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' BEGIN HERE TODAY Lights were an ineffable glory in the
Lenore Hardenworth. They are ehip-
Ned Cornet is engaged to marry skY•
Their bodies builup to endure even
wrecked and with Bess Gilbert they such hardship as this. The fact that
t
take refuge on an 1and occupied by the snow at last packed was a factor,
a bru o named Doomsdorf and his In -
did not in the least retard -the blow,
It did, however, affect ts. aceuraey.-
That fact alone saved Ned from la,
stant cleath.
But as the wolf lunged toward him
to eomelete his work—after the man-
ner ofsome of the beasts .of prey when
they fail to kill at the first. leap—the
inner man of might seemed ie) waken
in Ned's prone body. A great force
came to life within him, Ile lunged
upward and met the wolf in the teeth.
A great surge of strength, seerning-
ly physical limitati In, poured
through In one great bound he
overcame the deadly handicap of ,his
own prone position, springing up with
te,rrible, reaching, snatching hands
too: they were able to skim oV.et tti3 and clasping arms, Some way, he did
dian wile. Nee and the girls are white crust at a pace even faster than
island and he tells them t:ae-- are to not know how, he hurled that hu
pounds of living steel from his body
mired
‘Freslt from the gardens!
Lenore is too weak to work, so Bess the best dine the had made in early
before the white fangs could go home,
made prisoners by the master of the
and Ned take up the burden. Dooms- fall
be his she, es.
clod announces that he means to make
his prisoners do him winter trapping.
them-
Potting Garden
Plants For
Winter Window
For those who live in north temper-
ate latitudes, August is a good month
in which to consider the garden in re-
lation to plants for the winter window.
Many will have plants left from last
winter; some will wish to buy new
ones, while others will wish to take
indoors certain plants which have
graced the garden during the summer.
And every bit of care given the plants
now will mean volumes next winter.
Potted plants from last winter
should have been rested during the
first part of the summer and started
into more active growth now. These
may be cut bak quite severely, but
be sure to leave enough strong wood
to support the new growth and flow-
ers. finless they were shifted in the
spring, it is best to repot them now,
using a pot only one size larger.
lIf new plants are to be bought,
August is the best time to get them,
as the prices are but a froction of
what they will be later on.
If plants from the garden are to be
potted for winter display select sturdy
ones now, lest you wait too long and knows, the leaves are fuzzy to touch
the frost catches them. With a sharp and the beautiful double flowers range
trowel or long bladed knife cut a half, fromwhite to scarlet and maroon. The
or a third around the plant with the new plants are raised from cuttings
blade slanted in toward the root. In and the Old plants should be cut back
this preliminary root pruning, the after each year's growth.
circle should be slightly smaller than Cestrum, the night -blooming jas-
the pot to be used, the pot being us- mine, is smooth leaved and has many
ually a four or live -inch one. At this yellow flowers that are very fragrant
time, remove any buds or blossoms
there may be and cut the plant back
severely, removing some of the oldest
wood. Two or three weeks later make
another cut, and if the ground is very
dry soak thoroughly several hours be-
fore lifting. Pruning the roots in ad-
vance of potting gives the plant a
xane to recover from the transplant-
ing and to form new- feeding roots so
that it may ' more easily establish it-
self in the pot.
Piunglig
their rims in the earth under a tree.
This will provide shade midday and
keep them from drying out. When
the pots are plunged, lightly cork the
holes in the bottoms to keep the roots
from growing through and into the
earth. Also leave slight airholes be-
neath the pots to enable better drain-
age and free access of air to the roots.
The Begonia is one of the best win-
ter blooming plants and needs plenty
of sunlight and water. It is raised
from cuttings, that may be planted
out of doors in the spring when the
The result was that at last the corn- But there was not an instant's
panioaship between Bess and Ned, pause, Desperate with fury, the wolf
forgotten in the dread horror of the sprang in again)a long, white streak
early
winter months, was revived. almost t* fast for the eye to follow.
But he did not find Ned at a disad-
vantage now. The man had wrenched
to one ride to hurl the creature away,
but he had already caught his balance
and had braced to meet the second
onslaught.
(To be continued.)
They are permitted to build
Ives a cabin and Doomsderf gives Again they had pleasant hours about
After .the cabin is finished Lene're the. stove at the Forks cabin, some-
timesworking at pelts, . sometimes
is permitted to remain and help the
thern as old stove. -
squaw with the -housework, but Bess even enjoying the unheard-of luxury f
of a few minutes Of idleness.
and Ned are started on different V
rof the fact themelves
outes to trap for their Master. Very naturally, and scarcely aware
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY to be the best of companions.
s , they had come
CHAPTER XXL—(Cont'd.) gave him lest: satisfaction than they
Ned's hour with Lenore, however,
- had at first. She somehov failed to
understand what he had been through.
Slowly, by the school of hardship,
and conquest over hardship, Ned Cor-
net was winning a new self-mastery,
a new selfconfidence to take the place
of the self-conceit that had brought
him to disaster. But the first real
moment a wakening was also one of
peril—on the trapping trail one clear
afternoon toward the bitter close of
January.
He had been quietly following that
portion of the trap line that followed
the timber belt between • the Twelve -
Mile cabin and Forks cabin, and the
blazed trail had led him into the
depths of a heavy thicket of young
spruce. H3 had never felt more se -
curt. The only hint of darger that
the Red Gods afforder him did not half
penetrate his consciousness and did
not in the least call him from his
weather has become settled, but must
The beaver was of course not fro -
be potted. in the early autumn.
Camellia Japonica belongs to the
same family of ph,nts as tea, thea
virdis and thea bohed It has hand-
some thick leathery leaves, and, by
cultivation, beautiful double flowers of
white, pink, rose, and carmine, striped
and splashed. Plants for blooming
must be thre years old, New growth
is made in the spring and new plants
are raised from uttings. Camellia
mil. and the skin stripped off, easily
under the little, sawing strokes ef his
skinning knife. He was rather sur-
priseu at its size. It carne' eff nearly
round, and it would stretch fully
thirty-two inches in diameter. Wash-
ing it carefully, he put it over his back
and started on.
Othe" traps yielded pelts in his long
day's march.
Tired out, barely able to stand
Japonicas must be kept cool during erect, yet wholly content with his day's
July and August to prevent second
catch, Ned made the cabin in. the twi-
growth ,and they should be repotted
light, built his fire, and cooked his
only in January or February if the
meager supper. After supper he skin -
roots have become pot-bound. ned out such little animals as he had
A Great Favorite rot taken time to skin on the trail,
The geranium is probably the most fleshed and stretched the pelts,, then
popular of house plants. Aa everyone hung thein up to dry. He was almost
too tired to remove his wet garments
when the work was &me. He hardly
remembered drawing the blankets over
him.
But in spit. of the hardship. the
wrack of cold, the fatigue that -crept
upon him like a dreadful sickness,
Ned heel many moments of compara-
tive pleasure. One of these moments,
at night. Make the cuttings in spring seemingly yielding him much more de -
and be sure to plunge the pots in the light their the occasion warranted, oc-
summer. curred at the end of the second day of
Of course, in this list of house actual trapping.
plants, ferns and palms should be in- This day's march had taken him to
eluded, but this is not the time of the the Fork's cabin, and there, s twi-
Potted plants can be put in the
shade on the porch or sunk up to Minard's Liniment—The King of Pa'
in home cabin a .day ahead of him, she
was perfectly on schedule. He could
hardly Jxp 1 ain the delight that flashed
through him at the sight of her. In
this loneliness and silence mere human
companionship was blessing enough.
His appearance in the doorway was
not a surprise to Bess, She had count-
ed the days carefully, and she knew
his schedule would bring him here.
But now she was too near dead with
fatigue to give him more than a smile.
With scarcely a word he lifted her
to the cot, covered her with a blanket,
and in spite of her protests, went
speedilj about the work of cooking her
Supper.
They had a quiet hour of talk be-
fore he drew the blankets about her
shoulders and left her to drift away
in sleep He was unexplainably exult-
ant; light-hearted for all this dread
waste that surrounded him. This little
hut of logs was home, tonight. The
cold could not come in; the wind would
clamor at the roof in vain.
He did her work for her tonight.
He skinned the smaller animals she
had brought in, then fleshed ancl
stretched all the pelts she had taken.
After preparing his own skins, he
made a hard bed for himself on the
floor of the hut.
It was with real regret that they
i the n Ned's
year to disuss them.
A Traveller
Like a cheerful trakmller, take the
road.
Singing beside the hedge.
—E. W. Browning.
light drew about him, he Wa. zed
to hear the nearing sound et ps
in* the snow. Some one was ing
laboriously toward him, viith t ,
dragging tread of deep fatigut
It was Bess, of ,course. ,.A.,t this
point their lines coincided.Ithas her
third stop, and since she had left the
t •
OUP Own!
T. OME -.MADE mustard pick-
les!"• • how proudly you
show them to him. . . and with
-what satisfaction you serve them
to your guests!
There is -ataste and a tang to the
home-made kind that you 'can
never buy. Put in just the in-
gredients that everybody likes
. . add a touch of KEEN'S
fine old English. Mustard . . .
and you have something dis-
tinetively your own, something
to give added individuality and
enjoyrnent to meals throughout
the year.
1;1
EtIXIE RELISH
Soak 1 pint of
chopped sweet red
pepper and 1 pint
of chopped sweet
green pepper in
brine for 24 hours.
Freshen in cold
water for 1 hour.
Drain well, remove
seeds and coarse
white sections.
Chop separatdy and
measure 1 quart of
choppcd cabbage, 1
pint of chopped
onion and the pep-
per. Mix thorn. Add
1 quart of cider-
vinegar, 4 table
spoonfuls or salt, 4
tablespoonfuls of
Keen's Mus tar
1 tablespoonful of
celeryseed(crushed)
and % cupful of
sugar. Let stand
over night in a cov-
ered enamel pm.
Pack in sterilized
jars pressing the
relish down well
and getting bubbles
out. Process for 15
minutes in water
bath 181 degrees
Fahrenheit.
FREE — Send for a copy of our book listing many recipes
for really wonderful pickles and relishes,
EE'S MUSIrAlidD
Aid Digestion sea
leallada) Lituitedo Ilio Amherst St., Montreal
took diffeient ways naw .
last office was to prepare kindling
for her use on her next visit to the
cabin four days hence—hardly realiz-
ing that he was learning a little trick
of the woodsman's trade that would
stand him in good stead in many a
dreadful twilight to come.
The trails of these two trapeore
often crossei hi the weeks to cern°.
They kept close track of each other's
schedules, and they soon worked out a
system whereby they could meet at the
Forks cabin at ahnost every circuit.
No longer did Ned go abott his
work in the flimsy clothes of the city.
Out of the pelts he had dried Bess
helped to make him gavinents and
moccasins as warm and serviceable as
her own, supplied through an unex-
pected burst of generosity on Doom-
clorf's part soon after their arrival on
the island. They brought their hard-
est problems to the Forks cabin and
solved them together.
Day after day the snow sifted down,
ever laying a deeper covering over
the island, bending down the limbs of
the strong trees, obscuring all things
under this cold infinity of white. The
traps had to be laboriously dug out
and reset, again and again.
Wheri the skies cleared, an un-
atearned degree of cold took posses -
Sion of the land. The fingers froze in
the indent that the fur gloves were
removed, and the hottest fires could
hardly warm the cabins. And on these j avenue trai.,i Toronto, neat W
cleat* bitter nights the Northern. little resiStanCe thee was seemingly
They had a quiet hour of talk. •
pleasant fancies. It was only a glimpse
of green where the snow had been
shaken from a compact little group
of sapling spruce just beside one of
his sets. Lkiely 'the wind had caught
the little trees just right; perhaps
some unfortunate little fur -hearer, a
marten perloips, or a fisher, had
sprung back and forth among the lit-
tle trees in an effort to free himself
from the trap. He walked up quietly,
tecated the tree to which rhe trap
&min was attached, bent and started
Modern Modes in
Paris
Some of the sharp corners and the
rough' edges are being polished off
what the world is pleased to call
"modern" art as applied to furniture
and furnishings. Suddenly it appears
to have been discovered. there is no
reason why the things that have to
be lived with shouldn't be livalhle.
There is a rush by the modernists
to strike "new notes," create trends
aud startle again and again an already
well startled pulilic. Perhaps there is
a great deal of jazz in all this effort,
but there is also a great deal of re- handles, The wardrobe, with a long,
freshing newness, sirnplicity of line mirror set in its door, has both hang-
ing and cupboard space for clothing
inside. A tiny desk -table stands in
a good light and a cozy miniature
armchair is drawn up to a low round:
table, set with a faience tea service.
A finishing touch is a long, low, built-
in blackboard.
Kill that corn with Minard's Liniment
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cream woodwork with a lacquer -red'
trim. The low window seat is padded.
with a deeper yellow linen and the.
floo ris covered with dell red. lino -
tom. A long, low, shelf, with a red'
edge running clear across one ,side,,
has lower, shorter shelves under-
neath. Still below that is a long space
for the storage of toys, fitted with.
sliding doors with immense red knobs
easily pushed by little fingers.
There is a cunning crib •of ovali
shape with a solid wood base and a-
long, very low day bed, both covered
with the same material as the cur-
tains, a gay printed linen in Orange,.
dull yellow and green.
A very low chiffonier has two deep
drawers with huge red knobs for
and, here and there a stroke ofgemus.
Whether it is genius or not, livable-
ness and sunshine have been injected
into the modernistic by the latest
comer in ommercialized modernity,
the "Athelia" studios—for they are
all studios nowadays, instead of de-
partments. This has lately been in-
augurated at "Aux Troies Quartiers,"
last of the downtown department
stores to take to creating modern art
-on a big scale.
Antique and 1929 Side By Side
Curiously enough, this store, long
noted for its excellent antique depart-
ment, has put the new alongside the
old. Through open archways one
walks from the past to the present—
or perhaps -the future, for isn't 1929
progress supposed to be one jump
ahead of even the calendar?
Robert Bloch, modern designer ot
Geneva origin, con -mintier of "Athe-
na," is the one who thinks It ought to
be possible to live comfortably with
modern art and who also has the sun-
shine theory, As he couldn't sudden-
ly change the people; he decided to
change the art and bring the two into
closer relation, put them on easy
speaking terms. He ame to Paris
with a splash, designing a front, ex-
tremely modern—quite the thing to
do in Paris now—for the old-fashio'ned
building of "Aux Trois Quartiers."
The new front is of. the utmost sim-
plicity in grayish -brown imitation
marble and is really a singular de-
parture for a department store in
France.
Sunshine Simulated 1 Lighting
The studios "Athelia" wd be a per-
manent exposition, Combating that
to drav- the trap from the small, dense' lack of warmth which is the criticism
thicket whense some creature had, given a great many interiors of the
dragged it. He was only casually in ultra modern style, Bloch. has skin-
t t d • t mon of flflOr fro-! fully imitated the sun's rays by clever
zen creature would be 'revealed be -1 lighting effects, thus transforming a obey.—Jeremy Taylor.
"Why did you divorce your hus-
band, May?"
"Why, my dear, I couldn't hit a
barn door with a pistol in a hundred
years."
Sunspots and Tree Growth
In some localities the thickness of
the annual growth -rings of trees
varies in a period of about eleven
and a half years corresponding t� the
sunspot variations. It is believed
that changes in ultra -violet light,
cloudiness, and rainfall, are the chief
variables in causing this relationship..
—Dominion Observatory, Ottawa,
Obedience
others thatnot first how to
iNo man ever1 e fit to govern
tween he steel jaws. The beauty of dark bedroom into a sunny one, The
the day had wholly taken his mind window, Which presumably opens tip -
from his work. on aark couft, has its glass corn-
• ad
ark
moment, and the forest was
asleep about him; the little trees look-
ed sadly burdened with their loads of
snow. The next, and the man was
hurled to the ground by a savage,
snarling thing that leaped from the. arrangement suitable for a one -room
covert like the snow demon it was; apartment. Save fo rthi alcove and
and white, gleaming fans were flash- indented spaces, which are covered
ing toward his throat. with a silver-Leige homespun, the
wals lare painted a soft gray beige.
CHAPTER XXII. The mantelhhelf runs along the en -
Except for the impediment of the tire side of the room, fcivnting a top
trap oil the creature's foot, there toopenbocoek Over shelvethe n
s onei select eand would have been but one blow to that th e
battle in the snow. White fangs would painted directly on the wall surface
have gone home where they were
is a modern still life in delicate jade,
ed, and all of Ned Cornet's problems aim-
orange and silver, flanked on either
side by square niches lined with mita
would have been simply and promptly
solved. rors. ,A. small oblong Mahe below
This was not some little fur -bearer, each niirror is lined with orange and.
helpless in the trap. It was no less a holds a soft -toned vase.
creature than that great terror of the A deep inciosure with a padded,
snow, a full-grown Arctic wolf, almost built-in seat, has a small square din -
as white as the drifts he hunted
ing table set in front of it, This table
through. Only the spruce trees know
can be enlarged to se".t 12, thus solv-
how this fierce and curinit g hunter ii the dining problem.
came to snare his feat in the jaws of Al! Comforts For Little Folks
a marten trap. Nor could any sen- The nursery is a real triumph in
Bible explanation be made why the livableness, for it achieves a cleanli.
great wolf did not break the chain 'Tess easy to maintain, at the same
with one lunge of his powerful body, time avoiding that linical air. Its
instead of slinking into the coves walls are soft golden yellow With
pletely covered with golden yellow
silk illuminated from behind so that
the whole room seems charged with
veiled sunshine.
The sinal salon shows a harming
and waiting developments. The was
of the i1 I creatures often fail of any
kind of an explanatien; and it is a
bold woodsman who will say what any
particular ereatucic will do under any
particular condition. When he saw!
Ned's body within leaping range, he
knew the desperate impulse to,efight.
The ehain a the trap broke' lilke a
spring as he leaped. The steel leash!
that is often used to restrain a savage:
dog would have broken no less quicicel
ly, There was no Visible recoil; what
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