HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-09-18, Page 6tltta tettelliwing
ten
Pure, Fresh ; n ••'' i SaflsfY ng...
ells ' in. alstugaai tstiv packe . — Try it.
TRY THESE FOR STAINS
Often an otherwise fresh garment
is made unsightly by a stein which, if
given immediate attention, may be
removed at home, thereby caving the
cost of having the,entire garment
cleansed, and also the inconvenience
of having it out; of use for' several
At this season of . the year table:
linen and linen frocks seem partiotilar-
ly disposed to acquire stubborn fruit
t
stains.- If such stains are saturate
with,; glycerine and allowed to set for
several hours before washing, they
will usually disappear without a trace
of damage.. Coffee, stains yield : gra-
' eiously to the same treatment.
-Disfiguring ink stains may be re-
moved from:`cotton o"r . muslin gar-
ments by steeping the damaged part
in -boiling milk. If treated to a milk
bath while the spot is fresh the stain
will, •disappear and:the -color of the
mateial will not be damaged.
Egg stains may usually -be removed
from:a 'silk gown by: rubbing them
with common table salt.
If the gold lace or embroidery,on an
evening gown has become tarnished,
it' may see restored to its original
freshness by'applyingpowdered rock
• ammonia, A soft brush should be used
for: this. Slippers made of gold fabric
• may be9l reated similarly.
Tar spate usually *succumb to a
treatment of ' ether or chloroform.
'e Saturate a piece of absorbent cotton
with `either- of these preparations and
.cover the offending spot,' allowing the
he ma=
sin on t
ntoisteited,cotton to rem
retial for several Minutes,• • If one 'ap-
plication is not sufficient, repeat -pro-
cess :until the spot vanishes.
White felt hats, which are modish
for sports wear,may be, kept fresh
sy frequent applications of bread.
Merely take' the soft inner part of a
stale' loaf of white bread and rub. it
-aver the hat. It does the work per-
,. , fectly arid takes very little time. Care
hould be token, however, to brush the
hat -thoroughly before applying,; the
bread, •
Farewell" - to- SuI7[%Yntir
'arm ie the, sun on' the high pasture-
nds
hereon res the stl of lissome
rb(���xjittp�u tw
here % iettgnLs ki&j d song whet o the
'fat miht?u� oi;or
Ther tdiest pe...!tee and co -t on
anent still' hover,
Rays of the noon -sun tall burning and
� 'lWl:fb 11*,F7'i47 ni�'+andr i glewlI1
..;Preen tettr?de f y pppdat eeuneaftlnp® *Sev?ral',. --Upon the long hill, near the wild-
, -# v µ� r wood and dell.
geentssiazzgeetsgailmitiollengtannetr , , ,. , ,�r«K ,z' �'� ! A lonely bird sitswhere the 'toilers_
She took a' little handkerchief from
her belt and dabbed her- eyes. Jean 1
was crying—not violently but rather
miserably; She started, as she heerd
him move, and a smile flashed through
her tears when she' turned and saw
him. ee
"Oh, Hector, I didn't know you were
there!'"
"What's the platter, my poor dear?
What are you crying about?" he asked
a ,little gruffly.
"I wasn't—well, nothing at all, real -
'CHAPTER XXxI'V.
Pan was piping in the,old ggarden
He .lied it quite to himself in the
hush ;'of, the 'sunset, except 'for Tito
and the twittering little birds ;',who
Answered hint back, apprehensive' and
daring' at the same time:
What was that funny creature doing,
tri -their garden? Iiow came he there)
—that featherless songster, with the
voice of thin, trickling gold?
Hugo had made himself a new pipe,
a magical=ono over which he had spent)
considerable tints end trouble. It had
half notes as we as the s bel she must be hating mo.'
played marvellous
rveous tunes on it of his,, • Gaunt laid tt comforting hand'on
good syrups are: red raspberries, own composing.They were weird lyric
strawberries; peaches, and eyeteeth. ( melodies, such as•only Pan's` soul could her
Nev uldmind. She'llget over it'
be burdened ;with, and he spent them r
Cake loins fruit
cup powdered sugar, freely on the ambient airs of sunset. "I know. And she's -happy. She said
2 tablespoons fruit jukes The women in the" public washing- shef:was happy. Nothing else really
Mix the ingredients, and beat thor- lace behind the high walls of the Villa ,matters. X_• ought to be satisfied, and
u to sread. g labors 'to listen.) a?n. But her voice belied her words.:
peach
until thick ono sp p 'retina ceased their She .was irons
Poach juice mal es an especially good One or two crossed themselves; others,.t'lsfied. ,Shy -stepped r'o indeed
the ter,
icing.' less superstitious; smiled a little der- race and ailed down to Hugo.- "Hee-
2
Icigig-1 cup powdered sugar, tore here If you're g g
2 th fruit -juice 2 ibsp butter Villa Tatina
- o forest n eros children g• d
11 h' cele and
ly. 'Only life's i;o, very sad,, isn't it?
Y was thinlciitg' about' Alice and how
are going-- g
. ft carols, "Sweet, Summer, "sweot�
Sumrner, farewell!"
Shrived in my heart are memories ten
der
Of all -perfect Summer, now folding.
her wings;
Acroes the worn threshold, there, -falls
1 the old splendor
Of Summer's calm close in the great
' soul of things,!
Nay—but site will not mourn long.or
carosses—
Nor stay for the thrush -song far
• flown ;in the dell,—
Her epirlt; is bjding, she feels uo die•
tress—
The lonely bird carols, "Swset Sein-
e -ler, farewell!""
`Charlotte Carson-Talcott:
isively. Every one knew that the curt -going to change
cue little Signor • of the i a • a }• : i .better come en."'
for dinner,you d
-
For a moment- it looked. as though•
Hugo had not heard her. He went on
playing. But • presently, with a,.dis- most satisfactory
gruntled 'air, he thrust his pipe into 1—with, so far, the m
his pocket and, whistling ,,to , results.
1 stent)` towards thefhous a is -'the malaria treatment for
stalked hegetsmore and moreThis
"Every1day g "Have general paralysis ,adopted experimen
childlike, Jean said to Gaunt.tally by the Liverpool School of Tropi-
you noticed. cal Medicine:
noddile e5 have been treated
"Like a spoiled'child,"`he'nmended. k]ighCy$our�case
9'You'really ought to have someone to and the mental and physical improve -
look after him." went of- twenty-three patients has
"Ohi�no—he's quite easy to manage, been:so wonderful that they have been
really. or are' about to be discharged from,
TI trailed in, Tito at hie hospitals. Hugo mental P
"Hello"' :he grinned at Gaunt, but.No patient suffering from general
then.
was mad and madeess is always _10
Cream the 'sugar and butter- t nils en clambered
gether; then addthe fruit juice gradu- i
ally, beating the mixture to a smooth,
creamy consistency.
Plum=Pudding Sauce-l/a cup plum
juice,: ee eug water, ee :cup sugar, 1
tablespoon cornstarch;
-Moisten the cornstarch with a small
onion of 'the' cold water. Mix the F th to each other
remainer of the woe er with the plume would be Tito; 1VIaddelina's little eg•,
juice and. sugar, and heat. to the boil' Was the mad Signor murdering Tito?
ingpoint, Stir in the cornstarch, and Hugo, Tito' and ,the' pipe were in=
Pn
ndth
e� aide
l ins
a
cook three minutes. 'S'erve piping hot. separable companions, , g
on pudding Cherryeuice witli.the ad -I was. their lair. Between the'thre'd of,
i tion of one tablespoonful oonful of lemon l then they made it by turns beautiful,
d t F and hideous.
juice may be used instead of the plum' . _ comingunt in through the gate+
juice: wayatthe bottm of the garden, halt -
grape cups a e uicethe eerie
Grape Sponge -2p b'r P 9, sJw moment and listened to 1?
2 tbsp._gelatin, 1¢ cum cold waters 1' piping. Then he walked on up to the,
sup sugar, 12 cups -cream. ,„,villa. The drive was well=screened by
Soak the gelatin in the cold water. shrubbery and Hugo did not see him.
and dissolve it over hot watet, or, if! The front `door being open, Gaunt
you wish, heat one cupful of the grape entered without the formality of ring -
juice and dissolve the softened gelatin ing. or having himself 'announced. In -
in and. ft.` Stir in the sugar and 'rite re- marble stairs and floor -having recently
rnainder of the grape, juice, and when been sprinkled with rosewater. Jean
the. mixture begins to thicken fold in',would probably be in the drawing-
the
rawing
the whipped cream.. Pile, in wet molds room. He looked, in, but she was not
chill before serving. !there. Then perha s she -vas dressing
and 1
- oranges,1' for dinner. Gaunt,. ail been. invited to
Fruit then; Drink -2 3 • . r but h :was half an.hour';early.
]croon, 6 uWxbesugar, 3 cups water, dinner, into the drawieg loom, se
t+ reship r d
rmlte
He went
hi ei . of x
of
nu b b low
Anythe
,< one ro
0
00
f
a U k
lected m
can be'mdse with this foor eaon., cases which 'edged the . walls, 'and•
Pineapple, ,gxap¢, cherry, or rasp -a stretched himself on'a-coue'h. -Mme.
berry.jnice make delightful `.variations Douste, the long -dead mistress of the
Strain the juice and make a syrup by villa, had been' a great lover of books,
cooking the sugar with one cupful of, and even now, so many years after she
the water 5 minutes. Cool, and add had vanished and the Villa 'Patina had
the fruit juice and the other:, water, • passed 'together with its furniture
from one strange hand to another, the
Chill and serve. ' clever old Frenchwoman's personality
up. the terraces behind hoping to catc
a glimpse of the mad musicion, but
there were too many trees in the gar-
den, and Pan?was not visible.
To add to the mystery of him, now
and -again -following upon notes more
piercingly sweet—would come ' the
Plaintive wail of a dog.
P 1 i That, said' h e children • h r
h •t1'ttl
Death' Gterrrasas Cur�e.For• •
Other Diseases. ,
For the -flrst'tithe :in the History of -
r
meilicine-one form of death is being
deliberately played off against another
when he spoke to Jean he' was Indeed
spoiled child. - "Do'I have to ehange? Paralysis had ever been discharged
from these hospitals before.'
Seventeen others who underwent
the malaria treatment have shown .dis-
tinct mental and great physical in'
provement, while'niany of the remain.
der 'haveimproved physically.
"This treatment opens up' an entire-
ly new field of medical research," a
fellow of the Royal Society of Tropi-
cal Medicine and Hygiene told a Lon-
don Sunday Depress representative.
'•'The original discovery was a shot
in• the dark"dileto. a German who•:had
hotieed'that occasionally elreehic alis
ewes , .counteracted ach other: cem
s
ics.
i o
the t ..='r
in P
p-eAn his is the nullifying
- An example;of t _ nullifying
"feet that pneumonia 'and' •bti
Won't it he enough if I wash my hands
and put on. a. clean' collar?„What's the,
+lase of dressing up? It's only us-,” His
voice was querulous and plaintie.
"Do 01 you like," Jean said. "Only
hurry." '
He flew of, delighted at having got
his own way. -
"Do. you give in to him in every.
thing” Gaunt asked, jealously dis-
approving. she re-
plied.
I possibly -can,"
plied. "You mightn't believe it, but
Hugo has a will of'iron. - He'd wear
me out if I tried to oppose him: After
all,: -what does it matter whether he
dresses; or not? ,I m so tired, Hector.
Sometimes I. think I shall drop . down
dead through sheer fatigue. Thank
HOW I USE FRUIT J'IITCES. '
If there was -no reason for canning
fruit: Juices except' that of making:
fresh jelly in the winter, for Thanks-
giving Day, Christmas, and all other.
special occasions, I think it would be
worth while. The fragrance of newly
made jelly is a'treat in snowy weather
and its taste is enjoyed by most every-
one. Moreover, I find more time for
jellymaking then than I do during, the
busy summer. .
There are, however, many ways of
tieing fruit ' juices in our cookery..
g
Among these are: Puddings, pudding
sauces, cake icings, gelatin dishes, sy-
rups for hot breads, beverages, frozen
desserts, .and salad dressings. Then
there are those little tricks of {teeter-
ing food combinations in which fruit
juices play am.dmportant part. Baked
ham 'basted with peach juice, for ex-
ample, ie. delicious, and mince -meat.
moistened With apricot or grape juice'
has a certain richness that almost
everyone likes.
Plum -Apple Jefly-3 cups plum
juice, 4 cups sugar, 3 cups apple sauce:
Mix fruit juices and boil twenty
minutes, add, sugar, stir until it Is
dissolved, and boil, until the mixture
jells when a small portion is allowed
to, cool, Pour intoe lint .sterilized
glosses..
II2int Jelly -d cups apple juice, 2
cups sugar, 1 cup mint leaves, green
vegetable coloring..,
Cook the apple- juice and . crushed
mire' together twenty' minutes, and'
strain.' " Reheat to the boiling point,
":'add sugar, and stir" until the; sugar is
b >
'dissolve'd. Boil until the mixture• jells
when "a'Small portion is allowed to
cool. Color a delicate green and pour.
Into -hot, sterilized glasses:
C
- 'iia. -2 cups sugar, ar 1 cu'
Fruit Syr Syo t 1 1? $ , p
fruit juice.
Combine the ingredients,, acrid cook
' Gut
together until the"syrup thickens a
Tittle, Serve warm on pancakeseveaf-
fles fritters, or any hot bread.' Among
the fruit 'juices that make especially
To Can Fruit Juices=Placa the :was still strongly stamped upon it,
washed fruit on berries m a saucepan) Hector Gaunt thought of that, as he
and -add a small amount of water.11ay stretched on the couch. The people
Brims: eo the boiling point, and simmer, who had come for a season.. or
two
gently five minutes. Strein through and then gone their various ways, two
two - layers of eheesecleth into bottles l all dealt kindly with Mee. Doudstee'
or fruit jars which have been boiled in' possessions, . Of course there h,
] on. been Maddelina to keep an eye
al -
water fifteen na minutes. Pe a these nus on things; but: snore than Maddelina;
a false bottgm in a large kettle, and it seemed to Gaunt that the spirit of
pour. sufficient warm ‚water around 141me. Douste, 'herself, hovered gently
6hem to reiich the necks of the bottles', the old stone house and the gar--
and the shoulders: of the jars If jars den she had made and loved.
-
ad'u t the .l ds loose) , and!- He glanced up and saw her watch -
are Used, i Y
m nths of the , bottles, with ing him from the portrait on the oppo-
eil n. 0 site wall—her expression, quizzictel,
cottoo. jhumorous kindly—ani) 'he. thought
Process the fruit juice thirty min- `he had been to her, She
° the
..water simmerin twhat a traito; hof her ease in the
utes, keepingg had made him free
time. Remove the ars and he had rewarded her by
gently all the t ] old days, a
and tighten the lidsr,immediately and ruining the life of the young girl',who.
discard .the'cotton' in the bottles, ie -,`was -living under her protection,
dit with- corles that have been I Gaunt winced.' He did'notlike these
placing
dipped in bailing water.`,':When tlietricks:of conscience, and rarely suffer -
bottles are cold, dip the corks hi melted them. He Was -ti Yuan little given to
edF - araffin or sealing wax. contemplation •'of his inner self. He
wasmuch 1: i, Masculine for that sort
Of the paper now.manufactured, 99,: of thing. t flow and again remorse.
per cent ls;maehine•made: Icaught him unawares, :and, he •was
(forced to ebntemplate his errors. How
FLAVORS FROM THE FLOWERS.'
^ "T
,!could he -ever have blamed Jean for
ti
what had happened? For
inyi g
Heaven; there are plenty of books in rt on'kala•asar—a usually
this house! I don't have to. stir out,' 'lasses exert hick is -near-anon i s iln-
end people have given up corning to j fatal fairer v
see us" - • gal Bind Assam.,
Gaunt showed her "Dr. Antonio'! "Now, general paralysis'is a late
and what he had found pressed be -I
-manifestation of a curtain disease
tween the leaves. .Her hands shook as•icadsed by spinal organisms, and the
shread the;little note of long ago.
"Why, Elector, why—oli, dear!" She
mopped her eyes again. "Look.theso
were fie= a bunch of violets you gave
object -of deliberately inducing malaria
is'tet raise the blood of the patient to
a. series of such' high recurrent tem-
b 11 " stuns that these organisms wilt
M
"A high temperature is essential.
el I remember
so we
"Mme. Douste had a geed laugh at kilted
me The ,garden was full of violets
and I brought you these," he said rue-
fu"B. "them. How terribly
But I adored Y
in love. we weret Everything in this
house reminds ane of it. Sometimes it
seems as though- I was back again in
those days#. Then I hear Hugo playing
and-andrthet sort of kills it. There's
a mockery about Hugo' s; pipe.. The(
other night after e to gone to
Nothing milder 104 degrees or 105: de•
grees is any good,
"Malaria can be ebecleed by Judici-
ous doses of quinine, eo'the treatment
is not really quite so dangerous as it
i
would seem.
"The next step no doubt will be to
test the effect et lnalaria, organisms ou
f h hod
In our andmothers' day. • -navy l Mtn, as he had simply 'whirled er
into doing, and for running away when
dainty at rdctio were ieh cos a from -the
nal she discovered that eke was not legal-
cial attraction of which carne frem tier Iy Ms wife. Nor, in her'shame and
flower garden. Of late years this
seems to be a lost art. Seldom indeed
do we -find •a modern housewife- who
knows the secret of making' rose con: how possible to apologize to Mme.
servo, er a rose geranium cake: The
Douste.- Her kindly, humorous smile
Worried him. Ile felt that he Was ac=
cepting it altogether with ver. hospital.
It,/ under false pretences.
Oh, well—he hiroself into
a more comfortable position and open-
ed the book. he had chosen, ,tuffino's
"Dr. Antonio," He hadread it before,
severixi times, but the old fashioned
charm of Lucy. and Sir John never
•
distress, for marrying the chivalrous
Hugo.' The gble person to sufer.blame
for all of this was Hector Augustus
Gaunt.: He wished that it were same.
INSO `m -ideal for any wash -day
Yon o not
method d
.: you
use. Y
o.id
m
`
of
our
usual
changeyour to c any
have. ;s
steps=just use : Rinso where you
used to use ordinary soap.'
like e t o boil, our white cot-
you p IY
If y
cot-
to'ns, Rinso will give you just the
safe cleansing suds you need in
the boiler. If you use a washing
machine, follow the advice of the' big
washing machine manufacturers--
use
anufacturers-
use Rinso. i
ith this new kind of
Just soaking w
soap loosens all the dirt until a
single rinsing leaves the - clothes,
clean and spotless.
e.
tl However you . do your wash, mal.
it easy by using Rinso.
Rinso is - sold by 'all grocers
and department, stores
if :you use a: Washing
Machine, soak your
clothes in' the Rinso
suds as usual. In the
morning add more -
Rinso solution and
Irak the machine.
Then rinse and dry-'
you will have a clean
sweet -snow - white
trash.
LEVER BROTHERS
LIMITED
TORONTO
MINIM
- ° Time is este
The ease with which hardy spring ed in ever-increasing numbers each,
be ro heel fall, and this is the type.to plant
lloworiiig or
bulbs may g
made"this• 'phase of gardening extreme- th eret•'
P.
ly pee-eller...Much of this -popularity 1s
n
Tom
pts U
e" la
at tires
due to; the fact th F
at's, seasoli when all.proWing things
are 'Just .hwakening'fronl' their winter
sleep. The trees are yet bare and leaf-
less,; or' just beg'linting. to swell their
buds,;wheni otic beds and borders may bee mixed colors is not to be des
be ablaze of.:color:.
Spring -flowering bulbs 'should be pised, yet such a bed lacers harmony
Spring -flowering
)anted: early;- although some. species :such as we can have by a selection 01
do noteufer:•to any appreciable extent,1 named varieties. planted in beds of o
even if not planted until' November, color, or of any design.
y tuella are
The double -flowered- P
the smaller bulbs, such assnow-drops,'
settles and glory of the snow should be
in the soil' as soon as peseta°,' say,
late; September or early October.
although hyacinths used alone
en
permanent `effects in the hardy bot -
der,' for,' unlfko
e early -floe
be left undis•"
Dutch." tuliQs, they can
1'e.
suers)- ea
r ed
fors Y
tub
However,: to give es_ a longer title
Beason. -we little -t also include in the
Planting , table a selection of early
varieties. Gorgeous color effects are
to be had from tulips, and although a
bed relapsing fever, Weil's disease (a 'form
I found it lying here on the terrace, of intecttous jaundice), yellow fever
ande just for a moment I SI cam n I rat -bite and Taw's disease.
breaking v thewthing. .But he Would
tried us all •hunting for � . "It w111,' however, need great -Dour
only have: Worried
-i - the sed have made another. age."
It and.e I'1 -
It amuses him.1 ma beast to,con 1
plain. Poor Huge!"
"Poor Hugo" came bounding in, de-
manding admiration for his clean;
hands and collar. They had dinner,
and he, ate ravenously,: with an ob-
servable lack of nicety, slopping his
food and talking steadily, usually with
•fu -1:
girls of to -day have a fad of making
anything popular which found favor
in their grandmother's time, se I am.
giving lielowsome' of the recipes and
secrets that were used by the quaint
inaidens:ef long ago.
,Rose ,Geraniunt Cake -Do not at-
tempt to : flavor a dark' cake—either
fruit or spice—in this way,but choose
Chew it after
every _pleat
' .11.9 stimulates
eappe`ttite and
aider digestion.
It mattes your
gond de you snore
tieml. Note bow
9t roe i't!40, Melt istuify feeling
stetter a tap9 e tih5 9.
,` Wbii�eems Qgetas
eberens
o*isatlb .6Pd
Ir. the goody
eat
-ceased; to fascinate him. Probably
some lghea n white cake, whr h isthere was not a library in Bordigeera
Ver light •and feathery., When'you tot
to Without' its well•read "Dr. Antonio;'
he an hWhic t the cake isnot
butter t Piculer co
be )laked, lay three or four rose ger- Yet this Parti Se appeared'
to. have been opens., for many year e
onium leaves in the; bottom..' Pour the .Some pressed !lowers, fell out and
batter directly00 these, and bake, as little 'scrap of.pepel, a note Gaunt
sual. • Let scans'' fee twenty-foue!looked at, t in. a wondering -way -:•a'
after •.bakin and with the little note•ill his own hand -writing ad -
leaves
til g,
leaves still laying on the bottom of they dressed <:to -"Miss_ Balite,"::asking. her
cake before using,, and you will he to obtain permission to:'driiivvestooSan
flavor from' Remo with him. ` In those y young
delighted with the will dainty iris did not go about so freely with'
the, leaves, which have; permeated men -as • now, and again, conecienoe
through the whole cake. ' •I stabbedlhim•when he remembered that
Nactry tiisiles Nasturtium petals,
kind-hearted • and,-..ttneting, `, dine.
d
leaves and stems may be used in sal- Douste had given Jean the •permission
ads. They are fine. in mint salads, and this note of his prayed' for, and they
when 'used in this way, it is preferable had not only driven to San Remo, but
to use the leaves and r stems in the had tea tliere,and'gone for a row,' and
salad proper, and to use the petals' or not returned ,to'the villa until after
blossoms as garnishing. • , dark "Even then,Mme Dchlste hadn't
The green seeds are fine to rise in scolded. She merely hoped they,had
had a good time i
mixed pickles, as they give a delicious-! Someone carne into the rowing
ly spicy taste to the`pickles.'They may room .and opened one of: thesong win
also be; chopped anal• put- in -salmis. down: that led` to the marble terrace:
When used in . cooking of any sort,; The Aeolian harp on the: door played
they sheltie) be .picked while green, and a jingling
ungwit, the ingsosomend hat dds
before they reach Maturity. pipe outside,'
b--ee (taunt raised himself on one elbow. It
was Jean,'standing thereat the win-
dow in a soft white dress, a little shaft
of sunlight catching her fair hair, and
giving it back a touch of the pubs gold
of youth.
So slender and small she looked; her
dress' a Tittle •old-fashioned, her- head
his mouthl
His conversation was niaizz'�ly direct-
ed at Gaunt and full of childish en-
treaties. Would Hector take him to
the flower' market toemorrow? Might
he drive the little horse? , Would Hec-
tor he'n him to- select a .thin linen 1.
suit? .When wore they, gaoing to have �
that long=promised bathing picnic,
Gauut•foand himself agreeing and
promising, just as Jean. did.
(To bo continued.)
Life on Mount Everest.
Animal life, It appears, is to be
found en 'high 'tnounteins•far beyond
lant..growth, The highest growing -
P
plant that the. Mt. I]vei•est expedition'
1924 observed was the Niue vetch, at
eighteen
en thousand feet; but :animals
ei Itte
g
?the Ade•
live( ataS great a height as twenty-two1. Has Nothing,to do With
thousand feet, "A minute and; incon- ' ,"Site says site is still very young."
steatites black softer,. says a menf- "She's had thirty Uirthdays, i know."
P
Um' of the expedition, ")taps about, on ''What's that got to do With her
•
excellent subjects for bedding; they '
last Much longer than the singles, bus
are not quite so graceful. 1 am, hew
ever, very partial to the double -flower
make a great showing soon after the ed type; thliir lasting qualities ansi
their great size of bloom appeal to the
flower lover.
In,the case tit P•Irneilowering tulips a
mass Of one color is preferable to tlx
tures,
When we remember that these late•
frost leaved us in spring, yet it is an
advantage to use, some of the lesser
bulbs or'dwarf perennials with', them
to'1;eighten the effect and also to pro-
long the beauty of the bed. Inter-
mediate lines of narcissus will follow
in time of -blooming shortly after the flowering tupils grow to a' height of
hyacinths are past their best, and at '. from two to three feet ;with foliage
heavy and strong, it is web to give the plants plenty of roojn; ;therefore, in
setting 'out the bulbs they. are: pleved.
four to six inches apart. •
better. to select tb Peen -muted
It is
position for them, in the bulb gerd lv
proper, or' established in the hardy
flower border.
Bulb. planting should !to flnisted by
early oventher; in fact, it were better
to plant about the middle of October.
no time will they obscure or lessen the
effect of the -Hyacinthe. • •
Arabes Alpiha, the white rook cress,
mattes a:eine carpet for any of tiro col-
pled hyacinths. Another charming
lardy plant to utilize •in the sante
manner is the Cerastium or snow In
summer.
Since the great beauty and value of
the May-florlering...tulips have been
fully appreeiated,•they are. being plant
England.
(By an Australian on Her First 'Visit
to the Motherland).:: ;
'I thought that w•heii,:uty strangweeees
Beheld this dreamed -of treasure-trove
With primrose -haunted memories,
With proud:: and daffodilling love
I'd laugh and bare any head to Eng -
lisp rains,
Ren eingingthrough:the green of Eng-
llslt lanes, -
And stooeittg by a Imetlgo hiss the
sweet •earth - •
That eaves nil' fathel•a•birth
"But there',s:no laatghter on my lips
Nor yet a song, but like a bird'
Stumbling en beauty's soul thole slips foibeaY`s of
Into my moulh-a sobbing ;Nord--- went to us now, were 'tl e
I a er• manufacture —u -day.
' � Her fields are fnrrtrw•eri in L P
(lug tt m 'the. arCof aper•
my. heart; •- ,. `Chula Monopolized' P
s Beneath stones " 'fore ebout^000 years; until the
rocky duffs -and bate ago. errs that Making:
fore . t Her rivers -aro the little tc
in diose bareplacgs: tliathapPon to be -;egret was' learned Utile her by the
Who' Made the First Paper?
The credit- - for making the fleet
paper is due to a Chinese - named
Ts'ai•1un,
In A.t% 75 he ;made the fleet hand
sheet of paper froth the bark of a alai
berry. tree':
Before this leaves of trees and vari-
ous barks used -in eretle form had been
good enough for the Egyptians, Me
.mans, and other nations, The Chinese;
however, did not:,use the Crude inner
bark of the tree as the ilnal material
on which to make his records, lie
used the bark merely' as a raw tun•
ircm which he produced a dntsh
ed sheet of paper; by a series of pro-
cesses which,; emitive as they may
snow b nee" n the tart who improved P
swePf cleat of Y D ou have aft anttmacitesai o L elate 1 cieeP Arabs, P
The Uncorseted- Figure.
Miss Cricket "Goodness, Mies
Wasp, you're not a bit stylish—doii't
you know the slender waist is entirely
Mit of date 2"
o wind' I' s as roveY upon the L' nerc
• .: o y .. n esaadow•quie i ": -; - rage A5 toss 1 tat 2
on What- lives'at that . • .v.• co • do ou rocssr byusing l nen.or,cottot R,
cannot thinkbade of 'yom chart . If o, Y p
1t Lsl1 •a shy child, to:ween,ark.'
other
'l in thein ai notbis there t i?„blew why They call et an antimaaas
-{---P:T:,, to ll4orntug Post, instead' of rnlilUerry k
-:Huta) thinglenothing ib sb .IodicYears a o • Soon after 1800 -the first paper to be
other t; �?. Here is the why"; g
•
Tti s little spider is worthy sat i -e with wood pulp carne' into the
ani) -ice. iX people were lust as afters of getting ..pad
Of note asbeing'the
-h ghelb psiman- Wald, as 'ere today, so great
b
market.'
inllab tact of theearth. ° B en his Nowadays, to meet the enormees'1e•
ent i _ 1 grandfather put inaCassa> o Histo y 0 •
to save viands of the press and commerce hen
of
National Assembly has
citizen' of the new
Republic shall be at liberty to choose
bis' own headgear' — a momentous
change, as the fez has long been the paper•
badge. of the Turkish subject, willing nese __
-
or unwilling.' Never' bring a kerosene can tar e
" Prot the non-VIoslem,eitizen of Tur-' stove which has a fire in it, and a et
kej', indeed, the fez was the symbol of quirt kerosene into a stove tvhatn
subjection, enc- when. the. Greeks ee” tw file is out or not. Man,, ,t n r
ci?pial Sttlbnika, during, lite Balkan have been bmned to death tr iri1 lhal'
War o1. 10]2-13, ilio- first act of the eXperiritent•. If you
persist 111 1121
local Christians was to throw away
very" foolish habit of using ikeroceee
the hateful headgear. Similarly, many for kindling a fire, only do so Uy, pours
refugees leaving 'Turkey atter the' ing it on the wood fuel before it ie
Armistice :of 1018 threw their fezees put ilato. the stove, and do' iha1L• fkr,
overboard. from the stove or:any open ilal-1a,
1'1 1 dgear wo wear has often had
Very often the man who complains hair, but great-grandmother, , he furlcish Nat . rail over 400 varieties of seem! and
d luck°has been having too soft her
drooping forward, displaying the
pretty curve at the back of her neck.
Just for a moment Hector Gaunt
had'ti dizzy feeling cif having awaken-
ed from a long and exceedin o! fibre tble-
'soiree dream," Couldet be p a
he had lived these twenty years in
dream and that he was really still a
young man and that e;ikl by the wiu- cf ill
dow was Jean' Bailee, whom he meant ilei 'l.c Menai. of British meservico men,
by )took or crook to make Itis wife?
r in Hats,
chairs, put the anti on the maces- p e v.
filar, decided that every
gr,ts
•
ses have been canoe into requiti,.
tion, Linen and eaten rags are it ee
only in the, making of the finest note
The tea
ti special ,significance, The cam, for `®`®� rtn -
n spa a :R'fr
instance, has been suppceed to -have an
et'nity with revolutionary doctrines;
And at one- tine- the toe -hat'- was. the
symbol of )Republicanism,
when :'Boujamin lurankliti entered
Paris, as' the 'minister of ,.the newly
Republic, of the united States,
•---... _- - _ . -..�° he wore 'n-: hat of this sort,. derived
'e of i,ul.isuse bast, the steepis-crawn heaclgear"•of
ideas throughout England is the sale front
et the newest al b :pain sigh a
go' to Lord Flaig's �,25,DU0 7: the Puritans' et the Mayflower. Pei+is
Fillies of Wales, all proceeds to
culla) It, •end it egon became general.
Tho, Toronto noenitnl for 1,,oOl tile+,
afotlilloli whit Bellevue and 051,! Io,11t01,,
Nay 'tali City, otiose a three Sears Cotlrb1
et Trnlninai to Ynunu Vion,a,l I;sN i ilio
required" educntlnn, and dcalroua of bc,c,omlno..
nureon.;'Thl,- nsspitai hoe adotltml thi olnht-
(lour ayatom The pup) r odve ung otmt ut
the Snhoel 1 molltllly 11 ,v l eo and 11401115.
exoehoesto and train Nov., -.volt. Fcr t :thrr..•
'information apply .15 filo Saprrietc dens