Thursdii.v, April 10, 111*10 THF THIIH’NK, Tl'RNKH. OHKí’.ON • TH E • K IT C H E N C A B IN E T The Crippled Lady of Peribonka - B y - James Oliver Carwood WVT Servir* (3t, 1SÎ0, Doubled«? Ponua * Ca.. lat.) STORY FROM THE START Introducing s o m e o f ths pro- pU o f th* pretty l it t l e K ren c h - C a n a d l a n v t l l a a * of 1 ‘e r l b o n k a . particularly the Crippled Lady, Idol o f the si m p le In h a b ita n ts. P a u l K irks Is a d escen d a n t o f a sister of Molly llr a n t . s i s t e r of Joseph Brant, g r e a t In dian ch ie f He has inherited m any In dian characteristics. His f a t h e r Is a powerful New Y o rk B n a n c ie r Paul marries C l a i r * Dtirand. daughter of his f a t h e r 's p artn er He Is In charge o f e n g i n e e r i n g work near P e rib o n k a . P a u l 's wife Is in Europe. Sh e d is li k e s the woods. P a u l be com es I n t e r ­ ested In Carla, v i l la g e t e a c h e r Paul writes his w ife to Join him C arla's mother, long an Invalid, dies. Claire a n n o u n c e s her In ­ tention of Joining P a u l on the Mistassini. CHAPTER V —Continued tie iriu glad be bad beard the word* from her owo Ups. It built up a new comradeship between them and made him more positive of tits triumph over himself. A letter from Claire helped him. His wife laughed at him pleasantly for bis whimsical surges tlon of a Journey around the world, and then painted in her picturesque and rtrld way the torture which she knew such a trip would be for him "Without your forests, your open skies, your big outdoors, you would die before we got half around. Paul,” she wrote him. “It would be mercl less of me to make you pay I d that way for my presence up at the Mis tassinL I am coming, and Just because 1 want to come I am antlcl|>ailng seeing something very wonderful up there, something which will mean greatly more to you and me than six months or a year rambling around the earth. As for such a trip, with you In It”—and then she went on to tell him more about himself than he thought she had ever known. The let ter thrilled him. It gave him a new vl9ioD of Claire, who nad never analyred him lr this gentle and an derstandlng way. portraying for him the life which he loved as though It were a part of berselt But In the end, after assuring him again that she was coming to him and was looking forward to the time when they would be together, she said her return to America might be postponed until the following May or June. Could be wait that long? Carla also received a letter from Claire. It was Ailed with a womanly tenderness and sympathy for one who bad suffered a great losa, and was filled with L e Intimate knowledge and sentiment which could only have been given md Inspired by Paul. Carla let him read It. Her eyes were strangely alight, though she nad prepared her self to show It to him. “You told me once that millions could not buy sentiment." she said “And millions could not bring what has come In her letter. It Is her heart speaking to me.“ Carla became so deeply lbsorbed In work outside of her school that he did not talk with her again for a week She formed evening classes, tn which she taught English to the adults who wanted to come to them, and the few gpere hours of her afternoons were spent among the mothers of her school children. With the coming of winter Paul buried himself m orj passionately In the actual stress of outdr-or labor, leaving hls office routine largely to others, and the change benefited him Carla, on the other hand, seemed to have assumed too grear a burden Tbe strain. If 1» were that, began to show Its effect on her, nntll Lncy-Belle noted It and remonstrated with Paul. “Every day she Is growing less like the Carla we knew before her mother died,” she told him. “She Is breaking under an effort to keep her mind away from herself. Yesterday I dropped Into her cottage for a mo­ ment when I knew sh»» was there, and I found her crying. 8he la growing paler, and It frightens me to see the loveliness fading slowly out of her face. You must do semething, Paul make her drop her night classes send her away for a vacation If you can 1 think 1 am the only one she confide* tn at all. and I should not betray her confidence—not even what I have guessed aboot her. But something Is eating at her life whl Gazette, went to California last sum trier and ate her first meal In a dining car. "Yea, I wore my new kimono In to breakfast,” she said, “and Ihe w-a) everyone stared at me, they must have thought It was pretty.”—CsDDer'* Weekly. Past and Future Life, as Seen by Scientist l A I I I * . W *alara Nswapapsr P a lo s .) “ As a rul* good food will plans* a husband much bstlsr than fnncjr frills. An occasional souftls or nsssslrods puddlna Is «njoysd, but a rsal msal of Juicy slsak, sub­ stantial vsgstablos wall cooksd, and a ptscs of appls pis, will call forth hla hlshsst pralsa." GOOD THINGS TO EAT There la not a more appetising cocktail than one of shrimp. If th* fresh ones are ob talnalde, they are far finer than th« canned, though th« c a n n e d ouea are g o o d . Prepare a snappy sauce ol tomato c a t s u p , chill a a u c a, and a few drepa ol tabasco and a nip of horseradish. Serve the shrlui|ts In a cocktail glass, sauce, glass and shrimps all chilled Today one may purchase for a few cents any nundier of kinds of good soup. If one has a bit of stock which has been made of leftover meat, bones and gravy, add U to a can or two ot the commercial stock, with such sea aonlng as one likes and you will have a different soup. A hot dish for the first course or following the cocktail, seems to be universally liked, for the millions of cans of soup sold dally In the markets are proof that It Is pop ulnr. One may, with the addition of minced cooked vegetables, convert a canned soup Into one that Is Individ­ ual. A little rice, a little uspnragus, a few spoonfuls of pens added to bouillon or clear soups add to their attractiveness as well as llavor and nutriment. Tomato soup Is one of the ennned soups that hay a large repertorio as a food It may be converted Into a delicious meat or fish sauce tn a turn of the hand. Poured over a meat loaf It transforms It Into n delightful sur­ prise. It may be added to the meut when making a loaf with the egg or cereal used as a binding omllted. Part of the soup Is saved to serve as a sauce with the meat. More cayenne, a bit of onion Juice, or garlic, a grnt tug of nutmeg or of lemon |>eel, all adds variety to the tomato satire. One of the most delightful of rare­ bits Is made with tomato and cheese. Cae the canned tomato soup Instead of the fruit, adding a beaten egg Just before It Is poured over the toasted bread or crackers. HEARTY S A N D W IC H E 8 When there are bits of leftover ham too small to serve pat them through the food grinder together with a small onion, half n green pepper nnd one hard cooked egg. Mix with salad dressing and use as filling for sandwiches, toasted they are also well liked. Ham and Tomato Sandwich.—Take one cupful of chopped ham, one tea- spoonful of m ined parsley, a pinch of mace, a few drops of lemon Juice, one-half cupful of butter, a bit of garlic or onion. Itub the bowl with tbe garlic and mix all the Ingredients together and spread on rounds of bread between which place a slice of ripe tomato. Dsvllcd Ham and Cucumbar Sand­ wich.—Take a small can of deviled ham, mix with mayonnaise to moisten or use fren>-h dressing. Cover one •lice of hrend with cucumber nnd the other with the ham. I’rcss together and cut into triangle*. Chopped Roast B etf Sandwich— Cae the small waste plcees left from a ro ast; to one cupful add a little chopped onion, salt, popper and enough fresh horseradish to moisten. Spread on generous slices of whole wheat bread. Another 8andwich.— Work Into four ounces of fresh butter two teaspoon­ fuls of curry powder, half a teaspoon- ful of lemon Juice nnd one fourth ten- spoonful of s a lt; blend to a smooth paste, adding a few drops of onion Juice. Let stand where It will keep s o ft Butter slices of bread, lay on a thin slice of ham. then n tldn slice of chicken, i ’ut on a slice of but­ tered bread and press together. Cut any desired shape. Roast Beef Sandwiches.—I tip tldn slices of roast beef Into hesvy french dressing to which finely chopped onion has been added. I’luce on thinly sliced buttered bread of whont or rye and garnish with a slice of sour pickle. Chill With Beef Sandwich— (.'hop roast of beef or broiled steak and mix with chill sauce to make a spread­ ing mixture. Add such seasonings as needed and spread on rye bread but­ tered. ' H j j u a I«. v ftia Take s postage stamp and stick It onto a penny. Now climb Cleopatra's Noodle and lay the penny tint, post­ age atnmp uppermost, on top of tbe obelisk. The height of tbe whole structure may be tukeu to represent the time that has elaiwod all!"# the earth was born. On the scale, the thlcknese of the penny and postage slump together represents the time that mun has lived on earth. The thickness of the postnge stump repre­ sents the time he has been civilized, tbe thickness o f the penny represent­ ing the time lie lived In an uncivilized state. Now atlck another postage stamp on top of the first to represent the next 8.1kW years of ctvIlWatlon nnd keep sticking on postage stnmpa until you hare a pile ns high ns Mount Blanc. Even now the pile forma nn Inadequate representation of the length of the future, which, no far aa astronomy can see, probably stretches before civilized humnulty. — From Sir James Jeans' “The I'nl- verse Around t*».“ Little "Ifs " That Might Have Changed History The word "If* has been the cause of much reminiscing ever since Adam aald, “Oh, If we had never eaten the apple" Professor lleamshaw. of London university, has prepared a hook railed “The Ifs o f History," In Which he say s: " I f Cleopatra's nose had been an eighth of an Inch longer ahe would have fulled to excite Julius Caesar or Mark Anthony and the history of the world would have been changed. “If the battle of Artlum bad not been fought, the empire of Augustus would not have been established, neither Pontius Pilate nor llerod would have ruled Syrln nnd Home might have remained a stranger to the Christian faltb. " If the .Spanish garrison of Gibral­ tar had not been so pious ns to be attending ebureh when tbe English troops attacked, the rock would not be* In English possession today.“ “ Brought Back My Strength’ •*My little daughter was bom on a homestead In notthem Alberta. 1 haJ four other ihiklrtn end I worked so held that I suffered s nervous break­ down. The doctor’s tonic did no« sacra to help me and when s ftlend told me b I hm M Lydia E. Pinkhatu’« Vegetable CoinjHJund, 1 began to take that Instead. 1 kept on until I felt well again. It brought back my strength. Today I con do anything, thanks tothe Vegetable Compound.” —Mr», trillion) Parent, 1« IJ VP. fijnd Srrrrt, Seattle, VTajJiington, Lydia E. Pinkliatn s Vegetable Compound I nli» F M»ii »# . l»iwi,.M»a. SUFFERING ELIMINATED IVyears success hi treating Rectal and Th* London Purdah Cotoe troubles by the Dr. C. J. Dcsa NON St K lilCAl BM«hnd **. Katherine May», tbe distinguished •M s • • t o e * » w a in » n a h - writer, was talking to a group of •NHH ANCE of l i t .» « H I MI­ NA IK D at MUT Ml.M'NOKIA. New York reporters about tbe cam­ Sang Malas fot MUCK K X H ona paign of the women of India to abol­ buuluUtoihi^iiAttMEMdrraoi A fciV* ,rr*hn« ,l '»* Wfc'fc Aftmrnf*,' ish the purdah, or shut-in harem life. R e J ctal V ; COLON.d i NIC "And here.” said Mlsa Mayo. *Tm reminded of a stogy about tbs omtr of Afghanistan. •"The emir ones visited London, and of course n royal dinner party was given In Ills honor. Well, when all Queen Hatchery Huskies the guests were seated» the emir Itnr Profits looked around nt the glittering ns- ■ U f i * for Poultry ■emblnge of princesses and duchesses V f f w V R \ H.ds, K I W h ils t , W l it# Rocks, Barr sci Hocks, • rul countesses snd what-not, and Blsck Minimal, Black Ulama,Whirs then said to King Edward In a loud Lag ho ma — all from carefully su por­ voice: vi sod flocks. Also W. L. Pullsts,/sor­ “ T see you do the same here as ting hsns and day old turksys. Ordsr now to Insuradslisary whan wsntsd. we do In Afghanistan—keep all Ihe W rits fo r Spoetai Dirottarti. pretty ones shut up.* ** ák Newlyweds Get Vow Cards Card* reminding iHislinnds nnd Wives of their marriage vows are be­ ing Issued by the Mothers' union of England. They are of a size con­ venient for carrying In the pocket, •ml are print's! In silver nnd white. They record the date and place of the mnrrinse nnd the names of the groom and bride, nnd they reproduce Ihe essential portions of the mnrrlnge service which hnve reference to mar­ ital fidelity. It Is planned to give a rard to every bride nnd one to every groom nt the time of tbe ceremony. lOOfg lis a d sliv sry guaranteed. 30 y oars' reputation you r aajsguard. (MY TOM» QUEEN HATCHERY 2420 1st Avsmis Seattle W. N. U., PORTLAND, NO. 18--1i30. Beeuty'a W orth It Contrary to public opinion, most beautifying takes a lot of work nnd a lot of courage. Anyone who bus had a |>erniauent wave will testify to this. And any woman who lias re­ duced her weight conscientiously will say "amen."—Woman's Home Companion. W hen Babies CRY Babies will cry, often for no apparent reason. You may not know what’s wrong, but you can always give Castoria. This soon has your little one comforted; if not, you should call a doctor. Don’t experiment with medicines intended for the stronger systems of adults I Most of those little upsets are soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant-tasting, gentle-acting children’s remedy that children like. It may he the stomach, or may be the little bowels. O r in the case o f older children, a sluggish, con­ stipated condition. Castoria is still the thing to give. It is almost certain to clear up any minor ailment, and could by no possi­ bility do the youngest child the slightest harm. So it’s the first thing to think o f when a child has a coated tongue ; won’t play, can’t sleep, is fretful or out of sorts. Get the genuine; it always has Chas. H. Fletcher’* signature on the package.