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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-03-08, Page 6•7,..1r-ma-zrrrr - ke- , very Leal 1sojVIr�n9uaUtt Sealed Packets Oniye Never In Bulk./ blacks Mixed or Greens • • rIMI. Ginger Recipes for Cold Days. Gingerbreaff-Onecup dark ino- . • lessee, one eup granulated sugar, one - El 217 half cup shortening (half leial and but- ter), one cup void evateroone teaspoon_ each of soda,. cinnamon and ginger, four cups, flour. Stir sugar, shorten- , ing, spices and molasses together with 'water. ' Then mad flour sifted with soda. Beat about tee minutes and 'bake. . . , I,I*PVliI.4Ar.A..r.VNO....tl. Ginger Pudding -Four ounces. of :attention, sae naturally she want e to egg'; one teaspoonful ground, ginger. find the simplese, way in which. it can. ......— Or The Suiilight. of Love tour; six minces of molasses; • one' . Tina ef lemon; pinch of .salty four. RB rromos . . , be. given. le smirching for this many ounces of breaderumbs; four ounces , of adopt mitheds which experts' on floor finishea knew are ruinous to the finish CHAPTER XXL---(Cont'd). , Ne, further weeds' were spoken teaspoonful baking Powder; finely chopped or shredded suet; one two .ta, end. Often .even, to the wood itself. . . . Sheltie Finish -If water has been , • ' - none were needed'. then_ Adrien said blopeonfuls 'milk. Having chopped "Yen .ask Me why he murroOrod, - -.' ._. .. .. ,, spilled upon the floor and it has ftlrne gently. -the-suet air finely - as 'pOsOble, grate f e- "Darling, 'before We •return; tell mei the lemon rind and mix these to with "ed white in places, mutation a eat cloth his forehead &trip with the force a ., his em.otion. "You, who kneW how Just once -let me near it froni_your the flour, breedcrumbs, baking pow - shadow" vvitli a•little alcohol sind rub tile aeote . actiecely believe I -am .awahe." der an ginger. Add the mo- lightly. Do• riot repeat this. operation- ,i ...: I lave you - worship 'your . 'WY own lips that yet love me. ter I can , ' • , . . She trembled under the past4on. of I. "It is no drove, Adrien," he side, 'lessee and the well -beaten egg. Then too. often, howeVer, or the finish will be: his gaze. • , , with the milk rinse out the bowl in entirely removed'. Shellacked floors' "Adrien!" elle exclaitried, in :low, pent-up emotion. ••,• "I love you, dear. , which the egg•witii beaten and add to sometimes take on a clouded or gray- C. orleironelthsel iloiatriraon4ZsairvraoriknoTh Ish appeeeance due to daraPnesa in pier face flueleing mid ,quivering witt speak to me 1001110, when I. know and neither heard a etep.behind them. into a well -greased reproachful tow.. "'Why do • you Again he claseped her in his arme the rest.. Mix very well and pour pudding mod; the air. This condition can usuelly be greatly improved . Thirty Yore. . • how little your wordreallymeant" It was riat until A warning 'cough steam for three . and a. half . hours, . by the same . , ' "Littler be cried with suppressed roused them, that Adrien started, and Serve with a sweet or a, bard Sauce. treatment. If the finieli has become ism . The Bwiton (Mass.) News Berme passion. "Ah, Conetance, why arebecame aware of the preeence of Mr. When meeeuriog the Molasses the best so dirty that it ia necessat7 to remove misjudge me, when I would gladly die . .....-......a 'v. -method iato •diii a tablespOon in, flour altieofihroltatiarthtlettttafielnrt wiwitti 41 All the meven 'wonders of the world. . you so cruel to ine? WhY tio.you so sleeper Vermont. to serveyou.'" • • • . cHApTER- xxie, . . and then to fill with the molasses, fade, on historY's pager compared with Which will easily roll out from the acid; never use lye, as it 'turns :the The earnestriese in. his tones Was While the preparations for the ball the spectacle Great Britain presente" - unmistakeable; but she kept her face at Barminster Castle had been going floured eneasure.. -One tablespoon wood and ruins the eurface per- hes to -day. A commercial nation of lees tinned from him, and he knew only . on apace, trouble and confueion (beeped) is roughly One ounce. ••• . • manentlY. After all evaporated the original finish inaY be than .60,000,00e. people euddenly sum, from the quick -drawn breath that she reigned in the little village on the Boiled' Ginger Pudding -One-half applied, . - , . ' . . moned to arms Where no arms existed a heardhim. • banks of the Thames. pound of suet; one pound of flour; . and. in less than thirty months she . Varnish Finish -If the finish. has be ' "Constance," he pleaded, "look at No Sooner had W., Jasper Vermont one-half pound sof brown • sugar*. two has a bigger army than history evee . X shall never trouble you again." ' Ashford sank on the floor of the' shop, but never floe(' the floor with wateie come liadlY worm Scrub with a brush, nee, dear.". Ohre me this one chance. taken his departure, than poor TeueY heaping teaspoonfuls 0 ground gin- before recorded and war Machine in - tremuloudy. . : ..; great had been,the s that she wad . Chop the•'suet very finely,. and mix After it'liai. dried out,' epply a thin Europe • that 'ter' wealth of shell/ ex- noeat of varnish; et,. in ease time -eon- plosives and war power is the mimic - or, • ' "You bave Nright--e' she began and bUrst into a f . . of tear's. So . "Islo, Tight to tell you I love you. De completely unnerve . and had quite with the other ingredients, Put all noe be allowed for the varnish to dry, ment of the Germans, who had taken You think I don't know 'that?" he forgotten the likelihood of her bus- quite ilrY j12st as they are Ian a very wax . May be sulsitituted. DO .not ten times thirty months to prepare for • • burst out. "It is Just • that very. band's return fronrSichmendt.asl well wall -greased mold gad: boil for three the atteeke , - . .., • . • - ' - use shellac on of old varnish 'oe : knowledge which has burnt itself into . as the' mysterious disappearance of hours. When cooked turn out on to a varkhkon top of Old shellac. • wonders. -• is only.: the beginning , of me, and seared my Very soul." Jessica, Who had not been seen in the hot dish and serve With a hot, sweet . Wax Finish -Waxed floors should ,,„ • "What knowledge?" she asked, fore .houeesince the arrival - of. Adrien "sauce poured over. • ` . getfid, in the suddenness of his attack, Leroy and his unconscious 'burden. .Ginger Puffse-One-half pourui . of ' . ' be dusted daily with a. bie9M covered- :. • 'Both Alt and Sea .Commande - . ', the tactics she? had adopted with re- This sodden realisation of all the with- •eenten-flannet. . Keep •a can of Without an English aeroplane en- gard to Lord Standen. • presentiment of evil which Lucy Ash- flour, . one -teaspoonful of ground gin- wax on hand, and should the finish bo- gine that could circle her own Island "The knowledge of your engage- ford had ever in her mind, had burst ger; three 'eggs, one tablespeonful 'Of come worn apply a thin 'coat,rubbirig, shapes vaiieuished the boasted Zep- , mot," be 'answered boarselye "Ab, On her liko. a thunderbolt. 'She had sugar, preserved ginger. If not suf.. well into. the wood. AlloW„the Wax :bers. and is . mistress of her -Own. Cohstance, he meriefule. Surely not known always that the man, Mr. Jas- fleiently Moist Mid .a little milk. . Mix to dry for one hourand then polish skies, . With.aubmarines' by the hun- oven Standen himself would grudge per :Vermont, who knew her secret, the flour, .ginger and sugar together;. me these last few elements:" " was alive; but never .before had she beat the eggs very thoroughly and 'stir: thoroughly. • Before.. rewaxing • 'the dred• Ihreatening 'her coast &fences, feWhet has Lord Standen to do with been'actually threatened with its be- -them-into-the-dry- ingredients. - 'But-- flomescrub ie with turpentine, and a .. , . • her .food supplies and her commerce, mot"' elle asked, leafing hint full in trayal, Bor.:father, Mr. Harker, had ter some little baking tins; put small lifice4 •°-46°‘el'ci*: .. ' the face with steadfast eyes. ' - always stood between her and that hard -finish- floors.' .• The rides applY tO virtnally all • ' .• . she has swept all oceans, locked the vaunted German fleet in harbor, con- •Bestared at her. in amazement.,, ° dreadful ,possibility. - . . - - ' • . Pieces of Preserved ;ginger at the bot - half fill with the •• mixture - and voyed 'shipments of gold across. the , "la he not your accepted lover?" ,' Presently,. sho. nimpecl up .and call- Om; . ' His VOiCe• betrayed his agony . of alto Jessica..., Then she tenienibered geeee in sefetsre---loads of gold that ire. bake in a qnick oven, SerYe.. with • Household 'spirit; and, heating this, she relented. that the girl had disappeared, from the wine sauce or a little ginger . syrup .-- . former tiros' weuld luive. peralyzed : •. Holding • up her left hand, the third time she had •sent her front the room. heated and flavoredwith lemon juice. - A smell afiacnitit of salt added . to . national financial markets -made the finger Of Which was bare Of rings, elle Feeriege that. Vermont might yet Gingerbread Pudding -e-- One-half milk :will make it more easily digest- English Channel' her . nuiltiPle • track - mkt:du/00Y, almost indeed, demurely: . change his mind and return. for -the patine a stale gingerbread e one ounce ed. . , • • • . ..• ' :' ocean railway to Europe , with no loss •"Tine doe not look like it. does Ay! niithtekhetran tothe door, calling out of molasses, one 'egg( WO ounces of When a housekeeper has no help she by. Zeppelin or submarine; fought • in •- . The light. of hope, newebornellashed Jessica's namein a paroxysme of tierv, !into his ; face. , He sprang, 2forward-r, ounterrot ' which finally, . 'oe reeeiving Sugar,. one-half --pound of flour, two .should • insist. oil a kitchen 'cabinet. .,, • Africa, at the -Canal, at the •Dardan- ; eagerly. . i- - ,• • • .• no reply, ended- in a severe' attack of. ennees: of almonds, one-half, pint of 1 • Cream of Wheat served with pork &es; 'grappled with the Turk and the .... •"Coustance!" he Cried. ' "My daile hyeterics, in the rnidet of 'which her Inn- - Cruinble,the gingerbread and sausage is good and it eminteracts-the -Bulger; ..changed.generaes and'admir- ing!.' You 'will try to are .fluv me -then husband eeterned and'foaaher„ -:: i - -mit with the flour, sugar andlilaneh=grease of the •sausage .• ‘..--e - . • •. ' als-in„Commandee.Changed. -cabinets; ..,..ee He would how taken her in his . With .an exclamation of alarm, he ed and -chopped alinonds, then 'stir in I. February ,is a good4tirrie to Plan the fed the arrriies Of .France given' arms 'trills; but she held him off at arm's raised her from the floor and hore•her the Inolasseee '. Milk and beaten egge. flower and vegetable garden, and gendzto:Rusaia.;•: Maintained the Amiga and length. , : • . . . • . . upstairs to the be4, on which "Lady Mix' thoroughly, turn into e well -but,' in the order for seeds. . ..- ' . ..' the gOvernnients Of Belgium and See - No. no, Adrien," she interrupted Merivale had lain sucha short time -. sadly. "Because 1 ata not engaged to aFo. He was greatlY puzzled .by the hours.. , ., • •• - .• . ..._ tered mould and steamfor three ..Fondant, the bath; of all good cream. bia and • altogethef-ndvanced three Candies, can be used as a covering and thousand .million dollars,' or three Ginger Rings -One pound 0-broil/II also as n1.141g. • • : ' • •., ,. times the national debt of Ilpited• sugar, one pourki 'of• flour; two table- •• , Whene r you take 'stack out of the Stites, to her War alliei.' ' - • • . spoonfuls otgreundginger, six ounces stock :pot add an equal amount ef of butter, one egg. ....', • I,water to I ep up, the supply.: , 'Cream the butter and sugar .and add . A .simple dessert ii male by adding . nutted, .you are my fiest love, and You Lucy had relapOd into a, State of the . beaten eggs'- .flour and ginger.. chopped nuts, to ..s.teskd,applee .and will be my last. '' l'' am not worthy to 'fever, and Was talking deliriously of -Mix' thoroughly .and knead •• lightly. serving'.with whipped. cream. . . • . • .,...touchyour hand, as pure as, it is white, an inn at Canterbury, an individuated . you not forgive me the folly the name of but well. e Johann Wilfer, and most 'Role out On a 'fiburdd-bOutd a quarter, Ifei .6.(ift'peace Of home-made bread, • '', a my past life, en,. let rite live in' of all, making plaintive -aliileals to Of an inch thick. Cut into rings, us- is rubbed on a scotch' on woollen goods, ehope that I may do -better? I swear Jasper Vermont net tobetray het..., . ing abegbmit -cutter, • ,- Beim- in•:-.ri it will -remove the .scorch,... , •• .. : -, from this 'day forth to gait off the cad .-:As-the nextdayIessicalacr not re, moderate oven till they have _aeeeired It is 'better to have too • nsueli than life, with all its emptiness and folly, turned, Ashford found • all his work a deep golden brown colae; • •.",. too little of the Mineral substances "''' arid lay the futureaty(1111feet." - cut out for bine to flee:aft-0 the shop Ginger Snaps -Ten ounces of flour, found in milk and fresh , ---' • • As herpessiionate. weeds ceased, she and the children, as well as his wife. two- teaspoonfuls of groendginger, a - All eereale, should Ara . he boilecl. turned to him. , - , • .. .• , A kindly ,neighbor crane to his rescue; pinch of emit, One-half pound of golden rapidly- for a• fene. minutes •and thee , • `Widen I 'do not know' What to but John; insisted eir. •Tmishig •Lecy !thii*e' she. said low; troubled tines: himself, White the woman remained syrup, three ounces .Of 'butter, a small SlOWly for hours le a double boiler. . •.•. . 9 wrote to you lest menthe -that day • 'downstaire. ' • • ' . '' teaspoonful ;of baking, • psfivder. . , Mix ' .. e. , . • e • . ' °We -came' up to London, believing that At first, the • liusbena paid' little. at- the flour, ginger, salt and baking pow,. • • • perluip.s.,yoe had learned to care.. a der together.. ., Warm • the aro and - -Going it Blind. ' tention. to. Incoheieta, . litthefor me; but when yeti deliberate- sentences of his ,wife; but as the first Melt the butter in it. Stir into the • : .. . . • . e. ly spent the day with another Woman, • excitement died down: and they began dry ingredients, roll Out and cut. bit° •'After witnessing 'the:wonderful per - sooner 'thee with me, • what . am I to , to take distinct feem, he .bent over her, rounds. Bike an a greased' tin for for:Mance of a blind pianist, one Irish - 'think?" - . "What do you mean?"- e ' • ' • •', , , and learned ^-6 ••asKed. Naturally, peer John recoiled. in hor- ; the one 'error of her life. fifteen minutes in a moderate esreil. • man remarked to another:' . . . • • 4 "By the - powers, -that's' Ale. best hoarsely... •. " • . c' ".. !roe; the whole thing seemed se incred- "e saw you, she. retuened siniply, ible, so impossible to. believe.. Yet • musie I ever heareivitleme two ears." Four, Delicious TIOt atead,,R,Iipi.: . "He does pretty .weliefer a blind "whew we were -et the.itation, auntie , and I; on the twenty-aeiond-" , 1 when he had, had time to idled? he The ' breakfast "pop -over" Usually men; doesii'e7lier ,:- : ' " • . • "Thee.twenty-setendl" ' he echoed , 'saw that this explained all. the. little takes about three•••querters of an hour , -44tie does,' indeed, but . f I was just --;‘ -- ';Strangenesses in his wifies conduct AA belre,,„bittirone.eb_reedeceMea.the thinkire. of wan thing." • thre4git blenched -SW- ' ' ' • - - ' I' tied inanner; lier interibe2:neftiftiaiieSs al'es, you were at Waterloo Station followingrecipe for a very sirollae hot, . , "What's that?" e , . with someone, I, dia,not See her face. at the sight of any strenger; her re- bisCuit, Arch can be baked, Jn-• less: • .9t. wouldn't niithe .Any. diffeeenee to But what &eget Matter now?' , If tieence Bete- her yoUthful days;• all then belt an hour: ' • him if he wasn't blind."." . . • ' . - _, tlais-va.O. bonne in on hie mind, and he .444';':4"''''s -81m134"." realised that 'bee bad been. deceived.' Two capfuls of flour•,• two cupfuls .....0-Wiereaetse" . - , ee, •• . Yeefeige:div‘sta.14itoikteriiiiiiialaial tio tritathattie.t_atirillra. 41"feitkt ,= rreat".*:7-11:rit:'-'. gro:Itghlkir5: :.'.''-"•.Weli',d-.FAVitie-"Watchlirlii-irr'•'tffi-tii . iiVeningz .•rind he. never looks he, Pieno, anyhow." , j - • . =Millanina.77-77•••••“S THROUGH THE Dp1( SHADOWS spoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of butter, One egg, one eppfur of railk. Mix the dry ingredients together, then rub in butter. The egg should be beaten up in the milk and then poured bite the dry rmixture.- -Mix thorough-- ly and bake on a hot griddle or in a quick oven. .'' Care of Floor*. No housewife ea n expect to keep her fik)or4 looking hestatiful without some of that people. WU fighting mad to- trade and eommer4 locked in the day and getting madder every miu- . WORLD'S WONDERS ute. The stigrao and insults to ore. dit and honor from Washington only increase the resolve of her people end their faith in the "inVincibility of the righteous ouse: Fee this- thet are willing to pledger everything sacri- , VAST ACHIEVEMENT: flee for luetice upon the altar ot their. bettle floe, The Ordnance Billie. 1*(514Y-five year ago the Machin- ery of Efigland and her Maid work - am stamped out the coins of many nations and. moulded the guna of big and little of many more. She was the ordnance maker. of the world. Then Germany became her rival as a metal worker and, getting government bowl: - ties, oretorders, she was able with her • choper labor and living to cut. under the prices of England. The ordnatice fires :of England went out except for navy guns and "made in. Genhany" invaded the Island and was stamped over the world on feverything :from mitlety to yitieel and cannon. But the foundations', in metal work- ers eed the old factories in tliis busi- AMERICAN . WRITER TELLS QF • Lord Standen, is that any reason why (bordered appearano of the room, .. - I should love. one . who, 'treats Me so' andbis first thought was Of burglars. lightly?" - : He gave no time to this, however, but , "I treat you lightly, you -the one hastened to get his wife into bed, then woman I heve ever truly loved? Cone rushed out for a doctor. When he stanceewhatever sins I nuLY have com- returned with bim it was found that , me. • CleAtenee, r can give neither 1 b.r„k;,414,...,":61):::,..;,ando hiding his face in the and l!nelta..., p you nor any living. being the explana- I.71;e7-e'vemetheee are ately. . . "Heaven above but I do not hope to make you'believe tion of that ,awfel day. .But I swear • knOWn that; the bitter troth, John Ashford utterly teen beat. in gradually the flour, milk e sobbed like a child. Nattire's own cups I. het Pour isatcot•;i: buttered oi,vieeecit. 1E, • by me: / could not help myself. dci heart.than•ainy weeds. After the first ;recry to till:bet cape, gob -half full, and to you that the-afeeting was unsouzght medicine' and do more to soften' the not know how all this hos COMA alit:AA' shock had worn away, Ashford -0m. in half an lieunr, irOven Jillti,111jawill. menced to look back .on the happy be light, , . f 1blown •„,-,. I understood from Standen thateetbat da5es he had ineseteeme•Leey; tee way erowre, . !4 cn 'hee'weeneeririgneergancatote—ee: interrupted 'con. she had _worked with lin, and for . Ilere is a hot breekfast brieacl which .,.. stance softly., 4/.1. toldt ie e him. These thoughts did their heal-, i;16,511* en, ty t'" -e einc.Meenine'e' -Ariz work,andeaceordingly, a few---days.-t7-ebteeeePatedie . ' l'ecit. a tnoment, Adrien teeked at her later, 6:.:etrdrit4- . :in stupefeetion. when Luck Asliferd returned to •Throen "If I had known we were at cross- 4 ecieneneee' she found her bus- '- - • /'.,. . . cunfifie of flour one-halftea4 purposed" ho exclaimed. "I see it pitying eyes-gezing into hers with only spoonful of salt, three teaspoonfuls or . all now-, *hen it IS too late," and hteonderness in their depths. baking poWdere one tablespoonful of. oinking down On the stone Oat he o n she said faintly, "have i butter, (Mehra cupful of milk.- The been, ill. ' flour, salt and baking powder VC 5.1.t.. "Yes, dear," he replied gentry: 1 ed- tog therethen the butter is rubbed Something in his saddened tones,„ or in. ,Md milk and . mix thoroughly, at h perhaps. somer e strange uitionlonger, tout -estemore ear it unman, ecerataeo - Lucy thsecret was no • bees alone. a soft dough. • Thereplace the dough "John!" she cried, her yoke sheik- °n the. hot greased: griddle, cover end Int; with terror andwertknese. oyou eook slowly for ten miraitee. ;Re, know all!" And she hid her face in .move, turn the dough over and dock , her hands. . on other side ten minutes longer. 'Do, Her husband bent over her tender- not Cut this, but break into pieeces. It ly and kiesed ,thethin cheek; e'en be served With butter' or in small "Yesedear,' he said. "You've told bowls with fruit' Juke. me all. Why didti't You trust me:, . A substantial hot bread. for break- , She looked at him in wonder, hard- f4 1cornmeal and r combine- s a , loe ly'believeing the evideneeof her own '0)6... Tlie rlee -eon be eo°hed th° Aare. Was this all the reproach and night before and be used old boiled anger he would deal out to her ? in the morning. It is made as fel- Could it be possible that knowing all, lows* • ' • . • TWO cupfuls of cornmeal, one cup- ful of boiled rico, two cupfuls of milk, three eggs, one tablespoonful of but- tery ono teaspoonful- of salt, twn ton. spoonfuls of baking powder, Mix the Well -beaten eggs, milk, butter and tOrnineal---to which the salt ehould be. added -and tho rice. Finally, the baking powder should.' be stirred'in. Ms batter should pour easily, but 'if too thiel: a little more milk should he ' added. 'Petit. ,iiito muffin tins and hake in a Moderate even. ' Here ia the recipe for &etch stones, tho favorite Scotch hot bread: Two cupfuls ok' flour, elle teagpoon. buried his face itthis hands.- • For a minute there was silence, broken at last by t 0 rustle of Lady COUStafiCal dress as she diible tifnidly towards him. •• v' "Adrian," she murmured, very low Indeed, but not so low tliat he did not hear. He looked up, gave ono swift glance at her blushing fate. then, with an incoherent cry of delight, caught her in hie arms., ''"My darline he ."/ love you. Believe that, though' t failed srott so:" 98'0" • 04 • IIIAL tthilidgea CREAM SEPARATOR *ROLM tittOroAttogtostoil 'tout,tett .0%ro, ertar tutilat, , gorree- aktramat **ranee& tor OW Sig 9. Maxi? Wiles *arra greota rapt, pakais mos etricks WWI% oiri*aerzefftrg Marcel, *OW e.enteft,_ moment, rem *tete. iah:ch Ingatigrall larger eggatiry totiebEars, mamas% ItionthlyPsynissitPlon SS:entente re Aiss cas0....kgr Wilmslow% ..seesmi semi st.,.afiesm vs. aCiffithe; (',5,i.aeer se:sii,WAti tor harldeatie ire6 wets ota our sis.pmett �i4.. Atittg1CAW BAUR% NI wool/44ff. T. the man site had loved, yet feared, solely on this account, would not only fOrgive but take her into his heart again? As it in answer to her be- wildered thOUghtS Mires arm was around her heck, efid his kies of fOr. emotes fell upon her lips, Presently' she *looked up, with a look of Inefrahle petite end pratitude Ott ht5t. ftidb, "Sohn," she said, "send for poor father; it will lit new life ts hhn e know that tide dreadful w.Ight is off my heart, and that you, Imo lig mutt a lied woman I have been, Will atM eall Inc youvire. oh, retell him to me soon, deer, that he may bo happy too." (Toia continued), fel of baking poWder,; one-quarter tea- • . Still, Supplying the Woild., While the • United„States has been trying to find out how to build •inili- tare' rifles n quantities and has un - flied orders for . them representing hundreds of millionsof dollars, Eng- land, has been 'terning• out rifles' by the million for herself and her allies can- non by the thousand, boots and; oats. _by the million for herself .and ber allies ,and, Weeder of wondets, she bas done all this, is'doing it, is yet to do More, and has nowher manufactur- ing, her trade relationa end her 'over- seas commercennimpaired.. Yet she hasegrabbed the -trade of the • world, -so that her enemies are struggling on half rations With food, rubber and metal supplies frorii the outside *Old practicallycut off extept as new. ter- ritory is taken. , . , • This is a .gigantic physical pinver and a trade and war power combined never before dreamed Of. It Puts in the shade all that the world previous ly knew Of Great Britain's financial power.'" Neliiidiareintred two-Yekikr • ago that the war cost M Great Britain was to be beyondfive- or • six billions. It is to -day more thadtwiee 'that stint is prepared,. uble Butatupendous, even beyond all previous estirnatest• as iethrs 'financial power, the physical and 'Mentalpowof manifested by J1111111111111•11111.111.111111111110111111111111118 Great Beitein is theraatvel of rear- , • --TheeBritlebeLeon-evasieregardedeleie inories°4 bag Of trade and a whelp.• Of • the sees. Great BeitaiTi3e Ability to put 1.0%:•, of • ligy , population . under rime, to feed.and equip her Allies and the -same timeetoevesdirtaireirer-erte • dit and eomtnerce throughout the v' witld weii something never dreamed of within or without hoe enipire be, fore We war. • Alt:counted Wealth and UnMeasured- , • war issue. ° • • Knglend did not: wakeri:to the war' power that comes , through cuttileit, out luxuries eo soon w Germany, bet she is on the road to just sta thorough alensexvittion of all IWO& -Alt the- n:41one are in the :struggle for econow mic existence that fighting forces inex be %awed. Germanyeand England are rather ashamed of it; Russia and ?rime are proud of it. /he shutting pp 0 barrooms, the closing a places of Oreutement, the closing of cafes and the shutting off of lights at nine, thirty all nuke for increased mae power and greeter war efficiency. It . Is not only 4 finaecial and a metal, but a social and economical struggle In Europe such as the world has neve dreamed of and of which the people of the ;United States have almost no comprehension. • The P,eople and Their Resource& Formerly, armies .fought battles e. and the war was whekever the armies moved. To -day, ,fiva hundred million people are arrayed in battle andor:. ganizing to win in war. They are or - nese had no. entirely disappeared ganizing in ,clothing; food; drink; the , *hen the Prussian hosts fired upon. .discarding.of luxuries, increase in the . Belgium and attempted to oil up the 'energies and hours of labor and in the Or- tteaties of Europe as scraps of paper. mutual burdens of a forms of taxa - It was en this 'aim° .forgotteri found4 •ation that England htts brought forth her wealth a war Material and is or., ganizing to roll. the, Prussian back aver the Rhine in 1917. gnglancl'et reserve in man power that can maintain her eeninierciel produetion, her exports and overseas trade .while petting -an arny-gregter- than that of -Frahm in the field needs • to be carefully studied.. ,• Thorough mixing is what makes cake delicate and tender eS inakes the best cake be. calls° it ere aras quickly. and thoroughly with the hutter whichits the • bar1estpaPtofthtnux- Ing. Its purity and extra Vine" granula- tion make it dissolve y at; .,oitee. "2 and 5.1h, rtons 10 and 20.11t. gs s, .England Feeding and Fighting. • Germany is living on" 80% per capita of what it was consuming be- fore the war. But ngland is con- suming; feeding and fighting to the exteet that her physical force is in- creeied by far more than Sects. the whole nation is fighting, men, women and children.. There is -nothing ,else thought -of,. talked bf,-orworked for, throughout the whole • country, All the leisure classes, men and women, are one way Or another in the war. The. women are joining in the ranks of labor and all labor IS to -day for the that must inevitably flew therefrom..e.. ' . - country with everything in production Wall Street Journal ton, Any excess profit is prom/41y taxed., In England. more than 'two billion a year, or one quarter the cost, is being raised by taxation. Grains, aie being ground more- coareely With the result that in bulk. they. .produce . g5% more, a smeller percentage 0 nutriment is lost and, the food .being richer in nun-igen'consumption pet capita is ditninished..Witholit breed • :cards or other German regulationse In all figliting countries luxuries are being steadily 'diminished. .Cream, fat, sugar, wines,' expensive meats and • fruits are being steadily reduced . tensumptton. Champagne is forbid- den_in Russia; it was never 4,50 a pride in Frahm. •, • ' The whole world is caining into a' new civilization, a new manhood 4nd' a new Womanhood:And it new strengt or both *lir and. -•pellee; and 'fret& ' Washington to Sin Francisco there appears to be little cothprehension'ofi 4 the issues and the econoinie results P RIKER SERVICE Known Everywhere Available ,Everywhere 'just because' there is not ft "Parker" Agency nea; • • - . you is no reason Why you should -do Without 'Talker . • Service." . _ excellence of our work is so well.known- that itineed"only be ini.ntioad here - - • But the cenyenience of our seivlice'by mall to distant , customers is not. Articles of any sort can be sent us • either by parcels pest or express, and oturned in the seine manner. We eay the carriage charges one way. Every precaution, is taken to .ensure their . safety n Wansit. ' ' So -many things can be "rescued" b7 -cleaning or dyee, ing that, the value of this service will be apparent** everyone.. •, When you'thInk.of cleaning, or dyeing, think Of PARK1311^S. • • Send for a FRES copy 0/ our useful and Interestini • book og cleaning. and--dyetagr Be me to addraw poi parcel clearly to receivhig dept. PARKER'S DYE WORKS' LIMITED . 791 YONGE 4. - TORONTO so toonoinlat • 4eo1inte4• -Wealth in Oredtt, nt refierVes and se- curitcs power that is now showing forth in the Britieli ornpire, I4o stu- ' dent of teen caul 'netlone ever pietur- . .6d, forth the war spirit of the British ppople that 6iiid.be o roused'in a eighteeus eause, No student of re- Iiin eocial order ever gauged the spirit' Of, seif,.-saeritiee that is • now, • lightIng the path a the •nation - itt war. ,Thie Is the people's war.' ft is the , war 0 derolertu.* that.has 13ritielt ,emplee around the globe. It neta wire of king's, fordo 4 or nobles. It le a war in defense Of all the Civil.' izatiom pence and honor for • which Brigistul has stood -sod itt wljleh tho has -inede pr.ogress for mere/tg;in o buTtliatro"IPYiettasisi. ttcould .nreas.urabb measure the wealth of Bnglarel, count her' population and take- toll of her . .f.3unz, big' and little.' They numbered her ealliterY men, her bueinesu 141.111 , ttflet her iale.and leietnee ela0a.3; mid outside of her navy. her wealth. and ; her tiede AO wall Ly Petrtsian The A11,Purpo6. itt Ib# v.orla f42tIntifA imtWot., 41fi!: ;:th to ineasoeo tiAnr.J0 ri tj • . -Ace. *9, • • DEPORTATION OP BELGIAN EN' LEAVES WOMEN AND CHILDREN MORA. fIELPLPS\S' THAN EVER • Neutral protestido not prevent thet Getinan• ii Vogt contirtuing 'the deportation and enslave., zne,nt of tho able-bedled men who were -left in • enhaprsy -13e1giii*---and • we are powerless tet ' Stop it until we have won the war. • , - Meanwhile the lieu:trial .r.otrnidsaion fot Xeliefiri -Belgium, tidrninistered.without pay by,. great-hearted Americans, is saving the Wonieri.— end children 'fibril starvation. Here we •OM.1 • help promptly and effictively, by giving gene. rowdy to the ailgien Relief Airid. • More •contributions thait ever are needed, . because the higher prieen -at rnodetuffei paid» tularly wheat, have eptionoly Innreased the nest �f feeding:these tuillions Of dependent Belgians. Bow thuch can you.iipare the victima of One of the blaekent...dost cold-blooded crimes?. Send whaterveryon Can give Wseltlymetithly Orin Wit Iturlp woo to Looat PCOVialig Ceiritinitteelio Ot ' ioAlrAiLE 'to arasAsuann ' Itian kliefrund • as St. Peter Strott, Meatreat. The Greatest Relief Work In tory. _