The Clinton News Record, 1913-12-11, Page 3OafAPIMIIt.. XXX. --(Continued). cleave anal round:. the deck, then followed
my coat t o c u W rl-
kins;" sand Gaunt •
`Yee my tom I will send for • .t' d g
'I•haya left• tat 1 •1 b hSm below.
,' The beetle and confusion increased; theta
o r ,• s,„r suddenly the signal sounded for -:the de-
. 1Yilkilua *promptly nartare from
the veseel of those' who were,
'not going the' ygyage, and the usual part•
Ifut:G aunt dliohk has head, tug- of roliitivee and er'^ends took place,
Never mind," he, said. ' I will Picic it 'up and the visitors hurried' pehoro. - A few
a or the veseel atarted, and;
- ae I drive to. the stetson to morrow. minutes
Ae he npoke• lie handed hie hat to the
man, and Wilkins, taking it, saw the slowed' from the quay. Gaunt -still re -
Weak of blood on Gaunt's wit let.., mained in 'hie qutei.\corner, and. ppresent-
'.Have you out'your hand, my.lord?" he lv he saw' the red -treaded Mr. Jackson
aeked. He had known 'Gaunt ever since come up from the ealoon. He stood at the
he 'wee a boy, entrance for a moment or two, then came
Gaunt Blamed at the: stained wrest across the ,deek and looked.gloomily, and
band. •,et vacantly, at the ,now faat•reeeding
'Eh? Oh, ah,. yes, I think I have. No, quay, As he did so, he took out a cie,ap-
no; it ie nothin No, I ivon't have` any. case, and absently put a cigar between hta
thing, thanks, Wilkins, • I will go'etr,ei ht lips. It wee evident that hie • snatch -box
np; I am tired, You will have arc called wee ,empty. 'for' he dropped it into lats.
at helf•past six, please," pocket again and looked round,
He.'weut up to hie room,. not a large but -Gaunt was standing. near, and ellen'dy.
an extremely comfortable enc' -Por trier, extended hie box. Mr. Jackson took it and
let's hotel was the perfection of comfort lighted a match, and Gaunt noticed that
in all respects• .and lookingthe door, flung the man's hand' shook. He looked. norms
himself into a chair besie the fire, the lighted match as he held it to lee
Yell, 1118 life '.
he kew that Gaunt had notced tithe
tame. That he who loved herso•dearly, shaking hand, he said, rather reluetautly;
so truly. should have tempted her to her ••Gold this morning."
-I
amid
Che°ring and -handkerchief -waving,
wae ended- Re0Oree and (Agee,and caught Gaunt's eye and f.
love tore sue heart like a sou is oY vet -
e eweet, innocent girl -love, his morn n
pure 'white angel! And he should never- Gaunt nodded: Ha was not in the humor
see her again! The thought ffe for ooavereation. �,
¢ E affected ham "Beastly cold," said Mr. Jackson, with
tea tat that moment its have wae ae a faint ehudder; 'bat. I'm seedy -and-
Pari!eating peni et He could have borne the and feel. it more than I should otherwise
parting -the eternal gamin¢ -better if ho do I. eabyoae•"
had not known that she returned his love; Ile was silent for a moment thong he
Mit to know that she loved him -actually -
asked,
a etoselyn '
erd" ee for to have no nearly
e e for- Do we atop at ALadeira, "do you happen ;
ever, wee a torture that nearly drove him to know? I've had to start emidenly m•
mad. to
ae it pray seem, he bed not Portant business at the Cape -only heard'
Yet thought of hie wife. There was only lu's'Nonight-and e e ot one of them regular vox- i.
room for Deefma in his mind and heart, gels We stop at the Canaries,"
As to. what Laura would do, he woe per-
fectly The yours¢. fellow nodded,
indifferent, when he did force him. "Ala theater he said in a low Yokel.
selfsto think r of her. That she would. Gaunt moved away, and pre eptly wont
Merw•iy fe, anut d drag hienname laim lin the mire, down to hie cabin to avoid any further
one quite possible, and • more probable. talk. His heart was aching as badly as
But what did it matter? Nothing she any on board -aching 'with an agony be -
could do could affect him. In a few hours and words, He was leaving -England-and
he would have left Blneland. -IG wits very Deoime, forever! Farewell Dove, and all
certain that he would never return She hope in life. Despain etretahed darkly be
• -excepting
suLimedelf tHieera»k She claimed
cwenlGb About an hour after Trevor had stolen
the enden' due to her ae hie wife, she
from Prince's Mansions, etre yarlor•ma;
miVithave -but not himself glanced up at the cloak in the kitchen
might do just what she pleased He would fore him,
e
i•
T en his thought returned to Declm•t
"I outmost) hie eelhav isn't osmics
moat not magi Mershon ThaE he to -night ar had have told me to get
She y back
to-ri
telt. she would not do; but he would' de-
stroy remarked tothe Iferphon'e power; lie would release who yawned in sympathy; .and yet he's
the Deaner from the man's clutches, That, left his coat." -
at. any rate, lie could do - Perhaps -he's come back and
cook. •
He awent to the writing -table, and wrote of eeted" the - `m
a letter to. Belford ;t Lang, the lawyers. ]vo, or I shong. have heard when for
It was short and to the point.. Dal been listening. d, I see wonder oleo Mrs.
"Aseertaain," he said, the amount in Dalton left? t didn't her Mgr and Deane
which Air, Peter Deane is indebted tp- Mr, lordship must have shave ring,Shetogetliur, Deasu a
-
Merehon, and any Persona connected with sup
-
Menthol).
and diech. r 1 .and the ima a fig[ y
ar a a.l a oP hoi brother
g hleliabllities
the rompany started 'by tim and Dtr. Pose. Now, there's
a grotty. gi if stn
t eroh like cook
I give. you absolute carte blanche in the We'd had quite a - _ _- -
matter, and request that you will carry- and "Perhaps she they're a day's delay, It,wiil theyoo In the. drawing -room
' have to be 'done with tact and discretion; ilea, _ said the er h,
and I leave the mode of doingit entirely hos shook her head.
to you, itoyisting only that it shall. be done "No; It'sdall et now, I went and hearing
atone," at .the door ,lust and not hearing
He drew a breath of relief as he ad- any one, I knocked. and looked in. There
dressed the envelope. At least, lie could was no one thorn, smile,I got a start though,"
snatch his deepest from Mr, efershon's she added, withuaa i
clutches. But alae, alas! that was all heHow do you mean?'
h
could. do! He could not heal the heart"Well, his lordf,tip had thrownor far
wbieh- be had: broken -for that he had coat on the tibia, and it looked for all
broken it the memory of her fano, of her therworld as if somebodyyawned lyingthere,'"Well,
eyes ne they rested on him at the moment I thinkiwe'd: She again. e
of their parting. convinced him. s upo better go bed; expectt lie'sno nae.
Yee. that was What his love for her had sittingCardigan for Mr. and
I ems.,liwon't
at
'wrought; He had broken her heart. Per- hmetill Terrace, and If so, he won't be
ham, after all. It 'would have been better home the smallothedrawing-roomh•
it that other woman had not come in andBetter r said fire
has and Decima had gone away together- hadn't you?" the cook, as eke turned
together! But le. put the thought awaydown the pogo of her novel; bat Jane
from him,. It was a deeeoration, a sacrashook her head,
lase. Ito hal been mad with passion, with ' "Oh, it doesn't matter. Mr. Deane al.
the intoxication of her oresenoe,'her sweet ions hoer ie moor s bed when he comes
voice, and mere than all, her confession in -I hear hie door shoo"
-of hove. The two 'women wont to bed after a little
Ho Paced up 'and down the xoom until more talk, and the place was 'wrapped in
dawn, then hpacked the esthete bag he silence.
had with him -the rest of his luggage was Bobby was not an early middle agd and
already on board -and flinginghimselr On teesona aro, It is the. middle-aged and
the -beef. tried to, aloe-. But lke Macbeth the old who eg. a easie Bobby get go than
;. an 'was B go his
' he had murdered steno d he 'o illi to .lie •thinking and if
t e
awake 'when the maid knocked ate the breakfastuitedeby ten d. o, he was quare
door.suited, and satisfied. Lord.Gn that, ser-
The eight of hie face in the glace start. specs. had an easy time of in that„;o•
led him; he was shaking like a man suf- It waspastnine when. Jane went into
feting front the effectsof as drinking bout. the drawing -room to light the Are. The
s
But the cold' bath himg electric lamp was still burning,
emnewh,st, and he made a pretense of looked over her shoulder and calledeto
eating the ;admirably cooked breakfaet, the cook,
Then lie got into a cab and was drivenMr.. Deane hasn't come in:, yet,” she:
to Gearing Cross. Waterloo was his sta. said, 'I wonder where lie is..
tiop for Southampton; but leo bad not in. .The cook grumbled incoherently;
tended taking Declaim to lhfriea, Ho woe "I, suppose I had betterget lsroalcfast
known at Cane Town, woe known .to the ready all the same,"she said. "If I. don't,
oflleere of the . vessel --the Pevensey he'll come meshing in and want It all of a
Castle' --in which belted booked his pada• hurry,.. It always happens like .>th at."
age;- so he had fixed on hlgypt no Chime Jane laughed, turned out the lamp, and
Mine of refuge. - drew', back the curtains.: Al she did a
The cloak struck eight as he. drove into .ehe was conscious of, a faint perfuShe
the station -yard. know it
He told the cabman to wait, and then very well, for it was rhe a scant
looked for her -though he knew that oho clotwhich'. always hung about to Deaga's
'would not come. Terrace . when it eq been thannrdigan
eke had not come. • With a nigh and' a In thehe°' But woo stronger usual
twitch of the set lips, he got into the cab in room , the window
again, ,and was driven to Waterloo, HeShe opeeef, the window and sweepad and
was Just in time to catch. the train. lighted tile ere, then fell began . e Costlythe
At Southampton one of the "Castle'p on thebsofii her eyes on eke coat
oficiahsmet him: and conducted him to the "I'd better take it into tothe bedroom,"
board, ed • h will be°mother-.
"Your luggage aneasesareonseaat to herself '"or it I '
my lord," lie said. "Is this all you have? with dost. Lor',howcareleps-. gentle -
We start in lees than an hour, or there. folks aremoof their things!" •
-
abouts." ' A theet afterwardand
a shriek inn
Gaunt went down to his cabin -the beat throughohe place, the crthe y7c, rushing
fn the veesel-and. found everything an seeded, found herofellowfierva.ntllen pro
ranged'comfortably. - ' against .the table with the coat at her
After a few minutes he went on deck,.feet, and her eyes staring at something
end lighting a cigar, got into a quiet cm. on the:. sofa.
lkey and leaned against the side, apparent. "Good Heavens, Jane! what ever is th
y watching the hustling crowd, but in matter?" Then she, too. ecreaaed,' and
whitey seeing
terror-stricken, A gilt face, the two woman, stood. clinging
quivering other, ,end staring at the inotiole to figure
line a d attain ng eyes, floated
e befo a with terror in their eyes,
the clatter of the arriving passengers, he Their cries,porter again land again,
heard Decima'e voice: room,
the byr two rho -pogo into the
'Your wife!' your wife!" - of th Polherod t. or Amongst theculaltat
About half an hour before the sailing -of the other arms. who,biking
utter
time, Gaunt saw. a man come alongthe.'the
f`ettl'ed army doctor, sht:his y
sang -way earrying a bag in his had. He heten seicn nt a examined
mined ;e body, his 'way
woe atyoungthan, with rod hair and a .to the cough and lse sai , gra
Hale face, 'with small, bloodshot eyes,.. Ills are the, is
o be A , Do ou 'Who
collar of llie overcoat was turned up, the lady? 'Who le oho? Ah, Do you know
he looked cold and ill. She, half feinting,
'lie came aerates the deodg, and paused by name: gasped cut the
ed l alin zn. end ked raround. Cmintt whim. "It's Mrs. Dalton -Mr. Thorpe's sister !
Prceciatly the stoivnrd came to hinss, and -. She canes .baro last nrghti' She broke into.
Hiked .hint the number.of -lie berth, terrified sobs,
The young - fellow hesitated a moment, better
anew the et someo"Bet stop
then he, sued, in a dull, expressionless theteg.ntle aan, M Litt one , for
voko: - gentleman, Mr. Thorne.ns. Here, bog,
"I don't know it yet. My. name Is Jaek. I take a cab and bring him," He thrust
son • I wired for la berth titin mei'n,ing,' too' he port from lie the' room, so°m "'And youngo
The steward consulted his. list, for the Police,".
47.,.yea Teclasou, Thaytee right, air. I en n very. short time two policemen' were
thegot G e;wilee, 'm afraid
it yov e e t th i •on the eeene. They cleared the room and
the, yen see. mounted guard beside the, body.
\Pr. en sen nodded. we've sent Jo Scotland Yord for -a' de-
I dTae t know I was going till last i tective officer," one said to the doctor.
night,' he sad:.: "Important business over He arrived before Morgan Thorpe and
there -spines on me suddenly." at once, with the sena-fiord of ox erlenoe,
The steward nodded. A great many Per -1 tools possession of the case:" an d .with
sone Iced;'of Into; had important business notebook in hand, he wan questioning the
'oresnq upon them from Africa, and had servants, Hwas whin Morgan Thorpe pa or
been e'ome,,ltel to rush over. there sudden -i increased
d shite asideath,e. but the ver the
ly and. It short notice body asnd to lividity asbeautiful bent aver the
I body and eared postsaid; and peace ofdeath. •
down 1, 1 nhow you -• 'You know her, identify
"rlitinlee,. Bald. Mr ,ackson "Whop- hoer' yen the
wlren do we start? an kine you "uf„ 'coarse, I.. derst you that
1.lmeet . immedia ely .sir, said the nnY,e}re; elm Ise-issay youinr. ' s s i T o
eteivard,- bustling ahead. loaning pfile table "said Thorpe, t
The youl+a fellow ti:,,*•en.i g npainst. the tattle and amine at
• ' the dead woman. My sister• yes!"
' You knew ehe had come hoes?"
elhomye nodded:•
SEVERE COLD ON •LUNGS AND ccPehtodeeep2e come here? Who did elle
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'Deane," replied Thorpe.
In that moment falsehood, evasion were
impossible.
Deane -who is he?"- .
"He lives here—in them rooms," -:Raid
Thorpe. "I thought she was .at home-
in her room! I Cain, beck late last night
-from the club -it was early this -morn.
Mee .Her door Was closed: • I -I thought
she was in bed. I went to my room ande-
and I was in bed whet they fetched me.
Who -who -has done it? She has, :been
mut derodl l"
I am afraido," said the detective,
grimly.. He looked at the Peralan slag•
ear which ley on ;the floor, as it bad drop-
tied from Trevor's hand. "That did' it;
don't touch it,,.:plen e," he added, though
cons' of those uremia would. have died ra-.
ther than do so. Why. did' ohs sono lere.
to nee Hr, Deane --a lady—alone-•-You
know?'"
Thorpe moletened his parched lips.
Por goodness was, eve me eometlring
waters '
The detective noddo<l, and the doctorsoured' out a glares of water. for Thorpe.
He drank it at draught.
I'll toll"you all f know. Shs sire" lie
shuddered -he dame here to to get some
money from hien.'
Phe detective sande a note.
' Go on he said, gravely. "Came. to
threaten him?"
No, not onlay -'only persuade." said
Thorpe. "Oh, Laurel laurel"
Tho detective tented to the trembling,
shrinking servants
"Whore lo•Mr.Deane?" ho naked -
"•I -I don't know, sir,' said Jane, with
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a terrified sob. "He -he hasn't been home
all night
'Ho'w do you know that?" demanded the
detective, quietly.
The girl looked round -with a bewildered
air,
"He hasn't -fee far as I knows'
The deteetivenodded, His sharp eyes
had caught the shattered portrait frame
where Jane, ' nil uneuepeotin ly-she
thought that it had been aeoklentally
knocked off the mantel -piece -had placed
it on the table. He took it up.�.
"Portrait of the deceased, Whoa is it?"
"Mr. -Er, Doane's, sir," - sobbed Jane"Ho-he ant it on the mantel -shelf the
other day."
It all seemed so plain to the shrewd de-
tective. The woman had corse to threaten
or cajole this Mr. Deane, a quarrel had
ensued, the broken portrait, the dagger -
it was all quite plain.
"Give neo a description of. Mr• Deane,
will- you?" he said.
Thorpe, with his hand, to his heart, tried
to describe Bobby, and the detective took
notes, .
"You can go into the kitchen," he said
to the servants, "but dou't leave thelace,
please. It is quite evident who's to blame
here," he said to the army octor, who
stood grave arid attentive. "I'll: get a
warrant for. this Mr, Deana."
Thorpe overheard, and looked up with
a bewildered expression.
"Deane -Deane did not do it," he said,
feebly. He -he' isn't capable of it, Oh
why did I let her some? Itisn't Deaner
eBut the detective smiled, -a superior
smile, His experience had convinced him
that, as a rule, there was very little mye-
tet'' about a murder. It was only hl no.
vele that there wee any doubt as to the
criminal who had committed the deed.
He went to the'door of the inner roost
and tried it.
:Locked" lie Bald to ono of the con.
sineitablesde.'f a 'Go round and see if .the key's
The man went round and nnlooked the
door, and the detective passed through
thee suite of rooms, noting everything with
Ids sharp' oyes. and reentered thedraw-
ingroom by the passage,
"He got off through these rooms," lie
said to the; doctor,
The -the scoundrel!'' lee gasped in re-
sponse.. "You -you will be able to get
him?"
ththo detective smiled conlldently,
Oh, yea; crime's.too recent for him to
escape. I'll have him under the hue and
cry in half an hour.""
Leaving the policeman in charge, he
wont back to Scotland Yard, and in a few
minutes a fairly accurate description of
Bobby was being flashed over the Country,
ellen the detective, with other officials,
returned to the Mansions two hours later.
Morgan Thorpe was still there, seated In
a Chair. his head in his hands and look-
ing half stupefied.
As they entered, he looked Up in a be.
wiidered fashion.
Have -have you fascist him?" he dc=
mended, hoarsely.
haveehimRpresentle y, without "but
oubtelpIr1'e
can't have got far." .. ,
At this moment the door was flung open,
and Bobby and an elderly man entered in
hot•haste. •
Morgan Thorpe sprang to his feet.
"Deane!" ho exclaimed,
The detective stepped behind Bobby and
shut the door.
"Mr. Deane, I think?" he said, politely.
"I street you.".
But Bobby had snruna to thesofa, and
stood, white and ehnd.dering, before the
white sheet with which they had rever-
ently covered the dead woman:
"It-it is slot truer he cried. "Olr,`it.
can't -it can't ha!- Thorpe" -ho flung his
hands out in appeal ---'toll mile it lon't•
true!"
Thorpe stared at him.
hanging �undernion.c3"Ati;o'd rsci hole- withat
nieht-in your rooms P'
"My goodnessl" tried Bobby.
The detective laid.a handl on hie
lie idcr.
(To he continued.),
Taking No Chances..
Dugald was ill, and his friend,
Donald, took a bottle of whiskey to
him. Donald gave the invalid one
glass and said :
"Ye'll git anither ane' in the
mornint," '
About five minutes elapsed, anti,
then Dugald suddenly exclaimed:
"Ye'd better let me rhes the filer
noo, Donald; we 'heart's' sac mony
sudden deaths ncoaclays."
Surer,
He: "I know a man who can re-
move wrinkles and make a woman
look young in an 'hour-"
She: "Is be a beauty dootor I"
He: "No. He's a. photographer."
THIS
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Dainty Dishes Worth Trying.
Breakfast Rolls. se. Dissolve two
ounces of butter in a little warm
mills., Put one pound of flour into
a pan, add the milk with the butter,
stirring in before adding to it a tea-
spoonful if baking powder and 'a
pinch of salt. MX into a stiff paste,
knead well, form into little rolls on
a flowered board, and bake in a
quick oven for .20 minutes.
Sheens' Tongues. -Gook three or
four sheepe' tongues in hot water
till tender, then take them up and
remove the skins. Place in a stew -
pan, dredge with flour and add or
gill of nicely flavored stock. Sint-
iner gently for lip minutes, then
place the tongues on a het dish and
add 10 drops of lemon juice to the
gravy. Bring to the'boil''and poor
over the tongues.
11Ii1k Biscuits. -Boli three ounces
of lard into one pound of flour. Add
a pinch of salt and a teaspoonful of
baking powder, with sufficient milk
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a, well -floured board and cut into
biscuits, using a pastry cutter.
'Prick each one several• times and
bake in a hot oven for 15 minutes.
These biscuits are excellent with
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in an air -tight, tin,
Cream Soup. -Wash and grate a
'red carrot, chop two onions and
peel and slice four potatoes. Cook
in a little water till soft enough to
mash to a pulp with a wooden
spoon, then add half a pint of milk,
one ounce of butter and a teaspoon -
ha of cornflour slackened with a
little milk, and.pepper and salt to
taste. Beat all up together and
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may be added to improve the ap-
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Caraway Biscuits. Break three
eggs into a basin, add half a pound
of caster sugar, and 'beat to 'a
cream. 'Stir in half a pound of fine
flour, 'which has been dried in the
oven, and a teaspoonful of caraway
seeds. 'Shape the dough into bis-
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a tin plate for a hour. Then place
in a moderate oven and bake to a
golden brown, .
Potato Savories. -Take as much
cold mashed' potato as required,
and mix it.with sufficient flour into
a paste, roll out and cut into small
squares, Soak a few breaclerumbs
in water, squeeze dry and add a lit-
tle chopped parsley, mixed herbs,
onion, previouslysoaked in trot wee
ter, and a seasoning of salt and
pepper. Mashalltogether finely
and put a little of the mixture on
each square of paste and fold over
as in sausage rolls. b;ry in boiling
fat till brown ,and serve
Savory 'Tarticts.Line as many
patty pans as required with light
pastry and bake them lightly. Melt
one ounce of butter in a 'stewpan
and stir into it one heaped up tea-
spoonful of floor, a 'tablespoonful
of good stock, and half ft teaspooe-
ful of anchovy essence. Sensors
with coralliue pepper and salt, their
add the finely, chopped yolks of
two Bard -boiled eggs and six her-
ring roes. Put a teaspoonful of
this mixture into each tartlet, cover
with the beaten white of egg, and
return to the oven till nicely
browned, •
II01n0 Hints.
First wash table linen in cold
water and then in hot.
Not all canary lovers know 01 the
bird's love fur nasturtiuli' blossoms,
: When next making jelly, add a
few cloves to the mixture: The sea-
toning will be a pleasing addition.
When coating 'chocolate creams
the melted chocolate often becomes
curdled. To remedy this, add a lit-
tle olive oil.
To prevent milk from boiling over
butter the tipper part anti edge of
the saucepan, and the contents will
not boil over.
When the children's books have
become soiled, the pages can he
cleaned by rubbing with powdered
pumice stone,
To clean curtain hooks; place
them in water in' which a little am-
monia, has been poured', and leave.
for a little while.
Chicken salad pelted in green
pepper shells notonly is attractive
but the season from the pepper is
very pleasing.
When boiling cabbage, place in
the saucepan, a small piece of bread
tied tip in muslin. This will pre-
vent any unpleasant odor.
A delicious pineapple dish is made
from the fresh fruit, served with
mayonnaise nixed geneh'oteely with
whipped cream,
A few peas added to the dish of
creamed chicken, lobster, or
shrimps are as pleasing to' the eye
as they are satisfying to the palate.
Wet shoes should be stuffed with
paper before putting away.. It will
absorb the moisture and keep the
shoes from becoming' hard.
To take disagreeable Medicine,
eat .one or two cloves or hold ice in
the mouth until the tongue is chill
The preferred time for thedaily.
bath is in the morning If taken
then it will produce lnvtgorating rs.e.
stilts.
For something new and dainty,
spread the buttered' fudge pan with
minced . dates before turning the
candy into it.
Teeth powder is excellent for
cleaning jewelry. Bub it on with a
nailbrush and then rinse off 'wills
scalding water.
To keep the teapot tweet and.
clean, wipe it out dry after using
and put a lump of loaf sugar, inside,
leaving the lid open.
Thinly sliced bananas moietened
with lnayonnaise and placed be
tween buttered slices of bread•nrtike
excellent school sandwiches.
When garments of. any kind are
trashed in gasoline, add tt few drops
of oil of cedar: The disagreeable
odor will not be noticed
In making custards or other food-
•
stuffe`calling for settldekl milk, re-
member that if the milk is in a
double boiler it reaches the right
temperature as soon' as the water
in the outer titensil boils. '
Salt thrown into theoven imme-
diately after 'something has been
burned in it .will make the objec-
tionable 'odor lets, noticeable:
'1`o stretch kid gloves when new,
place them between the folds of a
damp towel for almest one hour be.
fore they are to be worn,
Add a pinch of cream of tartar
to the whites of eggs when' they
arc half beaten. This keeps them
from falling before being used.
The careful' laundrss- always
keeps a small vegetable brush at
hand for the purpose of brushing
out the fringe of doilies and towels.
To clean a net waist, put it into
a two -quart fruit jar filled . with
gasoline. Be :sure that it well
screwed on. Let it stand over night.
In the morning shake the can back
and forth. The motion will clean
the dirt out of the waist.
lay the foundation
Proviri'ces. Strath
Ontario, was the
young Gory, and,
born on June 16,,1'
A Big Unit
At the time 'whe
set out ler:the fel
known, plains of
Land, the journey t
no, light matter. F
town the little fain
went first to Sarni,',
Lake Huron and L
and• so over Amerlc
St. 'Paul. There,
had to be taken to'.'l
overland to the wate
River and so down its
Garry. The journey
was long and hard, b
the •beginning. Fro
outpost of civilization
plunged south-west in.
try about Gladstone.
then no roads • and no
If apples to be used for salad 'settler simply went and
have little flavor, sprinkle- them his lands 'where Ilse lab
after they. are cut up with a goodly and squatted on them.
amount of lemon juice, to which a the survey was made,
few cloves have, been added. At the hustle for his title,
end of half an hour add the mayon- Pioneering was pit
noise. It will, be a decided improve- those days in the West
meat, who now looks after It
�� of three hundred :thous
N. W. COItr, C.m G, a year remembers . hr
' whish they have no ids
Man Who Controls Land and um- through the grasshoppe
migration
Department of Canada. etre Dater•seventies.ams
'breezy
years of the early eight:
big,A y Westerner --the son I remember, he
of one of the pioneers of the oldest coming of the first of
prairie Province -it is eminently The first to arrive
fitting that William Wallace Gory, alighted in the farntyar
C,M.G-, should be the head of the Was pounced upon by e
department which is charged with eaten up. But soon th
the peopling of "the last best not- know. ,what to make
west." He is' one of the biggest grasshoppers slid not
men in the service -aur more ways green thing above the gi
than one. Six .feet ,east breath, ;in year we lived on jack
proportion, but not too broad, hie, breakfast, dinner, and t
bulk gives him an imposing ap- hadn't even bread to t
pearance, but fair and wavy hair, The next year the yoi
and a sunny 'simile predispose one hoppers : kept everythi
to expect a pleasant reception from do'sso to the ground,
the ,start. Noris this first impres the same story over aga
sion belied on further acquaint- 'thir'd year the, parasit
alice. His voices is rich and mel- and they: soon disappear
low, and lie is courtesy itself. Any- 10 Dry Ground An;
thing which 'ho tan do for you with-
in the limits of his duty, that he
Mr. W. W. Cory, C.M.G.
will dor But behind all it does
not take long to recognize, there
the keen administrator, who
knows his work and knows his own
Mind .also, Itis easy to understand
what it is which' 'las made him the
chief of one of the two or three
largest departments in the Domin-
ion Government,
The Deputy Minister of the In -
Levier began at an early age to
study the ootintry which he was ta-
ter to administer. In fact, be be-
gan to study it long before,'lto or•
anyone else had deemed of what
that country had 'in store, It was
in 187'1 that he, a boy of five, start-
ed with bis father to •cart;e out a
homestead on the plains of Mani-
toba -a, territory which was not
then yet a part of the Dominion,
The Corys were one of the many
Ontario families which helped 'to
''Then in the web j
went on, "there was no
anywhere. Across the
walked in water 'amity
your boots rap to your nl
caetie a customary thin,
hold in the toe of your
the water run out, In
when you 'got ora a to
piece of land, your fe
fortable.''
Under these cenditi
markets 'beyond rea
Dominion public
that fanning did no
into the city. One
had to throw, out I,
els of wheat just
the new crop.
years on his fat
Cory went to Wi
ed upon the stn
his Jar'ti(flee ill
t se'ney-Genera
the ban' ill 188
more he pi's
of Winnipeg
tawa as a c
office, \rhe
the patent
I
In the
The yea
service
as..lnsp
paittme
Justice
in the
prospe
height
condib
north
Mttnit
boy,
sionet
year
positi
Un
whol
intra
conte
:new
issue
who
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