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Durham Review (1897), 12 Oct 1922, p. 2

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«4 # t» at Her veins were tingling with youth, eall of youth was strong within g of kwe. She wanted to tive, to te the eweetness and the warmth grme best that life has to give. Her out was throbbing a little as she pass«l into the flat; there was a faint mist before her eys5e. he had had her day. Bhe tok herâ€" J that with a gort of i itable ::k that was &am":cflstk. t to» row wus sop awsactâ€"so gwes the darkness ths* called was fie& so enimty, so cold! the was until she was E:' mind had been n of curious though malifica® at tho nawt Marcia wallk soit, chill dusk Trask‘s. Marcia tightened her hand su«identy over Araby‘s. Her eyes were bridilant. "Those two," she said, "are going to find out very soon that they need each other more than anything or anybody in the waorld. Kempton needs you!" The girl cried out at that, chokingly, and clung to her. As she released herâ€" self Audrey‘s voice came again from the other room. Involuntarily both girls glanced across the hall. The door was sufficiently open for them to see in. Mrs. Alden was examining a canâ€" vas, her stim, bare shoulder against "Kempton leaves for Liverpool this nwrningl?" she said. "That‘s why I ecame. J did not know he was going so soon, He sails toâ€"morrow for Buenos Aires, by the mail steamer. Are you going to let him go?" Araby got rather stumblingly to her foet. Her eyes looked unnaturally large, more tragic than Marcia‘s own. She laid her hamds suddenly upon the girl‘s slim shoulders and forced her back into her chair. "But you‘ve got to hear me," she finished breathiessly, and plaunged headiong into explanation Perhaps she told her story disjointâ€" edly, hur ie made it clear, as women can. When she finished Araby drew a lomg breath. Her eyes were wide. There was a dazed wonder in them. For a long moment she gat quite still. Then she turned her eyes quickâ€" ly from the great, dark, tragic yet smiling eyes bent n her. And,i'. was Marcia who NR: the silence. She stradiel hewad as "Loves you. He has always loved r’»u. Whatever wrong he has done, as hbeen, almost, as much for the sake of your happiness as for his family Ronor, for his dying father‘s sake. And you wouldn‘t yisun to him; you wouldn‘t hear any excuse from bri tragedy. % Mess ‘A dying woman doesn‘t lie‘!" she 1 CHAPTER LV.â€"(Cont‘d.) "Araby‘s through with me," Kempâ€" ton said concisely. "For keeps! She thimks the worst that is to be thought. Arnrd she refuses to listen. She aina ged ca‘" She whispered the w : little brokeniy, "But how re? How can I believeâ€"â€" stopped. Marcia‘s hands v s Her eyes were very s ldly sweet despite that â€" 2Gnt belleve 1i e the job, Jasper CHAPTER LV] H mat Or h but little conmsideration as ga were to be arranged ndal, talk. She knew, it somehow it would be he knew that Lady Rossâ€" : would be tied, and that, fact of Gordon inheriting, The Gates of Hope p4 k cry ater â€" Marcia make Wi hands were Wa BY ANTHONY CARLYLEB rd an ft, 18 W \he woulid have been quite unfit for ‘ practice." | "Jasper! What is the matter?" _ But Waldron, unheeding, was bendâ€" ing over a limp, slender figure that had sagged sudgenly over the arm of the big chair. a very few moments He smiled in answer to the anguished, steady quesâ€" tioning of Waldron‘s eves. tion had given place to a %m} alertness. He had even gonme back to Marcia‘s room, only to rsturn within little man with shrewd, kindly, searchâ€" ing eyes across the sittingâ€"room table. He had told all that he knew and the little doctor‘s smooth air of satisfacâ€" |__"It has since transpired that Sir [Hugh‘s mental condition during this last year has been by no means sound. Many patients, visiting him upon seâ€" | parate occasions, have found his stateâ€" ‘mon‘!s contradictory. In some cases this has caused considerable anxicty, lwh.ich has resulted in those under treatment seeking other advice, which, only in a few cases, has confirmed Sir Hugh‘s opinion. | | "It is believed that. had he livad agoniz« followe the hal He . uprigh "It‘s Every word that Mrs. Halstead had uttered was ringing, clarionlike, in his ears. A dizzy, unbelievable hope was throbbing in his heart. Hope! Mr "His collapse was very sudden, but for #ome time his condition has, it appears, been of considerable anxiety to his friends. Everything was done, almost as long as a year ago, to perâ€" suade him to give up practice, but without avail. | _ "So very sad. Especially the cirâ€" cumstances. And he was such a |young man. They say it was overâ€" | work, overstrain that caused the ‘breakktown. It was in the paper the other day, quite a long paragraph,. I meant to show you. I think it is in my workbasket, Jasper, if you care to read it. Rather terrible, I call it." _ Marcia sat quite still; Waldron fumbled for the paper under the little resewood table by the invalid‘s chair. He found the paper atTL:st, fiqmlwd] it for the paragraph. en dropâ€" ped it into Mrs. lfzr}me_q@"s lap. I "Sir Hugh Dallas, the eminent heart specialist, died yesterday at the Nursing Home in Bournemouth, to which he was taken after his selzure, a week or so ago. _ "Read it," he said. His eyes were on Marcia. Mrs. Halstead adjusted her glasses and obeyed. "DEATH OF SIR HUGH DALLAS. "There is nothing at all the matter "Dead!" Marcia sat upright in her chair. Her voice was startled, a little metailic. . Her mother nodded. _ _"By the way," she inquired mildly, "did you know he was dead?" P ( It‘s all right," he said steadily to 3. MHalstead. "Tell her maid to w me her roomâ€"and sendâ€"at once I Waldron‘s voice in her mother‘s sitâ€" ‘ting room. He was sitting in a low chair by the little log fire. Mrs. Halâ€" stead, placid, sweet, was knitting on is believed that, had he lived, ulg have been quite unfit for 10UP rew ce uneveniy, like a man who running. But his eyes were as he picked up Marcia and the scared Toinette across i long breath and stood he faced a danpor ’ A remarkable piece of engineering |hal been carried out by American enâ€" gineers in preparation for the forthâ€" |coming centenary exhibition at Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil. They have bodily Iremoved into the harbor a hill of reâ€" spectable size, called the Castello Moro. It stood nearly in the centre of the city, and though it was picturesque it was decided that its room would be a great deal more valuable than its comâ€" pany. The removal of the hill furnishâ€" ed a site for a large part of the exhibiâ€" tion, and, after that is over, Will add many valuable acres of building land to the city. The hill was removed by washing it away. Hydraulic power cut into the | hill like a scoop into cheese, and the | earth, turned into liquid mud, was washed down through pipes into the sea much more cffeaply and qu‘ckly than it could have been removed solid in vehicles. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the | Every ‘"Diamond Dyes" package |tells how to dye or tint any worn, | faded garment or drapery a new rich color that will not streak, spot, fade, |or run. Perfect home dyeing is guarâ€" anteed with Diamond Dyes even if you ‘hnve never dyed before. Just toll your | druggist whether th~ mater‘al you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether | it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. For | fiftyâ€"one years milllons of women have ‘been using "Diamond Dyes" to add years of wear to their old, shabby | waists, skirts, dresses, coats, sweaters, ! stockings, draperies, lxunglngsv_ everyâ€" , thing! | | He stopped, made dumb by the wonâ€" |der of her eyes. She slid her hands |up about his neck and drew his face "I know," she said. And added, on a little, lilting sob. "I‘m your wife, Kemp! I‘m coming. too!" (The End.) Dye Faded Sweater Skirt, Draperies in Diamond Dyes "But we start in less than a minute. I‘m going to Buenos Aires. Iâ€"good heavensâ€"â€"*" "I only heardâ€"yesterday!" she whispered, "that you were sailing by this boat. I thought I should be too lateâ€"â€"" She stopped. The throb grew heavâ€" fer. He laid his hands wpon her shoulâ€" She was smiling at him, a shabby little figure in a blue Tam 0‘ Shanter and muchâ€"worn Burberry, her bare hands clasped upon his arm. She looked utterly fagged, <â€" travelâ€"worn, but her eyes glowed. So that, fecognizi'r'r'g'.kr}ai)-yv,-'-}â€"le'fi:;; a hoarse cry of amazement, then stood very still. "You!" he uttered. "Great heavens! Why are you here?" he broke off. The steamer was already throbbing and quivering under his feet, hoarse voices were uttering varying comâ€" mands. In a little while they would ; be swallowed in the mist and England | would be gathering denser veils of it| around her, shutting her from sight.| Kempton Rosslaer, leaning over the deck rail, looking with haggard, bitter eyes through a mist of rain and sceudâ€" ding cloud at the crowded docks, startâ€" ed and turned at the light touch of a hand upon his arm. y mal will "I mean," he said, "that all Misg| EDT two dozen 1 Halstead needs is a change, a c.om-, (medium size), six on plete rest and a lot of care. I under. POPP®Ts (remove the stand you are to be married. Let it dozen tart apples and be smon and take her to some p!acel finely cut celery. Add she hm:t never been heforle; avoid exâ€" seedless raiszins, two qus citement, discourage recollection, and three c in a i'm‘r“sh:'v.-.'nl be a perfectly norâ€" taste. ?’f,:,’:,’,nfffnf‘:‘..’ system has suffered badly. Otherwise, there is no cause for glarm." | "You meanâ€"â€"" nguel Waldron got out the wornds with: diffculty. His world seemed to be! reeling round him. His eyes p!oaded., The little doctor pelished his glasses carefully. | _ | {with Miss Halstead‘s heart," he anâ€" {nounced. "It is as sound as my own, or yours. | "Since that timeâ€"she has been utâ€" terly exhausting herself, while she has lived within the shadow of a terrible dread hanging over her. Her nervous _ "According to what you have told me, when she visited Sir Hugh for consultation, she was in a rundown, nervous state, anaemic, probably imâ€" properly and inadequsately fed! She is very young, excitable and impressionâ€" able. & ‘ Washing a Hill Away. a Gaisa healthy, happy young woman! I wish you goodâ€"night!" CHAPTER LVIL + shald vieee ons stugtmeipycnane ts on 0_ O," omaune house ning activities just how much for further use rapidly it is be wife has work pint of corn (cut from the cob after boiling three minutes), one large head of cauliflower and two level tableâ€" spoonfuls of tumeric. Boil the carâ€" rots, beans and cauliflower in slightly salted water until tender, but not soft. Break the caulifiower into small pieces. Chop the peppers into small pieces, peel and seald the onions. Bring the vinegar to boiling point. mix the mustard and tumeric with a little cold vinegar and add with the salt and sugar to the boiling vinegar, stirring constantly. Allow to eool, then add the remaining ingredients. Mix well, bottle and cork tightly. | l Plain cucumber pickles: When but a | fow pickles can be made at a time, the ;Jfouowing recipe is invaluable: As the cucumbers ripen place in a jar and cover with cold water to find out how fmuch vinegar will be needed. Then | make a brine strong enough to bear | an egg, heat the brine and pour over | the cucumbers. Let stand over night, | then pour off, make a new brine, heat | and pour over the cucumbers, allow |to stand over night and next day reâ€"‘ heat this brine and allow to stand | over night again. The next day reâ€"‘ move cucumbers from the brine, wash ‘in cold water and pack in quart jars.| Place a small piece of horseradish and a piece of red pepper to each jar. Boil the required amount of vinegar with spices to taste. Fill up jars with the hot vinegar and seal tightly. Nasturâ€"| tium seeds may be added if desired.? and sweet pickles can be made by | adding brown sugar to the vinegar. ! A recipe for piccalilli which is highâ€"| ly praised requires oneâ€"half gallon of best cider vinegar, seven ounces of, ground, yellow mustard, two tableâ€" spoonfuls of salt, one and oneâ€"half ‘ pounds of sugar, oneâ€"fourth pound of ‘ mustardâ€"seed, four green and two red| peppers (remove seeds), one pint of|‘ small onions, one pint of carrots , (sliced, boiled and cut into small| . pieces), one pint of lima beans, one Keeping Do of gingerroot, and when nearly done, add one thinly sliced lemon to each three pounds of citron. Cook slowly until the fruit is transparent and the syrup thick, then pack in jars and seal. P EEVSE OV RERCTY are made of the citron melon thuâ€"‘:fcoldâ€"and the Wash the citron, cut in halves, reâ€"| mixture. â€" Hal: move seeds, cut in strips and PS€!:) benzoin will b Add one pound of sugar to each pound | nary sized wai of citron and allow to stand overr; Used thus, night in a large bowl. Next morning pores. If the place over the fire, add a small PIGC€| anlorow!} nes + Slice the vegetables and run them through a foodâ€"chopper. Add the sait and allow to stand &ll night. Next morning drain off the liquid, add the other ingredients and cook until vegeâ€" tables are soft. Bottle and cork tightly. oneâ€"half cupful of salt, six cupfuls of vinegar, oneâ€"half cupful of mustardâ€" §_e_gd and two cupfuls of brown sugar. Excellent pepper relish is made of one peck of green tomatoes, four red peppers and four green peppers (omitting the seeds), two cupfuls of celery, two cupfuls of sliced onions, ; activities? It is well how much food has been further use, and to know | _ Tomato conserve: Peel, cut into | small pieces and remove seeds from twelve cupfuls of ripe tomatoes, add | eight cupfuls of sugar, and the juice | and grated rind of three oranges. ’Cnok all together until as thick zs jel‘y. Put in sterilized jars and seal with paraffin. seedless raisins, two quarts of vinega&r, three cupfuls of sugar, and salt to taste. Combine the ingredients, and. cook until chutney is thick and clear,| then pour it into hot sterilized jars,} and soal. | Chutrey is made thus: Chop toâ€" gether two dozen ripe tomatoes (medium size), six onions, three red peppers (remove the seeds), one dozen tart apples and one cupful of ONTARIO ARCHIVEs TORONTO Pickling and Preserving. Woman‘s Sphere one pound of to know prepared also how e houseâ€" m which Clean the skin with a cleansing cream. Rub in a little of the paste, lie down (this is important) and rest for twenty minutes while the paste dries. The rest will relax your muscles and give the astringent a better chance to act upon the lines in the face and the tiny lax muscles of the skin. Wash off with very warm water, massage with a good cold cream, and end with an iceâ€"cold ringe. _ There is another astringent, a paste sometimes called a "pack" and variâ€" ?cusly used by facial specialists. There are a hundred ways to make this, the fsimp!est. form being as follows: Beat up an egg, using the white only, if you want this for wrinkles. If you want it to help cure pimpfes and for a bleach as well, beat the yoik in at the same time. Mix in kalf a teaâ€" spoonful of powdered alumâ€"this will. curdle, but that doesn‘t matter. Add. enough white wine vinegarâ€"cider vinegar if you can‘t get the otherâ€" to make a thin paste. Or use cueumber juice and vinegar, half and half. This amount will last for a long time. _ This treatment will help prevent wrinkles and sagging muscles, because it is good for the skin and because all good care wards off the fatal day when middle age shows in the lines of the face. But if you already have wrinkles and lax muscles and want something stronger, try ice as a masâ€" sage. Ice is a powerful! astringent. It brings the blood to the skin, inâ€" ducing a better color, draws up the muscles, and smooths the wrinkles. Of course, as ice is very drying, it should only be used after a hot wash and a cold cream massage. | While "I put five marks in a column to facilitate counting. It is easier and quicker to count by fives than by ones. For the same reason, to facilitate counting, I begin at the right to mark of my used jars o Pn vwan nuear. stand ?" I use a jar of canned goods, I cross off one of these marks. It is really very simple. of them crossed off. The housewife explains her system thus: "Every time I put up a jar of anything, I put down a mark to repâ€" resent that jar. The figure 1 repreâ€" sents a quart jar, the figure 0 repreâ€" sents a pint. During the winter, when suits her; you may find it satisfactory also, She keeps a large sheet of white paper, neatly ruled, both horizontally and verticaly, tacked up on the inner side of the pantry door. On the left side of this sheet is a list of names of the vepetables anl fruit which sho‘ has canned, and after each name there are numerous little black marks, somel of them crossed off. Large Pores and Wrinkles. umbers are ir season, d Danderine is deligh or greasy. Go to any and get a bottle. healthy, heavy, beautif then the hair lal and strength to and long. Danderine falling hair cleans every F mssc dnea ds T baldness. What a pit means your hair is w sibly dandruff is strar bair root pores in th firm and tight, thus w growing oils. Alds Deaf to Hear. A new device that aids deaf persons to hear closely resembles a walking stick with a «lightly enlarged head. Curtains, draperies, carpets and all household articles can be dyed and restored to their original s freshness. HE postman or express man will bring Parker service right to your home. _ Suits, dresses, ulsters and all wearing apparel can be successfully dyed. "Madam," answered he dealer, "I have only one answer. Did you ever hear of a muskrat carrying an umbrelâ€" la ?" DYEING A SIN TO LET HAR FALL OUT "But suppose I get it wet in the rain," asked the woman,. "What efâ€" fect will the water have on it? What will happen to it then? _ Won‘t it spoil?" Minard‘s Liniment For Colds, Eta. The Muskrat Knows. A furrier was trying to sell a muskâ€" rat coat to a woman customer. *"Yes, madam," he said, "I guarantee that this muskrat coat will wear for years." 35¢"Danderine" Saves Your Hairâ€"Ends Dandruff! Delightful Tonic hours, then strain. Add one ounce | white wax, one ounce spermaceti, and ; one ounce orangeâ€"flower water, and beat the mixture until it is creamy. Pour into jars and seal tightly. MNew Hite Remeby Compang RHEUMATIC SUFFERE | _ Are Relieved from Pain Wm. Dixon, Toronto, writes: "For over two years I had been unable to raise my hands as bigh as my shoulders. Afâ€" ter using the first bottle of Dobson‘s New Life. Remedy I was free from pain. Now, after using the ifth bottle, my general health is as good as it ever was. Thanking you sincerely for what Dobson‘s New Life has done for me and trusting every sufferer may learn of your wonderful medtâ€" cine." One bottle for One Dollar, Six bottles for Five Dollars, from your nearest druggist, or 78 West Adelalde St., Toronto Canada in@ almost instantly stops air of men or women and ery particle of dandruft away, hair takes on new life, vigor igth to grow StrOE, thick, ___l Brbson | New Hife| Jy o _ " eremrâ€"NOL sticky Go to any drug store now bottle. Use it, Have Mnb liade o s ie Parker‘s Dye Works, Limited We pay carriage one way on all orders. delightful Write for full particulare, Cleaners and Dyers 791 Yonge St. Toronto £ | #rurdy | BDoabson ? auly. slach day ore hair falling out & no effort to avoid weak, é‘?(‘k,â€"«pog. rangling it, or the the scalp are not wasting the bairâ€" 80 â€" it. > Have 1 hair ara lots alling hair P2R In HMolland: there cana‘s. "Ob, well, mother," ; course I know lots of I don‘t like to waste ; he doesn‘t know the d a dog." "Bobby," said you keep telling when you know should say ?" h farmers results, has beg a8 tling sunshin tical fathers : that of Aying It is begin t Among thke my The result may easily be a set of laws entirely different from those ap plicable to aerial navigation. In th last war the use of wireless was for bidden; in the next we may bave to protect our air from being tampered with. In the last war, too, Germany proved the commercia} value of the air. The blockade having cut off the supply of nitrate required to fertilize German fields, the chemists of the country drew upou the nitrogen in the air to supply the defciency. . With cheap power, cheap fertilizer can be made {rom the air, and more is now being produced every year. Other commercial gases derived from the air are oxygen, argon, and helium. The process of making oxyâ€" gen from air is getting cheaper as time goes on; when it reaches an easy stage of cheapness on enormous deâ€" mard will arise. Just as oxygen is now used for welding cnd other purâ€" poses in which great heat is desired. not gradually but very speedily, «n it will be required for smelting and a bundred other purposes, The Age of Miracies. Argon, a much rarer gas, is used io fill incandescent bulbs. Formerly they were filled with nothing at ail, but the substitution of this gas ensures a brighter light and a very much longe; period of usefulness., Helium, taken from the air, is use1 to inflate dirigibles and observation balloons. It is not cheap at present, but it is safe as well as light At least two areas have been dis covered which are described as ‘dead." Wireless messages sent across those areas are subject to such interference that results cannot be obtained. Just Fancy That! Elsewhere it is found that the range over which messages can be sont varies enormously with the condition of the air. These things mare not vet understood, but their mystery will one day be solved. ' Let us consider the question of wire less next. One of the most fascinating features is the mysteries upon vwhich wireless operators are continually stumbling. They will require policing, weather reports, and a dozen other services ap parent to any ordinary imagination. The countries over which they pass will be responsible, and will collect dues and provide services, Like the Suez Canal, or any big railway, an air route will be worth something consid erable. One lane for slow and heavy vehic les, another for light pleasure craft, and at least a third for speed maniacs will surely be the rule. One day we shall have definite air routes, and they will not carry the jumble of traffic at present seen on our roads. Possibilities and Problems. . So every country possesses, in the ‘air above it, a most valuable right of way, a tolegraphic system, the possiâ€" bilities of which are only dimly underâ€" stood, and a storehouse of chemical wealth. No laws govern it as pet; but it is impossible that the air should reâ€" main free much longer, because it is too valuable. (c) The storehouse, apparently inâ€" exhaustible, of gases of a commercial value equal to that of the coal and oil of the earth itself. mA y (b) The medium â€" through which wireless messages are transmitted. (a) The pathway for airships and aeroplanes, which are to be the world‘s chief means of transport and communtâ€" cation in a future by no means disâ€" tant. 1608 begun Already it is realized that the air can no longer remain @ No Man‘s Land, governed by no laws, and free for an,vb@y to use or missuse at will. For the present, while we breathe the air, we must also regard it as: Yet the outstanding discovery of the present century is the fwet that the air is valuable for many purposes boeside breathing. In another quarter of a cenâ€" ury we may have begun to know what the cushion of atmosphere which surâ€" rounds the earth is really worth. "Free as the air‘"‘ is a sayiag as old as the hills, and we talk about cmpty air as though thore were nothing of value outside our earth and water. is sale as w is likely tha to indicate m g its secrets ystery of rain sunshine. est A Waste of GCood Eng! possibilities _ be suppos« already pay aend the harm« AIR FOR SALE rainmak estimate impossit are O° essi 11 ba l H 104 Io &1 1} 17 fie/ A\

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