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Durham Review (1897), 29 Apr 1915, p. 6

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a) l "Yes," he replied, ‘and Lancaster would make a good actor. ‘One man in his time plae many m P Lnncaster at him with a light ping gieâ€"~ im B‘s blue eyes, There was t :R&! scorn in Luew. â€" ® you," he replied. "And ic <"!7 out your idea, I will now make my eait. _He bowed royally and walked away. De she asked hecself, uncasily. _ She pursed her pretty lipe and remained gilent. % 5) ‘Now you want me to go away, I see," he remarked. "This ie the first time you have let me talk to you since we came aboard, and already you are weary." "Yes, 1 am already weary," ehe echoed. She put her little hand over her lipe and yawned daintily but deliberately. Burning with chagrin, he lifted his hat to her and walked away. "I can never speak to her but ahe makes me repent," he said to himse‘f, and went and leaned m oodily againct the eide, while he continued to himeelf: "What a little thorn she is, and how sharply she can wound." Leonora watched the retreating figure a moment then leieurely opened her book again and eettled herself to read. But she was not very deeply interested, it keemed. for now and then che glanced up under her long lashee at the tall, move les figure of the soldier. At length she put down the book and went across to "Iâ€"I was rude to you juet now," she stammered. "I beg your pardon for it. Iâ€" um!lv don‘t know why I wae «o. I don‘t like you, indeed, and I think you are very nice. I have enjoyed the cha‘ir and the books, and I have been sorry ever gince that day when 1 came down to the steamer and did not wait for you. But Ver> ‘aughed uneasily; Leonora had coo!â€" ly gone back to her back. His cyes fiashâ€" _"If anyone had told me this, I should not have believed it," he muttered. "Ah! it was well to lecture me and get the game into his own hands. Beggar; what could h‘:a her, even if she vsstowed her ma self upon himâ€"what a barâ€" ren )o-r. «n c.rty title? Ab, well! falee triend, I know all now," he hissed angrily your pardon for the elang phrase I used just now. One falle unconsciously into such habite in the army. But tell me, did "Did 1 do what?" "D‘d you srub me because I am poor?" "I have not snubbed you at all," indigâ€" nantly. "You have ignored me. That is even worse," he said. "Indeed 1 have not ignored you at all," ehe protested. "Well, then, you forgot me. That is the unkindest cut of all. I could bear to be enubbed, but I hate to be annihilated," said he, with a grieved air. _ adaed I know «ome people who are poor, but very, very nice," eaid the girl, with a deâ€" vded air. + "I am glad to hear you say so. I am very poor myself. 1 have been thinking that the reason you have snubbed me &0 anmercifully of late ie becauce I eo foolâ€" «shly gave myself away when I first met _ "Miss Westâ€"" he wae beginning to eay when a eudden step sounded bese‘de them 42. 4 She had spoken every word with a de lightful shynees, and after a pauee, she went on, with a catch in her breath: "As for your being poor, I never thought ofi thatâ€"never. I think poor men are the niceetâ€"always. They are handeomer than the rich ones. Iâ€"" e U P _ Lieutenant De Vere had come up .to them. There was a sudden glitter in his brown eyesâ€"a jealous gleam. uind .. w't'!"l;e;';‘â€"on; p.a';d;mâ€" Are you and Mies West rehearsing for private theatricals?" he asked, with a elight eareastic inflecâ€" â€" Lanczeter looked intensely _ annoyed Leonora only laughed. _ â€" _ _ -WY;- she eaid. "Do you not think thas J ehou‘d make a good actress, Lien temunt De Vere?" _ _ _ * ky w;hc'-“c;u;'l‘lâ€".hcvr breath with a gasp. He had turned around quickly and caught her hand. Ein‘ w sou dn itc o o tion Gazing intently out to sea, he . started when a hand soft and white as a enowâ€" flake futtered down upon his coateleeve. lHe glanced quickly around.. "Gave y« ngly. comehowâ€"it was very hard to tell you "M‘es Weet!" he exclaimed, in eurprise. She glanced up deprecatingly into his livined intuitively that he was bit jealous of his handsome friend. Â¥ve I stirred up strife between them? CHAPTER XIV.â€"(Continued) The Lady of Lancaster ; I told you I was poor. I beg n for the elang phrase I used urcelf away?" uncomprehend CHAPTER IV. parently . abso Or, Leonora West‘s Love. in will bit« Efi-' 5A e a en i "Heâ€"if you mean Captain Lancasterâ€" ‘ to‘d me nothing. I was telling him some thing. Why chould you be vexed at him | because I went and etood there and talkâ€" | ed to him?" indignantly | __"I was not," rather feebly. C | "Do you really deny it?" ehe asked him, | incredulously. oae "Yes because I was ashamed to confess the truth I did not want to be thought an eaveedropper, for I did not really wish to hear. It was an accident, but it has weighed on my mind ever since, and at last I made up my» mind to ‘fess, as the <hildren aay." _ o % ¢ never do. 1 must carry [N6 OVE MIMIC® to the distrustful friend." ' She glanced around, and seeeing that Lancaster wae not in gight, called gently: "Lieutenant De Vere!" He hurried toward her, and stood in grim @ilence awaiting her pleasure. "Iâ€"I want to epeak to you," she said. There was a vacant chair near at hand. He brought it and eat down by her eide. "I am at your service, Miss West," he said, stiffly. * § He thought he had never seen anything half so enchantin* as the face she raiged to his. The big black hat was a most beâ€" coming foil to her fresh young beauty. There was a emile on the rosy Iigs â€" half arch, half wistful. The full light of the eunny day shone on her, but her beauty was «o flawlees that the «evere test only enhanced ite perfection. His heart gave a fierce throb, half pain, half pleaeure. _‘"That is between him and me," said the eoldier, with a sulky air.. ks vtion al NCT POOC. N) 4 "Andâ€"that was -Ils‘ Wes he m ca ing love to you, really?" cmc‘ J’"‘ tenant etill ll.fl{ at the remembi.."° of that impuleive handâ€"clasp that had e0 amaszed him. She flashed her great eyes at him in euâ€" perb anger. "Love to meâ€"he would not dare!" breathlessly. ‘"I‘m nothing to him. noâ€" w youâ€"never shall be! Please re that! Once I reach my aunt, nohbutol{ou need ever expect to see me again. Iâ€"Iâ€"" a strangling eob; rhe mbdmndv?to\nhnmhn :;:md square of blackâ€"bordered camâ€" "Oh, 2;-1 don‘t ery!‘‘ cried he, in dieâ€" treas. did not mean to make you anâ€" ery, Miss Weet;" and then Leonora hastâ€" "You are vexed with me?" said Leonora, in a soft, inquiring voice. "Oh, no, no," he reglied. quickly. "No?" she eaid. "But, then, you cerâ€" tainly are vexed with some one. If it is not with me, then it must be with Captain Lancaster." 4 % e ues To this proposition, that was made with an air of convictioin, he remained graveâ€" ly wilent. _ Coiea e rake Sn â€"‘Then it is he," she said. "Ah, dear me! what hae Captain Lancaster done?" _ _ . _ "Silence gives consent," said the girl, after waiting vainly for him to apeak, and then he bowed coldly. _ _ C The red lips dimpled. Leonora rather enjoyed the situation. "You will not tell me?" she eaid. "I beg your pardonâ€"no," he answered, reeolutely. _ ___ _ stt o elipped Ou«, .ls iA tion at her ruac *4 }0 ‘Then I will tell you," she said: “go-u think he has treated you unfairly, that he has taken advantage of you." De Vere stared. "Wow can yor possibly know, Miss Weet?" he asked, pulling eulkily at the ends of his dark moustache. 7 _ He gazed at her with everâ€"increasing admiration. "8o," <she went on. slowly, "this evenâ€" _"You did not guese this. He told you, I presume," bitterly. _ ____ _ ___ f "Well, since you put it so _ seriously, ves, I wae vexed about it; but I don‘t unâ€" deretand how you could know it," he anâ€" «wered, flushing a dark red. _ _ uo "I will tell you how I knew," she ~aid. coloring crimeon also. "I heard all that you and Captain Lancaster said about me that first night we came aboard." "Oh, by Jove, you didn‘t though?" he exclaimed, rediant, and trying to meet the glance of the beautiful oyes. But with her shy avowal she had lot the white lide drop bashfully over them. "And so all this while you knew that I thoughtâ€"" he began, boldly. ‘‘That you thought me rather preuiâ€" yee." ehe replied, modestly. "I knew aleo that I was a meealliance for you, and that Captain Lancaster‘s future was ‘cut and dried," " bitterly. He JM at her in wonder. "* you have kept it to yourself all this while, Mias West?" . € M {n‘“f told Captain Lancaster all about . She blushed at the remembrance of some «ther things she had told himâ€"things '...:dmnn-ttoufl.lnnvhhhhnd 800 «~._ =4 se it were, in her compuncâ€" Iy De Vere was not one bit disconcerted by what she had to‘d him. He knew that all she had heard that night had been to hié advantage. _ __ pall g ki C iy dried her and looked ied her ey« eyes and look« wp at him him. I am very good at gueveing," demureâ€" must carry the olive branch E‘lg io "I‘m not angryâ€"really," she said. "Only â€"only, I want you to underetand that you need not be angry with Captain Lancas ter on my account. There‘s no use in your liking me and having a quarrel over meâ€"no use at all." speare," he retorted . ‘"‘Not yet, of course," she replied, shakâ€" ing her head gravely. "But you know you epoke to him very aggravatingly just "No one hae quarreled," he answered, in a tone of chagrin and bitter disappointâ€" pointment. now _ The bright eyes looked him through and through with their clear gaze,. > . _ _ "You are charmingly frank, but you «re right. I do not doubt but that he will if he can," he replied bittorly. _ _ _ Leonora measured the mediumâ€"sized figâ€" ure critically with her eyes. _ ava d _ "I should think there could be no 2 3 on the subject," she observed. "He is twice as big as you are." . _ __ Hew twice as big as you are.. "Why do women all admire big, awkâ€" ward giants?" asked he, warmly. "We do not," eharply. "Oh, Miss Weet, there‘s no use denying it. There ars a dozen men in the Guards better looking than Lancaster, yet not one «o much run after by the women; all because he is a brawnyâ€"fisted Hercules," crossly. "Captain Lancaster is your friend, ien‘t he?" with a curling lip. "He was before I saw you. He is not my friend if he is my rival," eaid De Vere, with frankness equal to her own. The round cheeks grew crimeon agair. "Put me out of the question. I am noâ€" thing to either of youâ€"never can be," she said. "You have been friends, haven‘t you? "I‘m glad wo are friends again; but I was so etiff I could never have owned myâ€" gelf in the vmn:i. only that I promised to do it for her sake," added De Vere; and Footca c 39 d w se sls in oi ®: Sut 2e "Yes, but there was a doublo meaning in it. I am sure he understood all that you meant to convey. J should think that when you meet him again he will knock you down fOP M‘ T o. o c l onl "Yes," curtly "For a lonz time?" persisted ehe. "Ever since I went into the Guards â€"â€" that is five yeare ago," he replied. ‘The fellows used to call us Damon _ and Pything." . _ *‘ _ a e _ ‘"You must go and apologize to your friend for your hasty, illâ€"timed words," she eaid. . )/ is â€" wl â€" 2 & .. ui .T _ "I‘ll be hanged if I show the white feath er like that!" he cried, violently. _ _ "I can‘t see why you take up for Lanâ€" caster so vebemently," he commented, straying from the main point. "I‘m not taking up for him," warmly. "I only don‘t want you to make a fool of yourself about me!" "Ah!"â€"ehortly. "Yec, that is what I mean, exactly; I don‘t want my aunt to think I‘ve get you two at odds. She will be prejudiced against me in the beginning Come now," dropping her vexed tone and falling into a cosxing one, "go and make it up with your injured Pythiae." He regarded her in eilence for a moâ€" ment. "Should you like me any better if I did?" he inquired, after this thoughtful pause. rlige agt ecpl e ot . "And it would really please you for me to tell Laneaster I wae mistaken and am corry ?" "Yes, I should like that, certainly." He tried to look into the eparkling eyes, but they had wandered away from him. She was watching the flight of a eeabird whose glancing wings were almost lcst in the illimitable ‘blue of the eky. _ _ _ eaid, aryiy â€"*Then don‘tâ€"don‘t let me make a quarâ€" rel between you!" exclaimed Leonora, pleadingly. _ l heeaig esnt ol "It is already made, ien‘t it?" with a half regret in his voice. ‘"No; only begunâ€"and you mustn‘t Jet it go any further." "No? But what is a fellow to do. I should like to know?" _ _ s ‘"‘There is no white feather at all. You made a mistake and cpoke unjuet words to your friend. Now, when you discover your ersor, you should be m&n enough to retract your remarke," she anewered inâ€" dignantly. * o . that. How sweet she is! She did not want us to _ "Of couree I should," «he answered, in an animated tone. _ _ _ 4 â€" "I I do this thing it will be wholly for your cake," he said, msaningly. _ _ _ Lancaster had been in his etateâ€"room reading two houre, perhaps, when De Vere knocked at hie door. He torsed back his fair bair carelessly, and without ris ing from his reclining posture, bade the applicant come in. "Ah, it is you, De Vere?" he said, icily. "Yes, it is I, Lancaster.â€" What have you been doing? Writing a challengo to me?" laughing. ‘"‘Well, you may burn it now; I have come to retract my words." . _ ‘‘Yes, I was mistaken. . I thwfht Jon were my rival in secret, but Miss Weet has explained all to me. I epoke unjustly. Can you accord me Lour pardon? I‘m downâ€"right corry, old fellowâ€"no mistake." mcuter gave him his hand. ‘"Think before you speak next time," he then heâ€"went away, and left his friend to resume the interrupted perusal of his _ ‘"For my sake, then," she anewered, care leesly; and then he rose and left her. _‘To retract?" the frown on Lancaster‘s moody brow began to clear away.. I will. But I wase terribly cut up .at ‘lrmererly ueed a quotation from Shakeâ€" over it not? But ‘‘For her eake," he replied. "Fhe is 4 little coquette, after all, and l’%houcm for an hour thatâ€" Pehaw, I am a foo!! Bhe has fooled him to the top of hiz beiut. too! Why did I speak to her at all? Litâ€" would to the house keeper at Lancaster Park. A gocd riddance, 1 should eay! Bo sho thought that â€"poor men were the nicest and handsolg:t. always? â€" Faugh! Lucky for me that Vere came upon theecene iw then! (In anothér minute I should ave told her that I thought just the seame about poor girle! Bo she confessed all to De Vere, and bade him apologise for her sake. Ab, ab, little fiirt!" he reâ€" peated bitterly. P ME nsOR tn Ns ECC ILT 4 ie‘ c s. Wt c c pected to arrive the last of May, to welâ€" come the returniag master of Lancaster Park, Mre. West a)nnd time in the hubâ€" bub to fit up a tidy little room next her own for the little American niece who was coming to her from so far away. ‘Then whe, too, dicmissed the matter from her mind, eave now.and then when in solitary moments ehe would wonder to herself what Dick West‘s child wou‘ld be like, and if heht; would be old enough to put to school. "It is lucky that I have a good store of savinge," thought the lonely woman to herself. "I will find a good boarding: school for little Leonora, if she is old enough to go, and the child shall be eduâ€" cated for a teacher, that she may have the means of supporting hereelf genteelâ€" ly when she rrows up. It will take a good deal of money . but fwill not begrudge it to poor Dick‘s child. He was=.a goodâ€" hearted, eunnyâ€"tempered lad. I on‘y hope his child may be like him." _ _ _ _ _ Things wont on emoosb-!%v se usual at Lancaster Pazk after Mre. Weet had given her consent to my lady‘s clever plan, They put Richard Weot‘s child out . of their heads for awhile and began their preparations for the guests who were exâ€" HSo she went on thinking of the child as of a very emall girl indeed. Her brotherâ€" inâ€"law‘s letter, with ite burried mention of "my little girl," "my little Leo," had entirely misled her. The poor dying man had had no intention of dmivln: his sicâ€" terâ€"inâ€"law. To him his darling daughter, although grown to woman‘s etature, was always "my little girl," and it never 0¢â€" curred to him, when on his dying bed he penned that hurried letter, to _ ~!lain to Mis. Weet that his orphan c . was & beautiful young girl of eighteen, already fairly educated, and with a cpirit quite brn;abenough to face the wor‘d alone ‘f nee €. Bo she went on thinking of Leonora West as a little girl who would be a great deal of trouble to her, and on whom she would have to epend the eavings of long yeare; and, although she felt that she had a for midaible task ‘before her in the reurinf‘ of this orphan girl, she did not shrink from the undertaking, but made up her mind to go forward bravely in the fulfillment gf t(:\e precious charge left to her by the ead. Bo the day drew near for Leonora‘s arâ€" rival, and the great house was now filled with guesteâ€"twenty in allâ€"whom Lady Lancaster had bidden to the feast, pre: Eared in honor of her nephew, the Lord of ancaster. Bo the day was come at last, and Lady Lancaster in the drawingâ€"room awaited her nephew, while the housekecper in tho kitchen awaited her niece It was one of the most beautiful of June days. The air was eweet and warm, the sky was clear and blue, al! nature ecemed to smile on the homeâ€"coming of the masâ€" ter. Mre. West, having given her Ordere in the kitchen, repaired to her own special sittingâ€"room, a emall apartment on the gecond floor, with a sunny window lookâ€" ing out upon the rear grounds of the houee. She had put a bouquet of rores in a vase on the mantel. and eome small pots of simple, eweetâ€"sme‘lling flowers on the windowâ€"sill, to brighten up the place for the child‘s eyes. ¢ ene. *( t Naw k _"It will look so cheenful. Children al ways love flowere," she eaid. ____ _ ; "In a little while they will be here, Tor John went to meet them with the carriage a good while ago." she said to herself. ‘"Dear me, how nervous I am getting over that child‘s coming." _ . A "Yes, I am home again, Mre. Weet, and here is what I have brought you," he said, stepping back that she might see the girl who had followed him into the room â€"the graceful figure in deep black, that came up to her with both hands outâ€" stretched, and said, demurely : "How do you do, Aunt West?" For a minute Mre. West did not touch the pretty white hands held out to her, she vwas so amazed and eurprieed. She managed to stammer out la'lnt'ly: She pulled forward a pretty little child‘s rockingâ€"chair that she had brought down from the immense garret. She arranged a pretty little redâ€"andâ€"white tidy over the back And she settled her lace cap again and looked into the emall mirror againet the wall, wondering how Dick‘s child would like her aunt‘s look&.â€" â€" _ _ Lo "Dear me, Mrs. West, I did not think you were so vain," eaid a laughing mageuâ€" line voice. Bhe turned around quickly. "Oh, my lord, «o you‘re come home again!‘ she cried; "and as full of misâ€" chief as ever. Welcome, welcome!" W "Are you Leonora Weet? Iâ€"I was exâ€" pecting to see a very young child." The bright face dimpled charmingly. "That was a mistake," she eaid. "I hope you will not be vexed because I am «0 large In the list of articles contributed to the Red Cross sale at Christie‘s there figured a walking stick that had once been the. property of the author of "Lorna Doone." It was offered by Eden Phillpotts, to whom it had been bequeathed by Blackmore. It was returned as "of no commercial value.‘"‘ Smoking in was officially the year 1868 Coffee grows wild in German East Africa. Blackmore‘s Cane Returned. d (To be continued ) CHAPTER XVI Get then you are sure m hh ifmben T â€"Arsms readiice e tmaniid n Bgens. m British railway trains prohibited prior to TORONTO the folio angrily the genuine ! dn over Sugar . Tested Recipes. Cream of Tomato Soup.â€"Put into a saucepan a pint of strained toâ€" maitoes ; add a sliced onion, a bay leaf and a small piece ofâ€" mace. Cover the saucepan, and cook for five minutes. Put into a double boiler a quart of milk. Rub toâ€" gether two tablespoonfuls of butâ€" ter and two of flour; add to the milk, and stir until thick and smooth. Btrain the tomatoes into a soupâ€"tureen, add a saltspoonful if bicarbonate of soda, season with salt and pepper, stir, and, whils this is frothing, add hastily the thickened milk ;stir just enough to mix and serve. There is not the slightest danger of this curdling if you add the milk quickly. This soup cannot be reheated. If necesâ€" sary to keep warm any length of time, keep the materials in separâ€" ate vessels, mixing at the last moâ€" ment. Omelette Souffle _ Chocolate. â€" Cream two ounces of castor sugar with three yolks of eggs, add one tablespoonful of finely grated choâ€" colate and a few drops of essence of vanilla, then add lastly the whites of five eggs beaten very stiff. Turn into a souffle pan coated with clariâ€" hed butter, bake in a moderately hot oven, dish up, and serve at once dredged with castor sugar. This will take from ten to twelve minutes to bake. Cream of Carrot (Soup.â€"Grate three goodâ€"sized carrots; cover them with a pint of water; add a slice of onion and a bay leaf ; cover and simmer gently for thirty minâ€" utes. Remove the onion and bay leaf, and add a quart of milk. Moisten a tablespoonful of cornâ€" starch in a little cold milk, add it to the soup, and stir until thick ; add a rounding teaspoonful of salt, a saltspoonful of white pepper, and just at serving time stir into the mixture two tablespoonfuls of butâ€" ter. Serve this soup just as soon as it is made. Filippini Banana Omelet. â€" Add half a gill of cream to eight eggs. Season with half a teaspoonful of salt and two saltspoonfuls of white pepper. Beat with a fork for two minutes. Fry two peeled and sliced bananas in melted butter for five minutes. Toss the pan frequently while the bananas are frying : then turn the eggs into the pan. +~Beat them for two minutes and then let them rest h#If a minute. Let the omelet stand for a mement and then turn out on to a hot dish and serve. This omelet may be used as an enâ€" tree at luncheon. _ _ 3 Hot â€" Scotch _ Rolls.â€"Boil and mash fine one large, mealy potaâ€" to. Beald one pint of flour with boiling water; add one teaspoonful salt, one heaping tablespoonful of sugar. the white of one egg. and half a compressed yeast cake disâ€" solved in warm water. Set to rise BENSON‘S Home | ’ In the famous ellow Package JBhnRedsa!h 60 years agoâ€"flzn with Canada‘s first Sugar,made the Redpath Refinery i 1880â€"now with the modern 2 Ib. and 5 Ib, Sealed Cartons of Aa@aH Extra Granulatedâ€" "Canada‘s favorite sugar, at its best" ,,, CANADA SUGAR REFININC CO. LIMITED, . . . MONTREAL AT ALL GROCERS mm tA Dandclion Spring Salad. â€" Crisp three cups of dandelion leaves and cut into shreds with a â€"sharp knife. Quarter four sweet oranges and cut into small pieces. Rub the salâ€" ad ‘bow! with a cut clove of garlic, put in a level teaspoonful of salt and half a teaspoon of pepper, & leek cut into bits and a tablespoon of wine vinegar. Now add drop by drop two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, stirring all the time, then a hardâ€" boiled egg out into rings, and lastâ€" ly the dandelion and oranges. Toss all lightly with a silver fork and serve at once. & Dandclion Potato Salad. â€" Wash young dandelion leaves in several waters, cut fine and add to potato salad made with potato, bacon cut fine. Fresh dressing and salt and pepper. :s 2 _ SLisE fere F0 dn sls Chiffon Salad.â€"Heart of a white cabbage. cut into Slivers as thin as paper, the length of a match ; redâ€" skinned radishesâ€"cut in the same way, with the red skin left for the artistic effect, and tiny pieces of the hearts of celery. Mix and let stard for an hour or ¢wo «before serving in a French dressing of olive oil, vinegar, pepper and salt. Drain this off before serving. Place in a large white cabbage which has been scooped or hollowed out, the crisp outer leaves turned down to form the effect of a rose. Pour over the amixture a rich mayonnaise dressing. All suet puddings require long cooking to render them digestible. The following are a few simple rules in economy : Never buy @ cheap material when you can get a better product. Pay cash ; credit is costly. Buy nonâ€"perishable food products in quantities. Watch the household closely and eliminate all waste. A piece of garden hose makes an ideal carpet beater. While stout to dislodge the dust, its fiexibility prevents the wear and tear given by the ordinary stick or rattan beater. A very good way to dispas»> Of slices of toast and scraps of bread is to brown all in the oven, ther roll and sift, then when you bake cookies or sand tarts three to four cups of crumbs are used in place of part of the fiour called for in the recipe. If spinach can be washed in many waters immediately upon â€" being brought in from garden or market, and then placed upon a cloth laid on the ice, the result will be surâ€" prising. The shoots from onions at this time of year will be found excellent for giving a flavor to a salad or othâ€" t1 Useful Hints. For Coughs. Colds and Distemper, and at the first aympiomse of any such ailment, give small doees of that wonderful remâ€" cdy, 1tow the most used in existence. SPONN‘S DISTEMPER COMPOUND Of any druggist, Turf Goode house, or Watch Your Colts SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and Basteriologists, Coshen, Ind., U.S.A. 3WA CSA S er dishes. Rub the bow! in which the salad is served with the shoots. Whe best way to warm up a roast A most delicious sandwich is made by taking twoâ€"thirds minced chickâ€" en and oneâ€"third ham and tongue, and moistening the mixture with mayounnaise. _A lettuce leaf might also be added. The best way to wanm up &A TO#S®® is to wut it in thickly greased paâ€" per and keep it covered while in the oven. By having it covered the steam will prevent the meat from becoming hard and dry. Serge, after constant wear, beâ€" comes whiny and therefore loses its original beauty. If sponged with hot vinegar and pressed in the usâ€" ual manner the shiny appearance will entirely disappear. The vineâ€" gar does not stain or leave an odor. free from eggs when laid away, the odor from the various repellents or from cedar chests and wardrobes will serve to keep the moths away. The odor, however, lessens with are wrapped in tarred paper the containers should be renewed every year or two. In general, moths are likely to affect only articles which are put away and left undisturbed for some little time. Apartments and cloâ€" sets that are. frequently aired and swept are not apt to be seriously affected. In fact, airing and «unâ€" light are probably the best. as well The varmous substances Urou i7 keep away moths, such as tobacco, camphor, naphthalene cones or balls, tarred paper and cedar chips have no effect if the moth eggs are already present in the clothes, and entomology specialists therefore reâ€" commend, before they ~are laid away for the summer, a thorough beating, shaking and brushing of all articles likely to attract moths. The brushing of garments is esâ€" pecially important in order to reâ€" move eggs which may have escaped notice. If the articles are quite age, so that the protection it afâ€" fords is greatly decreased after a few years. For this reason when furs and other valuable garments as the oidest, remedies. When circumstances demand that the articles be put away, however, a convenient and effective device is to place them in large pasteboard boxes, such as tailors use, and gum a. strip of wrapping paper around the edge so as to seal up the box completely and leave no cracks. If the garments have been thoroughly cleaned before being placed in these boxes no additional protection is necessary and there is none of the objectionable odor which is characteristic of so many moth repelients. _ Protection Against Clothes Moths, shown that the larvae of the clothes moth will resist for a long time low temperatures if these are uniform. but that the alternation of low and high temperatures quickly results in death. For valuable articles the safest plan is to place them in cold storâ€" age. â€" Recent experiments have y w es W in a 1 to feet, ‘and w windows the top « the top of the rubber tube "ped air t der the water Bobbie, wh« was always a e | Under the Water "Rot right under the » a long time °" exclam who was sitting up in arms round his knees "Yes, right down unde! pr an hour at a tiume Incle Hartley, who wa whout the wo: sea when he at tée seasho1 "Toâ€"morroy the breakwat ley, "and see ladder to ho\ low the surfa .‘".t wall sight, just as Uncle Harties range stories. 7 ad been about a It was hard gleep that mig brying to thin feel when ho ber suiw. B« ‘h bedciothe ecould stay w nmed to hi Jater when took the pat short cut to Uncle Har best of frien were workin ran out into men took th of the break was already suit. Bobbi with eager « breath whe! hood again when edge of the down the down, he w him no mo gan to wal air down t who gave | rope. The gignals in 1 boom swut over the $ OW 1 \ and fro se them drop diver relea big hook : another st BW :11 & It was a â€" something 1 wonderful 1 expected . They had for almost gone back were idly anything â€" afterward ous &@Acck shown ho has to be The men round a bis beginning : #truck the in the chai sharply. _‘ and then ; splash that up The d the ston it highe to the r again. / and the Then t wanted ed ‘him the big had be Young Folks brave whain a cessary then, i danger stone the m« how b duty : of dar se hard best 1 walkc the d thir uy ¢1, d Wh oncl sAV ©n Ores n# i «1 Ha ALF H W n wl d )bbi €i¢ 1 Ti

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