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Durham Review (1897), 8 Feb 1923, p. 2

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P S & ~#$ acommitiniitiheeathitntrass suites.cs ... e iieipratieete wees mone. mhom was to assume the| royal robes and crown, sitting daily | wpon the throne that the townsfolk might not suspect the King‘s tn;sence.‘ Orce every day he was to see the‘ Prirecss. And if, at the end of the | week, the magic purss had not failed| a sing‘s time, the King would return | r‘s t {narriago 'surt;lfly. be solgmnâ€" | madl s aprearing fa‘r Anvragn td * Shom. the Princess and the IEgher | @x j BTTD _Cf TTCC CC COCenor, TAC ETINCCSE and Jook sn !l"mZ:nf.: diviainfully after the rest. the very sil Shom m'm.‘.v' atecly revealed the purse a merry twin and explained its peculiar propertigs, "Good morn The King was no slower than Shom morning «he had been to perceive the convenionce ‘°h"." fingers i of the arramzement, and wished to try (:3"“"3. nvoul its powers at once. es 1 'whx: "Very well," said Shom. "We will MUCSYI, A assume that Your Highnoss is one of d tss doup the merchants of your capital and that noontbus w I am you, I thereupon offer you this n io nt?g hss gokl piece for your crown." a.. ... And / "But," hesitated the King, "it‘s my I;e es very best crown." Being reaszsured f."! je, i that it was all in make believe, he l ce haemded the crown to Shom with adâ€" B.‘}l,t 1;161,'}»0’ monition ncot to drep it, and took the o fhe ine gold piece. Shom pretended to walk b:mat:h the' off with his purchase, calling back ht CDUCC"® fieeful'ly over g:'s shoulder, "Now look her in enrite or the coin‘!" on nuree, an The King opened his hand and saw with iu'r.:com; with amazement that it was quite 'gw £ m;,gt empty. He ran after Shom, seized the :’ on-sdto_ € ‘; purse, and there was the gold piece [u%..u4~‘ looking up at him as innocently as feaving: £i8 gzur dog, when he has been raising e mosti)epolu‘tl b over the countryside all day, and ;l:w_ge %W(t;t' at suppertime wa‘ks nonchalantly in oT or yac h at the door, wagging his tail and sayâ€" o be of the K Ing, with a surprised air, "Were you (-nboumgg' n looking for me?" '!I'};I(:\ }\,’:)iul(d o That was enough for Zoto. Kinging lno" Oe had Lecome a more complicated P";usitz bf-c(:mmg n ness than it used to be, and he immeâ€" ('.a?' ar}d o f diate‘y imagined himself taking a vaâ€" pavent Muost eation from the court, wandering announcing it about the bazaars in disguise and buyâ€" e approa-ch‘ ing any trinket that might catch his fke part of fancy, without bhaving to explain his Shonl det'erml extravagance to the Chancellor of the hCX""% Y# Excher ; â€" Sabk C3 " _ that the King xchequer. So he told Shom, quite 1y halfâ€"1 :.'T:_x::l)'. to name the tiile he wished .:.'.\.\}.'5 :).. 'In-:: 1 am you, 1 thereupon offer you this gokl piece for your crown." "But," hesitated the King, "it‘s my very best crown." Being reaszsured that it was all in make believe, he hamded the crown to Shom with adâ€" monition ncot to drep it, and took the gold piece. Shom pretended to walk off with his gmrchaasc, calling back leefully over his shoulder, "Now look for the coin!" The King onened his hand and anur Vani,. . Ims inFenuous manceuvre seeming to mystify Shom, the King. now in high feather, proceeded to amplify. He wou‘d advise the court that he was ioin-z on a jJourney of one week alone. Shom was to assume the royal robes and crown, sitting daily bant! This ingenu seeming to mystify | now in high feathe BC\ tro gTC The Toronto Hospltal for incurâ€" ables. in @?Silation with Bellevue and Allled MWowpitais, New York City, offers a three years Course of Trainâ€" ln1 to )'0':n1 women. having the reâ€" quired educalion, and demirou« of beâ€" coming nurses. . This Hospital has adopted the o!ght-hour aystem. The puptle reoe!ve Uuniforms of the School, Pm en SSntet o o n en n en Uit w mon:bl{c allowance and travelling ex nena®® and from New York. For further information apply to the €uperintendert. The Gift of Quirn NURSES PART II +1 fidgeting with impaâ€" s word the whole court earshot, the Princoss fully after the rest. M it P tne secret in King by this g with impaâ€" h BY JOHN . brazen tones of it think have at purse, ° t much ‘eamed. W sm mfer rried w ay ed en fit to becoming Queen in the happy city of Gaw, and one can understand her apâ€" parent impatience and her delight in announcing to the unsuspecting Shom the approach of the great day. But the part of the story which made Shom determine upon a suitable venâ€" geance was when he further learned that the King had a second. daughter, an ugly halfâ€"wit, whom he proposed to dress in Zeni‘s raiment, disguised by a wedding veil, and marry to Shom, while knowing very well that Shom expected to marry Zeni herself. Thus, remarked the Princess, while the old nurse nodded her approbation of the King‘s serupulousness in trifies, the letter of the promise would be respectâ€" ed, and Shom perceived that kings were much cleverer than goatherds, after all, and that it would again be necessary for him to do some serious thinking. Shom‘s thoughts finally â€"resoived themselves into the following rather peculiar actions. He went quietly to the royal apiary, which supplied the honey that the King defighted to spread on his white bread, carefully closed and lifted a hive into which the hbees had retired for the night and carried it to a small glassâ€"inclosed summer house in a distant corner of But in the evening of this last day of the King‘s absence, while walking beneath the vineâ€"covered balcony of the Princess‘ apartments, Shom heard her in earnest conversation with her old nurse, and what she said filled him with uncommon bitterness, for she was giving the woman amazing direcâ€" tions to be carried out on the followâ€" ing day. _ It appeared that, before leaving, the wily King had agreed to a most politic and satisfactory marâ€" riage between Zeni and one of the Princes of Gaw. Upon the very after-} noon of the King‘s return Zeni and her entourage were to set off for Gaw, tmd‘ she would be married that evening. The Princess was far from averse to the grounds. He left it there, fastenâ€" ing the door secureiy behind hbim. Very early the next morning he dressâ€" ed, in the King‘s robes as usual, and went secretly to the summer house, providing himsef on the way with a long, straight branch. Opening the door a crack, he inserted the branch and poked at the hive until he had stirred up the bess to an ominous dim roar of anger. When the were about to discover the position of their enemy he quickly closed the door, and they beat against the glass in frenzied clouds. Shom showed himself{ to them at all the windows in turn, and trlo army of outraged bees followed him around, geemin@ to become more f\x{i- ous at e?c?x‘g\gpe,amnce of the scarlet vshbe and glittering crown. At last. yise and glittering@g crown,. At last,! when ‘fne &ou;ht“ilw‘-r mood a gah'l rop‘roJuciion of his own feelings, he| left them, returning to the throne room to await the arrival of the King.! About noon there came a knocking at the side door of the palace, and at Shom‘s direction the knocker was adâ€" mitted. It was the King, quite jovialâ€" ly drunk and staggering under the weight of a bulgi::f sack. The court was dismissed, and as soon as they were alone the King proceeded to exâ€" hibit his treasures, which consisted of every unimaginable kind of utterly useless trinket, mixed with divers pasâ€" triee and sweets, which were someâ€" what the worse for being carried for here, fastenâ€" behind him. ing@ he dressâ€" s usual, and (;1 _ _Once I went in for bush nasturâ€" ;:iums, surrounding the premises with ; ribbon beds that furnished countless | bouquets of spicy gorgeousness and a | most charmins effect. 1 dug the beds , very deep and just a foot wide, then . set the plants about a foot apart; well, you would have to see it to | realize what an unusually beautiful | effect it made. I learned two tricks with nasturtiums that year; one, they :should be picked as religiously as | pansies or sweet peas; the other, a | rather poor soil brings out brighter | blossoms and less foliage. Harmony in Flowerland. It is never too early to plan the summer beauty crops; sometimes I think them out while the seed pods of autumn are still swaying in the breeze. Planning a flower bed is like trying on new spring hats, each seems lovlier than the last and each must be considered with relation to its surâ€" roundings. To illustrate: a flower bed, lovely in itself, may conflict with a neighboring bed, waging such posiâ€" live warfare as to mar the harmony of the whole delightful summer. I am not strong for centre beds that cut into the restful sweep of a lawn; a rioting border along the boundaries or masses of one particular flower trying to outdo its neighbor in fragâ€" rant display, are to my mind, more pleasing. Everybody can be treated impartially in a jumbleâ€"bed, the only preference being in giving the shorter plants front seats. Anything and everything, the more the merrier, from stately aristocratic cannas at the back to dainty snow white candyâ€" tuft in front, with all the colors of the rainbow tangled between. Be sure to include a generous sprinkling of blue blossoms to get the best rioting effect; blue ageratum is splendid. Even a blue morning glory vine, plebian though it is supposed to be, may be permitted to trail its lovely belis across the cannas and down again over the front bushes. Years ago 1 started a hollyhock hedge along our back fence and I have had full reward every fall in a dainty wave of color across my kitchen view. For some reason the hapless hollyâ€" hock is generally required to fight it out alone with the weeds, but I cultiâ€" vate mine as carefully as John does his corn and had just as good a crop, even if we couldn‘t ceat it! If you keep bees, plant the single varieties and prove to your John that hollyâ€" hocks can be made an eating crop as well as corn. So when my things get out of fix Do I ask pa to mend ‘em? Nix! But ma just grabs what‘s near at hand An‘ togs things up to beat the band. Ma fixed the latch up with hay wire The bath tub drain got all clogged up Pa bailed the tub out with a cupâ€" He had a dreadful helpless look, Ma cleaned it with a crochet hook. If you have a shrub or rose hedge, be careful that the prowling grass roots do not edge in on the rose roots; instead of a scrag@ly grass margin, keep it clean cut and have some quick blooming summer flower to take up The caster on the table leg Fell out. Pa said a wooden peg Would fix it up, but ma kept mum An‘ fixed it with a wad of gum. At home it seoms to be the rule Pa pever has the proper tool, Or knack to fix things, for the stunt That stumps ma, though, you‘ll have to hunt. The ccurt having been assembled, the ugly Princess dressed to resemble ZLeni (wh‘e the "atter prepared to set out secretly for Gaw) and all being at last ready for the wedding ceremony, Shom conficded to the King that he had the previcus evening stclen a most magnificont golden chain from the shop of a silversmith and hidden it t a week in the sun. Shom complimentâ€" in the summer house. He proposed‘ food will cook stlowly while the family e4 him on the excellence of his taste, that they go together to get it, that attends church. On their return from inquiring if the magical purse had it might be presented to the bride &t church, the casserole is placed in the once failed him. the proper time. This tickled the King heating oven over the top of the "Never failed me once!" giggled the immensely, the more so because the yange, leaving the oven for the comâ€" King, plunging into innumerable remâ€" siversmith in question had been overâ€" pletion of the pie. The vessel conâ€" isri;:scenoes of his advinturu, which looh]:d in tt:w otl:cer f;h:i:x'o‘namzf ;‘hlg sining the tomatocs is placed over in ted f week, so they set 0 â€" ‘?%::?:?E:d\figl?:\so ha lkaom vanr asa rrmmd-syafter first tucking the. the m' for Nhe&tin‘. The Farmer‘s Sunday Ninner. Roast of beef, cooked in casserole with apples and bacon, sweet potatoes, stewed tomatoes, pickles, bread and butter, cream nut pie, currant jelly, cheese, and coffee. This menu is planned with the idea of making the preparation of the Sunâ€" day dinner a really easy matter and, at the same time, giving the farmer and his helpers the hearty and appetâ€" izing food which outdoor workers reâ€" quire. A boned rib roast of beef is seared in drippings, or its own fat, and partly roasted on Saturday, at a time which is most convenient for the housewife. Tomatoes are cooked and seasoned, to be reheated. A thick, boiled cream for the pie is prepared in a double boiler (also on Saturday), and a pieâ€"shell is baked in a deep, ovenâ€"glass pie dish. The dough for the shell may have been left over from a former baking, and kept in a cold place until used. On Sunday morning the roast is placed in a casserole and dredged with browned flour prepared for this purpose. Peeled sweet potatoes are placed with the roast, and next to the potatoes are placed apples, which are somewhat tart. The apples should be cored, then stuffed with rollsâ€" of thinâ€" ly sliced bacon. The casserole is then placed in a moderate oven where the Doeen‘t ‘iurt a bit! _ Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, instantâ€" ly that corn stops hurting, then shortâ€" ly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Last year I mixed flaming single poppies with blue larkspur and had a bed of dazzling brightness; this sumâ€" mer I shall plant the poppies solid and edge them with white candytuft for a more restful effect when Old Sol is doing his worst. _ White or blue flowers carry a suggestion of coolâ€" ness; startlingly red blossoms (canâ€" nas, salvia, poppies, geraniums) send the thermometer scooting. On a scorching day, a bed of red poppies resembles an army of butterflies arâ€" rayed for battle, and I am trusting to the everâ€"lovely candytuft to wave the white flag of peace. Your druggist selis a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hbard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calâ€" luses, without soseness or irritation. If you love asters, try a new arâ€" rangement this coming fall. Get the seed in separate colors and plant them in stripes, the red and rose tints first, then white, and on the other side the bluish and lavender shades. _ "Say" your patriotism "with flowers." the pretty work after the last rose has faded. The delicate little portuâ€" laca is simply unsurpassed for filling in under roses, or any other shrubâ€" bery; or, tame daisies, pansies, Caliâ€" fornia poppies, any of the low growâ€" ing beauties can be used. sack under the throne. When they reached the place of conzsealment, Shom, with his hand on the door said: "After you, fatherâ€"imnâ€"law! See if you can discover where I have hidden the go‘den chain." _ ns He opened the door to admit the King, who bustled expectantly in and began looking for the chain, not noticâ€" ing the hive. Then Shom closed the door soft‘y and locked it on the outâ€" gide, depaiting swiftly for his own beâ€" loved zlopes of Dumeen, for he had a Lift Off with Fingers CORNS [ To make the pie, pour the cream ‘ into the pieâ€"shell, sprinkle chopped nut meats (preferably hickoryâ€"nuts) | over the cream, and cover with a . meringue made of whites of two eggs | and sugar, and place in the oven until | & light brown. With the pie serve tart, red curprant jelly and cheese cut lin cubes. Coffee is also served with this course. The pie is served at the table in the dish in which it is baked, the use of this dish and the casserole | making serving dishes unnecessary. Garden tulips were introduced into Britain through Holland in the 16th century. mocte h. 6 "Diamond Dyes" add years of wear to worn, faded skirts, walsts, coals, stockings, swenters, coverings, hangâ€" ings, draperies, everything. Every package contains directions so simple any woman can put new, rich, fadcless colors into her worn garments or draperies even if she has never dyed before. Just buy Diamond Dyesâ€"no other kindâ€"then your material will come out right, becauss Diamond Dyes are guaranteed not to streak, spot, fade or run. Tell your druggist whethâ€" er the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether i; is linon, cotton or infxed goods. If a man frequently says "I don‘t know," there is at least a reasonable presumption that he is well informed. Minard‘s Liniment for Coughs & Colds. The housewife who wishes soms freedom and leisure on Sunday must plan with care and do some of the work on Saturday, otherwise she will not succeed. All work and no play (or rest) is as bad for the housewife as it is for "Jack." In the model home "mother" also has a day of rest. When the preparations are comâ€" plete, dinner is served in the dish in which it was cooked. Bread and butâ€" ter, pickles or other relish, accompany this course. Silk Stockings Blouse or Sweater SUNâ€"MAID RAISINS Master bakers and neighâ€" borhood bake shops in your city are making luscious raisin pic fresh every day. Your grocer or these bake shops can supply them. ‘ Crust that‘s light and flaky â€"tender, thinâ€"skinned, Taste them and you‘ll know why there‘s no longer need to bake at home. juicy fruit, the juice forming SAVE the trouble and the time. of baking pies at home, yet give your imen folks pies that are exactly to their taste. Made With Raisins The Supreme Pie Raisin Sunâ€"Maid Raisin Growers Lusciousâ€" â€"â€"and already baked for you in Diamond Dyes Bius Package Mambership 14,000 Sunâ€"Maid Raisin Growers, Dept. Nâ€"533â€"13, Fresno, California Please send me copy of your €rge book, *Recipes with Raisine." CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT Mail coupon now for free book of tested Sunâ€"Maid recipes, Make cakes, puddings and other good foods with them. i'ou want is the kind you know s good. Iosist, therefore, on Sunâ€"Maid brand. ‘They cost no more than ordinary raisins, a delicious sauce! ‘There‘s nothing left to be desired in a pic. 1560 calories of energizing nuâ€" triment per pound in practically Yrcdigflted form. Rich in foodâ€" ron, also=â€"good food for the blood. Made with finest seeded Sunâ€" Maid Raisins. You may be offered other brands that you know less well than Sunâ€"Maids, but the kind Hurry Mother! A teaspoonful of from a painful and lingering death. "California Fig Syrip" now will thorâ€" _ The pup seemed to realize what was ouglly clean the litcle bowels and in a in store for him, and whined dismally, few hours you have a well, playful a&s if pleading for the clemency due to child again. Even if cross, feverish, youth, inexperience, and ignorance of bilious, constipated or full of cold, the law. Peter was fmplacable, arguâ€" children love its "fruity" taste, and ing, evidently, that it was not only his mothers can rest easy because it never | duty but his pleasure to exact the suâ€" fails to work all the souring food and preme penalty. For ten minutes he nasty hile right out of the stomach and | continued these horrible threats, gradâ€" bowels without griping or upsetting ually working himself into a pas«ion the child. ‘and inch by iuch diswing nearer to Tell your druggist you want only |his prey. Just as he appeared about the genuine "California Fig Syrup" to make a final spring, the unhappy which has directions for babies and terrier sprowed upon the floor, giving children of all ages printed on bottle. yent to one last despatring sigh Mother, you must say "Owtmtl-"‘ Instantly Peter turned to me with Refuse any imitation. what was really a look of astonished Round pearls are more valuable than the pearâ€"shaped kind. MOTHER! MOVE CEILD‘S BOWEIS 4( Use WRIGLEY‘S aifter every mealâ€"see how much better you will feel. provides pleasaiut action for your teeth, also penetrating the crevices aend cleansing them. Then, too, it aids dlgestion. Fresno, California The Great Canadian Sweetmeat Provincs ; in the heavens; its ascension . irlinalion; the equinnres, solstic «easons; and on the dia! at top, {.dded ar are unon which a hand denoies the hour at wh 'suu paskes the imeridian: the b ; asunrise and eunset for all tha . \ the year, and the length of : and nights, are given at the »i | sidereal time at the le‘t 1 am a blacksmith by trade, a rough man, and a fighter by inclination, with a fighter‘s contempt for cowardic> in man or beast, but the passing of this poor, helpless pup left en ache which the little mound on the mine dump gstarts afresh.â€"A. C. length upon the impossibility of escape from a painful and lingering death. The pup seemed to realize what was in store for him, and whincd dismally, £&s if pleading for the clemency due to youth, inexperience, and ignorance of the law. Peter was implacable, arguâ€" ing, evidently, that it was not only his duty but his pleasure to exact the suâ€" preme penalty. For ten minutes be continued these horrible threats, gradâ€" ually working himself into a passion and inch by inch diswing nearer to An ingenious clockmaker of les, France, bas converted an « alarm clock into a very com; tronomical clock, Without the main functions and with s ditions, except for a new fa clock has been made to indica and age of the m« passage of the m m abl ex1 what do you thitk of that? joying and never for a mon ed to hurt the foo!l pup." Dropping my tools, I j ward and lifted the poor coasing intru growling thre to them upon Instantly Peter turned to what was really a look of & inquiry. If endowed with + would, presumably, have sa it One warm afternoon, while Peter was resting in the shade of the shop, a tall gangling cur, mostly bolliterrier, with, judging by his long snout and foolish expression, some faint ancesâ€" tral taint of sheep, came wandoring up the hill and thoughtlessiy entored the That fear, and fear alone, has proved fatal to human beings is indisputable, but although the lower animails are perhaps equally susceptible to this em«tion, we seldom hear of their dyâ€" ing of fright. One instance only has come under my observation. I am the blacksmith for the Go!lden Spud Mine on Raven Hill in the Cripâ€" ple Creck District, my shop standing a few yards from the mouth of the tun» nel through which the property 18 operated. I could easily have averted the tragedy I am about to describe had the possthillity of death through fear ever entered my head. case with dogs er belied his f) ing his maste Peter, the bull arou Wit+ One of our : companied by a 1g In fear I crushed a «pid« A liitle harmless one, And ail day long my con Was dark with what Because 1 found the cohb» That tiny thing had spr â€"â€"~â€"Beth Cheney List to the wind! It grieves Bnow spraads a suodesoft p Pause‘ God holds ohsequie: To mark a sparrow‘s fall =â€"â€"Patkir Jeroi Astrornomical Clock Made From Alarm Clock. i lied his friend] is master‘s s to d wl 2 ppearat A Holy Moment. rOu at 1€ A Cobweb. d the works s off the pr s of what 1 11 g, visited th« ay the time e offices a1 dâ€"will toward t the presen t ay as Ly W , I jumpe: poor anima he had ac ithout even ti d the olir ff MJ# ®1 wa W C A se arly 4nâ€" urpose V rig:ts riably ; with ild do AYs ormi« groat 1 past PA Iting back OUt vor any C y prise posta #UT goce} tute J h« and V 41013 viee of auth o care o t0, an In wh tion ti Imim c Oress® the a alf al Charltor Charltor T ic 6# JyNDUCTED w omen s t of th Th

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