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Durham Review (1897), 17 Apr 1913, p. 6

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must be subtie now or nothing. Woâ€" men may still weep a little, but men muâ€"t do nothing more obvious than ligh a cigarette or go out for a game of golf. In the old days a m«n in tears was an ordinary thing, but now he is looked at askance, an‘ blamed, as an actor is blamed for forgetting his part. Watch a man at a theatre when a woman on the stage bursts into tears. He is uncomfortable, and looks awayâ€"not because he resents so clumsy 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 sugâ€" gestion of grief by a clever actress will give the whole audience a lump in the throat. Novels, too, are no longer wet with the tears of their heroines. Auâ€" thors recognize that the old sympâ€" toms of emotion are no use. Their heroine must be dryâ€"eyed and beâ€" wildering. She must not show her feclings in the old obvious, elemenâ€" tary way. She must not blush. She must not swoon. Above all, she must not burst into tears. hadt ‘earned m either with the or with their considered by the students to be their equals, if not inferiors; for, in fact, they have often been styled public servants. Cases of friction between the teachers and the stuâ€" dents, ending in strikes on the part of the latter, are very often reâ€" ported in the newspapers. With the unions formed in schools the stuâ€" dents â€" become absolutely lawless. The positions of the teachers as well as those of the directors lis in The fools are not all dead, in fact, lots of them haven‘t been born vet. some years have elapsed since the Manchu Government announced a programme of educational reform for China, having for its object the introduction of a national system of _ education _ approximating as elosely as possible to that adopted by the wostern nations. This proâ€" gramme has made some headway, but has not yet been carried out in its entiretyv, and its ultimate sucâ€" we D the hands of the students, who, in fact, form the moving spirit of the whole institution. _ With the preâ€" sumptnous power acquired from the unien which they have formed, the students, through the medium â€" of the directors (the president of the college), instruct the teachers on the best methods of teaching and formulating _ examination _ quesâ€" tions."" WI Students Boss the Teachers and Study as They Please. but was in tears James I. was an a freshâ€"beaten ba princes could sho erudely, it is quit people had no m What a change and, sav, the sixteenth century. We know, for example, that Henry VIII. constantly burst into tears ; that when the Duke of Anâ€" jou was being pressed to marry Elizabeth he "retired to his cabinet and bestowed half a day in shedâ€" ding tears‘‘; that when the funeral sermon was being preached on the Regent Murray of Scotland "there was not a man in all that iron crowd One of the most conspicuous feaâ€" tures of modern life is the change in the expression of emotion. There seems to be no doubt that the time will come when all the crude meâ€" thodsâ€"the _ tears, the downeast eyes, the outbursts of passionate anger, the broken voiceâ€"will disâ€" appear entirely . Though women are still inclined to cling to the old methods, men have | already learned to express feeling: more subtly. Something of the pro-, gress can be judged from a comâ€" parison between the present chyi and. sav. the sixteenth century. _ | Emotion Must Now be Expressed in a More Subtle Way. ent You will find it wonderfully se refreshing LIPTON‘S TEA U TEARS® ARE OUT OF STYLE. It sustains and cheers Gives a Quick, Brilliant Polish That Lasts sCHOOLS IN CHINA. s in tears,"‘ and that when [. was angry he "wept like beaten babe.‘" If kings and could show their feelings so , it is quite certain that the had no more subtlety. a change toâ€"day! Emotion subtle now or nothing. Woâ€" v still weep a little, but men IT WHEN YOU‘RE T U t LY 4C ipanese parent ea of liberty was the management themselves have ne. The students ace to experiment lity of which they manese books. was th T inn the tfu s at home at school. wchers are |POLISH nce the No Turpentine For answer, ehe picked up the flashing diamond and flung it into his face. "There is such a thing as love turning to hate in a single instant," she ecried. "Your love would have made me an angel â€"taking it from me has made a fiend inâ€" carnate of meâ€"but I shall take such a revenge upon you that you shall have cause to remember the name of Evelyn 8t. Claireâ€"whom you have so bitterly wrongedâ€"to the last day of your life. "I hate you now, even as passionately as I have loved you," she cried wildly. "I will torture your proud heart as you have tortured mine to-nifiht. pain for pain, and your misery will be sweet to ""C Kave me her addresaâ€"you rememâ€" ber I wrote you all about it at the time, gveliyn Miss Remington, No. â€" Gramercy aPKk, & "I could not rest night or day until I called there. I had written the {oun' lady that I would be there, yet I did not find her at home. I was shown into the library, and was brought face to face with a portrait of Miss Remington, the bal'lvlc'l."! adopted daughter. . ~1 can give vou only warmest friendship. I you, or build your heart delusive hope. I can â€"nev poor Evelyn." HMe never forgot the free she turned toâ€" ward him; it was distorted into a fiend‘s. In hber passion she tore" his betrothal ring from her finger and stamped it beâ€" neath her foot, erying out that that was the way he had stamped upon her heart. "Now, in the hour in which you bave broken my heart, listen to my revenge for it," she went on reckleesly. "You ahall never woo and win the love of your heart. Do yon hear me, Percy Granville? I have narted you from berâ€"not onceâ€"but a second time." "Evelyn‘‘ hbe cried, in alarm, "in Heaâ€" ven‘s name calm yourself. You distre:s me more than I can tell you." _ _ _ _ _ "Evelyn!‘‘ he cried again, attempting to take her handâ€"but she snatched it from bim, facing him with glittering eyes that lai\:ly burned their way down to his very "Evelyn! for one moment I stood dazed, #speechle«s. If it had not been for the golden hair that curled over the lovely white brow, T could have sworn that the original was my Little Gay, who was lying in her grave. "I left the house a few moments efter, but the face that smiled up at me from that canvas has haunted me ever since. This was a side of her nature be had never dreamed of. He looked at her in wonder and alarm Bt. Claire‘s pallid face, but unbeeding : "She gave me her addresa ber I wrote you all about it 5n~lkyn Miss Remington, No. Un k. =â€"â€"â€"â€". S o e e se t AHe RTmeey "I have struggled against the aweet temptation of thinking of her all in vain. I did not go to the house again. I made no attempt to see or communicate with her in any way. Now you know my story, Evelyn. She is the only girl whom I can ever love. If I ecannot win her, it is my !:n»l('ml: ‘w:ah to go unmarried to the grave. Â¥ siura 12200000 ae e BP CC PRC ETE I would love you if I eould, Evelyn, but, nlfilq.' I cannot. The heart goes where God wills it." Again the mighty foree of her pentâ€"up love swept down the barriers of maidenâ€" ly reserve and the St Claira nrida He looked at her in astorishment, quite helieving she had taken the matter so geoply to heart that it had turned her rain. § 092002000002 008. n ns P A & aa 2 22 P . ic I will tell you now. I loved Little Gay with all the passionate depthe of my naâ€" ture; she was more to me than the world knew. My heart went out to this young girl whom I met in the park because she was so like my beautiful love whom chill death had taken from me. Heaven forâ€" give me, I cannot tell which one I love st, my dear Gay or my living love." A great change had come over Evelyn Bt. Claire‘s pallid face, but he went on "Listen and I will tell you the truth," she went on mockingly. "You held the "You remember Little Gay," he said huskily, "who left the village so suddenly and mysteriously, and _ whose . sudden death caused such widespread sorrow. I never told you of it before, Evelyn, but would ever be in her comn. se i ing mad," she adâ€" "Am I mad orâ€"or dreaming, Porey? ‘"!d.a“.'éo::'.?:fif &:Int.oyo: _Awvill see a meâ€" my senses playing me false, or are you Thod in my madness that will quite shock | telling me you have learned to love some | you, 1. lanty... Une phildeopher teils us of & ht o5 s0, "Eretwa"" ho aamitie | ‘the keen eyes and instinets of love," anâ€" "It is so, Evelyn," he admitted, ".nk"other ols us ‘love is bliind: you have | tv. _ "You ‘will never know how 1 strug | OTotin tho Titter dite, ifhe. Tok were ‘:Ied against that love with all my heart blindâ€"you did not ‘discover that Gayne!l and soul, for 1 knew 1 was pledged tqunterbrool your lTost Tove. and the ‘bankâ€" | you; yet I was powerless to thrust from | SW T dooled. dnughtct. were .ohe and. the my beart the new love that had crept Same. _ Hear" me out,"" she cried. *Irue | into it. Pray forgive me for causing you love .nlwau finds ite mate; yet, even deâ€" |e, hearpname yer 1 must ol P io t | spite every instinet of your heart which |\love another as dearly as you love me." | i you irresistibly toward the girl, you ‘ “Ylhh‘“ this ied ant bet "“,‘;"'i:"",o’fi"; failed to recognize her." § | er, ave trusted an leve e= i " ‘he 8% | worshipped you as the very soul of honâ€"| "Evelyn you must be mad," he said Evelyn 8t. Claire recoiled with a terrible ery; herâ€"blonde face grew livid in spots; she tried to speak, but her tongue clave to the roof of her mouth; the world seemâ€" ed to reel and grow dark around herâ€"all the horror of a lifetime was crowded into that moment. . "Repeat it, Percy!" sahe cried shrilly. "I eannot believe that I have heard aright. Ah, no, fate could never play me so horâ€" rible a trick as that!" "It is quite true, Evelyn," he repeated; "that incident in the park seeme to have changed the current of my whole life. As 1 caught the slender girlish figure in my arms from under the plunging hoofs of her maddened horse, I felt a strange senâ€" «ation in my hbeart, a longing to hold her there through life. I could not see l'le‘{' face, for it was heavily veiled, yet all And there was something in her voice that compelled him to proceed.. f Ohomegr Doi TR i dn ns sc ia s h i 1 knew that it must be fair as an She spoke to me, and my heart with every word she utteredâ€"â€"" "“(‘}‘o on, go on!" eried Evelyn, He looked at her with grave wonder, flushing a little under the scathing light of her blue eyes. y G "You must put this new love out of your hbeart," she cried; "thrust her out of your thoughtsâ€"learn to forget her." ‘My dear Evelgn." he answered buskâ€" ily, "if I could but persuade you to beâ€" lieve that my heart is irretrievably lost â€"it is too late. Be reasonable, Evelyn." "Who is this girl to whom‘ you have given the heart that is pledged to me?" she cried shrilly. ‘"Tell me who whe is, where you met her, and how {ou came to lcfing' herâ€"keep nothing back. I must know All. "It is cernin!jy your right to know all, Evelyn," he eaid with gentle dxfuity, conâ€" tinuing elowly, "the young girl to whom my heart has gone out is the little ereaâ€" ture whom 1 reseued from death in Cenâ€" tral Park a little more than a fortnight ago She sunk down on the valyet haseock at his feet, forgetting, all in a moment, the haughty St. Claire pride, thinking only of her migbhty love, and that he had come to her, asking to be released from the promises which bound him to her. _ A distressed look broke over his hand some face. "I have been more bonorable than some men would have been in such a case," he answered. Evelyn oprun: from the sofa and stood before him with claeped hands and burnâ€" ing eyes, ber face as marble white at it would ever be in her coffin. _ * 8 For Weal or for Wo¢; never care for me?" she cried, her feet again, asking the i low, intense, breathless tone have warned him ofi coming CHAPTER XXXIII vou only the truost and Iship. I cannot deceive our heart up on a falee, I can .never love you, my Easier to Use Better for the Shoes Or, A Dark Temptation angel‘s. thrilled tell me | _ Mr. Remington, with deep agitation, asâ€" eured him that he believed it was quite |\ true; Little Gay had indeed come from | Passaic, where she had at one time been | employed in the cotton mill, and the name ‘«he had remounced to take his own was | Gaynell Esterbrook. It was news to him, { however, great news, that Little Gay was | Perey Granville‘s bride. | _He was so shocked, he could only stand there and listen while she briefly outlined ‘ a sketch of Gay‘s past. How Tremaine | had. in truth, abducted her, of her es | cape from him, and her subsequent illness | at Leighton Hall which caused the great ‘change in hber hair which so disguised |her appearance; how she had written to 1hnm. and she herself had answered the | girl‘e letter, declaring if they ever meot | again it must be as strangers. _ The pathetic story of how they had been soparated at the very altar, and the cruel plot of Evelyn 8t. Claire to thrust them asunder, which had been carried out with euch fiendish success, seemed more like a romance than a painful reality. _ | "Evelyn!" exclaimed Perey. "I dare not | believe you. Mf' Little Gay alive! oh, no, | no, 1 eannot dare not credit such a |storyâ€"you stagger meâ€"amaze me." | _ "A moment more and my vengeance will : be complete," she answered shrilly. "You | saw the eirl at the masked ball dressod as the fairy queen. Again your heart |wns attracted toward her, but you did i not know her. She recognized you, but | the words of the letter she believed had | come from your hand kept her silentâ€" ‘whe believed you loved me and had forâ€" The train seemed to creep along between the moonlit hills and over the babbling streams to the impatient man whose heart was on fire with the keenest anxiety. _ Although the hour was late when he reached the city, he drove at onee to the banker‘s home, at Gramerey Parkâ€"sprung from the cab, fairly leaped up the marâ€" ble steps, giving the bell a quick, imperaâ€" tive peal. _ flmm A Two gentlemen stood in tho vestibule in earnest conversation, one of whom opered the door at once, and Percy found himsolf standing face to face with Mr. Remington, the banker, and Mr. Lennox, the detective. He never remembered in what words he told them his thrilling story, begging the banker to tell him at once if hie lost bride, his Little Gay, still lived, and was known as his adopted daughter. Percy raved around the room like one distracted when be found that the darâ€" line little bride who had been so miracuâ€" lously restored to him from the dead, as it seemed, had in truth, as Evelyn St. Claire had asserted, mysteriously disapâ€" peared a fortnight previous. _ For the first time in his life the great detective betrayed the most intense exâ€" citement as he listened; for, as the narâ€" rator proceeded, he bad made the thrilâ€" ling discovery that Little Gay, the bankâ€" er‘s adopted daughter, and the bride Percy Granville mourned as dead were one and the same, though he kept his own counâ€" zel, breathing never a word of the startâ€" ling denonoment. , PS An hour later Percy was whirling as rapidly as steam could take him toward the city. Men. women and children looked curiâ€" ously at the handsome, haggard face of their fellow passenger, who paced restâ€" lessly up and down the length of the car in a fever of excitement words are weak to describe. They were nothing to himâ€"the whole world was nothing to himâ€"his thoughts were concentrated upon one subject; ere the day dawned he would know whether his darling Little Gay was living or dead; whether she and the banker‘s adopted daughter were one and the sameâ€"or not. Percy‘s great delight at finding the deâ€" tective, upon whom he had been intending to call as soon as he left the banker‘s home, standing before him, knew no bounds. Thenr it all came out how the banker and his wife had gone to Pacsaic to bring Gay home, believing, from the note they had received, she had gone with Evelyn 8t. Claire to visit her, and their dismay upon learning the heiress had not seon her and knew nothing of her whereabouts. Immediately upon reaching the city the banker bad sought the services of Mr; Lennox, the famous dectective, and unâ€" folded to him his story, begging him to trace the whereabouts of his adopted daughter, Little Gay, and he should be a rich man for life. i ‘Evelyn you must be mad," he said quietly, "quite mad, my poor girl, to have such hallucinations«. Little Gay is in ber | grave. | His soothing tone exasperated her. _ "so you have been duped into believâ€" | ing." she cried lrium%hnnuy. "I teil you \ Little Gay is alive; she and the banker‘s daughter are one and the eame." ! There was such an irresistible ring of truth in her voice, that the words to which he was compelled to listen in borâ€" ;ur and dismay carried conviction to. his eart. "Evelyn!‘" he cried, in a stern, hoarse voice. "Your words are terrible; I canâ€" not believe that you have conspired so cruelly to separate me from my Yove. It I thought so, Iâ€"â€"" _ Wik!>: % i un "You have wrecked my life, and I have paid you back pang for pang." she said slowly. "Every word I have told you is true. If I cannot have your love, my hated rival never shall. Take what reâ€" venge you will; it will not lessen what I have done; it will not restore your love to you." whuk s & _ He refused to be comforted; his poig nant grief wase terrible. drug, and had followed her from the etore to the fashionable Remlnflon manâ€" ai:m; _u}__grnflggqy Park, where the strange A horrible ory broke from Percy‘a lips â€"awful to hear in its intense anguishâ€" the veins stood out on his forehead like whipcords, and the perspiration rolled down his face in great heavy beads. 4 [MUURNE $U, EOO She faced him deflantly, her beautiful {)?ce. white as death, her steelâ€"blue eyes azing. The enraged beaut‘y scht from the room with a mockini augh, leaving Percy alone to face the awful shock her startling revelation bad given him. Aico® Various persons spoke to him; he nei ther heard rnor saw them. The detective remembered the beautiful blonde whom he had firet met h} the newsâ€" paper office, and whom he had followed to t?‘o druatgu in the disguise of a ragged E N Re Bd ind t e ty old man, begging work in the shape of showâ€"cases to clean. P He had watched her quite unnoticed while she cajoled the impressible young clerk into letting her have the subtle adventure drogoed: but now, as he ened to the banker‘s story, and a for a description of the young lud{ ir who had left for the matinee with on that fatal day, he realised that C friend was the tall, beantiful blonde w he had followed from the drugâ€"store, the deadly poison in her possession. ‘"Evelyn, do not hold me back," he cried hoarsely; "your words hbave driven me mad with {oy. My Little Gayâ€"aliveâ€"how shall I believe that such delight is in store for me? I must fl‘v' to herâ€"Iâ€"â€"" "Stop!‘ commanded Evelyn 8t. Claire. ‘"‘Listen to the sequel of my story. I have told fou the truth, that it may torture youâ€"1 have saved this, as the last and sweetest morsel of my revenge; you are not to claep my hated rival to your throbâ€" bing heart, giving her the love and kisees that 1 am thirsting for with a «tarved, yearning heart. Fly to the banker‘s home as quick as you can, and there you will learn that your charming Gay m‘ynteri- ously disappeared from their roof over a fortnight ago. _ _ s "Search the world throughâ€"wear your heart out in a torment of agony and suspense; but you will never find her. You shall never know the true fate (and death itself would be eweeter in compariâ€" son) which has overtaken Little Gay." _ Me bounded to his feet with a terrible Cry : , 5 uie come from your she believed you gotcen her. "Mold! hear me out," she cried: In a moment more she had explained how Gay happened to be adopted by the great banker. And she added to her story the pitiful lie that it was Gay who had bribed the keoper of the morl‘uo to pubâ€" lish to the world the story of her death, when on passing through it she had beâ€" held a poor girl lying there with a face fatally like her own. _ hes 3 R _ Percy sprung to the door with a bound; but Evelyn 8St. Claire caught his arm in a steelâ€"like claep. _ _ e Ts t girl in your arme in the parkâ€"you looked upon her pictured face in the Remington drawingâ€"room, yet no instinet warned you who the adopted daughter of the banker really was. CHAPTER XXXIV - v;‘inu\iv rarn o & TORONTO |_When he read of the approaching wat | riage of Percy Granville and this Misa @+ l(‘lure. the whole case was as plain ®s |day to his keen, experienced eÂ¥e \w A8 ; tended to stop the ceremony '):.3' has [ arnds, but in the interim he AWanl i (tutedâ€"a vigorous search for the mi®ing {#url; but it seemed as if all the eÂ¥il pow [ors wore arrayed against ‘um. tor the first time in bis life he 'MY‘ to eblain | the elightest clew. And at this stage of affairs Percy Granville had come wpon the ecene. The case had been carried on with the utmost seorec noi even the faintowt Â¥4 \mor of Miss {kmmfloun my®ternious dis appesrance leaked out Memories of Past Experience of the cold, chopped potatoes. Put a layâ€" Individual. t;;r of this at the }fiottom of the salad o owl, cover with chopped parsley In many cases where the incidents |and salad dressing, puptp in ,,pm,the’r of a dream seem to be entirely unâ€"|Javer of the meat mixture and again familiar it has been shown by careâ€" the dressing, and continue till all ful investigation that they correâ€" the material is used. Place the bowl spond to _ actually experienced in the refrigerator for two hours or events that have escaped the meâ€"|so, and the salad is ready for use. mor,\;dof the ‘w?kmgt‘self. I)elflmeut['j Salad, Rouge cet Blanc. â€" Take records an interesting example of| | this. In 1862 he dregmed tl{)at hc}a__duse' â€"â€"_firm red cabhage: trimt t found two lizards in the snow. He:} rnmmnmmemma ( took them up, warmed them, and| % ‘@ # placed them in a hole in a wall, m‘ OME M gether with a small fern, which he| B knew they liked to eat. The name‘ §/ MW of the fern seemed in his dreams to | P\ me â€" LG Airh be Asplenium ruta muralis. _ Later| fi « + on in his dream he saw two other| M 3 '”7, lizards come and eat the remains‘ ’ ‘}/ of the fern, and then a whole host| 4 of lizards coming to the wall in a '/7 ( MWM long procession which covered the A'J ks WM entire street. On waking he could | Wy %m not remember ever to have heard * pproprage s yor the name of the fern of his dr(‘:),m.I x * ~"> DYO~LA although he discovered that a fern Te M ow x L c called Asplenium ruta muraria realâ€"| ly existed. _ Sixteen years Iat‘er,f It‘s the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, end BEST HOME huwe\'er, he h-'lp[)(‘fl(‘d to be turmng DYE, one can buyâ€"â€"Why you don‘t even have to over t})(’ pages Uf a fl'i(‘lld,S albl}]ll; ::o:w::.t Ii!NDol Cloth ‘ynurGuods are mede of dried flO\\'(‘l’S. and to his st}rprlse '"S‘e?\d lc‘»:.F::e.go}:.rp?:.:rl:.l;mry Booklet, and came across the very fern, with the | | Bookletgiving results of Dyeing over other colors. Latin name written underneath in | [ Th® #OMNSONâ€"RICHARDSON CO., Limited, his own handwriting. He then re-i membered that in 1860, two years| =T~_~â€"â€"_â€"â€"â€"_â€"__â€"â€"â€"«»««««â€"» before the dream, he had met the sister of his friend, and to please her had written the Latin names unâ€" der the various plants in her album at the dictation of a botanist. | Fifteen years after the dream h also discovered the source of the lizard procession in an old illusâ€" trated paper, dated 1861, which, as a regular subscriber, he must have seen. Innumerable cases of a simiâ€" lar nature are on record and go to show how remarkably heightened the memory may be in dreams. They also warn us not too rashly to beâ€", lieve that incidents in a dream which / seem entirely new are really so. | He had been weeping his very heart out over her lonely grave, over which he had placed a marbls ehaft, which told the world that she was his. Yet all this time Gay had been alive; and, bitterest of all bitter thoughts, she had believed that he had ceased to love her; believing, too, that it wase his wish, if they ever met avain, that it would beâ€"as strangers. He could scarcely refrain from cuming Evelyn 8t. Claire for the hand she ha had in it, although he knew that it had been her great love for himself that had tempted her so desperately and fatally. (To be continued.) her identity, and it had been quite the same when fate cast hor so strangely in his arms that day in the park. He reâ€" membered how tightly his arms had closed about her, and how the yearning longing that poseessed him to press his lips to the sweet, tremulous mouth the heavy veil but half revealed, almost overpowâ€" ered him. He wondered that his heart had not broken when he had gazed, as be believed, on her sweet face in the coffinâ€"the lovely face of his lost brideâ€"that had held all the sunshine of his life. Ho told the shy maid of his love, The color left her cheeks. But on the shoulder of his coat It showed for several weeks. How much blinder his eyes and brain had been than his heurt at that masked ball at Leighton Hall, How true his heart had been when it claimed Gay for its own, despite the disguise that shrouded Gay Experienced men were detailed to work up the case; every nook and crauuy of the great metropolis, with its hidden crimes, was eaNNYl‘y explored â€"all in vain, If the earth had opened and ewallowod little (hiv. she could not have been more completely lost to the world. _ Percy‘s grief was terrible to behold. To Perey‘s grief was terrible to behold. To have his lost darling restored to him was indeed heartâ€"reading. ‘The poor fellow haunted the detective‘s private office like a shadow, begging them to inform him when they obtained the slightest clew. "Oh, GaÂ¥y, my love, if you had but come to me when Hazel died, how much misery might have been spared us both!" He quite believed that this girl was at the bottom of the whole affair. He went m.n:he case alter his own peculiat fash And to think that it was his "Can you lick Kelly?" ‘‘Does he belave in arbitration !"‘ ‘"‘He does.‘"‘ "I kin." Ceylon‘s Choicest Leaf and Bud; the Finest Black, @rean and Mixod. A RIGH, FRAGRANT TEA SEALED PACKETS ONLY. sCIENCE OF DREAMS. A SAFE ANSWER. Transferred. own lost /2 | :Z/ f %»,4% ***â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" _ BONEDVEALL KINDSr sR Cold Meat and Potato Salad. â€" Cut a pound of cold cooked meat into thin slices and then into small squares, and mix with a pint of eold, chopped potatoes. Put a layâ€" er of this at the bottom of the salad bowl, cover with chopped parsley and salad dressing, put in another laver of the meat mixture and again the dressing, and continue till all the material is used. Place the bowl in the refrigerator for two hours or so, and the salad is ready for use. Onion and Tomato Salad.â€"Take half a dozen firm ripe tomatoes of medium size, wipe them with a wet towel and cut them into slices a quarter of an inch thick. Peel a medium sized onion (Spanish or Bermuda) and slice very thin. Arâ€" range the sliced onion and tomato in layers in the salad bow! and pour over them a plain salad dressing made by mixing together one teaâ€" cupful of salad oil, two tablespoonâ€" fuls of vinegar, a half teaspoonful of salt, and a half saltspoonful of pepper. Use this salad as soon as made. We should have said that young green onions may be used for this salad as well as the others. Boak one hour. Add one cup hot \\MuP ane â€"half oup _ lemon juice, one fTeaspoon _ lemon extract, two oups augar, 8tir till dissolved, Bet on 100 till jellhed and cold Soaltloped Pish. â€"Cut fish in amall pioses free from skin and bones, Use vsold cooked fish, Chop cold boiled eggs and potatoes in alternate lay ers,. _ Fill a buttered baking dish threeâ€"quarters full of this material, alternating fish, potato and ogg. Cover with white sauce, sprinkle with breadcrumbs and bake twonty or twentyâ€"five minutes in moderate oven. White Sauce.â€"Cook together and mix well one tablespoon butter, one teaspoon flour. Add one cup sweet cream, simmer ~five minutes and season. Tomateo Hisque,â€"Maoke a tomato soup from two cups celery stock, two oups of cuuked tumato, une teaâ€" spouh ul sugar. â€" Bimmer an hour and run through a sieve,. Cook to wgethes one h\l«ru-gnu-u of butter, two tabloapommna â€" of â€" flowr Add _ the atrained tomate ; stmmer fve min wive. . Askt ons oup of sweet cream annt a pmich of suda. . Nerve at once homun Jelly, To oneâ€"thind box welatin add one oup cold water ‘ Dainty Dishes. Rice Crogquette®,.â€"Wash the rice, boil and strain it, Use one cup rice, oneâ€"hbalf cup saweet milk, one tableâ€" spoon sugar, one teaspoon butter, Bimmer gently in a saucepan over the fire, stirring until the ricoe has absorbed the milk. When slightly cooled flavor with oneâ€"half teaspoon of lemon or vanilla extract. _ Add the white of one egg (unbeaten); fry in hot grease, dropping in a spoonful at a time Drain on cheesecloth and roll in pulverizsed augar It‘s the CLECANEST, SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME DYE, one can buyâ€"â€"Why you don‘t even have to know what KIND of Cloth your Goods are mede of.â€".S$o Mistakes are Impossible. nome | Salads. 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 and scientific methods, been able to bring 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 redu¢â€" _ 1fthis!abelis not on ing the price of Canada Cement. This demand will _ every bag it is not crete‘s superiority over other materials. When you buy cement, see that you get "Canada" Cement; by so doing you will assure the complete mcceuohlyouconaew_wwk. Send a post card for our book "What the Farmer Canada Cement Company Limited e n do With Concrete." It is free. There is a Canada Coment dealer in year ncighborbood. Canada Coddled eggs are‘so good the reâ€" cipe will bear being repeated. Fill a pitcher with boiling water, drop the egg into it, and let it stand five When washing any garment made of silk add a teaspoonful of methy. lated spirit to the water and iron while damp. The silk will look just like new. = Cranberries can be kept fresh for any length of time if placed in a jar of cold water changing the water often. â€" A little ammonia in a few spoonâ€" fuls of alcohol is excellent to sponge silk dresses that â€" 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 silver is put in. Silâ€" verware which is frequently washed WFith 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 conâ€" taining a spoonful of spirits of turâ€" pentine to every quart will look bright and new and will not be troubled with moths and buffalo bugs. Bhould the knob come off a panl or kettle, a screw can be slipped | through the hole with the head inâ€"| side the lid. Screw a cork onto the | protruding end. _ This knob will! not get hot and can be replaced. ; Bran is much better to use for cleaning matting 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 it off with a cloth wrung out of warm salt water. This meâ€" thc@ freshens it up wonderfully. When gilt frames or molding of rooms have specks of dirt from fles and other causes upon them they may be cleaned with white of egg applied with a camel‘s hair brush. Tartaric acid removes almost any iron rust blemishes, and is an exâ€" cellent article for removing yellow marks. To clean a frying pan after fish or onion, boil out the pan with soâ€" da water, washing clean, then put it on the fire and shake a little oatâ€" meal in. â€" To stop a door hinge from creak ing rub it with a lead pencil. Potato balls which are salted in butter after being boiled are delicâ€" i0us. _ They should be served with a generous sprinkling of minced parsley . the outside leaves and cut into four meces, wash in plenty of water, and drain. _ Breamk t‘ne leaves apart, reâ€" move the stalka and ribs and cut the reat into shreds, Now cut the heart and white sticks of two heads of celâ€" ery into pieces and mix them with the cabbhage in a salad bowl, garâ€" nish with young green tops of celery and serve with a lressing poured over all, prepared as follows : Beat one egg and fix in gradually a teaâ€" apoonful of salad oil, a uhr;upoon- ful of vinegar and a half teaspoonâ€" ul each of sugar and «dry mustard. Neason with a little salt and serve. as fast as farmers leatn of conâ€" Hints for the Home. Cement ‘TORONTO, ONT. WINNIPEG m C ENW.GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED To guard against alum in Baking Powder see that all ingreâ€" dients are plainly printed on the label. The words "No. Alum" without the ingredients is not sufficient. â€" Magic Baking Powder costs no more than the ordinary kinds. Full weight one pound When women vote and the elec tion doesn‘t go to suit him a man can blame it on his wife. In baking beans for a small famâ€" 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 and heated when desired. Seed Corn Bread can be well toasted in a corn popper. _ For English afterâ€" noon tca there is nothing better than a fork with a handle about four feet long to hold over the emâ€" bers of an open fire. A wardrobe to fit under the bed is a great comfort when bedroom space is limited. A neat box can be made to fit the space, and it should have handles and rollers. If a curtain pole or portiere is rubbed with hard soap before being put up the draperies will slip on easily. .Cheese may be kept soft and good for a long time if wrapped in a cloth wrung out in vinegar and then wrapped again in dry cloth. Dates stuffed with peanut butter and then rolled in sugar are a pleasâ€" ing change from dates stuffed with nuts. To remove coffee stains from silk, satin, or any other material, somk in glycerine; then rub gently with a soft cloth. _ Rinse with warm water, cover with a dry cloth, and iron the wet portion until dry. minutes or more. The egg will be c'l;l" like jelly and extremely digesâ€" tible. Postage stamps carried in a purse or handbag will often be found stuck together. Never attempt to separate them by pulling them, but simply lay them flat and press with a hot iron. They will then separâ€" ate quite easily. _ On the Cob or Shelled. Imp bonmin%. or White Cap Y. Dent $1.35 per bushel Longfellow _ $1.50; Compton‘s _ $1.60 Freight glld in Ontario on 10 bushels or more. ntc free. Write for catalogue CEO. KEITH & SONS, Toronto. Beod merchants e@ince 1866 ‘The rolior bearingsâ€"and hand and fopt leversâ€"â€"make churning an casy task, even for a child. c}l ;tlzon from 1 to 30 gellons. rite for catalogue if your dealer does ;i‘d In;ll\dlo this churn and axwell‘s *‘Champion" Washer. {m It makes ths smoothest, richest, most delicious butter you over tasted. MAXWELLԤ Favorite Churn. MoONTREAL CUTIC WHEN APPETTE FA AND INDIGESTIOR There is a etrong 1 of James Bchrum, Dartmouth, N. 8. 1 wple, he wae fallinge stomach and digesi> repair. His vitality he wase losing gnow "I eould not has J was waeting w remedy 1 used ga amy «tomach. The rem were doa MHemilton‘s P:. they searched miraculove w man of me. eured, rich b veins â€"clear .# day. Dr. Han mastered the . enervated man one in Talling grand remedy Pr. Ham Butternut box, five 1« keepers, or Co., Buflal Relates His Experien amining a lion‘s ‘The man who medic gically attends cattl beasts has often a har an â€" ordinary | hospit mays a wild beast dox course of a recgut "It is no easy tack to a large animal, whet horse or an elephant i cal forest, and the da1 ed with wild beast would drive many @2 agent into a ft. "I had an alarmin while examining the large lion suffering ¢1 inflamed tongue. The: so friendly when he ay that 1@ straightaw the anima ining to C ish when tongue, f second, ar terrific or ripping 0f cxposing 1 "On n was medically the creature â€" that I was out diately #tarie« The playful si ‘mat,‘ so to 8J re Is Danger Abca Man That Neglects Warning. Thf h ig demeoastr know, th« Uin@rd $â€"¢iniment Cures **The Family feiling rellef Shrlo THUE WILD BEASl pens spsia Tendencies . are | Should. be Troated Aoce SKIN C ET,'.};G postâ€"ireo. . Addrew I ., Dept. 101>, Boston, U. 8 Alifctime of disfigure Sng often mults%rom ln(uncyorcbildhOOd, fections. In the preve ment of minor eruptic fimolion of perman ith, Cuticura 5 Ointment are ebsolu Cutioura Boap and Ointment the world, A Hiberal ssmple booklet on the care and treat vuticury SOAP. â€"r...ayrmucwao relief for Croup and SQ ad A 1« de $\ that 1O At i

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