HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-04-20, Page 2--r
,MilhlonsoT T":
•
is Pure-
•
ittackiii.aes0
or mixed
3eolle4 Paokets
15*. •
Murderer, and he vrethed forward and
jIaid Igle" hand on the stoelc of Jines
Wincheater, pulling at it gently.
"Take your hands off," 'snapped the
white man, And eertain now that the
Indians- bad vot pluck enough to rush
hing all togethen he whipped out his
six-shooter gunk covered Ms Minno
Instantly the Ingran's hand was
withdrawn and a change C4I100 Orr
the flVe faces.
, The Chileotons had only calculated
ittport rifie,-wIfieb, they could see.
"What for.you so mad,. Jim?" asked
Ithelowzga, "Indiana' all time good
friends. Re not want to take you
gum"
:"I kiiow, 1 have. plenty Very good
itiendig• ;:31411tetet gm very best," and
he glanced atthe revolver in his hand.
• Then he reached forward in his turn
and took baek the empty cartedge bag
front between thct chief's knees, and
the silver flash from the ground where
the, murderer had dropped IC; For por a moment he lookut 'Om
ilia, and then a ‘grin-suitle flickered
round his mouth, and looking
Khel-
owna squarely in the eyes he said, ar
thing you. go and get me some water,"
and al the chief hesitated' he 0850
up the black muzzle of his revolver
and. added "Get"' .•
Atthatpoinent the roan .snerted,
cudcrfoot's Wooin
By 01,11/E•PHIL1.1Pra W9L.1.0 .
(Author ofoGoli,'Gold in Carlime," MO
X,--(Cont'd). -
He did net .feet easy ablut The
• expedition ofthe petiee 1144
accom-
p1ihed nothing unless it We'm to Provo
that the Chilcotens had broken Up
• their camp, and left the country, prob-
ably fOr an early winter bunt towards
• Teti° Lake, and in all the Yearsthat bc
had lived on the plain's and in B.C. Jim
hail never had any serious 'tratible
• with Indians. •
• He had become so Used to them in-
deed as peaceful neighbors, thathe
-
had ghost forgotten the red stories
.of which the plains 'used to be full;
legends of burnt ranches, or men and
, women ,murdered across their own
thresholds, and brutally mutilated in
orderthat their long bait might trith
a chief's robe. But those stories were
or Sioux And Apaches. , He doubted.
whether the Indiana of B. C. had ever
taken scalpa untirlie remembered a
hidetnie dancing mask ,which hung in
the Boss's library that had tufts • of
long soft hair round it, as to the ()twin
of whichhe had never hitheito ttou-
Now everything seemed changed.
There was a terror' abroad on ,the
ranch lands, 110t,SO.rauch seen as felt,
• arid though he scoffed at presentiment;
The cattle had been disappearing as ,
they had never *disappeared before'
there had been no friendly 'visits from
tha Chilcotens as there, used to be.
Whenever' he had met anY of them,
evewbefere the quarrel in their camp,
they . had been Wien, and Silent; and
then there had been• there appearance
Of Davies' murderer'and that unlucky.
•
-
were not as &salmon then as they are and me qulek eye noticed that there
to-dayaMenget the Indians, but as were only four Indians', ound hint,
:of these wage IChelownii, the ;chief, he NY Mist .11-0.',143d been Owing his „Ohnie
at rate sfioidd have been able:: to with the old- chief, . Elneeshaw had
re1acet.V.0.brown Tzeepen, • , 3,1iliPeal'frOM the. In a flash
For Wind .seemed- like an, hour ‘
. the tne White' Mal), Wee on his get, and his
nye swinge- •ligurfs "crouched niiOn 1'ev°11711 8110 was eehoed. by a sharp
their hangs around Combe; erY of pain. • • .
wolves around a kill, their mouths iii:a`welmielybeactich,:u11:4"1: tireert',',, and41Clinheeen-
,iliut,.theit limbs motionleesi•only their
"ping
eyes alive, but those so vigilant that dropthe Muzzle 00 that It looked
they seemed, to follow • his very Ichelowna straight between the eyes,
thou bts. /t is his vioaace afai heoabidedwed,;07,r uneexiatildf YaosaKmineveee.sibawi
came back 9 want that horse and T together,
eannodugshoLoeire tlovirldsajitt wa:1,11
want you Out of ;this blanket quick.
il'aMP it.. • Merck" And for the second POPer• Piece rice and spinach,
bin e ernal, patienee which enables the
Indian to win in his life long 'battle
with the wild things around Wm. The
beasts' ilensee are keener than those Of
his pursuers anne hives life, bntethe
tireless ,patience of the hunter wears
dtiVtrit the. patience of the hunted.
...Tim felt the power of this watch-
ing silence. It was as if he'were bee
.ing mesmerized: •At list he broke it,
• "Well," he said. "What.' -do , you
want, IGielowna?" •
• The chief shifted bhp seat little.
• "What you doing here?" he asked:
AiTalcinga ..dultus 'coolie" '(stroll).
'nee much cold :wind. • Cultus
coolie no goad." . •
-"Then: why are you out?" .
"Inclitioe got no grn.b...Oot no guns
qr.
VS:
141)
,r4R1
.1karAr."" •
...MN MINCE'
IS BEIN'BLAME,
PA'ILVED tigT VERDUN. tAIDI
111$ $.1101/1aDVAS.
Selected, Recipes,
Olive Oalai.-Stone and halves
one Of 4130 olives, Have resulY
•
01.14- thn at,A.P4 .0*
feed rrom borningt •
When filling layer cake tins', spread
Oix whte onions, out in rings and as much of the batter to the S'Aftti as
crisping in geld water. Lorain Woes possible, leaving a Plight depression in
toss in French &easing, Armin the Centre. .When the Peke JO halted
Lett'hue:Ithr. Veiie.12,Prctioviired'44ilre4:1314g7 ItlesvM" b4"e";174.aa t114111'iddirr "t11°.
naked Eggplant, -.40e1 pieut ea .Meked beef's tongue is better to
'boil •it whole in salted water until be "waked over rnight in cold water,
tender eubugh to pierce with silver in 'the morning put put it Into tk kettle,
fp:pro': b:raadlerulk anna:m4ansdhlotn40441:04g4pbouot;a, fUll of cold water, stand it over a.
ter, Salt. and veneee .4ad two tame. slow, fire and eirnmer for four hours,
or until you can pieree with. a fork.
Pc:et:400pol. with
br:exinet:m0;lahaneadt bointes * delicate perfume will be Oren to
egg- into mixture, put ju baking pan, linen by Putting a llaMet‘ of Orris root
Into the boiler on washing; days. An.,
of bitter and bake about one-lialf hour other and even more lasting method is
rn coevrrenetheste-ue;Lcuough ttomaibreiwnonicczted, to Pilt trolcaY been in the drawer in
pound of eatretiv into entail • nieeelb which. tb° linen is
Is laid.'
Melt two tableapoonn butter in ammo -
A pretty sofa cugldon is made of
green burlap embroidered red
Pan and cook carrots it, •with Potneettlas done in red, yarn. ; The
Onions, for abOut five minute And only color to lelieve the monotony of
two r largo cvupi bt fel I ingcarrotswat. "pi, eartl.tenorcr, the red 'green. is little bin unch of
efiongli, to tub through fine sieve.: craracell.'0)tf!1•11: tiofv/Y°:411"..41:1 .th-Ln
After OW40 .Aieve,•.return Jr you. find your butter hard at tad.
to fire, add Ave tablespoons flour ntig, Psychological .inorneat eake-balsing,
well and 'add two cups Season of het- water. The outside will 'soften
err. carrot don!tinit it Of the IitcrVei (11.•ill'e• Pan
•
•
winthkes441:04:4p,inraeephp„%ahnidlesseprivnaachti.i.is and the inside vvill remain hard. The
beat way to do the trick is to pour hot
water over the butter; and work it
Addcoobnegatbeoni legrigcoangdn and season. with a spoon or fork until it is like
one teaspoon sear' ve,:eNheet- oft; •of course, cannot
be
thoroughly cleaned untithe, furnace
fire Is • allowed to go out for the sen -
son, but it . -can be. cleared of all rub-
bish, if rubbish has been allowed to ac -
eliminate . there during the winter.
The cellar should be the most orderly
part 'of the house, pertly because an
time. in a week he drove the five reci-
•skins before that deadly -1,ttle weapon
which has • done so Inuelt• in the .Staes
towards the equality of Man, • ,
CHAPTER.
"You think yeti heap srvvy Indians.
You dam fool. I fix you plenty."
As they Made fel. their horses, Kin-
eeshaly shook his bleeding hand at
Combe, and that was his last message.
He knew that at a hundred yards a re-
volver was practically useless, and
though when Jim •picked up the Win-
chester the Ave 'hurried to horse and
galloped Swiftly away, at the clank of
its pumP, he almost wished that he had
fired. •
"As well now as later," be Mused,
"rind it has got to come. It is pretty
ternately in layers in shallow, butter-
ed baking dish' or casserole, moisten
whole with a little Spinach water or
vegetable, stock by pouring it over
top, cover Wi.th bread crumbs, dot with
. Baked Oranges -Use thin -Skinned
, accumulation of rubbish there in -
bitter and brown in ever. •
oranges, cutting' off tope' one-fourth creased danger of fire and partly be-
cavlies with four teaspoons sugar to ,throngh the house, carrying with it
cause the air • from the cellar rises
down, pulling out pitch and filling.
each °tinge. PIA fruit in casserole, duat or any other uncleanness. '
bake until tender. Remove from Oven .
WEALTHY: ORGAN -GRINDERS.,
'
fill one-fourth full of Water; Over and
and nutke sauce of juices in .pan by Several "Well-to-D—O Italians Living in
stirring in two teaspoons cornstarch • •: . • England . '
- . -PA - • 4 .
now, Indians very hungry. You got juice- from tops or oranges has been Instead of 'turning the 'handles of
to each cup of liquid, measured after
any grub?" and he reached out his added. Put one-half teaspoon butter n'lere or less . inusical barrel -organs,
table, his eye All the time UPOICJim, on top of each orange, pont sauce over the
don are back in their native land
men of the Italian colony in Lon -
hand* I ke a eat that eteals from the
and dreW 'away the cartridge case th'em„. and retnrn to oven'.uncovered to grinding out death freiri niachine:-
Which, had eontained the: aanditiell00-
bro•wn. Serve hat.
--Three pounds round " . _
steak, one eupful chopped onion and 61:u'Icliiatfew organs t
Until that day are "seen in the
. That was the first•moVe in the genie. 'near a blood fused between French Roast,
us now:
. •rielndiana,, on the If they'd, had a gun amongst them I'd celery, one cupful soft bree.d crinnle's,
Kielty lands would have dared openly', have let them have it." •,. . one. level teaspoonful poultry season-
te-talce-a white man's -property-limn .1..„As_lie_.tightened the einelies of -the
---Jirn-WOUltilave-liked-ittbetter-if-the-e
Indians had Visited' the ranch to 'de-
inand compensation' for these .1?):01cen
rifles. and would alniost have been
Iti-
clin'd te listen to 'their 'Oahu's. but
, tiley had niede no sign. -
Just,then the roan snOrted, and Jim
• terned his heail.. in the nick of ' time.
The five figur.ed 'which had , Passed
bin)ten minutes earlier like shadows,
steed Almost at his back,' arrested in
their otealthy 'approach hy his sudderi.
movement.' Iie.•eouId see though they
ad paused, hoWthe leading2-figure
,,gi'ipped .a short bludgeon .-Which he
.eatTied, and he knew Davies' murderer
and utiderstood the look in that sullen
anim'al face; but though his heart
seemed Lo given Jump and • then -stand
still,• Combe did not attenipt to rise
or show any sign. of surprise. •
11(1 understmel-Why these 'Aire had
ei,:tpt up behind him through the misty
, daNtet. in this featureless waste,*but his
hand only "clesect over the revolver'
-which Was, ibeltered in the breaet of
his-Actiat and he rolled.leisurely over
so es to face the five and •bring his
left elbow across the rifle which he
had taken from his saddle before pick-
' i.ting his horse. •
• "Olt, JIM), You dear old Jim!
Come quickly; we want you so badly,"
was What he seethe.d,to hear; though
.. as the five squatted silently round him
they uttered no word. .
• Except. for that bludgeon they were
none ef theri armed; a curious tWng
thought for Indians who' 'carry
as townsmen •, carry walking
etnes, nor was • much leis puzzled
when he realized that.these" werethe
very five whose weapons he had
-et-embed against the pine trees. Rifles
It e er fat
titone.hcrlf-inch-•-thielt-and-!ivelgi'dng
one and one-half pounds each. Divide.
into, six equal portions, rub with salt
sure, but • after all they wow only and pepper, cover with dress -111g
' and
made of crumbs, 'vegetables and poul-
five, Indians and unarmed, and he had
• left more than •that on the. ranch,
white, and Well armed.- '
It was! his business to go and fetch
• the doctor. That was what iKtty
wanted:him to do, so he swung him-
self into the saddle, and rode stecutly
east. ,
Wee thakzeorning_he saw Indians,
•in small bands; but on both occasions
he thought. that he had been seen be-
fore .he .saw them, and was uncertain
of the direction' in which they were
heading, and once, just before reach-
ing the Fraser, he came across • a
large camp of Chileotens, just prepar-
ing to inove.
To his questions they replied that'
they Were. en route to Tato Lake, bu+
"they strue.k Ifin as unfriendly, and ly-
ing for soine set purpose. ', •
If such things had ever happened in
B.C. he 'would have Suspected that an
Indian rising was oi•i foot, but that was
practically impostdble, • and Jim dis-
missed, the idea as born of fatigue and
an empty stomach.
and. Have steaks
rider hie-yery.eyesiwithoutle roan it worried him to re embe that! mg' sa ' PP
streets nowadays are mostly worked
by *Omen and girls, the wives and
daughters lif the Italian soldiers called
to the celors when war broke out with
Austria last May. ,
' Even these, however, are fewer in
nuinber than might be expected, the
truth of the matter being that the
palmy days of the hurdygurdy player
had passed away even before the War
began. In fact, the business -if busir
nese, it can be. called -had been on
the down -grade for some years, large-
ly' owing to the adient of the gramo-
phone and other mechanical mesic
producing machines. •
•
irzr_ •when he.saw the chief take kie these five red devils ,had ridden off in
cartridge case and search it, Under. the. direction of the Risky Ranch.
stood that the Old restraint Was, break- They meant mischief, of that he felt
ing Own and that a change was in
the 'air. All the food had been eaten,
but the flask remained in the bag; and
this Klielowna opened, unscrewing ,the
top with clumsy lingers' and -sniffing at
the mouth of it like a 'beast
"NO more fire!Waten?" he asked.
'‘'N'e, there vionIn't have been any
fOr you anYway. Think Pm going to
be rimin for giving Indiana whis-
key?" ' ,
Khelowna laughed, and. his laugh
was:like a wolfs 'snarl-
"WhiskeY • very good for . Indians.
Any water here?".
"Plenty. Nothing but .water in this
cursed hole." •
. "YOU go get 'some," -and the chief
held out the flask to Jim,. but though
the 'blood rose to his face at the inso-
lence of the bidding, Jim neither stir-
red nor held eut his band for the flash
"!.You go, I -say, ' hyak (quickly),"
and the chief,who misinterpreted
Combe's silence, pushed the flash 'al-
most into his face. • •
"Go to het and get it Yourself," the
cowboy replied and his Steady eyes'
met KlielOwna's without flinching.
For a moment the thief hesitated.
Then he threw down the flag( with a
laugh, and the "murderer under the
pretext of picking it Up, edged a
thought nearer to Jun.
As, even so, the •Indian ' was net
itear enough to strike .or grip, hiin;
the watched Man never moved, and
again the silence genie, of cat and
mouse went an. .
"You got geed rifle, Jim ?" asked the
••••••••..
'
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„, 0 liffini01110
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'
VUlity bear those-painsatiis
A single bottle will ---
convince you )11(
Sloart's
Linirnent
:V
Arrests lultuunnation.
EI:otuittts seuere compli.t
tttiottst' Just pita fete
drop $ On' the ahuL
spot anctfite pato ds -
appears,
XXI t )11W WEI(' ONOIE it 1100*
• And then he heard the voice of the
Fraser, and presently •came over grey
bluffs to that great river: It is never
a pretty river, no, not even In spring-
time; when the patches of -white flow-
ering olali bushes do their,best for it.
Grand as it is at times, and at‘Hell's
• Gate and ether places, picturesque, a
show for the P. R. and. a pleasing
horrors for tourists who ride safely
along its prompltous banks in a lux-
urious Pullman car, its waters are
too turbid, -and its strangely shaped
mud cliffs, too, a gitclly colored with
mineral .matter to be mor, e than
grotesque and uncanny. At the
crossing where Jim struck it, the river
was certainly not rooking its best
Like the whole country it seemed 'in
evil 'mood. • The 'river had . already
felt the first touch of Winter. sine,
lakeso-f-iee--were. thiekening thus
colored waters- rindin against one
another, an rendering a crossing a the .
•
matter 'of some difficulty. •
However the Terry man made light Linen garments should be hung with
of it. , • the fullness • dowriwards, but with '
panels the reverse plan should'
"It's all right, sond, for twentyinsed.
•
and if I was yeti I wouldn't.get on no' 'tato puts all its strength into • the!
hours yet, and maybe for a Week after After potatoes have-s_tafted sprout
Shat, but its coming, it's,coniing sure,, ing they ai•e less nutritious; the pe -1
tear in &Ay Creek , asill keep you sprout.
morein a week. It you do, you may A cup of cool belled rice added te
try seasoning. • Roll each piece, tie
securely, dredge with flour, and place
In kettle, with enough at to brown
them nicely on all shies.: When
brown add boiling water araolst to
cover and simmer until \tender, about
three hours. Fireless cooker is good to
use with these Steaks. When done,
thicken broth, add few drops of kitch- ' In the old days it was very differ -
en bouquet, strain over meat and send eht. There are several well-to-do
to table garnished with parsley. ' Italians at present living in the Saf-
-;Date- -Cake. One-fourth fron Hill -district of London, who. tracp-
cup butter, One cup sugar,. two eggs, the beginnings of their fortunes to
one-fourth teaspoon soda, grated rind the sudden burst of 'popularity that
greeted the advent of the plano-organ,
4wenty-iiva_or_thirty_years . ago.
Indeed, the verr first marl to travel
of One-half •orange, • one-half Cup
orange juice,' one and one-half cups
pastry fleet, two teaspoons baking
powder, one cup stoned and %tattered
dates. Cream butter and, sugar and
stir in grated orange .rind and eggs
well beaten. . Add soda. to orange
juice, sift baking powder with flout
awl mix dates. with two extra table-
spoons :flour. Add flout mixture§ al-
ternately to butter with orange juice,
stir in dates and bake in two -layer
pans in moderate oven. Put together
with orange date filling. • Sprinkle
one layer before -baking with ;finely
chopped •orange peel, and there will
be no need of icing cake.
Orange date filling; Three-fourths
cup sugar, three tablespoons flour,
grated rind one-half orange, three-
fourths cup 'orange juice, one table-
spoon lemon juice, one slightly beaten
egg, one-fourth dup hopped dates.
Mix in order given and cook ten min-
utes in .double boiler, stirring con-
stantly. •Cool before ' spreading.
Makes eomplete•dessert without sauce.
•
• Household Hints. •
' One teaspoonful -of baking soda in
piiit • of water makes a, geed' 'wash
for plents covered with insects,
'A silver spoon in a• glass Will tern- ,
per .it so that hot -ROW May bor
ned in Without danger of breaking
through England with one of the' old-Ithere was a prospect of Certainty in •
•
•T e-Velperer; Vert-Deinding and • r
Meader Are Also
• Criticised,
it 49, regardedas an 011449114 fact.
'is clonueditm WIT t110, Upttb, 1.4 Ver*
dna that the Ger-man arMY and the
German people already are beginning
to place responsibility for its under.
taking. Thi4 much is distinctly eta,
ed by 'prisoners, in the hands- of the
Frenbli, and is being more and more
openly shown in the German news-
papers. "; • • •
• On the "sheilders • of the crown
Prince is being laid the chief burden.
The others who with him are regard-
ed. as sharing tbe-responeibillty have
t
v.141,
,„Jeltertteerpa,
'HeelieettC0140.4
•footle rattlot
MOM thew forty •
ruts,
grasigh.for 5cv to
prodeee40- NO •
Pnwoittritz,
:44Ra III 01,1*4 yitelle°40144
;shine home Made breed, • Do
not.expecipeato these is„ nothing,
fest s*.good, '
Ewoluar co.tro
• TORONTO. ONT:
wee -viva , MONTMLAt
VO2
'COST Op LIVING' IN ENGLAND; '
Has Suf6red Lees From War Thai\
Enemy Countries%
The people of Enittand Claire to IWO
r(!loow been aarrOVONI dOWn threeir
•otherS are General ;Count' GOtt eb
Von Rambler and General" Berthold
Von Deimling. ' '
•
Most sionificant of all is the feet
that the Gerreens are hinting ,that
the presence of Emperor William •at
a great military undertaking' has
'h.eretofore.'not been *alight With
happy consequences., • • '
The history of the Verdun enter-
prise is now regarded as clearly de-
fined by. the Paris newspapers. It
was preceded by two councils of
When it .was first decided by the
,Kaiser and some •of his closest ad-
visers that an attack on Verdun, un-
dertaken by methods which inicl.prov-
• ed successful in Russia and in Serbia,
would be successful, the co-operation
of Field Marshals Von •Hindenburg,
and Von Mackensen was. sought.
Berlin War douncil.
•
tq ,of theso lig the -Kaiser, and the mitered leSe trom the inereased eeahl
- it • of living brought OP by*".. war than
For this purpose they were sum-
moned to Berlin, where they were
met by the Kaiser, the Crown• Princes
of Germany, Bavaria and Wuerttem-
berg,. and Generals Von. Haeseler
and Von Deiraling. When the mat:
ter was 'laid before them, beth the
ghat German leaders, who had prov-
ed their worth 4n - the eastern field
of the war, opposed a grand eased,
on the French stronghold, and ex-
plained the. 'radical ' difference be,.
tweeri conditions on ' that front anti,
those which,had made, success • pos-
sible in other -regions.
•As both field, marshals had already
objected to taking part in .theopera-
tins in 'France, and Flanders unless
they had ;an entirely free hand and
'coin te • libert fro • interference
on the partof the crown Prince, it'
Is believed their advice did not make
a due impression on the Kaiser and
his • eldest son. They returned to
Verdun to stedy the situationence.
'more. , •
There a neer council was held„ at
•which the chiefs of the Imperial fam-
llY and Generale Von H.aeseler and
Von Deimling took part. .The-clecir
sion which they reached was that
the capture of Verdun was feasible
and that for -manyreasons it was
imperative.
•
Deceived by Try -out.
•
•
When all. was ready, al •the begin-
xii ti was of dtelicei dfeodurttoh.steretk wioftshVoeubtruaarzfy, Rice 25 340
• 406
totitish of trumpets, as .a tri -out, _
It was thought, would "show Whether •WAR EMPTYING THE PRISONS.
have the •people of any other coutti
tr1,00, although admitting that priaee
or foodstiffs are higher now than
:they have lieen 111;the, 3110M017 of
V.STIlleentsetag"llerartn.foi January wal
1% per lent; according to the Board
.ef Trade Labor Gazette, Which pointi
out that the •up*ard trend • has been
In flour and bread, six per cent., and
In fish and granulated sugar, five per
cent.
Bread has reached 93 pence„ or
about 18 cents for the guartern
(four pounds), higher than it mid- '
has been in modern trines:
• The inc.rease in the cost of food
comparing February 1 last with a
year ago, has been.: Fish, 50 per cent; •
meat, 26 per cent.; bacon, 'bread, sti.,{ .
•gar, milk, and cheese, 20 per cent; beall
28 per cent.; flour and eggs, 17 perj
cent.; butter, 13 per cent.; potatoes,'
7 per cent.onargarine, 6 per cent.
Other countries -have been hit hard - i,
er, according to the Gazette, which
increases upon pre-war prices:
Red Kingdom, 47 per cont.; Berlin,,
83.4 per cent.; Vienna, 112;9 per cont.
Attention is called to the fact thati
Germany allows only a limited sale
.ab a legal maximum. price of whatj
are ordinary every -day articles of
diet. This, the Gazette points °Vt.,!
applies to bread, butter, flour,
and milk. "It says 'that in :Vienna thej
end of the year brought an easing eti
Some of the advances . partly explain.:
ed by the fact that in December
mint retail charges came into opera•I
thin for the first time in respect. to,
bacon and hog's fat.
Here are .802h0 comparative re -
turns o • increas a percentage since,
July, 1914:
United
• Kingdom: Berlin.Vienna.
Beef' •70 • 206
Mutton. 36 • 60
Bacon . 32 .• -164 • 300
- house-
hold . .58• •
Flour; rye 60
Flour, Wheat•28' 81
Bread . 51 • •
Bread, rye -42 75
Bread, wheat • .. • 27
Rutter . , •81 • 101.• 11,4
Margarine-, . 10 . 220v-
• Milk
•
. 30 • 36 • 51.
Eggs. • •• 70 285 • 214
. • •
•
fashioned barrel -organs -a native of the success a the venture, _and, if Eleven in England ' • Closed; Nine
failure should occur, the .attnek _ Others Nearly Vacant
iFtlecetdeind ocinutienkaiymeednoCugahrlomFoneeryrartol-ceoany
en-
•
not having been extravagantly adver- A reduction in the Englieh prison' '
able hini to purchase (for about ten tised, would not leave any unpleasant estimates for the coming year . of ,
thousand guineas) the title of count impression on 8500,00p -or about 12 per cent. -and
the German nation.
•
in his own conntry. . The first four days during which the the shutting lip, in whole or part, of
.
•
' 44— • French, following their great line of a score of prisons: These are some
• Admiral Volt Tirpjtz.'
• Creator of the German Navy .
Inthee _of. the Giant SUbnierine.
• :
Man gets many shocks during
tree;-‘blit-the-,g-reatest nf all Conies
-him the first thne his young daughter
advises him- f•t-not to be
tid
tactics which had been -manifested of the visible evidences of the retitle-
ftom the beginning.af • the war, pre- .tion. of erime in -England owing to the
,
. sented a resilient front to the' shock war. • •
Of enty prisons eloiler
.
Of the solid German body' and; yield-
Ing a measure. of ground for the per-, .piroosceecissentffrthe•twoeeruraeli teevi lie; shi tauvdaeohi
ten .. .
. .
pose of their method cif.warfare, were etowes or moderate, size, iike.,dhelms-. •
regarded by the Germans AS ptomis- ford, Hereford,. Stafford, ..St. Albans, •
inagssaendevpehrW4lahnexlmainttgl•teelucc.ce.Istis ftohri:hbeeir.
a*ing onlyhas been given upAr-
.Ti . : ,..• •
...ievizes, and ea fortli.,„ Of four„Other
ine
lief .the Kaiser's:lack of judgment an rangements .are now being Made -5 or
mforilittahreyGniparnittearnss.was again dialistr,s, the total. closing of. fire mere.- : • •
It ii true that not 'quite ell of ,the M.:-
•• minution.in.minlleality can be ascrib- -
. ,
• ed to the war, for • the .process. has '
•• FREE mr.OmE_N-O.F.. 0, BIEN'P..
as a result of the gteater. intelligence.
.. ' been going ,on.• since. 1904, 'int doubtedly ..
War • Will Give Them , Liberty,..StYtie 'Of British legislation. ' -- • , , ..
2 . sultan of Egypt. . -. ' , in, their last report the cetninission.
• "• • _, _. • ers of Prisons ascribed. the decrease in
'one Of the greatest. results :or..• the . criminality, to . three' chief causes ---
war CO the Orient will be the coniplete namely (1( the drafting lino the ainik,
..einancipation Of women'"'says the Sul- of a consitlorable patt.of. thc..A.6ction, of '
tan; of Egypt •:. "Orientals Understand, the population from 'whieh the ..gelc.i)e-na.tt.ii:ig;
ton -the -great parr weitia-„-playii.'llali14-wc.1,dexea;duetillei11rallbt9Yt':(11,1rt lie'
in the iyerld'e 'PreeeCe. ' ' • - facilities fer making a livillined by
1.r
"If we_ could end the ignorance or
themselves, alt other
of t e sa- e o . quer, xeer ti • a
honest means; . and • 0). the Nowt:thin
troublesome queitiens would . suicunii) r
toour aws°sTretn.. ,,
' three . causes wkieli liae • been met
no iloebt that. it is the last . of these
An that healthy. Influence, and new. Inlitientittl. , : ,4' .. • , - • ' . • '
, ienerabitma would be •raised in....t17,
Viuieline rubbed on the setiffed parti...
. . . .
. -light ...of intelligent iriotherhood.'• '
et. shoed", before ,'the3r ' ure .polislied, ''--
to the Orient until *efree women from
"We. can never be wholly happy in
Will malte the scratehes invidible and
his
Theve to waft thet•a•until you Can W'aik •-oi-Weff-lex-
aeroits. A wee.k on bug • ince ought to inaltierthror--1-rghter-and-enore-camly..„,...H1_
1 -do 'you,.. though -ec64-...punehing 'does Vfgestedi' - •• - - f -
Iseem to make man powerfully.drY." ' Wtatch cellars and bathrooms -both
• The ferryman was new to Coribou,- haVe more. to' do w'th the health 'of a..
;mut didnot know Jim, Combe, but he rathily thin almost any other' part of,.
, spoke' • from a lott experience 111 the housc.
other parts of the North-West, *fiery Remember that spring appetite
, prohibition had mightily increinsed the chave fresh •, things; • mid that :minds
or th• peoplet mpt wh hentle r #6,,o repel,'
right.Cap.":Everrene• is a van, Vegetable for .tunicht,en•at•e ad- •
-t.iTIP"wito ewes anything bigger than it mirable on fpring •glays.-
Nome n Cenatia. "111 see to •that. To t•ernove Miteltine 'oil •frijni
cii-
tn li.•! on, hand in an hour's One." :tei ia1 in whieh the tellers miglit run, ,
4 The' man iaughed good-naturedly. itoc cold eeetpi, to wicch has been add -
"Sure," he said, "I will, but you ed p teaspoonful, of ammonia. Then
I won't he. 1 ic've5 lemma n man yet; wash 'with -soap.
as didn't calculete to do his business.'• One cap retiove -the odor of fresh
• in half an hoer, ntdr one as did it in it Paint vrnn e! room Ily_leavipti there •a
'day. Seerns .tne this 'here metro- epail *of 'Water into whieh sefreral •
.1polis had ought to, he called Whiskey onions inive been slieed. Het,' weak.
If:reek 'stead of Sody." . 1.tea n good solution for cleaning
• I nft,UENZ raver, Esttootte is
Pink nye, flititroittr
Catarrhal raver •
a 1 diseases. or the horse attPetitst hie throat NSF,011-
11 trail; volts and horses hi 'Prime stable kepi f rmn
brit.fg them by. using enbint's •Distesitter COntSound.
3 14 , doses efiee vui. one, bottle guaranteed' go rqtre
.)iII't";tsc t4.ite for bt.soil Mitt OK, liti 1'011 a. stallions.
all sites •aiin cc,/1dt (.1111A, •:t1 (JP r ,14 Id I hi5 get t 10. ,,o111T.
m '
ind. • 14oltt the to. doses .Vity druggist or
tisittartti14 rnattufseftVars
131'031it MitD104n• co., GOSI1Vell, Ihd.,11
•
Jim latighed itt the old. joke. There, varnished paint.
: Were ' ninny , worse towns thatt.,.•Soila I ' the idifficult, so often experienced
• Creek, but of -course there was Whig-. in cutting soft, flimsy goods, ..sueli as
key in it. •. '• . , • . ' . ! chiffon, soft eilk,nititiliti, etc., is easily": ,
....P.D., van, know where I ran find the'' oVerettrin• by pino'ng thc. maserial to.'
doctor ?" • • ... . ' gethec ala entting, both together,
(To Ile(ontintied).-
' 'Then the oven becomes tob hot place
if hapin of cold witter in it,hut d.
1. Nine , times out of .ten Dante Par: not leave the door Mien. This an -
tune knowon whorn she ts 1hig. swees the purpose of cooling the oveno
b a
treated by the Mohammedan laws."
the .seini4laverY with which -:they -ere --prevent-"the -surf-Pee -f-rom
more seratchedbeemnmg.
•Sto,.
EViRYTHING NEW
PRES11—PURE
• RELIABLE
,Ask..vouf dedCr 'or write. •
• 12ENN1E'S TOtIONTO,
, AL40
: ININNIP60 VANCOUVER