Bloomington Courier, Bloomington, Monroe County, 17 May 1895 — Page 3

A COMEDY OF EERORS.

HAT DO YOU think of Jack Dermott?;' Miss Georgina Poole had dismissed her maid. She asked the question of her cousin Polly. Miss Georgina Poole was a great heiress from the west. Polly was by no means an heiress. Georgina was the handsomer, Polly the prettier of the two. There was five years difference in the ages of the young ladies. And there, Polly, if poor, had the advantage. "Jack Dermott? Ah, yes; a heavy swell from New York, who came last night. Why 'Jack' so familiarly to. you?" Georgina tapped the floor so impatiently. "Dont be so provoking. Every one knows Jack Dermott and calls him so. He's almost a public character. Society papers have been full of him for years." "Oh! We did not see society papers at the Plain City Academy for Young Ladies," Polly yawned. "Well, his eyes are killing. So dreamy. Dresses well, :oo. Naturally. Dresses like a New York man." Georgina's eyes had grown dreamy, too. She let them fall on the mirror at her elbowThe mirror threw back the reflection of a face improved by heightened color, transformed by a subtle something that made Polly Jump to her teet. "You're not in love with him?" Georgina flushed the brighter. "Absurd. A man who only came last night, and who I've never spoken to," she said; but she stammered as she spoke. Polly nodded three times, deliberately. "Well, well, well: What is there

"I DID FALL IN LOVE WITH THE WRONG OX

about the man that should fascinate at first sight. Has he a reputation of being dangerous to women, of having had 'affairs?' " Georgina made-no reply. Presently "He's bankrupt. Gone through all his money. So they say." "Ah Probably would not mind marrying an "heiress, then. Polly's pretty eyes gleamed beneath their narrowed lids and a dimple showed. deorglna looked angry. "You are provoking! Do you think no one would marry me save for my money? Heiresses are married for love sometimes." "Sometimes." The dimple deepened. Georgjoa watched her cousin. Her vhancteo'me eyes gave a flash. She 3tood up and folded her arms. "Supposing that I had fallen in love at first sight; supposing that I did want him to propose to me. I say, supposing these things! I'd be willing to show you that I could rely on some attraction in myself, independently of my money., You are a Miss Poole, as I am. Play the rich Miss Poole while we are at this hotel, if you like. We've been here only two days, and no one will know the difference." Pretty Polly's laugh gurgled like running water. "Ah! that's an idea! We'll meet Mr. Jack Dermott, as you the poor, I the rich Miss Poole, and then for the results!" She threw her arms above her head, pirxatted, dropped a courtesy to her Image in the looking-glass. "I salute you, rich Miss Poole! Fortunately, Georgina, your dresses fit me, dear. And 111 wear your jewels on the proper occasions. Poor little pauper me, what novel sensations! But Jeanne must be in the secret, of course. And strict discretion must be enjoined on Jeanne. No gossiping from her." Jeanne was Miss Georgina Poole's French maid. At the hotel people made up riding parties, forded the shallow streams, and rivers that flow through these southern mountains, flirted under the shadows of the woods, in which the leafage was thickening, now that spring had come. Spring at least had come down here. In the north and west winter lingered. The hotel people were idle birds of passage, though, and lilies that toiled not; neither did they spin. They were congregated at this winter resort for pleasure.jand they took it as it came. "Pfor my part, I should not mind having this sort of thing go on forever. You think I'm jesting? I'm In earnestdead earnest." The speaker was Jack Dermott. He rode at Polly's side. He had not been

in that position long:. Georgina's stately shape, sitting a gray horse, thread

ed its way, with another cavalier, through Woodland Park, just in front of them. Jack Dermott's post had been close to the gray horse's side most of the day; it was there most of every day. A long look had accompanied his last words "dead earnest" but not at Georgina's back, at Polly's small face, pink with exercise under the brim of the boyish hat. "What sort of things? Making love to my handsome cousin." "Making love to yes, your handsome cousin." "Well, why not?" "My dear Miss Poole, how cruel you are! I'm a poverty-stricken devil, you know. How can I afford to marry?" "Marry money, then." Polly said it composedly, and flecked a fly from her horse's ear. Jack looked straight ahead of him. "That is one way out of the dilemma. But suppose your heart goes in the wrong direction? Suppose it insists on loving where there is no money?" "My dear Mr. Dermott!" Polly's laugh gurgled out and rippled on and on; "only ill-regulated hearts do such things! As for yours " "Stop!" Jack caught her horse's bridle. They had come to a little river and the beast was in water to its knees for the ford. "Be careful here. This is one of the swiftest currents hereabouts,' 'he cried. Polly dragged her bridle away. "Nonsense! I can manage " But the horse slipped in the tussle and Jack had his arm about Polly's waist close and tight. The romantic situation was not unduly prolonged. Miss Georgina Poole and her cavalier, having crossed in safety, watched from the bank. Polly's mount scrambled up again, and she was still firm in her saddle, with no damage but a ducking to the bottom of her habit. Mr. Dermott had been, apparently unnecessarily a'.armed. Miss Georgina Poole turned her horse's head rather sharply and rode on. That afternoon, when the party returned, the elder cousin tok the other to task. "I should like to know, I must say, just where we stand," was her remark. "I should like to understand Jack Dermott." "In what particular?" inquired Polly., "Is he serious or is he not? He has been devoted to me for days weeks now I could swear that " "That he loves you? Well, so he does. The only thing fiat keeps him from proposing is that he thinks you're poor. Can't afford that, he says, being poor himself. But he'll come to it. He'll come to it all the same. Had a deal to say to-day about hearts that would not love according to policy and reason, etc. I tried to lead him on. Told bin he'd better marry money, and so on That looked like offering myself, didn't it? But no. He as much as declared that his heart was yours. Hence be satisfied. He thinks you're the poor cousin, and he prefers you to the rich. You have just what you wanted." Georgina flushed a little, looked pensive, then sighed. "If I could be quite sure but h had a singular look in his eyes, my dear, when he had his arm around you to-day in the middle of that ridiculous stream. How do you account for it?" "Natural look of his eyes. Born sentimental and killing, so to speak." "Tell me with your hand on your heart, Polly, he has not been flirtingcoquetting with you?" "Good gracious, no!" "Well, we shall see." "You will see very soon, then. 1 prophesy that he'll propose to you in a week." It did not take a week. Polly was lying on her back in Miss Poole's boudoir when the latter burst in, and, breathless, sank on her knees beside the lounge. "It's done!" Polly dropped the novel she was reading from her hands. "In due form?" "Absolutely. Just now as we were coming back from our walk. He asked me to go and gather arbutus, you know. He said that he had long fought against his heart, because he could offer me only poverty. He asked if I minded marrying a poor man. Think, Dolly, how proud I was! And I did not undeceive him just then; did not tell him that I was, the rich Miss Poole whom he had chosen after all. I thought I would wait till to-night; Jeanne must dres

mo in my best! I'll resume my own role, dear, and dazzle Jack." "Very well, and I'll be poor Polly once more." Polly kicked off her little slipper and caught it again on her slender toes. "All's well that ends well. Glad the plan succeeded." "You don't don't mind, Polly?" said Georgina, a little remorsefully. "Dear, no." In commenting later on these occurrences in general and on her revelation to Mr. Dermott that night in particular, Georgina said that "Jack" took it beautifully." "What do you mean by that?" said Polly in the seclusion of their own rooms. "I mean the disclosure that I was the heiress did not unduly elate him. He took it almost as a matter of course. Wasn't it nice of him, darling?" asked Georgina, and then she sobbed a little, doubtless from stress of emotion. While this colloquy was in progress another was going on in the smokingroom, deserted save for the presence of Jock Dermott and his best friend, Tom Howe. Tom Howe arrived that evening and had just been told the news. "But, look here! What's this? I've already heard from a man I know here in the house, that you've been devoting yourself desperately to a poor Miss Poole here, and now you tell me you are to marry the heiress of untold western dollars. 1 hear that there are two Misses Poole. Now which is which ? And which is to be Mrs. Jack Dermott?" "The rich one, my boy alas!" Jack sighed a sigh long and glimmer. "But I've, been devoting myself, apparently, to the poor one." "Oh, don't talk in conundrums." "Briefly, then, the rich Miss Poole desired to be loved and wooed for herself, not for her money, exchanged roles with her cousin when they first came here. Every one took her for the poor cousin, and Polly," Jack sighed again, "for. the heiress." "Ah! And you fell in love with the right one, after all, and courted poverty only to win riches? Very good. Virtue rewarded." "Not exactly." Jack got up and came and stood before his friend with his hands deep in his pockets, and a gloomy brow. "Not exactly. You see. Miss Poole's French ward was an old sweetheart of my man's, and she gave the whole scheme of the two young ladies away, being, of course, in the secret. And er Jennings told me." Tom Howe smoked a moment. "So you were up to the racket from the first?" "As you say, I was up to the racket from the first." "Well, considering the state of your finances, and that only a rich marriage could put you on your feet, you've been lucky." "Not altogether. You see hang it all! I did fall in love with the wrong one, with Polly. Ah, Polly, I

shall never forget her, little charmer!" But Tom Howe observed drily: "Don't be a fool!" HOW TO BE BEAUTIFUL. A Woman's Advice to Those Less For tunate Than She. The most beautiful Trilby that has posed before a Chicago audience was revealed the other afternoon with the rising of the curtain at the Columbia theater. Before an audience of ladies that crowded boxes, auditorium and galleries, Mme. Sale, a perfection of female loveliness, poised herself in the familiar attitude of Du Maurier's hero ine, her beauty and shapeliness height ened by the Grecian garment of white crepe and the wreath of orange blossoms that crowned the loosened hair of gold. For a moment there was silent admiration, then enthusiastic, almost tempestuous applause. In this impres sive way Mme. Sale prefaced the lecture she was to deliver on tho science of beauty. In her talk she argued that perfection of form and feature could be acquired even by those apparently most unfavored by nature. A radical change in woman's habits, however, is necessary, and Mme. Sale did not hesitate to speak plainly. Cleanliness, she admitted, is better for the complexion than all the artificial preparations in the market. Healthful exercise is of more servi in rounding the body into perfect shape than all the distortions of tight lacing, Above all, force of will and peace of mind aro essential to the accomplishment of acquired beauty. Following the words of advice, Mme. Sale appeared before the audience in tights, admittedly to show the perfect outlines of her figure, and went through the breathing and muscular exercises that she prescribes. Questions of all kinds were freely asked by the audience and frankly answered by the lecturer. In response to many requests, Mme. Sale closed her talk as she had begun it, with an impersonation of Trilby. May Ho a Future President. In the vicinity of Morgan, in this state, lives an old negro woman whose love for the creeks has been noticed, perhaps, by all who live there. Hardly a day passes that she is not observed with her fishing pole, either coining from or going to the creek. Several days since a fond mother sat on the veranda, while a little toddler of 3 or 4 years played at her knee, when the old woman passed. "Mamma," said the little tot, looking innecently up from his play, "did Aunt Adline nurse Mr. Cleveland?" "No, darling; why?" "Taus papa say he was always fishin', an' I spect if you dit her to nurse me you'll 'ave a little president, too." Atlanta Constitution. JTl FroHts of Morality. A Glasgow man once remarked that a young townsman of his who had migrated was "a truly moral man." "Well, I don't know so much about that," said Ilussell, of the Scotsman, and he instanced a peccadillo or two of this blameless youth. "Nay," said the other, "I was na thinking of drink and the lasses, but of gamblln' and sic thing as you lose money by." Argonaut. All the railway stations in Sweden at which meals are served are known by a sign bearing the suggestive emblem of a crossed knife and fork.

RISING LIKE TRUTH.

THE KEELY MOTOR READY TO START. TIip Long-A bused .Scientist About to Demonstrate uig Claim that He Hsu Harnessed the Interatomic Kther Keport or a Visitor. HAT MANY INtelligent men have full faith in the ultimate success of Mr. Keely and his system of producins power and moQ$yjiQMt mo doubt. Mr. enabled to keep steadily at work upon his experi ment, and he and his adherents believe that he is about to demonstrate to the world the truth of all his damns. A gentleman who has been connected with Mr. Keely' a interests from the first, and who lias never doubted Mr. Keely's ability or success, visited the workrooms last week. He writes as follows: "Nothing is so misunderstood as to the real facts as are Mr. Keely's inventions. Three-fourths of the statements made by the public press during the last few years have been entirely at variance with the real facts. Mr. Keely has always objected heretofore to having anything said of his work until the proper time came. " 'Not till I can produce a mercantile engine, one that will do practical work, will scientists and the people generally believe in my discoveries,' we have often heard him say. "Mr. Boyd Elliot, the eminent mechanical engineer, says in a letter now in our possession: " 'I have seen the etheric liberator of Mr. Keely. I believe he has six times the value in his shops to-day that Mr. Edison has,' and in answer to a letter he wrote: 'At first I thought I would reply to some of the critics (against Mr. Keely's work), but I have concluded that the game is not worth the powder. Let them scribble away. We shall enjoy the fun when these fellows are compelled to compare the new engine with their predictions of it. I have already enjoyed several such victories, and hope before long to lead some of these prophets around and rub their noses into this sensitive conviction.' Mr. Elliott was a friend of the great English scientist, J. Tyndall. "Mr. Tyndall, in an article headed 'Atoms, Molecules, and Ether Waves,' published just before his death in Longman's Magazine, is said by Keely's friends to have struck upon the very foundation stone (If we may use the term) of Mr. Keely's discoveries, which which gives the beginning, as it were, of his discoveries in vibratory power, etc., but, while Mr. Tyndall was still groping after the truth, Mr. Keely had found it, and has already produced several engines, every successive one of which has been an improvement upon the other, until the present one, now about to be given to the world, wi!l show how grand the system is upon which he has labored so long. Mr. Tyndall in the article above refer ted to says: " 'The union of bodies in fixed multiple proportions constitutes basis of modern atomic theory, cannot form water but by using and the We two volumes of hydrogen and one of oxygen invariably. A group of atoms drawn and held together by what chemists term affinity, is called a molecule. The ultimate parts of all compound bodies are molecules. When water is converted into steam, the distances between tho molecules, 'are greatly augmented, but the molecules themselves continue intact. We must not, however, picture the constituent atoms of any molecule as held fo rigidly together as to render intestine motion impossible. The interlocked atoms have still liberty of vibration which may, under certain circumstances, become so intense as to shake the molecule asunder. Most molecules, probably all, are wrecked byvibratory motion. The constituent atoms of molecules can vibrate to and fro millions of millions of times in a second. " 'Further atoms of different molecules are held together with varying degrees of tightness; they are timed, as it were, to notes of varying pitch the same as what occurs when a piano is opened and sung into. The waves of sound select the strings which respectively respond to them, each string constituting itself thereby a new center of motion.' Mr. Tyndall then refers to how vibrations are increased or accelerated by sound, and how great is the power of vibration when stimulated. "We have given a few of the expressions of Mr. Tyndall as to the power of vibratory action, wherein he treats and confirms the very things which certain THE MOTOR. scientists, who have never seen Mr. Keely's experiments, have stated oannot be true. We will now give Mr. Keely's words on vibrations as to their power, etc. He says: " 'Vibration is a difficult thing to define, if we speak of it theoretically. The scientific men of the world cannot fully explain it. Vibrations may be increased by sound. As regards atomic vibration, if I were to assert that I could make a machine which, by a certain process, i could create a disturbance of ciiuiiibrium so as to produce a pressure or fifty tons to tho square inch, persons would be dumbfounded. Yet such is the case with the machin now in my laboratory. The process involved in olheric ; liberation is the same sis if familiarly witnessed In the liberation of gases from water, water being known as the ; bighc-i't specific gravity. The liberation i of the ether Hi my machine furnishes j simply the medium, and that is used as ; Introductory of t!-." disturbance of th:

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equilibrium which gives the initiatory impulse. " 'It is well taiown that by means of a mechanical impulse innumerable vibrations can be produced per second, and these vibrations I claim can be produced by what I call the theory of interatomic ether acting upon molecular constructian. In my machine the force is in the vacuum, because the power which is to be liberated is greater than the power behind it. In rny machine I have two forces at work, the negative vibration and the positive vibration. I could not operate my engine if it were not for both of these agencies. The books treat of metallic vibration. This same vibratory motion is present in wood, air, plaster, and everything else. Mechanical impulse can be given to molecular structure. I claim that I produce the molecular vibrations by means of the ether which is liberated by my machine. Vibration is a force, not the effect of force.' "We visited Mr. Keely's laboratory last week and had an interview with him. He said, after showing us the coming mercantile engine which is now almost set up: " 'I am, as far as proving to the world the integrity of my vibratory system, about through with my work. My provisional engine (from which the coming :S00-horse-powei engine is modelled) was a perfect one in every respect, and the big one will be a more mechanical structure, and which combines within itself all of my system. I know scientists and all others will be pleased with its running, its power, etc., and all done with a costless force.' "

SOLUBLE GLASS. How It Is Utilized in France for Bleaching; Linen. According to M. Geisenheimer, in the Comptes Rendus, an entirely new departure has lately been made in France in the application of soluble glass to the bleaching of linen. In explanation of this it is stated that, to insure the complete bleaching process, the process arose of increasing the causticity of the lye and prolonging the time of boiling, to the injury of the fabric though improving the color; and though the production of yellowish or brownish patches on the linen is usually attributed to impurities in the chemical, it is chiefly due to the presence in the water of calcium and magnesium salts, which are precipitated on the fabrics and act as mordants, fixing the yellowish coloring matter of the lye an effect preventable by adding to the water a mixture of sodium carbonate and soluble glass. Calcium and magnesium silicates are thus precipitated in a floctulent form which settles rapidly, does not adhere to the fabric, and becomes granular and pulverulent on boiling: and, thus purified, only a very small quantity of caustic alkali is necessary, the greater part of the saponification being effected by means of the less injurious alkali carbonate. A convenient form in which to have the soluble, glass for this purpose is said to be obtainable by adding from ten to twenty per cent of anhydrous sodium carbonate to a. saturated solution of the soluble glass. MLLE. ACIAN A. Her Threatened Visit to This Country Has Caused Some Alarm. Aciana, whoever she may be, ha3 stirred up an American theatrical pub MME. ACIANA. lication to a high pitch. The paper says: "Aciana is well known in Vienna. She is also well known in Berlin and other gay cities of Europe. She is on the stage, but she cannot act. She appears in comic opera, though she cannot sing. She has, however, the faculty of getting into the good graces of wealthy men, who do not mind making a star of her, so long as they are kept in the back ground. Aciana announced some weeks ago to the correspondent of an American paper that she was coming to this country to sing in German opera. The manager whose name was linked with her statement says he would not bring her over if she would play for nothing. There is evidently a misunderstanding somewhere." Statistics on Consumption. Of the total number of deaths the percentage traceable to consumption in the several states and territories is as follows: Alabama, 9.6; Arizona, 6.1; Arkansas, 6.4; California, 15.6; Colorado, 8.2; Connecticut, 15.1; Dakota, S.S; Delaware, Ifi.l; District of Columbia, 1S.9; Florida, 8.:!; Georgia, 7.9; Idaho, S.S; Illinois, 10.3; Indiana, 12.6; Iowa. 9.9; Kansas, 7.3; Kentucky. 1.".1 : Louisiana, 10.4; Maine, 19.2; Maryland, 14.0; Massachusetts, 15.7; Michigan, .1:1.2; Minnesota, 9.:!; Mississippi, 8.8; Missouri, 9.8; Montana, 5.6; Nebraska, 8.S; Nevada, .;?; New Hampshire, 5.6; New ."Jersey, 3.9; New Mexico. 2.4; New York, 8.1; North Carolina, 9.5; Ohio. 1S.8: Oregon, 12.1; Pennsylvania, 12.6; Rhode Island, 34.6; South Carolina, 9.8; Tennessee, 11.5; Texas, 6.5; Utah. 2.8; Vermont, 16.1;. Virginia, 12.2: Washington, Ki.2; West Virginia. Ki.0; Wisconsin, 10.4; Wyo ming, 2.6; Average, 12.0. Floriilu for Sport. A few men from Roston anil Nei York go doAvn to Florida or the West Indies every winter and pay their way wholly or in part by shouting birds of bright plumage. Sometimes three or four buy a schooner and make the journey under sail, managing the boat for tho main part themselves. Olivers go down by steamer to Florida, build their own boat, and explore the rivers ir. the southern part of the peninsula. There are springs of fresh water in the iVivian Gulf that furnish supplies to vessels.

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WEDDED AFTER SIXTY YEARS.

Long Separation Through a Family Quarrel Over a Farm Pence. An aged couple, who were lovers sixty years ago, but were separated by a family feud, were married in Wilkesbarre, Pa., March 16. The groom Is Walter I. Chapin, who is 79 years of age, and his bride is Mary A. Chapin, only one year his junior. Their happy union, after many vicissitudes, proves again the old saying to be correct that love never grows old, says the Philadelphia Recqrd. During the presidency of Andrew Jackson they dwelt upon adjoining farms. The lad was then, blossoming into a sturdy farmer and his sweetheart was a charming country girl. They were lovers in earnest, but the two families split upon the rock that has divided many neighboring farmers. A line fence caused all the trouble. Young Chapln's father and the father of the girl each claimed a narrow strip of land. A family feud sprang up and the lovers were separated through the influence of their, parents and relatives. Young Chapin went to Ohio to make his fortune. His old Luzerne county sweetheart seemed to be forgotten, as after some years ha married a Buckeye girl. Not long afterward the first love of his choice wais also- married. About a year ago her husband died at a good old age and so, did Chapln's wife. Then Chapin went back to his former home in Luzerne, carrying the burden of nearly four, score years. Here he heard the life story of his old-time sweetheart. He visited the aged widow, and, although, both are in the winter of life, their affection for each other was renewed. He again proposed marriage and she accepted, just sixty years after their first engagement. The wedding ceremony that made them man and wife at last was quietly performed at her home. HERE'S A LESSON IN HUMANITY1 A Little Story by Col. Calliper Concerning rhlletns Goblinton. "Isn't it curious, Cynthia," the colonel said to Mrs. Calliper, "how sometimes the current of our lives is deflected by the most trivial incidents? Now there was Philetus Goblinton; you remember what a vain, consequential man he was? But all that was changed by just the slightest thing in the world. He went one Sunday to a church where he had never been before and where he was quite unknown. As usual, he made toward the middle aisle, where, at home, he was accustomed to sit; but the man that met him led him not down the middle aisle, but along the back of the pews and down a side aisle, and he gave him a seat pretty well back. This was a crusher for Philetus. Here was a man, evidently a man of some account, who, with the unprejudiced eyes of a total stranger, had sized him up as a man of side-aisle importance. Could it be that his friends and acquaintances really so regarded him? It set him thinking; and the result you see in the modest, thoughtful Philetus Goblinton of today." "Jason, dear," said Mrs. Calliper, "don't you suppose it would be a good thing for you to go to a strange church once in a while?" The Value of JKmcrson. Vernon Lee, writing of "Emerson, Transcendentalist and Unitarian," mentions that "the vital, vitalizing intuition in Emerson is a dualism, closely connected; the intuition of the worthlessness of unreality for our happiness and progress, and the intuition of the supreme power, for our happiness and progress, of that portion which we call soul, but these vital thoughts were defaced, hampered, and compressed by a cheap transcendentalism, the metaphysics of Germany adulterated by the shoddy science, tho cheap mysticism of America." Still, she regards Emerson as a valuable guide. She says: "Those who should deliberately follow Emerson's counsels, omitting from their lives not merely what he directly advises should be omitted, but also what his whole system logically leads us to reject, would be surprised to find how much space they had left themselves, how much energy for the real life, the life of enjoyment and utility." Forecasting tli Weather. A certain married man of Emporia Kan., was inclined to be humorous, but sometimes unwise. He had forgotten' to go home to supper, and he knew what was in store for him when he should finally get there, so just to be pleasant and entertaining he got some miniature flags at a toy store and put them in his pocket. "John Henry," exclaimed his wife, as he entered the house, "I should think you'd be ashamed of yourself to treat your wife with so little considera tion." He slowly unrolled his little package of flags, took out a square red one with a black square in the center and fast ened it to the mantel. How to Hecoinc Wrinkled. If more women realized that strain ing the eyes produces wrinkles, more would exercise a proper care of these valuable members. Reading by a dim or failing light, coming suddenly from a dark room to a light one, or vice versa, overworking the eyes in any way, and last, but by no means least, wearing dotted and cross-barred veils these and moie taxing of the eyesight are of valuable assistance in the wrinkle-making process. This Sound Good. An excellent relish for the Sun day night tea table is made with sardines as a basis. Take four boneless sardine, rub them smooth with an ounce of butter, a teaspoonful of Wor cestershire sauce, and a dust of cay enne peper; heat the mixture In a chaf ing dish and spread on hot buttered toast. A little grated cheese may be sprinkled over the top before serving;

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