- - - * ' - \ ' ' t H or THE RDER Astory of deep heart -interest in which mystery -tery intrigue and lyilin adventure * HtMljI Ie in the inimitably fascina- tin < ! i Appear Serial Form HIS PAPER ' Don't miss it if you can enjoy reading a real good stoiy. "One of the be& Tories of the plains ever written. " You will agree with this verdidt of others after reading it WATCH FOR THE OPENING CHAPTER * - ! ' " . : - : I - You Will Get the Opening In stallment of This Serial in This PaperNEXT NEXT WEEK And if you enjoy reading a Good Story , well told , with a plot which will hold your interest , you should not miss the first installment of KEITH OF THE BORDER Jack Keith , a typical border plainsman , while riding along the Santa Fe trail , notices a team hitched to a w.agon going at full gallop , pursued by men on ponies. "When Keith reaches the wagon the raiders have mas sacred two men , shot the horses and departed. Kieth reaches Corson City and is arrested and charged with murdering the two travelers. His accuser is given as Black Bart , a notorious ruffian. Keith and a negro prisoner escape from jail , wander across the sand des ert , and discover a young lady in a lonely cabin. From this on , Keith , Black Bart , Hope Waite and Christie Maclaire are intimately connected with the entire story , and many thrilling scenes are gone thiough. Dr. Fairbain , a frontier doctor , also plays a prominent part in the story and his gruff manner of speach and frontier mannerisms cover a heart of gold. V Be Sure and Bead It. L FOR CAKES AND PIES RECIPES FOR FILLINGS THAT ARE MOST DELICIOUS. Cream , Apricot , Cocoanut , Melba and Other Varieties That Are Well Worth Trying. Cream Filling for Layer Cake. One 2up powdered sugar , one-fourth cup hot water. Let them simmer , beat white of an egg and mix with the above. When cold add one-half cup chopped raisins , one-half cup chopped walnuts , one tablespoon grated cocoa- nut. nut.Cream Cream Filling. Seven-eighths cup sugar , one-half cup flour , one-eighth teaspoon salt , two eggs , two cups scalded milk , one teaspoon vanilla or one-half teaspoon lemon extract Mix dry ingredients , add eggs slightly beaten and pour on gradually scalded milk. Cook 15 minutes in double boil er , stir constantly until thickened , aft erward occasionally. Cool and flavor. Filling for Cake. Two cups sugar , one cup sour cream. Boil until it threads. Add teaspoonfnl flour sift ed twice , two-thirds cup chopped raisins. This is good for filling for cakes or frosting. Apricot Filling. Pick over and wash two-thirds , cup dried apricots. Put in a saucepan , cover with cold wa ter and let soak over night , or for sev eral hours. Cook slowly in water in which they have been soaking until soft , adding more water , if necessary , to prevent burning. Sweeten to taste , and add a few grains salt Force through a strainer , using a wooden potato tate masher. Cool , and add orange juice to taste. Bake chocolate cake mixture in Individual tins. Scoop out a portion from the center of each cake and fill cavities thus made with apri cot filling. Then frost cakes with any white frosting. Stewed dried apricots are frequent ly served as an accompaniment to bread and buter for the family supper. If they are forced through a strainer and then flavored with orange juice , they are much more delicious. One hardly recognizes them in their new dress. Cocoanut Cream Filling. Mix one- half cup sugar , 2 % tablespoons flour and a few grains salt ; then add one egg , beaten slightly. Scald one cup milk and pour , gradually , on the mix ture , stirring constantly. Cook 15 minutes in double boiler , stirring con stantly until the mixture thickens , aft erward occasionally. Cool slightly , add one-fourth cup shredded cocoanut and one-half teaspoonful vanilla. Use as a filling for a cake cream pie. Sprinkle the upper layer of the pie with shredded cocoanut and powdered sugar before baking. If the mixture is stirred until it be gins to thicken , there is no danger of having a lumpy filling. Melba Filling. Scald an earthen bowl by pouring hot water into it , then chill by pouring cold water into it Put one-half cup butter in bowl and work , using a wooden spoon , un til butter is soft and waxy , allowing water to run from cold water into bowl during the entire working. To butter thus prepared , add , gradually , while beating constantly , one cup pow dered sugar. Add cream filling , which has been cooled , made as for cocoanut - nut cream filling , omitting the cocoanut - nut Add IV2 squares melted , un sweetened chocolate. Spread between layers of sponge cake and on , top ; then ornament top with the remaining mixture , forced through a pastry bag and tube. Nut and Raisin Filling. Put one- half cup sugar and three tablespoons boiling water in a smooth granite saucepan , place on front of range and stir , to prevent sugar from adhering to pan , until melted. Let boil , with out stirring , until the syrup will thread when dropped from tip of spoon. Beat the white of one egg and pour on syrup , very gradually , beat ing constantly until the right consis tency to spread ; then add one-fourth cup raisins , seeded and cut in small pieces and one-fourth cup English wal nut meats broken in small pieces. Banana Filling. Make filling same as for nut and raisin filling , omitting nuts and raisins and doubling the recipe. Put between layers of cake and cover with thin slices of banana. Frost the top with remaining mix ture. The Houseworker's Hands. If you are obliged to have your aands in water for a long time , so that the fingers become shrunken , dip them in vinegar or pour it over the hands and they will be restored to nor mal condition. To properly protect the ends of the fingers the nails should extend a little beyond the tips. When the nails are too short the skin is apt to become rough directly un der the nails , which makes it almost impossible to keep them clean. The white crescents at the base of the nail can be brought into view by gent ly pressing back the cuticle every day. File the nail to correspond with the shape of the crescent Bouquet Salad. Use a good head of cabbage lettuce , arrange the white leaves in a bunch resembling the matured head in the 'center of a flat dish , garnish with slices of tomato and hard-boiled eggs. Just before serving cover the whole with plain French dressing. Use a spoon and pour the dressing on care fully so that all part will be moist ened without being disarranged. May onnaise may be used on the eggs and tomato if preferred , in which case the dressing should be put on the eggs in the cup under the yolks. TWO GOOD DINNER DISHES Recipes for Lamb Chops With Stuffed Tomatoes and Stuffed Compote of Apples. Lamb Chops With Stuffed Tomatoes. Select nice loin chops about one inch thick ; remove all extra fat ; sea son with salt and pepper ; cover with fine , sifted bread crumbs ; lay on a rack in a baking pan. For each chop take a firm but ripe tomato ; cut a cir cle around the stem and remove ; scoop out a little of the inside ; fill the cavity with fine bread crumbs sea soned with salt , pepper and a little melted butter , a few drops of lemon juice and a little minced parsley. If desired a little sugar may be dropped into the tomato before stuffing it Cover with the circle cut off. Place a tomato on each chop and bake in a hot oven from 20 to 30 minutes. This is delicious served with creamed pota toes. Stuffed Compote of Apples Select large juicy apples of equal size ( pip pins are best ) , pare and core them , leaving the apple whole ; lay them in a mixture of lemon juice and brandy until they have acquired the taste ; then cook them three parts done in a syrup of sugar and water ; drain care fully and bake a few minutes in a quick oven ; when done but still hot , fiU the centers with pineapple jam , with a few chopped almonds added ; cover each apple with a jelly pro duced by boiling down the syrup in which the apples were first cooked , with a very little more brandy. This syrup will give the apples a beautiful glazed appearance. Arrange the ap ples on a dessert dish and serve with whipped cream poured around them , or form apples in shape of a dome and cover with a meringue of beaten whites of eggs , powdered sugar and vanilla , sticking over the top sweet almonds cut In lengths. Place in oven until meringue is a delicate brown. MAN INVENTS STEAM COOKER Ingenious Little Stove That Is De signed to Be Attached to Steam Pipes. With coal and gas and even elec tricity used for cooking , a Missouri man saw no reason why steam should not be turned to the same purpose. Accordingly he invented the steam cooker shown in the illustration. This little stove can be attached to a steam pipe in the house by connecting up pipes- which run through the bottom tom or body member. The top of the lower section will thus be heated so that it can be used to fry on while the inside can be used as an oven. In addition to this there is a box-like compartment which rests on top of Connects With Steam Pipe. the lower chamber and which has a hinged cover which fits so closely as to make it steam-tight This cover provides for the retention of heat in the compartment , the same as in an oven , and makes it especially useful for certain purposes , such as preserv ing and the like. Of course , the steam cooker is designed primarily for use in houses which are equipped with steam heat Molded Rice. Cook the rice until soft in plenty ol salted water. If the water is all ab sorbed and each grain is separate and dry the dish will be more delicate. Let the rice partly cool ; to one pint add half a cup of sugar , a saltspoon of cinnamon , the beaten whites of two eggs and a teaspoon of gelatine dissolved in one-third cup of hot wa ter. Mix , pour in a wet mould and chill. Beat the white of one egg very light , stir into it gradually half a cup of powdered sugar , the juice of a quartered lemon and one cup of chopped raspberries. A more delicate sauce is made by straining the ber ries through a sieve. Lyonnaise Eggs. Peel and chop fine 2 medium-sized white onions , and cook them gently in one-quarter of a cup of butter until they begin to color. Stir in one table spoon of flour , then add gradually one cup of hot milk , chicken or veal stock , and stir until smooth and thick. Sea son with pepper , salt and a speck of powdered mace ; add six hard boiled eggs cut lengthwise into quarters , heat thoroughly , turn out carefully on squares of buttered toast , sprinkle chopped parsley and serve at once. Floor Cleaner. Buy a common blackboard eraser and fasten it firmly to an old broom handle. If the eraser is dipped into , a little coal tar it will take up all lint and dust and polish the floor at the same time Uncounted Miles of Bountiful Crops Make Glad the Farmers of Western Canada. YIELD WILL BE RECORD ONE Practically Beyond Reach of Accident , the Fruit of the Fertile Fields Is Being Gathered Elevators and Railroads Will Be Taxed to Their Capacity. On a beautiful Saturday afternoon , four weeks ago , the writer started for a twenty-mile drive into the country , from one of the hundred or more new towns that have been well started dur ing the past spring , in the Province of Saskatchewan , in Western Canada. Mile after mile , and mile after mile , was traversed through what was one continuous wheat field , the only relief to the scene being the roadways that led back into other settlements , where would have been repeated the same great vista of wheat. What a wealth ! Here were hun dreds and thousands , and millions of bushels of what was declared to be a quality of grain equal to any that has ever been grown in the province. As we drove on and on I thought of those fellows down on the Board of Trade at Chicago , St. Louis , Minneapolis and Duluth. While they were exploit ing each others' energies the farmer of Saskatchewan , Aioerta and Mani toba was contemplating how much he would realize out of his crop , now past any danger of accident , over what his anticipations were two months ago. One man said to me : "The profits of that field of wheat will give me sufficient money to purchase 320 acres of land , for which the rail way company is asking $6,400 , and pay it in cash. " Anotner , with a field of flax it was only 320 acres said splendid country , all one beautiful pic ture , and such an opportunity to use one's imagination In figuring up the amount of the wealth of the crops through which the trip into town took us , was not to be enjoyed every dfly And away we started. It was delightful. Wo drove and drove through avenues of wheat , which today , having yellowed with the beneficent sun , is being laid low by the reaper , stacked and threshed by the thousands of hands required to do it , and in great wagons is being taken , to the elevator. A night's ride by train took UB through 225 miles of this great province - , ince of Saskatchewan Into the south western part and from appearances it might have been as though a trans fer had been made across a township. There were wheatfields ! , oat fields , barley fields and flax fields , and many more that could not be seen. Yet there they were , and during the night we had passed through a country sim ilarly cultivated. It will all secure a market and get Its way to ocean or local mill by means of the great railways whose well-arranged systems are penetrating everywhere into the agricultural parts. Prosperous Alberta. We afterward went over into Al berta , and here again it was grain and ' a cattle , cattle and grain , comfortable 'a farm homes , splendidly built cities and towns , the best of churches and the most thoroughly equipped schools. While talking with a Southern Sas katchewan farmer he said that the land he was working , and for which he had been offered $60 an acre , had been purchased five years ago for $12 an acre , but he won't sell. ' He is making a good profit on his land at $60 an acre , and why should he who'a Farther north , land was selling at from $15 to $18 and $20 an acre. It II was learned afterward that the soil was similar to that in the south , the price of which today is $60 an acre. The climate was similar and the mar kets as good. In fact the only differ ence was that today these northern lands occupy the same position that the more southerly ones did five years ago'and there are found many who \ Steam Plowing in Western Canada. he could do the same and still have a balance in the bank. Flax produces wonderfully well , and the current price is about $2.50 per bushel. We then drove over into another town ship , getting further back from the railway , and the main traveled road. Here we found ourselves in the center of a Swedish settlement. Those form ing the settlement were originally from Nebraska , Invited to put up our horses and stay over for dinner , and a dinner that was enjoyed not only on account of the generous appetite cre ated by the exhilarating drive , but also because of the clean linen , the well-prepared dishes of roast fowl , po tatoes , cabbage , and a delightful des sert , some of the history of the settle ment was learned. The host and hostess were modest in describing their own achievements , and equally modest as to those of their friends , but enough was learned to satisfy us that they had come there about three years ago , in moderate , almost poor , circumstances. Most of them had re ceived their homesteads as a gift from the government , and by careful dili gence had purchased and paid for ad joining land. They had plenty of cat tle and horses , some sheep and hogs , and large well-kept gardens , showing an abundance of potatoes and cabbage and other vegetables. Their buildings were good. Schools were in the neigh borhood and there was evidence of comfort everywhere. On to the Park Country. Reluctant to leave these interesting people , the horses thoroughly rested , were "hooked up" and driven on , un der a sun still high in the heavens , with the horses pulling on the bit and traveling at a 12-mile an hour gait over a road that would put to shame many of the macadamized streets , we were whirled along a sinuous drive through the woods and then out in the park country. Here was another scene of beauty , groves of poplar , herds of cattle , fenced fields of wheat and oats and barley and flax. Here was wealth , and happiness and surely content ment. The crops were magnificent. The settlers , most of them , by the way , from Iowa , had selected this lo cation because of Its beauty. Its en tire charm was wholesome. Fuel was in abundance , the soil was the best , the shelter for the cattle afforded by the groves gave a splendid supply of food , while hay was easy to get They liked it. Here was a sturdy farmer , with his three boys. He had formerly been a merchant in an Iowa town , his children had been given a college edu cation and one of the boys was about to marry the accomplished daughter of a neighboring farmer. Through Land of Wealth. The invitation to remain to supper was accepted , but tnat given to re main over night was tabled. It was only a 25-mile drive into town over the best of roads , through Rich a. say they will come into a price nearer their legitimate value of $50 or $60 an acre quite as quickly as the southerly lands. And I believe it Throughout all this great country , practically 500 by 800 miles square , there are still a great many home steads which are given free to actual settlers. Many who. have secured pat ents for their homesteads consider their land worth from $18 to $25 pel acre. Immense Crops Assured. Throughout the southern portion of Alberta , a district that suffered more or less last year from drouth , there will be harvested this year one of the best crops of fall wheat , winter wheat oats , flax and alfalfa that has ever been taken off these highly productive lands. In Central Alberta , which comprises the district north of Calgary and east two hundred miles , through Camrose. Sedgewick , Castor , Red Deer , Wetas- , kiwin , Edmonton , Lacombe , Vegre- ville , Tofleld , Vermillion and a score of other localities , where are settled large numbers of Americans , the wheat , .oats and flax , three weeks ago , was standing strong and erect , large heads and promising from 30 to 35 bushels of wheat and as high as 100 bushels of oats on carefully tilled fields , while flax would probably yield from 15 to IS bushels per acre. In these parts the harvesters are busy today garnering this great crop and It will shortly be known whether the great anticipations are to be real ized. Throughout all parts of Saskatche wan , whether north , south , east or west , the same story was heard , and the evidence was seen of the splendid and bountiful crop. Rich Yield in Manitoba. In Manitoba it was the same. The fields of grain that 'were passed through In this province promised to give to the growers a bumper yield , and as high as 35 bushels of wheat and 60 bushels of oats was freely dis cussed. It would appear as if the expecta tion of an average of 25 bushels of wheat throughout the three provinces would be met. In a few days the 40,000,000-bushel elevator capacity throughout the coun try will be taxed , the 25,000,000 bush els capacity at Fort William and Port Arthur will be taken up , and the rail ways and their equipment will be called upon for their best Today the great , broad , yellow fields are indus trial haunts , the self-binder Is at work in its giant task of reducing into sheaves the standing grain , the har vesters are busy stocking and stackIng - Ing , the threshing machines are being fed the sheaves , the large box wagons are taking it to the elevators , and no matter where you go it Is the same story and a picture uch as can only be seen in the great grain fields of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and Alberta.