
in the sun, keeping the spots moist-
ened. Another remedy:is to. eover
the stains with a thick gaste of salt
'and buttermilk. ,Spreati it on both
sides of the spots, ,and lay the
blouse in the hot some IteneW the
paste after ;bhree or four houns if
the stains have not vanished. After-
wards rinse ithoroughly in Warm
water.
a '
MOST PERFECT .1' CHP.
One of Nature's „Diminutive Pieces
of Machinery.
The raost perfect pular\ in the
world, the most perfect ever made,
is also the oldest -how old, 110 one
knows, for it is na old as man him -
This pump is so small 'and ao light
that it might be carried in an over-
coat pocket. 'Etit it 3:0100 day and
night, without a stop, without at-
tention, drawing in and sending
forth two and a half ,oances of liquid
'70 times a minute. In one minute
it pumps 1'15 ounces.; in one hour,
656X pounds; in oae year, 6,'748,750
pounds, lit normal life is about 70
years, in \vhich 0010e it pumps 402,-
412,500 pounds, or more than 901,-
206 ttimit •
310 fkansport this immense weight
404 115114(1 111110(1 it pumps would re-
quirf; 0;700, freight cars of ordinary
capahitao, -.This would Mean 223
trains of"2.0 ears each, and as many
in8511e10 to :haul them. Strung out
17) ane„„liue, wilh no intervals be-
twecn each train, lhey \vould cover
a distance of 47 tillneS.
This diminuti..ve piece of machin-
ery has -item], known to keep Alp -this
work without a gingle stop far more
than 100 years. .
It pulsates 43:200 times an hour,
'..t00,600 times, 0<105''39,792,000 limes
,a year., It has inttrnalS :OT bear-
ings to oil, no hefts to ftgliten or
slack to be taken up, lb is so con-
structed that its parte are aulonot,
repaired as it goes along.
Bat,, with all of this, there ime
'Very\ serious:, characteristic in (sei,,a,-
rab)y'?.e°.111141eCatbColnaveit'i.ht, sttel)pis-iptucnitypit-s
5)1)1511 ,rtot b31 starte.d up again, unless im-
mediate steps he taken to' do so by
an expert. Byer: ,.tha -genera Y
fails, • So tha..owner should use cart:
and judgment in its upkeep. There
is no ,other machine that, \ve have
any krtowledge of of which the
'above eart be said. Hcrw this is all.
ancomtplithed 1010115)7013' itS
Liven or.
This pump is, to 11111nan Deant;
4lon tare like tea ,says Estelle
Pander ; it titatet t water to draw
'T°. ; A00 A Rik r.'N‘, Aa GpAo, •Nvisjc RA LsUEME
THAT ALL IN GREOIENTS
r.t1R PLAINLY PRINTED ON
THE "LABEL,AND THAT ALUM
,OR StiLPHATE OF ALUMIN5,.
OR SODIC ALUMINIC SUL-,
PHATE IS NOT ONE OF
THEM. , Ho W07)n "00,0
ALUM" WITHOUT THE IN-
GREDIENTS IS NOT SUFFi-
CIENT. mAG C Balelka
POWDER COSTS 710 MORE
THAN THE ORDINA,R.Y
KINDS. FOR ECONOMY, BUY
5)1-10. ONE P011e',DeTINS,
itateatt. thOCIAL
'1400, 03101(3'
EARINZ omen\
IseenralWOFTnE
aeralkla 30155701.
ASSIliglg i;
?RAM MASS,
QIIIATroEsevalo
•toirICH.,
p‘rtilopincoryp:1110
000
GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED
TORONTO, ONT,
IVIONTREAL
IIMPRO.1011110 111110100MMOWAY1)141,40#401rgeSeirottintk,
e $ aiiielorsioaaokvvol
ACTIVITIES OF WONII
...in,yeana/nr,14)
In Siam ohl maids are unknown.
German has vainest carters Wild
street eleanierS,'."
Philadelphia has fire women
municapal positions, "
The club women 'of .Concord, N.
H., half° won their fight for lower
,street car steps.
Women mix mortar and 'carry the
hod fothitilding operationin Milne'
idh, Germany, •
exSa'neviidrnittliowneflumenthehabvuer ipnaussLdrgitillo
but have not been allowed to prae-
Queen Mary of England has been
12)117c101'rieher by, 036,000 due to a re-
cent boom in securities 011 the stock
exchange.
Frau Eerbha. Krupp, tlaghtcr of
the founder of the Krupp gun works
in Germany, 41383 1101 income of $500,-
000 a year.
German women have started a
campaign for admission to the floor
of the stock exchange in :Berlin, •
The Women's Aerial League of
England has offered a prize of 50,-
000 to the first aviator who flies
across the Atlantic ocean. ,
Mrs. • Elizab•eth Townsend, tile
wife of a showman of Weymouth,
England, has been granted the
King's bounty, havingagivert birth
to triplets'. • -
Mrs. Entherine B. Davis, cono,
niissioner ofeorrection 211 .New York
'City, says that, 100 -women prisoners
pre more trouble than 600 men of-
fenders.
Miss Bessie Beatty; a San Fran-
eicco iiewspaper reporter, has f alb, a
heir to 020,000, to be used, in be-
half of poor children as Miss Beatty
sees lit. ,
Miris Hogattli, who WV the riod-
nal of the character, Agnes, created
by Charles 1)11ke0101 in David Cop-
perfield, iS• still Hying in London
and in good health. ,
"", Miss Gertrude 13eeks, who did
such, yeoman work in helping to
clean up the Panama canal 'zone',
will receive .certain special honors
from the United States Gevern-
men t.
An English woman, formerly a
teacher in the serviee of the gover-
nor' of 'Corea, has applied for 11
license to become a Geisha girl:
For a white :Wee:Ilan to become a
Geisha -girl is unique.
"Mummy : "Can I have that pear
that Wm, 011 the dining-ronat side-
board this morning 7 'Cos---"
"Because 1,1)311.7" , "'Cos Iv'e
eatexi l" ,
•
"I've come to ask for your clant,11-
ter's hancl," faltered bho 50111175
nlan Rare:Oiling his off-th 5)] 1711
his nigh foot. "C'en't have it!"
snapped the stern -parent. "1 ain't,
in the instalment business. When
5011 ean support the entire girl then
you can have her."
Strong on, 11)03013'.
tiPl•lq bile teacher, ,``wils)
weiT th(3 two strongest Men of 0.1d -
e11 times?"
''Samson and Hercules,'
``Cian 5011 , anything about
them 2" -
"Oh, yes, • Satnsen Was 0 11150,1111.1
Pierenles."
. ,• A woman whose 'pastor asked af-
ter her health replied dolefully : "T,
`feel very well; but I always feel bad
when feel well, because I' know
I'm going 'to feel worse:afterward."
"Kidd looks very sheepish
He seems to have been 1:110reltiellbr
cowed by something." (`Didn't you
hear He foolishly took a steer
froni a bull on a hear market."
Ffitave 11.:essrmal to
Play the Pia
En Ono Hour.
Without Lessons or Enowiedge of •
Phasic - Anyone San Play tho
Piano or Organ in One Hour.
Wonderful How System That Even a
Chlial Oen Liao.
Ho -"You empties met You told 3110 701080711101'
coeidn't play 1.notel"
Shen — couldn't; 5 lonesed to piny in one hour
by the wonderful Teuy Method Music.'"
Impossible, you. say? Let us prove it at
our expense. 'We will teach you. to Pleg
the p(e") or organ oncl Wal not ask tine
coet wall you can play. -
A musleal gentile from Oltienno has
I event. d 11 '5'0111t00 (1111 15 1(007 weereee (1 ),
one ean learn 10 oloy the Petro or Orgne
in ono hour. WPIt this rue- method You
don't hnvo tolcrenv ono not 11 front 7111,1111 10,
yet le an, hour of precliee you mut be
playin5 your fevoree mush: with 3..1 the
fingers or both hands reed playing It well.
iorsatien Is 70 61111111,1 U1111 oven n
cluid 011111(8)7' mister un isle without wetly
InolTootino. Anyone tun hove this 1191','•
method on a. tree trial merely by asking,
einiply -write sti-intr. "Send /110 the
Fo,'111 Metbaa 0,, anuouneed In
tills Miner. -.se-.
lefriteeir
The complete system together with 100
pieces of 71111111 30111 111611 be sent to you
Free, all chergen mope atul absoLutelY
Pol, ono cent to puy. You keep il, seven
clays to thorougnie prove 11 18 all Unit ie
claimed for 11, 111111 it you aro satisfied,
sone us 141.10 and ono.dollor 7111101111, 1;0111
(1.10 in al 1 is peel. If you. tire not del tented
wen it, send 11 back In seven (Wye awl"
You will neve riaLed nothleg and Will be
under we oblIgatioxis to us.
Bemire to $1111 0 3111111114111 05 w11 ILA keYs ou
your piano or oreen, eho pest r"' A4-
111.41,1, 11111.1r 111.01.11,41 (1501,,110, '11,1001Nag, '.1.1./VOOtOt C114141d41.
;$•-k
1,117' e
"`"ttrA
04
Yaw. dt‘l'
ot, -
ZtteAr •
vr,,,,a°,83,ath
fit
5)314,1,3111)
trr
ice .e.yee
,sr,tV*
' grail mac7.‘.."--1:' aYYY'i:eley1F1'esrtta'il:1;
the hardest knocks ainittev.er
have to be rcplacecl; for they
ye practically everl'asting.
T. ey are easily., club cheaply
ma lc and are the most' satis-
factoryof all feucc posts.
Concrete Drain T—Ite
Cannot Decay •
Concrete drains do not decay and
arc cheaper, because they do not'z,
mumble .and ntop *up drains, hence
they need no di2iting; up or relaying..
Let u1 send you this free book, "What
the Farmer can do with Concrete."
rhows you how to, mate concrete knee.
paw and will save you nutny dollars when
doing othtr building 'totted the farm,
Farmer's Information Bureau
Canada Cement ComPany,Limited
614 Herald Building, Montreal