sth ye : ie tae gnc é es a: i i 4 Pact} sia : rit es : them, for awhile, just seeing each G al Wie Pr eona nose wensTER Other when we can, then?” Retirement Well Earned of “Not going to the Majestic and the ¥ *JORETT, Two Sisters Sery nari “LIPSTICK OIRL ere Maddox. Oh, Peter, that was terrible. For 1 i ar oi tae § who are married and involved In their la ast give her up because he can-| afraid that you can't take care of me ‘3 |some day, then?” | “Well, that’s different. I get along . RESP b lease: ULEHOL In | Somehow on very little. You are sure ean eens a you don’t mind that I came to Amer- re ray, ream eter laura ica inthe! wtecrage clang) and ray _ They fall into each other's arms. mother wore a shawl over her head?” (Now Go On With The Story.) “Why, Peter Anson! Why should I mind that? So did my mother come ting, hov nother date. This time they walk in je park. Camilla tells Peter that she a CHAPTER VII. to America with a shawl over her head and suffer the bewilderment and Plans. Now I have you and want to You must let me pay you back the money you spent that night.” “Don't say that, dear. If I always have as much pleasure from i money I spend as that gave, I'll get enough from life. Please don't mention it again.” “All right. But you must not spend your money on me again, We can walk and talk together In the park often, and have little picnics this Summer when you are not too busy." | So they planned confidentlally, as only lovers who know little of the| caprices of life may dare; for to them| the future always beckons along a| straight shining road. i (To Be Continued.) | Coral stone churches on scattered South Sea Isles, a school for Micron- eslan boys and girls, the Bible and other Christian literature and school textbooks translated into Kusian — these are some of the results of the work of two American sisters who started out from Newark, NJ, 35 years ago and now have just been re- Old Fashioned “Cream Cooking” tired, at the cost of milk! The sisters are the Misses Eliz- Th hat toh beth and Jane Baldwin, and their re-| Su'Charlen, “Iti not only ceone tirement was voted by the American omical and convenient but it is double rich in cream and gives a delicious cooked-in-cream flavour to every dish you use it for, g2s Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. For 29 years the sisters were tho only white persons on the small is- land, Kusiae, on which they lived. They nursed the islanders through Tees E ST. CHARLES MILK When Camilla and Peter had grati- ‘fled the weeks of their longing for love of each other with incoherent _ words and repeated kisses, Peter held _ her off and exclaimed, "To think how near I came to losing you! And I should have, if you had not told me the truth! “That was why I dared to tell you, _ because I had to. And at the same time, I was sure that when I did it _ would be the end. There is no ex- plaining the way things happen, is a 3 ; "Peter was silent for a minute, then turned aside from her suddenly and) , “But, Camilla, don’t you see, dear—your not being Miss Hoyt Bet makes it all the more impossible for you to love me.” : < “What do you mean, Peter” alarm- fears of Ellis Island. {ft you into them from the begin- “What's the difference ,anyway,” ning.” : she continued, “just a few genera-| “Please tell me just what you ha tions? We all came from cross the Planned to do before you found me." Atlantic, yet the first arrivals scorn, Her tone was as matter-of-fact as if the later ones, Because they beat us they were ory new business part- to it, I suppose. But as sdon as the ners. biggest high-hats have prospered with| "But that is the past—beforo I freedom and the democracy that they found you,” Peter objected. never practice, they go back where “Tell me, anyway,” she insisted. they come from. They ‘go abroad’ to “Why, there was nothing very defi- exploit their wealth to the poor rela- nite accept that I was going to work tives they left behind, to buy conti- very hard and sacrifice everything to nental culture, to absorb the genius! succeed, I had planned to enter of great foreign masters or revel in| something in the National exhibit the historical grandeur of the old/next fall to compete for the Paris world. Even you believe that to com-| scholarship. On the long chance plete your education, you must g0| that I won it, I hoped to make abroad. Then why are you ashamed enough to pay my expenses over to have come from there?" there by doing anything I could — “You are marvelous!” just as I've worked my way Peter, de- Cambridge Scientists |sickness; remained with them through Return From Expedition 2undreds of furlous tropical storms, UNSWEETENED EVAPORATED and helped them through Bring New Species Of Animals and famines. Reptiles From Jungle After translating school books, Little Helps For This Week Many animals, reptiles and insects with their own hands the sisters pre-| hitherto unknown to man were dig-|Pared them for printing. Books were| | scientists who landed at Plymouth |Press until, on their twenty-fifth anni-| p from an expedition into the unexplor-| Versary in the islands, a machine ed jungle of the British Cameroons. | Press was sent from Boston. The adventurers I. T. Sanderson| Everything has been done or G, Russell and H. P. Seaton, mem-| Planned by the two women. haye brought with them a collection |#0USe was built, Miss Elizabeth su-| of 7,000 specimens, in search of | Pervised the erection herself. “O the depth of the riches both of covered by three young Cambridge | !@boriously turned out on an old hand|the wisdom and knowledge of God: ow unsearchable are His judgments nd His ways past finding out” |Romans 11:33, No star is ever lost we once have Thus, | stein bers of the Percy Sladen expedition, | When a cement reservoir and typhoon We always may be what we might have been. | Since good, though only thought, has The collection includes: which they have penetrated into coun-| _ Members of the First Presbyterian |. cage canted thier eas Pes try hitherto untrodden by white men, |Church at Newark, they sailed to the from death. island first under the Woman's Board} And evil in its nature is decay, of Missions, now united with the|And any hour can blot it all away; clared solemnly. ed. i “Because I have no money, either. r can't take care of you—oh, for Px years—perhaps never. Mrs. Hoyt is _ right—you must find someone to love who has plenty of money to take care of you.” “But didn’t’ I just tell you that I Was preparing to take care of my- self?" I saw you?” “‘Aye tank aye go home’ ?” he laughed. you stop being ridiculous? You al- ways make me think of Viking sh'ps h—that! For awhile—yes. But some Italian,’ Camilla added. Her finger tapped his cheek with might gentle reproof. “Of course not! Will s through National. Perhaps a guide or “So are, you! Do you know what | interpreter. I know French pretty you reminded me of the first time| well—and Swedish vian.” and Scandina- “I have Spanish and French and “We language start a foreign school.” * “Or build a tower of Babel.” “We'll let the children do that,’ she and brave adventurers in search of|reminded him, slyly. you must think of your future.” eG is just what I am thinking of—what my future would be with- out love.” _ "Surely, there is someone you could care about who has money and influ- ences that will give you the happi- 7 a hess you deserve.” He did not sound very convincing but he was trying to be generous. “There is no one in the world who can make me happy, except you, ter.” She pressed her head close his shoulder like a forlorn child r eeking protection. E pines “You can if you love me enough,” softly. ‘Love you! I love you too much! But I can't take care of you for ‘ever so long, and perhaps I never sould give you what you have had.” _ “Will you stop saying that, Peter?” emanded severely. “I don’t want things I have had—ever. I want n't send me away from you.” Her nds reached up and clasped around them, eagerly, lost to all prac- reasoning. ntly, it was Camilla who drew Seabed pment “Do I Still Remind You Of An Iceberg?” tay suddenly and exclaimed, “Why, ) conquest and new Iands. You are “There you are! Now the children {t Is you who should marry a) jike your beautiful, brave country./come into the picture. And you say ith a fortune, so you can be study and work without wor- about money. That would mean to you. I'm sorry I for- sun that never sets in that long} ay and take care of myself and | p1ye ice of the stern winters.” someone else." Now it was lilla who tried to be cheerful and | jigntful fancy. “Do I still remind you! cing and generous. lot an iceberg since I've kissed you?” | a1) th eter drew her close with an indul-| laugh. “You precious little your being an relation to ice. e! What should I have to work [ lost you? Having you would my ‘surest chance of success,|she bantered. | nilla. With you for my inspira-| “Just for that, I'll burn you up,” he | le sky's the limit for me. We | warned her, kissing her again. He Iream and work together, you) held her away to exult in her beauty. | lere are dreams in your eyes,| Shall I tell you what you remind me romise me so much, darling. | of?" ‘ ve shall live, together!” “Please do! I hope it is something | 1 are sweet!" she told him,| very nice.” caressing his face. “Everything nice—of sunny south-} it T haven't told you all about me, eas T have no family here, ex- — — li, | Your hair is like the gold of the|I needn't change my plans.” “Oh, but that's a long time from “Why, Tl be so old then—" they He chuckled with joy at her de- laughed together. Camilla said presently, “Forgetting at now, you must promise me, “No, I've changed my mind Bbane Peter, to go right on with your work Youlas you had planned before. If you |must be the fire of the northern! don't, T shall go away and never see lights, the son of Aurora Borealis,” | yoy again,” “You couldn't!" “I shall if you let me hurt your work. I love you too much to hurt you like that.” “So much that you could leave me if you believed it would be better?” Peter.” “Oh, my dear! “Yes, his voice held awe. ern skies and brilliant flowers, intoxi-| “But you are to remember that los-| cating fragrance and sparkling blue|ing you would hurt me now more t some older brothers and sisters| waters, of glamorous tropical moon-|than anything else that could possi- llight and music and gay laughter.” | bly happen to me. Shall we both go to a/any Only once have they visited America, in 1911, Miss Elizabeth, who was 39 when she left America, is now 74 and nearly blind. Miss Jane, |who was only 25 when she sailed is now 60. A giant water shrew species thought to have vanished ages ago. ‘A five-foot male gorilla. One hundred and fifty specimens of | mammals. Thousands of rats, bats, frogs and spiders. | A frog that is covered in hair and another that has claws. Mr. Sanderson stated that he nail THE RHYMING OPTIMIST By Aline Michaelis HOW two gorillas, one of which died in captivity. The natives, he said, are convinced that the gorilla is a “retrograde hu- man being,” with habits that are hu- man, but they considered that chimpanzee is definitely a monkey- “In the Assumbo district,” he add- ed, “we discovered an uncharted mountain range, which appeared geo- logically to be of comparatively re- cent formation. | “Our most thrilling experience was} when we were lost in thick virgin jungle. We were surrounded by im- penetrable forest, and then one day| we sensed rather than heard, the! }sound of native d-umm’nz, and by! | following for a day and a night we| | came to a native village and $0 found ourselves again.” FRAIL IS BEAUTY How frail a thing is beauty To touch the heart-strings so! The swirl of dancing shadows, The willows bending low. The jade and emerald water, The far-flung, breaking wave; How frail a thing is beauty, ‘That yet a life can save! O, beauty let me clasp you And hold you close always, Walk with me in the splendour Of morning’s golden haze; Reveal your still reflection Upon the sleeping lake And greet me with the twilight When starry hosts awake! A gleam, a hint a promise A sunset’s fleeting gold; How frail a thing is beauty ‘That yet a life can mold! Beautiful Indian Capital Fairyland Basis | | resect In Jaipur Is Built On | | The Maharajah of Jaipur, who has A Strange Illusion | | been in the limelight more than once Telescope Convinced People Man They Saw Was Not Flagpole Sitter A flag-pole sitter in Montreal seem- jot late, returns to it again by win-| |ning the Prince of Wales’ Cup at | Hurlingham with his polo.team. His’ ed impossible but the office staff of {native Jaipur sounds like an odd one of the upper storeys of the Aldred | beautiful dream for everything there! Building were sure that they saw a seems to be built on a fairyland person seated on a stool atop a flag- basis. The houses in the capital are| pole on a nearby building. |painted in every conceivable shade of} or many minutes the amazed au- [pink and purple, delicately traced dience gazed intently at this new with patterns of other colors, and! spectacle. Only after a powerful tele- northern summer, your strength is /now—when you are rich and famous, |U2¥ Steen shutters are on every win- scope was sent for did they discover = r- like the rugged cliffs of the coast-! when your figures decorate the cities your side of it, Peter dear, I'll jine, your eyes are like the sparkling | of the world.” “ jdow. There are peacocks in the their mistake. The telescope revealed streets, and the royal stables near a man sitting on a stool on the roof the palace are crowded with horses of a building beyond the one which and elephants. A touch of realism is’ supported the pole. Strangely enough added by the Maharajah’s private ob-! from all sides optical illusion caused servatory, but even it is unusual, for the man to appear to be seated on the it contains the world’s largest sun-/ flag-pole. He sat still for more than dial. 80 minutes and this added to the de- | ception. | Making Six-Year Tour | English Chef Collecting Recipes From | | Every Country In World | A Salford chef, Harold Hogan, is en-| Five Miles | gaged on the queerest world tour ever| A waterspout playing tag with an |known, for he is journeying 35,000 | ocean liner was the adventure experi- | miles in search of little-known recipes enced by passengers on the “Duchess Jin order that he may add variety to/of Bedford” during a violent wind Britain's culinary tastes. |storm, The liner was on her way Already he has visited Denmark,/down the St, Lawrence from Mon- Germany, Ireland, Scotland, Norway| treal to New York on a cruise. and Sweden. and already his pockets} The giant spout, which measured are bulging with recipes which he has|60 feet across the base and at times obtained in foreign lands. {as much as 500 fect in height, chased Waterspout Chases Ship Huge Volume Of Water Follows Liner Flying squirrels equipped with, “parachutes” of varied colors by|Am™erican Board. In all their years in| The jones, tink JosE:in: somenfar diss which they fly from tree to tree. - | the islands they never had accepted | yray be the truer life, and this tha dream. —A. A. Proctor. St. Bernard has said: “Man if thou desirest a noble and holy life, and un- ceasingly prayest to God for it, it thou continue constant in this thy de- sire, it will be granted to thee with- out fail. And if God has not given it to thee, thou shalt find it in Him in eternity; of this be assured.” There- fore do not relinquish your desire though it be not fulfilled immediate- ly, or though you may swerve from your aspirations or even forget them |for a while. The love and aspiration which once existed live forever before God, and in Him ye shall find the fruit thereof; that is, to all eternity, ye shall be better for you than if you had never felt them.—J. Tauler. Train Accidents Seven Passengers Killed On Canadian Roads Last Year | Last year there were seven pas- sengers killed and 339 injured in train accidents, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics says in a report issued re- cently. This was an average of one killed for every 3,000,000 carried ,and one injured for every 62,000. Injuries to passengers ranged from Scratches and bruises to more serious injuries. Two passengers were killed ie collisions, two fell from trains, two |were killed getting on or off trains, }and one from other causes. ‘There were 57 employees killed in train accidents and 957 injured, says the report, a low record for the last 22 years. ‘There were 94 persons kill- ed at highway crossings, of which 78 were motorists, and of this number 30 were killed at protected crossings. STRING BEANS BRETONNE | Two tablespoons butter; 1 medium onion; 1 tablespoon flour; 1 cup evap- orated milk; 34 cup water; 2 cups cooked string beans, cut in one-inch lengths; salt; pepper; paprika. Melt butter. Fry thinly-sliced onion until yellow, but not browned. Stir in flour. Add gradually evaporated milic and water. Stir until thickened. Add cooked string beans, cut in one-inch |lengths and seasoning. (Serves six). No Longer Interested Two political candidates were dis- cussing the coming local election | “What did the audience say when |you told them you never paid a dol- lar for a vote?” queried one, “A few cheered—but the majority seemed to lose interest at once.” | The mastiff bat is so-called because its pendulous upper lip gives tt the {appearance of a mastiff dog Increased demand for WOMEN dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ever fell oe pe m's Vegetable Compound. Head~ fund backaches that ure tho result d, run-down condition often | medicine, 190 women who report benefited by this from your drug- b Its. “T hope I always shall remind you on with our plans as we had made of such lovely things, Peter.” “Happy, dearest?” “So happy. 1 shall never be . THAT DEPRESSED FEELING happy again, IS LARGELY LIVER “Or blue . f Wake up your Liver Bile —Without Calomel You are “feeling punk" simply because your if ien't pouring ita flaily two pounds of liquid into your bowels, Digvatlon and elimination both hatopered, and your entire eystem la | After awhile, he sald, “But we) |haven't planned for the future at all.) y \There ig so much to decide. Every-| » re thing is different now.” d W ‘eed Is a liver stimulant. Som “Peter,” she said severely, “If you) thin the han salt, miceral water, ; ; oil, faxative eatidy or chewing gum or roughage let our love change your plans and) Whi tnly move ‘he bowala—lgnoring the real ambitions the least bit, I shall be very | ¢auss of troubl ‘Take Carte unhappy.” see No harsh calomel (mercury), Bale. Sure, - them by name, Keluse substitutes, “But I didn't have you in those drugeiste, e) | After a short sojourn in Salford he lis off to France, Italy, Spain, Turkey, }South Africa, Australia, America and |Canada, where he hopes to secure thousands of appetizing recipes. | His novel world search for recipes| will take him six years—and at the end he should be the most knowledg- able chef in the world. Norway will boost government tax-| es, Canadian-made shaving brushes} are on sale in Belgium, | sting business in Salvador. the liner for almost five miles at a) POoSting busi speed of approximately 17 miles per hour, passengers reported Accurate Summing Up Motor speed law was thus summed up in a court of appeal in connection with a court ¢ arising as the re- sult of a motor car accident: ‘Thin|f 5° 0. oe white or coloured court has sald three times, and 1/7) or for deltehen use—covering want it to be geverally known, that if| | Entives, Uning drawers, etc. you are going at such a speed that you cannot pull up within the limits @pplofort Paper eRooucTs of your vision, and an accident bap- HAMILTON, ONTARIO pens, you are in the wrong.” |