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The Clinton News Record, 1924-09-11, Page 6.x ^ ♦' pro , ea utbl,IUlt�+' � k ,I R asNbut't rhnt tAll uy ,.,o hhet called'Come kale, Fn' lair". Titer rod me to the gardni blot hChed spot,;..•, ♦'hors ?n a erti•e sun r}re e'had ptopaepd a lettloe rice �,, nd pen ng to t e sett riia�d n}d. w l st'ea$t Y YU eyes ode,„ e! my s a . ten° flour in6e dais 'foci eeareo,; ileus, run,4; ariedidhot tkl>.ms'elrnt Irl eo 'W'hen foot days: older I ei mdse hese- Seri-ilea 'When eserail dwhen I wiuiS ask' la 6i!f , it �C1.a a tbdal►. �Otee ss. Baty"'', boy �. 6'9 ,. ..,..,..:.,.... . - ,..:. - ' . •70 0 NO . a R X eSe� e 7. Q . U $ FREE SAMPLE of GREE11 %EA;OPOfl Req � �, Atom •.�, nd kept an et.eybateyer„„task 'CHAPTER ` XXXIII; you so much I'd!lrather die khan lie nmplayed her tiieicss, hands au3 feet ,':It;Wee. dal 'by ;tidy, sometimes pest' thig awful burden nn not6a•burden.', Ner.hiatdd to•ole what might meat `• by poste -thet Alice” ;put off vri'attlig•to, , 13ut,Youre,„, • 'san be other:`My hinted ng;.,gaze whole s...Mee sX her math's♦: 'In the morning;'She,would` ”`I don't .see how it clic With you, rive ' e it —1 ,want., p, :, sieve. tell herself that -she'd Write tieftge pile,;,;;5t l •, re 'a• that'ke')t my"fo;ith, ',sh`e! 'ade 'the; phili :'<' :It's. wontierf!h how you „ca The.,d,y , , at night', pe and h m e nn - rst 'Fa e.-'; grno e g,,� the P I< we•.ts r.la You Yt; x e nC me.•`ill alld'� ue sti"e" t thorn same _promise as^•:regarded, tri a ':Irfor and' ,.. ,,; • -fit thing :sin the;•Then' o, ' .. . :all trait .- i e =:' E 'began 'a • let,.ei, cious€ and Wonder, 1 y,:vou lett it Wei Two . h':Shell '1 t 11..-, , • _ wet , ; .' h it. ore' . . . , Philip ,,,,, , ,, '., ,, :;° ,; ,. , ., ,= : but 1deyns impossible -to finis ti I is Sl. , v ;1 ., o ng•"to ale lidi•'i 11 , . h:iidlike; I',d.: managed :,to foreef,: Ardeyne knew nothing ,of the did something I n .,>~ 1 t it : C mmg,;.on ,, a ha conflict" the su"fifers He dtd 4 jeaions I Baa;: � ` 4 iris vihoa uric called To (int. to ^ilei e he d`sovrn' t g g this o f e'tt Ar e is en g,. not guess that' ee. .the all, ting, Those tete p' Y t ith us•rye}ter,••The'seea bed' that to nil shed `shotes,ofa; oart(er better' battle ,;that all re forced got slat they 'gilt I v Vie; `1e•ilouis'; ai ,,And pointed, `'thele; before li?iY_eY r agains suchcruel were ranged t1 n And I'Wal•porfeci•.l miserable a got lite' s' greatest yet,.su Pi Y'•b aniounti such a :cruel foe as - distrust he thorns No lonelier -tbing•'I've over, seent, teWil M fn :almost . to ' hatred, of her , about ween. Eger; 'even ew what I .do, g ,, .afore I•knew - MY name in -dainty lettuce -green!" . o- .,,, ,•, !xied,,_evien•.b tyn mother. � r erv' o „ ^+ c :,, -I The: nett who: told t$s ,tale to me T.1117 hadn't mu ereytped h Why n w, and the. tension. nal: d tliattt: .:+ ER!'dress 'useless• for anything:but yearhadally en n rogerely d 0t Arsudde• laughed,Craved perso 1 M BT7TTER-..-;AND qTH 4r PLUM ,. ., .,, and hurried on was suddenly elieved_, ,1 '='': hal ,,-• , - • I e , ;had ml iage1.a. ed,r. }'a d . I•, have,t . , er-seen_ round hon . r Y. • : ..: - .,r, ,. tad he 'sab f rs wish he'd neY . .�.. , ?._ If only she arm' so g , ' He made fo 1, . w • • hem I haw a had fol marriage ,p. But There •Y a.5 - q hbu h W her :. eke-_ ., i .., _:. - sen. .One lime, t g , Ionfessron• to m ,,: ettuce gr - fsameco 1 ams in 'dee o ost dis: n •But, Ytel xi +blue -and -white •voile of Which 1 was � had told Philip., : ,Bu m,dainty {'the wee ons .levelled at Alice's• rut- a bulging-eyed'Gerinan,�ie he .ho 11 ori -,all - P e1T, I hope::your That kindly Mother, unbeknown; fond, - I treed an Fther night, who—ew . ; ,. . sees: • has particularlyf that-J:sari the 0 0 :• - Mere lettuce', s . , the lac..;, ms . .: Fan. mer , P.. tur l �uer d vrhE'er two. More t tl u1L . R. t e.;the bru . �, au , ed t no ,rT _ .. ..worked a. out drdn Gat . winch ,. toned. b ant. , nest ., . m n he •- led d: n . w irate 1 q ea ow ..had h Y , u e sown; Verve 'S aS i5 h .. _arm_ . < . I ehe q -ablution. tion of:4tikeW I ,, that he I d ve, pun ,..d„ ,, ; • s soapyo u .., su ieion • ,_. ,no- at1o.sAlices s , .d d Made -i. u o, and P , . I 1 i 8 g au ed too Alice h be 1 It GOOD THINGS• plate Plum Butter,.Wash"tlie perms, p rve r se them with a little water rn a preserve until soft. Rub Mg }kettle and cook , thrqugb, a colander or a coarse wire ve inorder-to remove•skins,and pits. sic Large'fr`eestone plums can' be 'dipped into boiling Wattle' for -a few seconds until' their' skins creek, then dipped. t ki can • Sine!? then.he s labored -Without stint - o sod .and`: put it into nearer. in relation- - :And A ice: g ate. and ur P . i ht a so. et Miele i -b ural -Philip oY-.has in.•Printr. w' .p. m.g.:. ,ra ,,.. ewasnaa r .:., keep thatname ..... ; ..., a� hem and h . , ,i To. k P t my d• , s- t . nd1 than as uncle, the t -not been , Lice . , •ore I shines, land Gillilan: the •washing — Then� I; but my:` dress.'il}to it,'and'• si�tnplo :evasion': o£ 'the truth, but. � -=a: most mofFenstve creat • I tick the current -and the inu-1 saw'it.• he stared because ehe• admired, us ' downrl ht lie—as-Alice Ahce•. � • iriio, cold" writer, ed that the s n9 turned runn g finale • r, Ian esti is 'chine for about flue minutest I lett The ,days slipped by; andthat Well, I . H wevex think return admit- e-I�iIled Waotl-¢tDr Paper see ed. off. The flsent her telegram. Even I ed _u,.. sto FII be readily thelit clear cold i Alice then split open, plums the colandere are re- the soapy water out and pwhere we began, ^" P and' started the machine had been difficult. • But shemuast? The{' red What°t about st ♦tingfor Ma�[1ng' the pulpY If plum the juicy, t in h t h to s y bit lea d b will w 1 "n 'the ' 3 0 u ttl the put x g be quite ,thin and should be boiled tl t squeezing or:wringing t ibis thing ettmg down to thicken somewhat -before the sugar is . added. For each' eupfuL of pulp, whether put through the col- • ander or' not, use from one-half to an three-fourthe.of a cupful of sugar - cook slowly with, frequent stirring i ired.: tri tc as des ',as t utter until the b 3e If a tart butter is' desired, les sugar should be used.:Cinnamont allspice and cloves should be added -to -suit the taste when the cooking is finished. two, with Dutch Apple Cake is made cupfuls of flour, three teaspoonfuls of if salt •one teaspoonful o - ^dei P kin o ba , gP cupful r one cu # lois sugar, P tablespoonful o onfu g , one P of milk, one egg, one tablespoonful of shortening. Use a mixture of one- ea one , and f one- quarter cupful of sugar spoonful of cinnamon for top of cake. Sift : flour, baking -powder, salt and ar -to ether. Add•milk to well- sug g beaten egg'and stir in slowly. Add Pear in . 11fix well. Po shortening. melted g mixture into a shallow pan and on the top place into of pared apples. Sprinkle with the sugar and cinnamon mixture and bake in a moderate oven. Moonshine, a delectable dessert, is made with one pint of mills, yolks of three eggs and three tablespoonfuls of sugar, brought to boiling point in a double boiler. Beat the whites of the eggs very stiff, and while beating add three tablespoonfuls ' of powdered sugar. Pare and slice ripe peaches, place in a bowl and add the two mix- tures, stirring lightly, until they are mixed. g dish Fillken Peach Cobbler: a ba with whole parod' peaches, ade two cupfuls of waters, cover and cook until tender; drain off the juice and allow to cool. Beat until light, four eggs and, a cupful: of sugar. Add a table- spoonful of melted butter, a half teaspoonful of salt, the juice from the Teaches and a pint, of new milk. Sift together twice a level cupful of flower and a teaspoonful of baking. powder. • ingredi- ents the other • and e flour Stir the St t together, pour over the peaches and bake about thirty'minptes:'unti'l a golden brown. Serve with cream. Sweet Apple Conserve requires four quarts of sweet atiples;,pared and fine- ly chopped (measure after chopping), two cupfuls of raisins, tetra-cupfulsof sugar, juice and pulp' of two oranges and one lemon, grated rind of one orange and the lemon, Cook until very thick, then add one-half cupful of •chopped nut meats and pour at once into jelly glasses and seal, Delicious Corn Pudding is. made with three full ears of corn, one cupful of milk, two' eggs, one' tablespoonful of ked of coo butter and one-half cupful rice. Cut and scrape corn from ears, acid then s e eat rice theeggs, add the b , milk. Put all together, add salt to taste. Place in a buttered baking dish, dot "the top with -the butter and: bake, until alight brawn. After you have cut' the, corn ronl the cobs, put them n the kettle'".with ,::a. theetatew and i e' leaeant flavor they impart.: enjoy tri p out the ' done take dish is o When the Wl cabs and scrape the: stew 'that clings erOnlya a was s a wa use Y .t a ca nr. v ao b tion sooht tat ou evas -again for two ozthree minutes longeY. sort of letter she felt impelled to Write .home to-morroW'? I feel I g •The great. d , it back Townshend ;_Fels forest faros, Sn •Canada, is well knows. Then wi too would be a. err I g nd _.114's full -III,. citizen lsekno n• dress out.of the water Meanwhile. Ards ne ^kept her busy at•tne;=has, his .iia S, F!c, to ever thinking •c a bit 1 lifted the he could "devise., line 'and when,,itl ` tri eve distract umadthout me, ;and"I've premised.tones to thousands of 'square miles have, and Fun rt on the with e ryant two of the summer li e t e mt"the'om and w t been burned over, likenew: - The 'took trips ited Y i• •look dwas Yi et of ueezing or rub- for mountain ,climbs.' Companionship London )us h The absence sq their life to- 1' t in bing kept ns color from; lovely a-Iwas to ether band,the , after all, :what better And now I indulge in nsthese lovely ma -basis' for marriage than -that? He told ferrels with a clear conscience,-1YI,J. himself that it sufficed, that in time orf este satisfied and. would be Y heP a : ' other m n SUNBURN. •as TO PREVENTLust as happy any man - Mrs. Farmer, the next time you are Everything was in getting used to an going to be at .worts in the garden or ideaa�i immense pity -for Alice; booked berry patch for some time, before you l up by anxiety for what effect,baked go, instead of putting on a smothering shock hisof Christopher anxf Shat s the he sunbonnet by smearing the face and. might have on her, helped him in his ,. of Islic es white nl not o unbeatenas Y e, w witheon. H neck thicklyr olut IT egg. Then put on 'a broad -brimmed companion and 'friend, he was her hat.. When'you come In wash with physician as. well. • Without letting her tepid water, then dash cold water on. know, he watched her with lover -like as rofessional solicitude. A alai You and find that instead face ot havwill ng a and feel he could tell, her mind was unusually, sore - gnu. fresh ash a face ito will well-balanced, even for a girl of nor- .delightfullyI hta of andcomfortable.fears to: -•mal heritage. • Never had he cone. I:used write. of egg for yeast to re across• a* young woman with as much ileus sunbWhy rd one day the thought common sense and less tendency to - c tura' at sale rated- Am- erican a rather„' it t now, and a renis catch'him�before ,he and I'd like to moves dn. "Of course, Philip,' .I'm •ready .to Alice A ou like," leave just as aeon as y er' destroying ma ur timber, trees that have. notY reach- ed, commercial size, and. the young growth. Mile' after mile of these par- tially burned or fire killed ', trees, greet r r weather, g whitening in the replied. { traveller through some of. our forests "Very well, then, Ph run around to provinces, and -the wonder has • often Cook's and see about time -tables and 1 P tickets. ':Would you care to conte?" been expressed, as to whether' some Alice hesitated, then she shook her use ccould be not be made 'of what appear- " rite a letter to ed t Im use w . ciiled ad.ftr e 1 eof h amount •moo s 'rite enormous I said, h she say, After Ardeynehad gott�'ont she Set! timber,. and what beneficial -use could h at- zdbeen given ninth hb.,e Shehas g task. made "af it i•to -thebe resolutely 3 herselfII —4 engird to think very hard before be, tention by those concerned. with the think of So many things in;the way 5f utmost utilization of the forest. This contingencies. For instance, its destt-I has been fully and carefully invests• that nbefore .the letter reach nation either mumsey or she herself I gated by the Forest Products Labora- with a fatal accident? tortes of the Department", of the should have met In - Nothing can strike quite so hard as a'the a the objectbeingdetermineto-andsuper- dead hand, and there can be no great- er reat ''trio effect of fi > ul u u ai l- n'the i g q onoon P n i P wt Marr following, tidal charring t f fl a than that et { 'remorse 1 a: Blow levelled at one who is Beyond beyond. . of the spruce and balsam, This the power of xetdrt. "° I vemable research 'work clearly de- -yea -Alice's. feelings towardscaher e , monstrated that this otherwise waste mother had suffered 'a violent rim fact,LInroduet can be successfully used for There was no denying grim OCCurred,• Why nota u�e'it' as a prevail- wards, Syzteria, than. Alice. : tive instead of as a remedy? I found This culfibus honeymoonhad of . been Ar- i s close. It tion. moved to t vett ov d e m 'lo once of. r • a • erbi P iov. eirs h itthe London I.o • r• 'return to p " t ,leu I deyne s intention. to A COMFORTABLE APRON. ' and arrange for a prolonged, perhapst indefinite, hoadhy, but now he began Many of us aro partial to the handy to realize that his own salvation lay little apron that can be slipped on and in his work. He needed it to steady off in a moment, and which is easily' himself, to keep hemand mads if ling laundered. I fried this apron even more too much upon Alice gn Y desirable when a strap is put across morbidities of mind and conscience, In the back to prevent it slipping off the_the cirrcu stesolneeS their comfort.ons iP shou.ders. Instead of putting on the was tooo usual patch pockets I she the apron wanted, 11 possible, not to love her less the desired width and bind with a bias but a little more impersonally. She was' "gill to mean too much to band. Then I sew the patch on the him It was useless for' her to a hypocrisy. So once again she began the long- delayed letter, and this time managed to finish it, although it could never. have been written with any sense wof satisfaction. Even the beginning different from what it would normally have been: have Dear, Mother, --You must won- dered and worried a great deal.at not hearing from me, but I found it so dif- ficult to write. Mr. Christopher Sma came to Lucerne at once after hearing zron.you, and told me about my fatb er, I wish you had told me yourself. It would have made a. difference•'Idow- ever, there is no use in worrying about that-noty. It is very beautiful -estedayiewe 'climbed very happy. the Rigi, and _I was not abittit'��o I hope Bordighera isn't getting Av e for het foe ' you. To -morrow' we 7e London. kindness itself, and if. he II 04V he an inside of the apron and then put a 'pricy were a strikingly handsome right side' a little'wider couple, and naturally people looked at thanap on si ur rised himself by Ardeyne surprised 1, A y - them, c t the pod is •evenI ( the stet: nae and p It it's front catching tang tearing and also disturbed hitmewhen gmen stared wrier, prevents dirt getting into them. and once he very nearly came to words with a German whose round -eyed gaze The Figurehead. had dwelt too long and too obviously A man endangers his soul when he upon' the little Brice seemed quite un - e. thinks more sof the front he puts up j At present the substance behind it. He ,conscious of her own beauty, and -as than of far as he knew—she was entirely sat. has formed the bad habit of letting jelled with life as they had mapped it usedmight t conte e be the nam .But his n r,day least ciheg. oraltto himself, , ea part'of the 'window-dressing oY when she would wake un to' the fact ..tate occasions. The intoxicatteg wine that'other women lived fuller, deeper of an easy notoriety has mounted to ,lives than hers could ever be. What his. head. He loves to see his name in tl.en? Pis -tonic love can so easily fail; print; he throws out nes, chest in the `is so trand17 suceent incidentally, ofehim might eye of the: camera; he wreathes with the world was full of men whom na-. Iaurol the brow of is own.Pedestaled ture had rendered unscrupulous as figure and does Homage to.it when he regards love -making. the Rigi the can get an audience. All this brings • They had walked up g weariness•to those that are not fooled. • day before—a long pull for Alice—and Ibr the truly great man, as a rule, , it had been a climb of charm and ad - is quiet and hires no trumpeters to 'venture. The pink and white blossoms precede hint with fanfare, neither does' ofirtli n cherry �t toes the d kept them he blow his own horn to spoil the 1 lair.was warm and fragrant, ohs the silences. He avoids dwelling on lits lcloudless., They had itemised frugally. f hiscontents 0 of seethe co n from does wayside s ld va bait=. H the t x Y own b 1 ;e Y own figure glory -crowned, the, most'philep's .haversack, scaled the height conspicuous in the landscape. Land returned more swiftly than they It 'n railway. Unta1 e mo to the commit- con n co had by The figurehead joins many 0 ssed u jou-•the statto n -;had been a day_to'llock up and treasure i embossed 1 , d sof an , days tees t-• the, i. box memory m_ s ri . one's Y ns. H e i n cry v all sorts of organizations. sing days, after which everything else could is feverishly sire}d of missing a tercels, not help iiut fall little fiat.l register hie presence or"the next morning and oil, failing to g fin: Now it was be heard in movements that are pas -,they sat •et breakfast,in their sitting- hionable and poPu ar, a e t n room. reinf g�e•pp. g �/ _R r il• c OU must fr uentl ; purify your akl?i,. antisep- 'kee it healthy, to bring to t Make p is a'1 i. t 0 t , • a glowing beauty. _ ; . en, ave realized this, winch Tl>pltsa}rds Of green and Vvotri kt ecozne •the • mo5t is why Lifebuoy Health' Soap has b toilet sod rn'tk%e world. widely >ased to p I• er areal health soap. Lifebuoy, }s a scientific skirt purifi made more lire, more bland, moi'® _•' Yet -soap caz}not be m P beneficial to the skin than Li'febuoy,. Its 'rich�,, "copious lather released• a bxe der uraaneise tic' ng all client which -it carried, down into ry Clean arid tang: . • the Elitist -thoroughly ittiptrritiea, and leaving IF HEALTH, S OAP More than Soap aHealth Habit ' LIAI! IT ED LEVER BROTHERS • TORONTO Le -4e1 T• --_ In the Silence. ce. A Rhyme to Remember. "Real action is in silent moments." Emerson. Come, soul of mine, withdraw a little the apparatus by which a b a letters printed , the rit k P spacea book, can read From all the busy turmoil of the reflecting light on to a selenium cbli, street, which produces sounds by electricity, nervous hurry and the renzied the person really reads by The so that h oat sound. ou Of mad ambition in. headstrong ram The new instrument is called a tone. solitude, ' scope. It' consists of a trumpet of silence and in end is horizontal; over the thou,in h the Seekwhich •wh To read the message of the Cosmic i end is stretched a sheet of thin ,i•ub• scroll; beg, on which is .0 drop of mercury, And chart the pathway to. the final- he light from ail electric 'Wine is A T goal• b- n o self s u and Y Ofllachievement Yu clued, e from life's Babel and the fang-.! broken reflections Using Prodnce'1 on Fie . I bt ling cries the plate, Of charlatan and mountebank, who These patterns are guile distinctive. urge 1 The note B flat gives a different eat, Each his own theory as a potent torn from the note F; in fact, the drop purge 04 mercury follows ivory variation of For ev'ry ill beneath unheeding skies. music sung or brayed into the teemed, so that a moving band o4 photographic Let the small whisper of the diner flare would record voice or music as a voice i- aeries oY different pattern, Speak of realities, search -thee and We thus have a new instrument for reveal the study of speech and eonntl, which ow �d C e hn .. g highfresh itsfo Hear ito s. g motives. tete way Thy hidden momay payee the For nobler living and unselfish joys. Thus is the silence ,will be born to is of Sounds.: Snapshots Four �orl' • o -s A new invention of Pt of nier d.'4lbe has made it possible t6 phatograph 'sounds. lefessor d'P:lbe is the Inventor of P urn if d t Pulp manufacture:by the sulphite pro-! cess:. "Such a result Will Mean ' mach to Canada, in that it widons the re- sources of our forests=sad will enable them longer to withstand the euor- mous demand being made upon thein for the raw material for, what was at one time almost a luxury but what at Present is recognized es a necessity— the newspaper. to them back into the kettle. WASHING PRINTED VOILE. 1 wonder if every woman who makes lug own dresses is es: fascinated. as l- am by the 'lovely :printed voiles • and crepes that we find in the stores. Even when,1 used to yield to the temptation to buy them. I felt that .I"Was being meet •extravagant,. for I could never seem to launder them'succeesfury, No natter how' careful i was, the colors. re he wouas ran .dad fad yxld make t \\� Philip !s �— were here at the moment : en //r , Color of Red Sea. I "affection -Sea is due 1 the shadow of ze«lily if one tr would ask gee to send you a,l • ~^ Not Found Yet. The color of the Red to enough to seek the substnuce which ate messages. Gaunt, and Nefghborfng`''Dungalist — "HOY, hosts- .of minute warin•water plant•' caste it, Mylove to father, Mr i bun a- that live in it. l The wish may be tether to. the Alias. Brownwhere's that portable g animals yourself._ ! thought, but the child will die in ie - Alice meagre ro:rh little letter at its low you just put on your lot h st; but it might so Basil; have bacon geared to?" The ideal hospital would be one; fancy if it is not also mot gree by tete ,w ,d b ege• time before "Tied the cog to it when I g s soon as well t the shock of des- t i Morning and the which sou h. t tq Progress undoubtedly the lnei'CUr,S or. to a t eti acted from photographic plate, and any Sound spoken or sung into the trumpet makes he inercury vibrate, a pattern of the and perhaps find many good Lees. A Sheaf of Saga Sentences. tree The man who rides fn a car with Impulse and wisdom for the fuller.i ambition for motor has a good engine, lire' ' but to avoid catastrophe lie news a And quickened thou shalt go back road man and strong co•ntrols. to the strife .l 1 P8d To win at last the voui's high,liberty! :diary a fellow,Who 1tae leen gs by appearances has later been ccuutoil among the disappearances, v cel n e - St is sotnetlitng to hilus di,c •,,,, e orae:' It woo, e a _ Brown— a ]d be destroys a bteal requires mo Alice ng,. t ge over , •had--as'she went to town t t s torn t her an immense en a rabbit run by" it was out" of date, int it y or char tion but a lot of folks melte the mite tritri M 'Yat for a o s; chairman e eco � covering & brute I11U5 have'seen said Sir Berkeley Moynihan, SRN,/ i6 done her an inrnenss wrong. years, that she fest guilty, of tete Army DlediC:�l Ad•I take ti4etls thinking commotion sate 11 fff as she dropped the stamped and ad- His Worldly Good visory Board, recently. the m•til chute. ', dein the brldeeroom had no • dressed envelope into At a wedding g. _ __•. OF ti e Mtlmsey would be,hurtanct distressed. means of support except his father, � 1. eo le Cdnti•ive,l d ORLD It was appalling hots .. .Y ,' bosh who was rich. �tY SCR GE ' each. other, but of the 1 Y t b 11lncL ener off .tete stage, where the real Usually the question was—"Whet) sc „chane - audible Iran But Philipc to- da. in-• e doY . shall W r invisible, toilers wore: is done by t. audible to the.crowd; he is conspicu-!ed"iwoul'd you mind if we started for ous by bis absence. 110 has no; time home to -morrow?',' he asked: " for activities which do not Cause him "Home?" Alice was a little bewilder- to e, earl. conspicuously. seen and .inordin- ed for a. moment. She had never had at0 Y heard. a home. , The very name of,lt was to - The figurehead counts for little more ,i;tally unfamiliar to hersThen she 'that <aaught-in the-•long-perSpective'flushed slightly. ""Yt'b'1 mean' London because he figures merely in .0 physi-:I your home?" - cal sense. •; What he is, what he .says, - "And"l;ours,"'Pru''-Philip Blend he noted What. he; does, are -all alike-withoutiaded lime ( She lowered hery gaze,imes end rid noted f first t o grit is for h w man erti se ! wonder fully leer :eye.ids were' fringed. first thcught is for his own advertise- „I don't know: 116el•so heepless1 -- Ment it. loved and trusted: ,hy the she exc.aimed slddeniy. Then she •can t o Oh Thr g leader. s it hem, crowd and Y. nLe i as looked at ' Philip. Don't you realize that it can't. :' POSSESSION. I can't ,titre on 3.01)1 charity , He found 14imeelf trembling in every t .rave took ' h slow mene- t ono • d` desire p Month site• mcntlf wit ., tub aiid a n a IMo limb, .•hem:^ ,.-. ton, P esston of ., Y, --'lice—f 0 ti le ave me now �• day,e A Y, eveh of.A tasks ed b ih., stupid Iced life e able to face that the world I- swear I won't. b , ;t scorn and With sco pity- 1without youli He droppedto his knees- should bebeside ° hex- d ,lard his .'head ire h'es Full of unending .duties, dull, and lap. The tear and misery, of losing gray, - her had taken'l.irh uhaWares. He'very were "Lifet beavoith -s•;idforwwouldn't '' taai�t�tA Wild ,.^ .:,.. �hi.e all to 1 esti, -sobbed,„,:. ,. J n y C A o W . n. .out 0 Iso. Y, h c It h1 n vY Y. in'r- t t -3 in./ .a 1 g Y ” hen o u Mean with charity \v Y tw hei cove c Y 'and s eels of • oured p deists ll d .c I p giving s are g listless builds;" Intuclt,to me It is you who g. Was this, I thought„the, best that life nie,e'y rythrng.:Ohs can't you,under- could bring stand., , - His emotion. Communicated itself to om ands?er'rocked in youth's mclungto tri , Tothey.g Y ` , herand , the stupendous power of :their, mutual a room had to re- TA to hurt , td. VJheg the bridegroom the -'1 in will I ,"After every meal It 1plieaaseti9f!':: eabfle. tan�agre sweet and i!a 1 a 8. i6 a� eDeaBeSat Well. - Good •Sire teeth, hre:aitil8 end digeotle;;ne: M0Pres the skezzt taste better. .tVa s Ota ._..-------� 'tw was y world e we i peat the. Words,” With all my worldly (To be continued.) 'goods I -thee endow," his father was Tho world to -day awaits a henefaC• known; not , k here goes before e s. t g "ITeav u boat t k toSb tri Geer -1 bloomed ' K by fat cut p greatly that of the people d re n e o Miceli s � er e t i It has rev n e sees ar 1< h as appropriate P tor such nti 1 - s to If ll e[i, t will deliver it 4ram'the great- cancer, iUe relies♦ be avoided. greatly within the next few years un- a less some -counter• measure; area lope cad tos3® heard +` 2" feet long le' his bicycle!" one who It is for preventing tv Shac •le ons. oa , - de the famous' voyage of „ • n plant," an Indian est bcourge of all trine—cannedtoaded death -rate in England may rt cis^ hich'he ma jungle canto meet terrible Bottle now 1 ., 50 miles with five men i .0 un le native; recently oome in Kew with it, coneum - 'but 0 000.000,e4,000,000, ? 'd for 'hes expedition, g strong smell of disease—compared old sc al, of ai Gardens, It has a s g1 less deadly=ancl so not, 5.000,000,001a of a00, g� q tion is infinitely has been presented to the explorer's tTiiinted meat which attracts flies to it. , x,e „ fast is it spreading that, its victims Sl�astly0disoa die fn old school, Du, 1� t g .•-AND T Dulwich College. Cancer, be adds,''.i - • '�.._ number millions. In this coon ry 0,000,000E the present opula I sal Host eacltt iro. o advancer age- be C eeo anc 1is •t9 . T 0 COME1 d WORST YFT 15 a risen .n u;e n are doomed to; die a lingering y a s many yang rtorage- petsbee Ido , , it takes n deaor al it• to eeeet•t;itself; also, ineicad of h Mute For allthese suerets science can do little or notiiiubal often Using. the cruse cf editcer, it l3' . The disease`la ! tttot<e likely, it merely eacelerat i1 '1 the of all the creat medical o -are l dtseaso'�tvh1ah tvoU1d.,1tat ^_ �m^ In t -s:.11 -- mi despair re ' l ,euro a Some.,dt..t use aiid ease. both in any. minds, ,and• bot nutuifest - • absolutely unknown. "It is' doubtful," are almost distractel by the h u•erlitg Arbuthnot •Lane, the consulting fear of Cancer, A Fool ninny melivel Sir surgeon to Guy's Hospital, London, re. • Wren have comrtiitttl rlticide ;when els marks, in an introduction to ''Cancer ' tacked,'by cancer a t 1 dire have ftp` Lor. ca.'S.Mils Barker, "whether a cure i narentlY creel tho-r lav t nab e 1t el -s- tacked for cancer will ever be. found.",ing to unfounded Lee rr htiving f Civilization. But,noW I'sing all day, as to and fro From tiny parlor' to the 'kitche:i With :epa"rkhng- sods •and :crisp new Or A, shi-fling path behind me,a, What delight .' Tometer ;'the scarlet jelly into molds,,, I ;love to ntaketthe'slender glasses slime• , ,.:±. - ' • , • Because this. little -house ;with all it holds Is yours Arid il.me! ' —Iiatherilie-Park Lewis,;•,,, love, "Aren't you happy?" Artleyrie plead- ed. "Could you be. happy if, we were separated?" ' '4 : She,whispered "No"=an answer to bath bus questions. • ' "Promise You -wont leave"me? .I want 'your solemn prmnise all over again—add this time it mast be hied nag,1 :Premise," • , ;: ' With his face eloee paessed to -:hers an, his axins'aroutit her, s e couldx ro• use g else -p5010ise,'e site shidel1uskiey Y s p "It's Bard for tyle to understand.I'dove aaes a U—Air _- lw^ • �/.glia:• t. A Disease o ivr the oiseaso, e:i• ' 'u ry o the conclusion," ltir. One, of the most c tt n d, a "i bave conte t ' -trines hewn e -neer is, that 1 r is . tures oE.ea hat cense 1 t • os• itr •:vt-1 i, t .n • er , •ell Bark S w bn arse the r ventable :au avoidable ` h rest 1 rather fele strong . ho ocr, who are d o dablo in the g ra epi . majority' of cases, that it 11 a laeaa_ I than the 13 at ccutraetr can ut tot ori. t an r. tion a - za . .i iii h of civ ticus not is .it T . appear iepr other A shortage of vie nni's :n the b 1y scourge,loProsY, which devastatedthea he Middle, affords another opening .' Cot uanrcr ' ies.''In,t ff en tin - I i< 'u od t.i 1 t .;^ins .. rd ice.. �tvo ••to va i 0 t s z ho :one Y U e, t Y r house,' arse A es hero were 10,000 Tape ar' ance 00± 1 g i • Uy ccnsimiing I�ss sub in Europe. Now Uecdtna :l More wholemeal broad, green vego• a o likely to for :that tt Y n a la o des not 1nfeC d t is tall • gild It cerin rads y 1 to do a gradually that fearful -ta as t t/tA • • 31a�, vaso `,• a rarity. Cancer is the leftose of e be, a ever Itmay n civilization. modern curable, but it is avoidable.", In tileauthor's;., opinion, cancer is caused by chemical poisoning; , tat"• workers are Poisoned by the poison in tbe7tarj,itis the same with'.oll work- ers, .• aniline workers, etc.,, We are poisoned with rubies- from tar and petrohsnielling roads—•for petrol also may ,00a eontribUtory falter du can- oer—but' the most,pow'e1r$ul source of poisoning is the piesor•Vatives In food. Also we , de not :eat sufficient' ooaree foods. 'Tholeath-rate in ilegland �r, dud, jai Calicet tothee adnaiiced countries," M. Beaker'Wcites, " s`l kelt to rise eery 1 A t is tar tables, and fresh s fruits. g, thoroughly, dangcrous ,.o ocL Therefore, to . escape ''0011051 we should carefully avoid chronio poisete ing and vitairirse,starvation o avoltl . poisoning, we thread avoid that state to remedy which so. ;lenity people ens. ploy strong purgatives, To avoid Vita• - mine :starvata,on we should acnlrl all substitutes forwhel0IOine natural food, however' tempting rite) May look and hotvever strongly they trees be re:. comneuclece to us, 1 9,tent (code "aloe patent medicines ere . equ:all r danger- s 1l).1Barker's book is a vale:, on. able crud timely; contribution to meal. Oat aliiente.