The Clinton News Record, 1913-04-17, Page 3TRY IT ,WHEN YOU'RE
TIRED
You will find it wonderfully
refreshing
TON'
EA
It sustains and cheers,
lasariasaissiareggargis
TEARS ARL' OUT OF STYLE.
111Station efust NOW be Expressed in
_ a More Subtle Way. •
One of the Most conspicuous lea -
tures of modern life is the change
irethe expression of emotion. There
epenas to be no doubt thatalle time
Will come when all the 'crude me-
-theds-tbe tears' the ciewneast
•' eyes, the outbursts of • passionate
anger^ the broken, voice -will dis-
2appear entirely.
Though women are still inclined to
cling to the old methods, men have
ah-eady learned to express feeling
more subtly,. Something of the pro-
• gress can ebe judged -from a coin-
parison, between the Present day
•and, .say, the sixteenth century.
We • know, for example, that
• Henry VIII.. constantly •burst into
•.‘tears ; that when the' Duke of° An-
.
fon was. ,beinge. pressed, to. mare,.
Elizabetteliretireetto.hie cebinet
• and bestowed half it day in shed-
ding ,thars', ; that when the funeral
sermon was being preached on the
Regent Murray of Scotland -"there
was not a than in ail that,iron crowd
•but Was in tears," and that when,
James I. was angry he "wept, like
a fresh -beaten babe!' 11 kings and
'princes eould ehOW their feelings so
crudely, it is quite certain that the
• people had no more subtlety.
What a change= to -day 1 Emotion
must be subtle now or nothing. Wo-
men nay. still weep a little,.but men_
maist do nothing' more obitious than
light a cigarette or go out for a
game of golf. In the old days, a
ma.n in tears was an ordinary thing,
• but now he is looked at askance,
and blamed, ,es ati actor is blamed
for forgetting his part. a
Watch a man at a theatre when
a woman on the=•itage bursts into
tears.- He is uncomfortable, and
looke away -net because he resents
se clumey an expression of feeling.
- He wants to have _ his emotions
touched, but -these tears and these
sobs do -nothing' for him. Even. the
gallery feels more inclined to laugh
,than to weep in sympathy. But
every one knows how a subtle sug-
gestion of grief by at clever actress
willgivethe whole audience a lump
in the throat.
Novels,' too,. are no longer wet
with the tears of their heroines. Au-
thors, recognize that the 'old syinp-
toms of emotion are no use. Their
heroine must be dry-eyed and be-
wildering. She must -net show her
• feelings in the old obvious, elemen-
tary way. She intist net brush. She
• must pot swoon. Above all, she
must not burst into tears,
SCHOOLS IN CHINA.
Students.- Bees the Teachers and
Study as They Please.
Some yearahme elapeed since thi3
Marieliu Government announced a
-programme of educational reform
for China,ahaving foe itrenbjebt the
,
introduotion- of =a national aysrbean
of education approximating as
closely as: possible to that; adopted
by the:western'.niefiions.ani, pee,
gramme has' made sole* lieadWaft"
, but has hot yet been carried out in
itseentirety, and • its ultiinate sue:
cess must remain cloithtful Until a
genuine attempt is =made to -intro-
. ..
dace and enforce strict discipline in
'all state ,sehoole 'and celleges.. The
laxity of the present cannot be bet-
ter desmibed than in the Words of
a C.thinese 'professor' who, in the'
eouree of aa address to the stu-
dents of Foochow College, in Octo-
ber, 1910, said :-- .
"The =lawless idea of liberty was
encouraged under the management
of directoSe Who theinselves brive
never had discipline. The studente
• found the best, place to experimeat'
• in r'egard to equality of which they
had learned in Japaseee books, was
either with their parents at, home
• or with their teathers at sehool.
• While in sehool the teachers axe
considered by the students -to be
their equals, if not inferiors; for' ,
• in fact, they have often been styled
• Ptiblic servants, • Gases oi friction
• between the teachers and the stu-
• dents, ending instrikes on the part
of the latter, are very often „i.e.-
Ported, in, the neweinape,re,•Witli the
unions formed in etheole the
dents become abeolutely lawless.
The positions of the teachers as
well as those ed the directors lie in
the hands of the students, who, in
feet, foran the moving spirit of the
whole ialethaution. With •the pre-
suniptdous power aqui-red from the
union which aheyehavO•formed, the
stuclonte, threugh the meditim of
the directors (the peesident of the
college), instruct the teachers on
the best meta -soda of teaching and
-formulating examination, gum-
, The fools are not:all dead, in,faov
10te olatliesah' lia,Viaff' b fa' r a sigh: -
For Wcal or for
Or, A Dark Temptation
CHAPTER
FerelOn spAlltar from the sofa and stood
beim* him withsclaeped hands And burn-
ing eye*, her friee- as marble white at it
weuld ever' be Maher' coffin.. '
"Amel tuad or -or dreaming, Perry?' Are
niy, 100005 blaying zne erase, or are you
tellieg me you have learned to love emne
mie Mee?" ole.gaeoed, hoarsely, ,
'It is so, P,velyn, ' he admitted, frank-
lyor
. ,"You will ever know how I strug-
gled egainst that love with all my heart,
end soul, ter I knew I %qui' pledged tO
1011; Yet I was , powerless to thruSt from
my heart the now love that had tercet
iuto it. Pray forgive me foe causing you
ono heart -pang, yet I must tell you --I
love. another tte dearly as you love one,"
"Yet all -this time, as my betrothed lov-
er, I haveatritsted and believed LI you-
worshipproleyou .as the very soul of, Min-
or," eriera Evelyn, With the harshest laugh
that ..ever' f ell from human liori-a laugh
that'inade the blood run oola in his veins
as be 'horrid it,
diStreSeed look broke over his hen&
tame faro. •
"I heve been Moro honorable than some'
men would have been- in eueli a ease," he
answered.
She sunk 'down ori theavelvet hassook
At his feet. forgetting, all in le 11,10Ment;
0110 ItaaaLhY St, Claire pride, thinking
only of her mighty love, and thatahe had,
come to her, asking to be released from
the peomises which bound him to her.
"You must put- this now love out of
your heart," she -cried; , "thrust,her mit
of 'your .thoughts-leerer 'to 'forget tier.'
"My dear Evelyn, " he -answered husk-
ily. "if X oould -but permute you sto be-
lieve that My- heart as &Teta/cambia lpot
-it istoo lath. Be reasonable. Evelyn.' -
"Wit* air this girt. to whom you. have
given the "heart that ,is pledged to mel'
she 'cried shrilly. -"Tell me who elea ia
where. you met her., aria how syou. eame,to
atarer her-aleaMaierithinfebackeal nfinitelinbw
iboked at her with gravewonder,
flushing a little under the scathing light
of heir blue eyes.
"It' is certainly your right 00 knoyr
Evelyn," he said with gentle dignity, con.
;taming elowly, "the young girl to whom
my heart has gone out is the little, crea-
ture whom I rescued from death in Cen-
tral Park a little more than a- fortnight
ago."
Evelyn St Claire recoiled with a terrible
cry; her blonde face grew livid in snots;
she tried to speak, •but her tongue Wave
to the roof of her mouth; the world amon-
ed to reel and grow dark around her -all
the horror of a lifetime was crowded into
that moment. ,
, 'Moppet Pother she' cried _shrilly.
"I'canoot betieVeathat I have heard .aright.
Ala no, fateacoula'neyer play no 00her-
1ib1e' tele& ab tbati" , •
hltis quite true. Evelyn," he repeated;
that incident in the park theme to have
changed the current of my whole life. As
I caught the slender girlish figure in ulY
arme from under the plunging hoofs of
her maddened horee, I felt a strange sem
station in ray heart' a longiog to hold
her there through life. I could not see
her face, for it was heavily veiled, yet
I knew that it must be fair us an angel's.
•She spoke to mea and my heart thrilled
with'every word 'she uttered --a. -
"GO on, KO our cried Evelyn, "tell me
•
•
And 'there was something'in her voice
that cOmpelled him to proceed. _
"You remember Little" Gay," he said
hued's,' "who left the village so suddenly
andmasteriouely,_ and .whose midden
death caused. etch .widespreadasorrow..
iiever told yeti orite before, Evelyn, but
T will tell you new. -I loved Little Gay
with all the" passionate depths; of my na-
ture; ehe was more to me than the world
kriew. My heart wentlout to this young
girl whom I met in the park because she
wuoea lile my beantiful love whom shill
death bad taken ftom me, Heaven for-
give Ina, I cannot tell Whicheone I love
best, MY dear Gay- Or my living love."
A groat change had come over Evelyn
at. Claire'e pallid face, but be Went on
unheedirig:
"She gave me her address -you 'remem-
ber I wrote you all about it at the time,
Evelyn -Miss Remington, NO. — GramercY
Park, —..
"I could not resteniteht .or day until
called there. I had. written the. young
lady. that I would bethere, yet I did not
end her at home. I wee athown into the
library, and was brought thee 'to face
with a portrait or, Miss Remington: the
banker's adopted daughter.
"Evelynl for one suortrenteI stood dazed,
stemobleee. 11'15 had hot 'been for the
golden hair that curled over the lovely
white brow, I could have sworn that the
original was meeLittle Say, who wae lying
In her grave.
"I left the house a few tztontents after,
but the face that smiled up at Me from
that canvas leas haunted me ever inee.
"I bave struggled agabiel the meet
temptation of thinking of her all, in vain.
I did not go to the house again. I made
ne attempt to see pr •commuOicate With
her in any way. Now you know Ina SleA,Y,
Evelyie, She le the only girl whom I can
ever hive. If 5 cannot wile her,_ it es eilY
selemn Wieli thgci unineariecl tie tI1O'grame.
W°U14..I0Ve I couldt,tVelY11, ,but,
aloe! 55500011,o,Tlie heart goes where God
Again the mighty force of her peht-up
love swept down tbe baariere 05 maiden.
reserveaand, ehis St. Olaire pride. ".
faaou vLSI abaermesaat 'Moth, Parma" Ma
cried buskily, "Sae- eauld uelerlove yeas,
no enema -es, ao. Think what it ie you
ask , when 'you wish, ine to, give. YOU 1IL
to anothets I -I -could almoet die for Yee.
I love you eel" • a•
could not help feeling touclied-tro
mutfh love lavished upon him in vain.
He felt sorry and *grieved for Evelyn,
for her hiunillatien: and her dietrese.•
He had- not dreamed She would take it
so bard. •
"Love like mine 'knows no reason," she
panted hoarsely. "I aek you, .wilt you
gaye-her up and try to love bier'
"It would be a fruitleris taek," he an-
swered sadly. '
"wiiry<llt -never care 100100a" she tried,
aprineing to her feet again, iteking the
Question in a low, intense, breathless tone
that inight have weaned- hint of coming
"I can give you ,only tbe truest and
WarILOSt. friendthip. I cannot, deceive
you, or build your heart hp on sa false,
delusive hope, I can never love you, iny
poorEvelyn.'
He never for,got the fame she tatined to,
ward him; it Woe distorted auto a fiend'e.
Iit ber passion ehe tore his betrothal
ring from het finger and stamped it bei.
neath her foot, crying out that that was
the way he had stamped Ilion hese heart.
"Evelyn I" he °tied, alamn,Om Hee-
veh's mune calm yourself. You distress me
snore than I can. tell you."
Por answer, she Voiced' up the fitiebing
dianionds and flung it into his -face.
"There Is gnat a 'thing as, love turning
to hate rit ,a single . instant," elm oiled.
"Your love would have Made me in angel
--takitig it from me 'has niede a fiend in-
carnate of, me -but I shall taRe , sucha
revenge upon you. that , you obeli bee°
cause to etutionelier, ehe name of -Evelyn
St. Claire -Whom you •have so bitterly
wronged -Co, the last -day of your life.
"I. hath you nowa,eveh as paseienately
as, I have loved, you,' elm cried , wildly.
"I will ` torture yeut proud heart as you
hove tortured mine tomight, pain for
Pain, and your tnieery will be .sweet to
"Evalyn I" be eriea. again, attempting to
hale hebled-but she snatched it from
him.facing him withglittering eYes that
fairly buened their way down to hie very
saes, •
This wimp, side ,of ..her nature, he hod
novror dreamed ofa He looked at her in
wonder and alaym
Now, in the hour'an whieh you have
broken my Heart, Estee . to my. revenge
fore it," she weht on reeklesely. •"Yon
filial) never WOO end win the Jaye of your
heart. Do YOU ;hear me, Percy .Granvelle
I have prieted Ton from her -not onee-bet
a. seeorid time.
• Hehooked at -her in ostoeishment quite
beSievine elm had eaReu the matter 'so
deeribi -to 'heriet that ,it hair turned her
100010. •"Listen one e _tell yea the truth;".
sbe went on - mockieglyi "Yon' held the
GiVee a Qt711C1r,
Brilliant Polish
Tlsnt LastS,
,Nd:r v
pea -thee
radar to Uee •
13etter for
the Shoes
Amoccoarnowsramcnnromater
1•41.m
af/
'girl' in your' urine in the parh-you Imnrer
upon her eictured face in' the Remingtoi
drawing -room, Id '130 instinct warned You
who the adopted daughter of the banker
"Yee. .think 5 mu going mad," She ad
sled irbut eornfully. " you 2e5 a Me-
lli°d In 101 madneee that will quite shod
You. I fancy. One phileeopher tent, us o
'the keett eYee alai inflames of love,' an
'other tells us 'lave le Lliltd;' YOU have
proven the lateer quite true. You were
,blind -you did not discover that Gramel
Esterbrodk, your _loot Wye,' and See bank
ere Adopted daughter were one ana the
thine. Hear me out, ,he (tried. '"aru
love. al -ay e Mole its mate; yet, even de
spite OVOIT instinct of your heart aelfiel
drew you irresistibly thwara tee girl, you
failed to reeogeize her!: s'
, "Evelyn yoa must be marl," he said
quietlY, "Quite mad, my poor girl, to hay
such leallueinatiense Little Gay is in he
111 soothiug tone exaspeeatha her.
"Se YOU have been duped into believ-
ing. she cried triumphantly., "I tell you
Little Gay hi alive; she and the banker'e
daughter are one and the creme:
There wae kith an, irresistible 'ring of
,truth In her voice, teat the words to
•whieh he was oonmelled to listen Oilier.
ror and dismay, carried 'oenvietion to Ilitt
Ile VMS so shocked., he could. only stand
there and lieten while she briefly outlined
a sketch of, (lay'e past. How Tremathe
hech. .traths,abducted hers ofeher Les -
(Mile from him, -and her subsequent illness
at Leighton ',retail' ithith amused the 'great
change in 7ber hair whioh so, diegnised
her appearance,: how alba Mad written to
him, and she herself had answered the
girl's .letter; deolarlog it, they ever :met
again it must- be ae strangers
'.
'Evelyn l',,exelaimed.Perey, "I dare not
belleve, pita' My :Little allevi ob. -au;
no, ore dannot 'date . net Credit 'emelt,. a
storsa-S10tatitagger inee-amath- me."-‘--
"A momUV v
ent more and engeance Will
be eaemolete." the aneWered shrilly. "You
eaw the Oil at the masked ball dressed.
as the fairy queen. Again your beart
was attracted toward her, but you did
not *now her. She recognized you, but
the 'words of the letter She believed had
come from your hand kept her silent --
she believed, You loved me and Iota for.
gotten her.'
He bouuded to his feet with a terrible
"Hold! hear me out," she cried: ,
Ie a moment more she had, explained
how Gay happened to be adopted by the
great banker. And eho added to her story
the pitiful lie that it Was gay who had
bribed the keeper of the morgue to mub-
lieh- to' the , waxed the story of her death,
:whens-on ,passingatbrough it; she had be-
lield a Poor girl lying there with a face
fatally -like her own.
Percy sprung, to the door with a bound;
but Evelyn St. Claire caught his arm lu
a steel -like clasp.
"Evelyn, de not bold me back," he cried
hoarsely; "your Words hove driven me
mad -with Joy. NY Little Gay -alive -how
shall' I believe that ouch delight, in in
store for me? I 0006t fly to lier-I—
"Stop!" commanded Evelyn St. Claire
-
"Listen to the sequel of my, story. I have
told you the teuth, that it Amy torture
1o00-5 have saved 51115. as the 'last and
sweetest morsel of ma revenge; you, are
not to clasp MY hated rival to your throb-
bing heal% giving her the love and kisses
that I ata thireting to, with a .starved,
yearning heart, Ply to the banker's home
as Quark as yom Call, and there you w1/1
leara- that yen. charming' Gay mystera
ously disantleared 'from their Toot over
a thrtnight ago. = '
"Search the world thaough-wear your
heart out in a torment of evils' and
suspense: but you, will never find her.
You shall never Ithow the taue fate (and
death itself would be sweeter in compari-
son) whiclt lute overtaken Little Gay."
CHAPTER 'XXXIY.
• A. borrible, oey broke from Peree's Deo
--aWful to hear in its intense anguish -
the veins stood out on tits forehead like
whipcords, and the perspiration rolled
down hie face in groat heavy beads.
''Evelynl" he oried, in a, kern, hoarse
voice. "Your words are terrible; I can -
net believe that you have conepired- so
cruelly to eeparateme from my love. If
I thought so, 5—',
Sbe faced him defiantly, her lieautiful
face white as death,. her ,eteel-blue eyes
'blazing. • .
. "You have wrecked ray life. and I have
Dale you baok pang for pang,' she said
slowly. "Every word I Bove told you is
true, If I cannot have your love. My
bated rival never shall. Take what te.
venge you will; it vi11 not lemon what
have done; it will not reetore your love
to yea."
The onragoa beauty swept from the
room with a moulting laugh, leaving Percy
alone to face the awful chock hor startling
revelationhad glean hint.
An hour :Tater Peroy was , whirling ae
rapidly as steam could -tale him toward
the city. • .
Men., women and children looked .ouri-
Ously at tbe •handsome, beggar& face -of
their fellow passenger, who paced relit-,
leerily up and clown the length of the ear
in a fever ,or excitement words are weak
to deseribe,
various ransom speke to him; he nei-
ther beard LOA saw them. a '
antes, : were earthing "to hien-the whole
'World • wae nothing to thoughts
ward' toncentrated ,norni 'one mthicet; ere
the day dawned bre Waled 'know 'whether
his darling Little Gay was living or deed:.
whether the and the banker's adopted
daughter were one and the same -or aot,
The train seemed to creep along 'between
the moonlit hills and over the babbling
streams to the impatient, meat whose Inert
Ives on flre,vvith the keenest, anelety.
Although the hour waselate when he
reathed ,tbe cite, be drove at Once to the
bankerar 'home, at Gramercy Parks -sprung
from the cab, fairly leaped up the DMA-
ble steps, giving,the, bell a. quiek, impera-
tive peal. -
Two gentlemen stood 1n the vestibule
In earnest eonversation; one of ;whom
opened the door at once, 'and Percy found
binnelf standing face to ,faise with, Mr,
R'
emington the banker, and. Mr. Letiox,
the detective.
.--Perey's great- delight at finding tbe de-
tective, noon wheal he heel been intending
th call aas soon as' be left the banker's
home, standing before him, knew no
bound ra . . ,
He never tementherea in whrit wee& he
tola them his thrilling story, bnrorter, the
banker to tell him at once if. hie lost
bride, bin Little Gay, -still lived, and was
known as his adopted daimbter,,
Mr. Reinington, with deep agitation, as-
sured him that he believed It Was Quite
true; Little, Gay liad .indeed 007110 ?roam
POSSak, where, ehe had at one time lres11
employed in the cotton naill, and the name
ehe,load renounced to take his' own .was
Itahnela Esterarook. It Woo newe to him,
hearever. great news, that Little Gay, wae
Pere* alrativillea. bride. .
Thespatlietic story of hew they bad been
separated at, the very alta, and the cruel
plot- of Evelyn St: Claireto-thrust them
asuncler, which bed acme' ca.rried dut with
euch -flan dieh enedese Seemed'aiore Mho a
romance than a painful eealitY,
Perey raved around the room like 'one
diethacted whets lie found' that the data
lino little bride who had. bean 'eo miracu-
lously restored 'to him* from the dead, as
it seemed, had in tIlltb, LS Evelyn St.
Claire had asserted, mysteriously dime.
neared a .fortnigIst previous.
He Teamed to be. onniforteds his poig-
na,nt grief wee terrible.
Then it all sone opt how the banker
and hie wife had gone te PASSOL: tO bring
Say home, ,believing, from theenote they
I d eseeivecl, she had gone With Evelyn
,Cilaite to visit- her, and, their dermay.
mem lent/rime the heieess bad not Seen
her and.knew 'Kabala of Tier wherealierita.
-ImMediatelympen reacbing the eitv the
bahlrer bad sought the services of Mr.
Lonox, the, famous decteetieo, 11,11d 1111 -
folded to him his story, begging hirn 10
r
t roe the where:limner of his adopted
daughter, Little Gay, and 1,0rthould bo a
rich nein' fee life: ,
,For the fleet -time in hie life 'the great
detectiee betrayed the most intense ex-
eitertieet es he- listened; far, 00' the nat.
rator Proceeded:- he had made the thril-
ling 'diseeverv: that, Little SOY, the- battk-
Gee 'adopted daughter, and the bride Fovea
Granville mourned' as dead were obe and
the stone, though he kept his cern e,min-
set beeathiug never a 'Ward of the start-
ling denouetneet.
The detective tomembered the beantiful
blends whom he hod firet 0301 th the news-
Paaer Office, and whom he bad folloived to
the drugetore in the dirrigulee et a ragged
old man, begging work in the shape of
show -cases to clean.
Ile had owatthed. her guito unnoticed,
whllehe .ea.iolede the irnpreseible young
)1ek ,hava. e10.451e
.02,10(1' SU nom tue
store tie tbe fashioner le Remington man.
131b11 at Orameray Paih, whore the strange
adventure drooped; 1000 1100, as heeltha
ened to the banlsort "steury,..ana hared
for a doseriotion of the Yeunglesay friend
wile had left tor the lliatillee with Gay
on that fatal day, ha realised that Gay's
?Aland WOO the ton, beautiful ;blonde whom
be bo 11 followea, Trani 'the \ding -store, with
tee deads, ' Deleon in hey poeseesien,
A Molt, FilAentAtil"
TEA
Ceylon's Choicest Leaf
and Bud; the F'Ineet
the World Produces.
---
SEALEEI PistOKEYS ONLY.
062
Black, Broca and
.1141
Re Quite believed that ,thie/girl was at;
the bottom Of the whole affair, Ile went
at the, eams after hiA oWn peculiar Melt.
105.
' Ile did not startle the beautiful blonde
en her fancied Orecurity. He felt, convinced'
that Gay had been decoyed to uome 01.00
Hi the oity an'd had been cleverly, en,
"When he reata of the approaching 'mar.
Huge of Piney Granville and tido Athol St,
Claire, the whole case was as plain as
day to his keen, experienced, eye, 11, 111.
tended to stop the ceremony at all has.
aids. but in the ,interim be had Meta
tilted:a vigorous Beach for the, Interring
gal rabut it. seemed as if all the evil' pow-
ers were arrayed- agelnst'him; for •the
first time in hie -life lie failed th obtain
the elightest•elew. 'And at, this stage of,
affairs Percy Granville had oome upon
The ease hadabseen carried on with the
utatost,esenatereeenot'even , the Menthe}, ,ru-
moo Misshiberhingtop's inyeteriotor
• appeartinegaletakedethut - '
Eicoetionced Men' were'detailed 50 ;auk
up the miser; evera Peek and cranny of
the great inetropolie, with its hidden
crimes, Watt carefully explored -all in -vain.
If the eatth had opened and ewalloWed
Ga,y, elm could not have been More
cionepletely lost tre the world. •
Percy's grief 'was terrible to bebold. To
have his lost darling restored' im. to hwas
iiideed heararencling. 'Phe 'poor fellow
haunted the detective's' private office like
shadow, begging them to inform him
when they obtained the slightest clew.
aOlie Gay, my love, if. Yell bad hut come
to me when Hazel died, bow lunch misery
might Imo° been spared -us both!"
HOW much blinder his eyes and brain
had been then hie heart at that masked
ball at Leighton Hall. How true his heart
bads been., when • it ,‘elaimed,, Gay for ite
oarne derinite -the' 40050150'that , ehrouded
her eidentity, and it had been quite the
mem when fate oast her Bo etrangely in
his Arms that day in the park. He re-
membered how tightly his arme_had closed
about, her, and how the yearning longing
that nosseesed him to press his lips to
the sweet -tremulous mouta the heavy
veil but half revealed, almost, overpow-
ered him.
And to think that 111 was hie own last
Gaye
He wondered that 'his heart bad not
broken when he had gazed. 00 he believed,
on her sweet face in the coffin-tbe lovely
face of his lost bride -that lied hold all
the sueshine of hie life. ,
Mo bed been weeping hie vety heart out
over her lonely grave, over which he had
Placed a marble shaft, which told, the
world that she was hie. Yet alt this time
Gay had been alive:and, bitterest of all
hitter thoughte,• she had believed that he
had 000000 to lave her; believing, too,
that it was his wish, if they ever islet
amain, that it would be-ree strangers.
.couad thareela refrain from cursing
Evelyn St. Claire for the hand she had
had in at, although be knew that it had
been her great love for hiraself that had
tempted her tro desperately arid fatally.
(To be contlnuede
SCIENCE OF D1tE4111i..
Memories of Pas* --t Experience of the
• Individual.
In many eases where the incidents
'of a dream seem to beentire/y un-
familiar it has been shown by care-
ful investigation that .they corre-
spond to • actually experienced
events that have escaped the me-
mory of the waking self. Delboeuf
records an, interesting eiample of
this. In 1862 .he dreamed that, he
Lound two lizards,in the snow. He
took them up, warmed them, and
placed them in a hole la a wall, to-
gether with a small fern,- which he
knew they. liked 'to eat. The :time.
of the fern seemed in, his dreams to
be Aspleniem ruta,,muralis: Later
on in hie'dream he saw, two •other
lizards come and eaf the remains
of thesferro' and tlienea, avholerhost
of lizaids:c6rping to the wall' 10 10
'long procesSion which covered, the
entire street. On waking he could
not remember ever to have heard
the name of the fern of his dream,
although he discovered that a fern
called Asplenium ruts, muraria real-
ly existed: Sixteen =years later,
however,' he happened to be turning
over the pages of a friend's album
of dried flowers, and to.his surprise
came across the :Very fern, with the
Latin name written underneath in
his Oarill handwriting. He then re-
membered that in 1860, two years
before the dream, 'Ise had met the
sister of his friend, and to please
.her had Written the Latin namesun-
der the variouo. planta beefier album
et the dictation of a botanist.
Fifteen years after the dream_ he
also discovered the source of the
lizard procession in an 'old' illus-
trated paper, dated feelowhich, as
O regular subscriber, he must have
seen. Innumerable cases of a shin-
wnahtouvirae,eam.earekan .blieychoericgreci negdtiotiothoe
memory may be an dreams. , They
also. -warn us not too rashly to' be-
lieve that inCidenta in a cirealn
seem en;tirely, nevi are really so. •
A SAFE ANSWER.
"Can you lick Kelly 7"
"Does he bolave in arbitration 1"
"He does."
"I kin,"
. • lit
lfransforrod.
. -
Ho told the shy, Maid of his love,
The color left her cheeks.
But on the shoulder of his ,coat
50 showed for several weeks,
aerielealetellealegrellelletallaralearielle
,HOM
Dainty bishee.
Thee- Croquettes. ----Wash the rice,
boil and strain it. Use one cup rice,
one-lialt cup sweet milk 'one table-
speon sugar, one teaspoon butter.
Simmer gently in a saucepan over
the fire, stirring until the rice has
absorbed the milk. When slightly
cooled flavor with one-half teaspoon
of "lemon or vanilla extract. Add
the white of. tem egg (unbeaten);
fry in hot grease, dropping in a
spoonful at =a time. Drain on
cheesecloth and roll in pulverized
sugar. -
onutto Ilistrue.-Make a tornato
soup from two cups, celery stock,
two cups of eooked tomato, one tea-
spoon if silgar. Simmer an hour
and run through a sieve'. Cook to-
gether one Tablespoon of butter, two
tablespoons of flour. Add the
strained tomato; simmer five Min-
utes. Acid ono cup of sweet cream
and a pinch of soda. Serve at once.
Lemon Jelly. -To one-third box
gelatin add ene cup cold watee.
Soak one hour., Add one cup hot
Water, one-half cup lemon juice,
one teaspoon lemon extract, two
cups sugar: Stir till dissolved. Set
on ice till jellied and cold.
Scalloped Fielt.-Cut fish in small
pieces:eteefeceliSkinand boriee. Use
coldeooked fish. Chop cold boiled
eggs and potatoes in alternate lay-
ers. Fill a buttered baking dish
three-gamters full of this material,
alternating firsh,, potato and egg.
Cover with white sauce, sprinkle
with breaderumbs and bake twenty
or twenty-five minutes in moderate
even.
White Sauce. -Cook together and
mix well one tablespoon butter, one
teaspoon flour. Add one cup sweet
recon, simmet five minutes and
season.
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e0ISM10
Salads.
Onion and Tomato Salad. -Take
half. a dozen firm ripe tomatoes of
medium size, wipe them with a wet
towel and cut themsinto slices a
guarter of an inch thick. Peel a
medium sized =onion (Spanish or
Bermuda) and slice very_thin. Ar-
range- the sliced onion and tomato
in layers in the salad bowl and peur
over them a plain salad dressing
made by mixing together one tea-
eaPlul of salad oil, two tablespoon-
fuls of vinegar, a half teaspoonful
of salt, and a half saltspoonful of
pepper. Use this salad m soon as
made. We should have said that
young green onions may be used for
this salad as well as the others.
Cold Meat and Potato Salad. --
Cut a pound of cold' cooked meat
into thin slices and then into small
squares, and mix with a pint of
,cold, chopped potatoes. Put a lay-
er ef this at the bottom of the salad
bowl,' cover with choPped parsley
and salad dressing, put in another
lever of the meat mixture and again
the dressing, and continee till all
the material is used. Place the bowl
in the 'refrigerater for two hours or
so, and the salad is ready for use.
Salad, Rouge et Blanc. - Take
a close, firm red cabbage, trim off
-4
- sfia.-4 •
.4e:lf
conrireari
Atait.itae
re. the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST. and IIEST HOhtE
01• ane c‘n bnc--Why yew don't even hove to
knot., what KIND of Ctoth yotir Goode are made
of, --So Mlatekes are Impossible.
Send for Free Color Card, Story Bookie...ref
Booklet giving result., of Dyeing over•other colon. •
'The 3OHNSON-RI000JWSON CO., Limited,
Mono eel, Canada.,
• To guard against Muni 'in
Baking Powder see that all ingre-
dients are plainly printed on the
label. The words "No Alum',
without the ingredients is not
sufficient. magic Baking Powder
costs no more than the ordinary
ldnds. Full weight one pound
cans 25c.
EW GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED
• TORONTO, ONT.
WINNII;)EG MONTREAL,
•=224,M2====nv"‘‘‘\\
the outside leaves and cut into four
pieces, wash in plenty„of water, and
(Iran). Break'the leaves apart, re-
move the stalks and ribs aod cut the
rest into shreds. Now cut the heart
end white sticks or two heads of cel-
ery into pieces and mix them with
tim cabbage in e= salad howl, gar-
nish with young green tops of celery
and serve vvith a dressing .poured
over all, prepared as follows': Beat
one egg and fix in gradually,a, tea-
spoonful, of salad oil, a tablespoon-
ful of vinegar and a half teaspoon-
ful eaoh of sugar and dry mustard.
Season with a little salt end Berve.
Hints for the Rome.
Potato balls which are 'salted in
'butter after being boiled are delic-
ious. They should be served with
a generous sprinkling of rainced
paraley.
To clean a frying pan after fish
or onion, boil out the pan with so-
da water, washing clean, then put
it Oh the fire and shake a little oat-
me
a
el
inTstop a door hinge from creak-
ing rub it with a lead pencil.
Tartaric acid removes almost any
iron rust blemishes, and is an ex-
cellent article for removing yellow
marks., •
When gilt frame or molding of
roOnis have specks of dirt from fles
and other causes upon them they
may be cleaned with white cif egg.
applied with a camel's hair brush.
Bran is much better to use for
cleaning raatting than soap and
water. Tie the bran in a bag, dip
the bag into clean warm water and
rub the fatting briskly with this;
then -wash itoffwith a cloth wrung
out of warm salt water. This me-
thod freshens it up wonderfully.
* Should the knob come off at pan
or kettle, a screw can be slipped
through the hole with the head in-
side the /id. Screw a eork onto the
protruding end, This knob will
not get hot and can be replaced.
' A. little ammonia in a few spoon-
fuls of alcohol is excellent to spoage
silk - dresses that have grown
"shiny" or rusty, as well as to take
out, spots. A silk, particularly a
black, becomes almost like new
when so sponged.
Silver spoons or forks may be
cleaned and brightened by leaving
for several hours in strong borax
water; the water should be boiling
hot when the silveY is put in. Sil-
verware which is frequently washed
with ammonia water will need
cleaning much less often and much
work be saved.
Carpets if well sprinkled with
salt and then wiped with cloth
'squeezed out 'of warm water con-
taining asspponful of spirits of tur-
pentine tci ..every, quart will look'
bright 'end new ancl will not be
treuble.d with, moths and buffelo
Cranberries can be kept fresh for
any length of tiine if placed in a
jar eonf bola water changing,e water
oft
When washing any ga,rment made
of silk add a teaspoonful of methy-
lated spirit to the water and iron
while damp. The silk will look just
like new. •
Coddled eggs are se good the re-
cipe will bear being repeated. Fill
41, pitcher with brining water, drop
the egg into it, end let it _stand five
,
minutes or more. The 'egg will be
clear like jelly and extremely diges-
tible.
Postage stamps carried in a purse
or handbag will often be Linn&
stuck together. Never attempt Ito
separate them by pulling theta, but
simply lay them flat and press with
a het iron. They will then separ-
ate. quite easily.
Te, remove coffee stains from silk,
satin, or any other material, soak
in glycerine; 'then rub gently with
a soft cloth. Rinse with warm
water, cover with a dine cloth, and
iron the wet portion until dry.
• Dates stuffed with peanitt butter .
and then rolled in sugar are a pleats.
ing change fioni,,dates stuffed with
nuts.
If a curtain pole or portiere is
rubbed with hard soap before being
put up the draperies will slip on
easily.
Cheese 10830 be kept soft and good
for a long tirae if wrapped in a cloth
wrung ont in vinegar and then
wrapped again in dry cloth.
Bread can be well toasted in it
corn popper. For English alter -
noon tea there is nothing better
than a fork with a handle about
four feet long to hold over the em-
bers of an open fire.
A wardrobe to fit under the bed
is a great comfort when bedroe:n
space is limited. A neat box can
be made to fit the space, and it
should have handles and rollers.
In baking beans for a small fam-
ily it is a good scheme to divide a
batch so as to nearly fill several
empty pound coffee cans. The cans.
can be kept in the refrigerator for
a week aaitl heated when desired.
•re
When women vote and the elec-
tion doesn't go to suit him a man
can blame it on his wife.
Seed Corn
On the Cob or' Shelled. Imp. Learning,
or Nabite Clap Y. Dent $1.36 per bushel.
Longfellow 51.60; Corapton'e 61,60.
Preight paid in Ontario on 10 buthels
or more. Bags free Writ for cateloguo.
CEO. KEITH & SONS. Toronto.
Seed merchants 61110C 11366
Any huge girt can do the
churning with
AXWELCS
Favorite Churn.
mainla the smoothcat, richost, moat
&Moue leator you ever tasted.
The roller bearaci-ned hand and
foot lovers -make churning an 0010 11111,
even for 0 child.
All elms from N treara ethons.
Write for catalogue if your dealer doss
, not handle this there and
Maxwodes "Champion"
'Wisher. •
David tdasiven & Sons,
- St. Bia4.6. Ont.
arre'rea
NETHER,' for a silo, a • milk -
house, or a million bu.shel grain
elevator, concrete is the most
ecoriormea mg, material to use to -
Concrete never requires repairs, and .
the saving in repair -expense alone
makes the greater econotny of using
concrete more apparent every clay.
The cost of other building materials is
constantly increasing.
The cost of cougete b being reduced.
Canada Cement
which Canadian farmers use, with their own sand, stone and gravel to make
concrete, is the only ingredient you have to buy. =
We have, by reason Of our large Output arid scientific methodn, been able to
biing the price of "Canada" Cement so low that it is within the reach of
everyone.
• An increase in demand results in a greater economy of production, and when
conditions have Warranted it, we have, from time to
time, shared this saving with the consumer by redue- If this ithel is noon
ienognititedermtioceinocfreCaasen-adaasCfZeLtiarmTehrsi' 1de:1'11151'i cwona-1 ^c-vi;en'Yad' boaCR:itneientrrk„
crete s superiority OVer other materials, .
When`you buy cement, see that you get 'Canada• ..
Cement; by so 'doing you will assure the cdmplete
sucCess of all your concrete work. , • -
Send a post card for our book "What- the Farmer
Can: do With Concrete." It -is free.
.,ere Is A dsnula.Ccm,eal ea er In onr,nog
Canada Cement Company EhniMontrealfed ,
A,Y,043:11 faCatW
„
ante
AtriteetO,,
11