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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1913-10-23, Page 3Thi mound you ten it yon .will 'want itl," Smell the real vi tlet fra .: once. ei The moment you smell ;this soap you will want it. In it we have captured that sweet elusive odor' which has made the violet universally beloved. In it, too, we have caught the beautiful green of fresh violet leaves. This soap is so clear you can see through it when you hold it to the light LL "IVI'ny scans have been made to imitate it; be sure,therefore, to look for the name Tergens stamped on -each cake. Your druggist has it. Ask him for it. Stull it, hold it to the light. you will want it the moment you do. For salt by Canadian druggists from coast to coast including Newfoundland. 10c a cake. 3 for 25c ���re�®t�19ie ® P •t VIOLET dares to look long ather, lost the desire to take her in his arms should get the, bettor of -him„ 'And -and you? You look --you, are thinner, paler. Have you been. "No," she said, simply. "Iam quite well. What haveyou been doing all -alt thie •time?" "!tithing, shooting," ht said; "'All 'thin byteeedoer n. oeem so longi'• Yon; very long!" she replied withthe ghost of: a sigh, as she looked at the tiro. ]How long, is 1t? I—I go:iroo:y remember. ',Vliy why,did you go so suddenly, Lord. Gaunt?"' IHe caught his breath to keep back tho words: ;.. • ]iecauee I loved you, because I should have gone mad if . I stayed. - Thon he said aloud, with a low, strained laugh:. "Iwanted -w-change.' Deoima:uodded. And"yoa have enjoyed it?" tirery much" he. said, with bitter irony.,Thero was silenceInc a moment. The antique: cloak, with its figure of reientlees Time mowing down the, minutes with 1te° scythe, Licked mockingly. "And -and what is the news from Leaf- more? Is your father well?" Yeo," she said. • "And -and Itright and the rest?" He put the commonplace' question in a!I dun, mechanism fashion.. "Yee," elle said again. Then she glans. ed at him. It has gone on at it -as if you had been there. The schools are near- ly finished. They look very pretty and and- flat You will ace them, will you not?" I don't know." he said, absently, lie. Was listening .to hoe' voice rather than, to her words, drinking it in; he was trying to roaliie that she was here, close by him,. alone -alone with. him.. "My -my move- ments are rather unoer,tain." "Have you only 'just' come from Scot- land?" Alio asked, glancing at the fur coat, at bie tired face. Yoe," he said; "titin moment" "You must be tired! Will you let me giveyou soma tea?''Sho laughed softlY. timidly. 'That sounds strange -asking you in your own house! Shall I --may .I ring for eonie more water?" No, .no," ho said, quickly He did not want the maid -any ono to come in, did not want any other voice than hers in' the rooms. That will do." !' 'It is quite hot ebill,' ho said. She poured out -a cup for him. and car- ried it to him. Ito had not moved or of- fered to go to the table. He took it from .her with a slight in- clination of tho hoed, and tonal bah horn in transferring the cup, just Ho stood holding the cup ae, if Ile had forgotten it, - Wont you sit down?" she said. "I. have got your chair. Will you not come into it? You goo, I am forgetting that this is your room and your chair.' Ile shook his head and draw n chair forward, quite close to the fire, and sign- ed to her to take the big one. She sat down, her hands resting inher lap, her eyes fixed on the blaze as it rose and-fell'fltfitlly, one moment lightingup o their fosse, the next casting them into shadow.. Gradually the wan look was leaving his foe, a light began to damn iu his eyes. iittsteffecctteu1ion him. Iher le could heawas r her he did notnlobok at liar, thecould oyesfeel. helloved sops. eionately glancing at, him now and again. She was hero -herb by his side. his dear, sweet girl -love. ' die forgot all else..'. The silencedid not seem irksome or em. Write today for sample cake For a 2e stamp we will send you a generous sample cake—ad- ' dress the Andrew 'Jergens Co., 'Ltd., 6 Sherbrooke Street, Perth, Her Great Love; Or, A Struggle For a Heart she aaid. "I have just nta7. and expeet• to tee" said. the char. ointin't You lutist he maids is alwaye droopingly. "When Wine back?" know, miss," Tralli to Widfield 'Le- to herself than of course you ur room ready I will stay Walfield to. safer, mies," us Decline's anythilak she added, can make had Bud. r ie in b Man. he will here it4 event - Gaunt gas - kind of Yee; the room was eloquent of him. She got round to tho mantel -shelf at Met. It was too crowded with brica•brao; but one thing among them attracted and chained her attention. It was the portrait, a cabinet. photo- graph, of a woman's face and bust, It was a beautiful face; more than beauti- ful, fascinating. A dark face, of purled oval, with dark eyee tvhich smiled witoh. inglY, fascinatingly, es did the small full lips. She wore a low-necked dress -very low -and the white neck and bust shone snow -like againet the dark hair and oyes. Desist= loOked at it, and as she looked, a strange repulsion tools possession of her. The face was beautiful, fagoinating; but to Decima the beauty was reeollent, the witohery unholy. The face Jarre,d upon har, and yet she could not take her oYee from it, It wee inolosed in a seedy silver She took it in hor hand, and etu,died the face, her brows drawn straight. Who was it? Some frlebd of Bobby's - or Lord Gaunt's? While the photograph wee in her hand, she heard the hall door 'open, and she eteee came along the hall, a hand turn- ed the handle of the door. "Bdbby," she almost exelaimed aloud; and she put tho photograph hurriedlY, face downward, upon the mantel-ahelf. and went to meet him, with a smile 011 her face. The door opened, and a tall figure in a fur coat, entered. It was too tall for Bobby, but for a moment eho did not recognize him; then, as be turned from closing the door, and presented his face to her, ehe Haw that it was Lord Gaunt. She Shrunk back, her outstretched arms falling to her side. Ho looked at her, stopped. short, then exclaiming, "Good gracious, Decimal" same toward. her. He stood stoek still and gazed at her as if she were a ghost, a vieion called up by his longing desire to eee her, He 11/011 thin, and his face looked worn and hag. gard and white against the dark, thick fur of the coat, and there 11116 an expres- sion almost. of dread in his eyes as they dwelt on her face. Ho had been in Scotland, f ar up in utherlandshiro, quite alone, wandering n die wills, going through the pretence fishing. shooting; fighting against the ad love which consumed him as men fight, inly against tho flames which spring afresh against the boating hands, And last he had acknowledged himself beat - had resolved to leave England forever 'Would go without a word of arewell ho had often gone before -and leave *ace behind him. had booked his passage, the vesael. d on the 'morrow, and he had come is rooms le got hie gun and other one necessary for the killing of big which ho hoped and prayed 'would hie mind and help him to kill the ry of his girl.love. honid never see her again -and now he stood before him,. within reach hand-unlees she wore indeed only th of herself, a vision, a ghost. reath ,bad. aeomed to cease -- gain quickly; but he could not hough his lips formed her Immo he blood had rushed to Beeline's ething vrarm seemed to run her veins, a swift. sudden joy her heart. . unt! is it, really you?" oho said d her voice rang like eoft mmeie . It was the sound he had been or ell these weary, weary often, in fancy, had he heard great solitudes, amongst the is 1," he reerponded, 66 if to 1 Na-Dru-Co Laxatives are especially good for children because they are pleasant to take, gentle in action, do not imitate the bowels nor develop a need for continual or increased doses. 25C. a box, at your Druggist's. National Drug sod Chemical Co. of Canada. Limited. 177 muffled bell -the room spun round with him, His love for her, hie jealousy, rose about him like a great wave of fire, and swept over hire, scorehing hini as it pass. ed. "You are going to marry him?" She looked up at him with a faint -won- der in her sad .eyes. "Yes," she eaid, almost inaudibly, for his fase, his voice frightened her. He turned from her and walked to the end of the room, Then he came back and stood over her, a tall figure almost threat- ening in Its aelleeb• "Do -do you love himP" Ehe eras silent, and his face grew dark- er, fiercer. "Answer me. You can answer me. Yes, or nor (To be continued.) it "And 60 all is going on well at Leaf - "Yes," she said, with a slight start. nee on bbr, too, a kind of trance -a, 11111 ill the storm -had fallen. "Yes; Mr. Bright has been working very hard-" "Which means that you have aleo," he aid in. a low vome And very great dea has been one, You will be sarprieed at the change, at the imPrOvement. Mr. Bright says that, it will be tha model village, the examnie for the rest of England. Be is very proud of it. And the people -ell, you shoule hear What they say! It would realm you very happy, Lord Gaunt." "Weuld it?" be said, elowly. "And yon -aro you happy, content?" She winced slightly, as ono winces when a hand touches, though gently, a wound fogotten for the monnint. I am quite content,' eho said ignor. ing the ' happy.' "Why, have you not done ell I -Mr. Bright and tho people wanted? Yee; quite content and sada. "'luau I am also," lie said, gravely. "Will you have somo more tea?" she leaked. "And will you not eat something -come bread and butter?" She filled hie cup again, and he took it, looking at her as he did so. Wee it fancy on his part, or had the lovely face grown lees pale, the eyes less ead? She leaned back and glanced up at the "Bobby lute not come yet," ehe said, re. fleetingly. "I 'wonder haw long-" Then, ue if it had ;suddenly occurred to her: "011, Lord Gaunt, had I yob better go? 1-4 must be in your way.' She eadd it quite franldy, and her eyes sought his Moo innocently, no ono man'a might seek another's, and she rose. _ lie put out his hand and almoet touched "No, no," he said; "do not go; stay. Bobby will be here directly, no doubt. How long haveryou boon in Landoll?" he wont on, as if by talking lao could keep "Only this afternoon " she sold "Shave only just come up. mime up sucidenlY, utiexpeotedly.' Her voice faltered and her 1040 grew grave. She remembered -it come upon her like a flash -the reason for the journey, and the remembrance clouded over her unconscious joy in his presence. "I found t'hat Aunt Pauline was not in London -she is at her country house -and / came on here to spend the evening with Bobby. I ara going to Aunt Pauline'e to sleep." "/ me," ho tad, "Why did you coma up so suddenly?" She wag silent a moment. Why could she not tell him? And yet nhe could not. "I 'wanted to see her," 4the amid in a low voice, "Is -is anything the major?" he aolo ed, noting her sudden gravity, the aloud on hor face. "Yes," she said; "at least, souiething has been the matter. We -father has been "Trouble!" he repeated, intently. "What in groat trouble.' sse sighed. "Ho has lost a great deal of money, and fimb we thought, we feared that-- But it does not matter now." Her No1C0 was very still and eubdued. "It in all over now, all put straight," "Why did you not tell me?" he began, almost fiercely. Then he stopped as oho lookqd at him with faint surprise. "X would have told you," she said, sim- ply, not reproachfully, "bat I did not know where YOU were -no one knew." "No; that is true. Forgive me!" he said, almost inaudibly, She had been in trouble, and in need of him. and had not been able to come to hind What a brute he 0 NI E oweesseeeeseeseeereeeeeeeeele Good Oh -Season Dessert. There are severe,' betweeneteaeon hills every year when fresh fruits are not at their best. In the lale autumn there is a peried when peaches, grapes and pears have passed their prime and erangee, grapefruit, apples and nets have not yet' reached theirs, Then the lionsekeeper and cook must 'put their wits to work to give their menus flavors. Preserved ginger helps solve the problens so far as deeeerts are concerned. Ginger cream is one of, the geed things to make wibh this candidd fruit. The ingrediente needed for it are a cupful of milk and a cup- ful of cream, halean ounce of gela- tine, the yolks of three eggs, two ounces of sugar, a little lernon jelly, two ounces of candied or preserv- ed ginger, EOM° diced candied, fruits, and half a gill of ginger Sir Oliver Lodge, Eminent English scientist who has dared to direct scientific investiga- tion towards the subject of continu- ity of e2cistence and the immortality ,of the spirit, declaring his belief in survival of personality after physi- cal death. offer to shake hands. did not her, but still stood gazing she., for her part, stood etill resting on the book Of the to see Bobby," she Grad. ntly,, they say. Where have Does he .expeot you?" "I^Imee come from Soot - off dm huge fur coat and e conoli and came toward - at him and caw more e light played on hie and haggard he looked. been MP" 9he naked, He raised his at her, Ile ecareely Waters . tablets. Ask your eon, eterree. 122 If you uee preserved ginger draen off the liquid in which it hi pre- serysd. If you -use candied ginger eoak sit for hall an hour in jusb enough watee oover it, and then simmer it gently for 15 minutes. Drain and use this syrup and use the drained ginger where candied or preserved ginger is called for. Melt the jelly and pour 11 with the candied fruits in the bottom of a mould. Tip the mould. from side to side to side until the jelly hard- ens, so that the ginger willebe held in place evenly over the,bottom of the mould. Heat the milk in a double boiler and pour it slowly over the egg yolks beaten. Then thicken thi's custard in.the double boiler. Remove it from the fire and add the sugar and the gela- bine, diseolved in the ginger syrup. Cool it. Whip the cupful of creara, add the ginger, out in small pieces, and stand it aside until it is al- most set, Then pour ib in the mould and let it harden. Serve Quickly Made Ginger Cream.— A. quickly and easily made ginger cream is this : Whip a cupful of cream, add the juice from half a lemon and the syrup Irom four ounces of preserved ginger. Mix this and then 8,dd two ounces gran- ulated 'sugar and four ounces 'of preserved ginger, cut he small dice. Pile it in. long-sbemmed cups and serve at once. Ginger souffle must be served the moment it is done. To nuske it, boil half a cupful of milk. Mix an ounce of potato flour, an ounce ol sugar and ounces la,nd a half ef but- ter, and add them to the milk. Stir constantly until the mixture is thick and smooth. Then add ehree egg y•olles, beaten, and remove im- mediately from the fire. Cool it and add the whites of four eggs, whipped lighb. In the mean time prepare two ounces of preserved ginger by cut- ting it in small pieces and add this to the souffle immediately after ad- ding the whites of the eggs. Pour it into a greased tin and bake 30 minutes. Serve from the tin in which it is baked, with a little sugar sifted ever the top. Steamed Ginger Pudding.,—This is a recipe for steamed ginger pud- ding : Heat a cupful of milk, four tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar, a little salt and four tablespoonfuls of butter in a double boiler. 'When hot remove from the fire and add a cupful and a hall of flour. Stir and return to the fire. After tfive minuees of conetant stirring remove from fire, add three eggs well beat- en and four ounces of preserved ginger, cut in small pieces. Pour bhe mixture into a buttered mould and steam flor an hour. Serve with custard and ginger syrup. USE OF MIDDLE NAMES. Distinction Permitted Only to Roy- alty 400 Years. Ago. People have not always been al- lowed the pleasure of having as many names as they wished; in- deed, 400 years ago not even a mid- dle name was allowed in England. It was illegal. The old English law was 'definite and admiteed of no in- fraction of its ruling. The only ex- ception in this ironclad regulation was in the case of persons of royal rank. If they really wished it, bhey oould boast of a middle name bub woe to the person of ordinary 'rank who was sufficiently unwise or ob- stinate to insist on having more than bwo appellations. For the first offence he would very likely be tied to a whipping post and severely lashed. Fox a second offence he would endure e,ome more lasting punishment -- perhaps the removal of his thumbs or eats. And if he still persisted in his stubbornness he would be There is a. case op record ei poor 1i:teal—in all probability half demented—who insisted on signing four nemes eirery time he wrote his signature to any paper. Of course, he passed through all the legal stages of punishment until he was finelly hanged. Chinese Burned Opium. Opium, worth $60,000 was burned in front of the Naelcal Middle School, in the native city, Tien- Tsin, China, recently. Nine great pots were filled with the drug. The students of the school and at least three thousand other spectetors cheered when the big cauldrons were set afire shortly after noon. Among the onlookers were more than one hundred foreign soldiers and their officers, to whom the en- thusiasm of the Chinese as the drug went up in smoke was a revelation. '"A.nd you would have come to me?" he said, rrither huskily. "Yes,' she said, eimply, but a little tim- idly. "There Vala no ono else; and --and Yell aro always ers kind. 'You would have told me what to do, advised me, would you not?" "Yes,i' he said, still more huskily, "I would; Goa itliowe how gladly!" "Thank you,' oha said, and the sweet- ness of her voiee hurt him. "But it done not matter now; it is all over." "X am glad," he said, "and yet Semi, that -that X hadn't a 'hand in getting rid of the. trouble. A.re yt sure that it' is Past -done withP" "Yee quite,'' she said in the same still voice, She pnt, her 'hand hefore her face, as 12 the firs were burning it. He rose and tOok a Japanese screen 'from the mantelehelf-his hand touched the portrait lying face deivnward-and gave it to heri and with a murmured thanks, she took 3.5 and screened her face, Relent- less Time again broke the silence with "How did your father oome to loos" this, Docima turned her face as if ner thoughts had been wandering from tho "I don't, quite know, It was throush eome sp.eouhttion--oomething, to do with ono of hie inventions, Mr.flliershon and he stanted.a company, I think." "Mershon!" daunt...started and looked, at her earnestly. "Wan he in it? How did he-,a,h, I remember! And your father loot hie meney; tan well believe it! don't know much of Mr, Meridiem but ehould say-" "Oh, hush!" oho broke in, looking up Pt Eui if oho dreaded the next words. "You -you must not Say -I must not lie. Gaunt stopped and stared. at ner with a "Why not?" he said -demanded, ret'hor. The e6101, TOBe to her face, then loft it ,,,pale again, She raised her eyea to We .with. a world of sad resignation in them. am going to be his wife,' she eaid flaunt did not move for a moment, but eat like ono suddenly turned to stone. Then his face broke up, ae tt were. and 'he rose and stood. before her, "Eloing-to-be-his wife' he+ repented, hoarsely, His otvn voice sounded lika eenes- We unhesitatingly recommend Magic Baking Powder as being the best, purest and most healthful baking pow- der that it is possible to produce. CONTAINS NO ALUM AB ingredients are plainly printed en the label. GIC MENG POWDER The leather adheres better to the guni than a gum patch. To save gaa, remove the tip and insert a small piece of cotton in the pipe -and repla,ce the tip. Tine les- sens the pressure, and a nfore even, and softer light ie obtained. When you clean the ebony brushes on your twist table, rub a little vaseline over the Vacks (be- and the northern. shores of South fore you waSh the bristles, as this America are to be found countless prevents the soda or ammonia in the water from injuring the ebony. The vaseltbae should afterwards be removed by polishing the backs with a dry cloth. To clean much -soiled hands do not go to work roughly with brush and pada water, but loosen the dirt by rubbing the hands well with -sweet oil or even lardeor dripping. Then wipe off the grease as mudh as 'possible with piece of eoft pa- per or old rag, and wash the hands with warm water and soap. To keep butter cool dissolve a lit- tle saltpetre in cold water putthis in a hereto ,bowd, and stanel the ba- sin oontlining the butter in it, al- lowing the water to reach nearly to the top of the butter bowl. Cover the small bowl with a piece of muslin placing the ends to resb in the saltpetre water. This will keep it as cool as if placed on ice. The ,best way to clean all kinds of baking -tins and eake-dishes is ,the following: Make enough strong lime -water to cover the dishes in the saucepan or the copper, and boil them for about ten minutes. When taken out they should be as bright and 'clean as new tins. Vexy old ones may require boiling a lit- tle longer. To clean a brass preserving pan, after a thorough washing with warm wafter and soap and rinsing, wet a ele.an piece of flannel in com- mon vinegar, then dip it in salt and scour out the pan very quiekly till all the spots and 'dimness have disappeared. Rinse out immediate- ly with boiling water, dry thor- oughly and polish with a soft ,old BANANAS REQUIRE FLEET. Qom Storage vaults on Steamers For Fruit -During Voyage'. The great part of the banana crop is raised on the shores and islands 6f the Oaribbean Sea. Throughoub the West Indies, Central America. ' Many a poor woman thinks she can do nothing without a husbwacl, and when she gets one finds she can do noehing with him. The Guaranteed "ONE DYE for Ali Kinds of Cloth. ob.., Simple, No Chance of Mecukes. TRY 111 Satie Mc Pre° Color Card and necklet. banana plantations, highly culti- vated, covering thousands of acres. The moment the bunches of bananas have been severed from the trees every effort is made to send the fruit te market with the least possi- ble delay. The great fleet of fruit steamships which bring us,our banana supply are equipped with the latest form of refrigerating plants. Hero the bananas are stored in great vaults, where an even temperature is main- tained day and night throughout the voyage. A single fruit vessel will carry from thirty thousand to fifty thousand bunches, so that the cooling rooms must naturally be large. As a rule, a special offer is placed in charge of the cooling machinery, and it is his sole duty to watch the thermometer and keep the banana holds at the right tem- perature throughout the voyage. We often hear young men say that if their circumstances were different they might succeed, but as it is, there are too many obstacles against them, What did Naeolon say about circum- stance? He asked one of his marshals about a movement he had in contem- plation, and the answer was, if cir- eunastanees were favorable it might bp accomplished.. Napoleon replied, "Circumstances! I care nothing about circumstances ; I make circumstances." Richly—"I don't wish you for a. son-in-lavi." Young Man— "No I Well, haven't you a,nyother good position you could give a fel- Useful Hints. A cut lemon rubbed on the fore- head will cure a severe headache. To make meat tender put Lb table- spoonful of vinegar in the water when boiling it. A tablespoonful of vinegar added to a pot roast will make ib more palatable and tender. To keep white paiirb bright, rub it with a clean kerosene cloth 8,fter the ordinary cleaning. Horseradish is better scraped than grated and should be prepared just before it is needed. A drop of oil of lavender on the arms and neck is sometimes a pro- tection Rom insect bites. Never rub soap on a stain with- out first 'wetting it and partly ly ash- ing ib out in cold water. ?'elly should be Mae(' from the preserving kettle with a silver or enamelled ladle or a cup. A girl with clever fingers can make good litele shire waist bows out of her brothher's-cast-off ties. French chalk applied to grease spots on flannel Sujte brings out the erease if the garment is held near The best way to make boiled ham juicy and tender is to leave it in the water in Which it is boiled un- til quite cold. Lacer; can be bell "creaaneel" and "starched" hy rinsing them in water to which a well-beaben egg has been added. When preparipg onions, turnips, and oarrote fee: cooking„enit across the fibre as thie makes them more tender when cooked, One tablespoonful of vinegar is a eubstibute for an egg, an,cl makes a cake light in which dripping has been used inetestel.of butter. To clean lacquered areicles, brush with hot water and mild eoa,p, wiptng dry before tile Are ...a finishing with a sort -cloth. Do not use alkali or soda. It will remove the lacquer. To mend rubber use, sell, kid from an old glove and paste the patch to the gum with automobile paste. The Pathway to Faith. The Bight Reverend Doctor Knox, Bishop of Manchester, is one of those rare men who teach with- out preashing. On one occasion mentioned in the Manchester Guardian a freethinker opened an argument' with the bishop on the naystery of pain. "I am reminded," reflected the bishop, when there was a lull in the talk, "'of a story a Lanesehire miner told me of aneeher miner who loudly sealed himself an in- fidel. He was working in ehe mine when some coal began to "'Lord save me V 'he ogled, earn - friend, the other miner, catching ehe weak point, turned round with a grin. " 'Aye,' said he, 'there's nowt like sobs o' deal to knock the in- fidelity oot o' a chap l' " The modern young man, says a female critic, has only one good quality—he is -punctual to his "Have you a spare cigar about you, old eluvial" 'Certainly. Butt 'I thought yen were going to stop smoking'?" "So I am but not too smoking my -own cigars." 4.'f-41-16ii-0). Gives quick, glowing warmth where and when you want it. Easily port- able. No smoke. No smell. Safe, clean, convenient. Steady heat for, inine hours