HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-08, Page 6""..r."11:7•Weirrogpra-,4 .
, . .
ee-s-earsereseessssocaler~
A.TEAP_.
Will convince you/ of its sterling user'
at the earne price you nour,pny for
Greens Address Wades Toronto.
Let *4 IWO YOU atrial Packet
,ordinary tea. Blacle, Mixed or
' 192k
appointment, end bitterneas in her
tone, ,,$he oepected every one to
bhow hits excitement. as ehe did hem
°Did you ever expect JIM O. leek ea
if he hurriedr osised Mrs. Bolt, who
was leaning over the girl's "shoulder
et the window. 'IDUI you. want Jim
to boll tat a 6110 at the firs like
the driver of an Irish atinting carl
LOOlt at the horses,"
They indeed told a tale of Isee• tO In
• the Past haSte of which they Were no
loner capable, end possibly any man
with a view to ei7ect might have
dragged, his limbs as the horses drag,
zed theirs. _
Jim only walked slowly entilluvea-
4 little, stopping to speak to one of
the boys and to help him off -saddle
the aottn., Then he 'walked quistly to
the. hulled With the doctor; not stop -
•ping to hear much of what old Al had
to tell, him. • • „
;
But he managedto take in 4 great
• deatinlhose quiet glances Which Kit-
ty resented so much,. •
"Any one hurt?"' were his first
words to AlSbefere the old 'man had
thin to open his mouth.
"Two of them hurt badly," 'minting
to the fresh TO. "None of eur
folk scratched:. • • .
"Didn'ttry to rush the ranch then?"
(13rolte the store -house and get the
pins while we were at the stacks."
• "MightShave known that they woul
try that. What did you all want to
go to the stackifor 'V • Didn't calcul-
ate to blow theni-out, aid you?"
Al hung his •head. It is dispiriting
when you have a great story to tell,
to have it understood and sentence
pronounced, before you have had time
to open.. your lips. •
"How many Injuns were there'?" .
"About fifteen, I guess." '
"Moro than that," said the man who
had not been there; • but he did , not
stop toargue or hear any more de-
tails. He remembered the two bands
Which he had seen on his way to Soda
Creek, andhe knew all that it was
vital to know, So he followed Prothe-
roe quietly,to the house
The doctor's report was a good one
and soon made. When sober he was
a capable man, and Anstrother's
in-
juries, lieweVer - painful, were Butt:
qiently sinaple.
"A bundle of nerves, fine bred and
high strung," was Protheroe's com-
ment. ."A steer who had had the.
•same smash up would have gone on
feeding. Three -ribs brokenbadly
shaken Up, and bruised a bit, of
course; but the ribs have knit already.
YOU did the right think, Mrs. Bolt.
..*••=1.111,
,
Tell(lerf00.Lf S 00111
' EY CLIVE KS ILL I PPS • WOLLEY • ;
(Author of .OPold. Gnid•In OerlbooS! Etc)-
• .
•/.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,
CHAPTER s'XVILL(Csint'd4 •".
• At once her revolver rang out, shot
after shot, until every chamber was
• empty. It 'mattered little whether
she "bit or missed. The main thing
.was to recallthe men,andalmost be-
fore she had ceased firing a horse's
hoofs thundered through the corrals,
and a voice hailed her, ,
"That you shooting, Polly? Take
care. . port% shoot any mere," and
then for a moment there was :bedlam
in the darkness • outside, horses gal-
loping amongst the bnildingss and
men running, and twice the tharp me-
tallic ring of a rifle.
After that the main body of gallop-
ing hoofs seemed to recede towards
the hills, but the BOSS and Old Al."'rOde
'up to the house, •
'open the door and give me a, laa-
tern, my girl. They have-allgorie, I
think, except two, and they won't do
any More harm."
• There was aliardness in'the toss's
'voice, which Mary ,Rolt had never
• heard before• in all the years' she had
known, hirS, but then. she had never
. seen him before in the; light of his
- blazing stacks, -
• "Did . you see anyone when. you
,„ trod," .t.easked, as SCap as she had
let him in. •. s • ,
"I think so; .but41.- am not scertain.
Oh, Dick,s1 have not killed anyone,
have I?". She . cried( breaking' down
iiiddealY, and clinging to him.
' "Steady, there; ; stea:dy, little ivo-
Keep Your nervia bit longer.
the returning'hoefia and before long
about half of the seen of the ranch
reined up their lathering horses in
front of the mess Melee.
"Did you get any of 'gm?" liaised Al,
."Devil a hoof.'
"You got gick of the bunt mighty
quick.'
"Yes," drawled" one of the boys. "I
ain't almighty stuck on night huntie.
Once you're over the hog's back it's
darker nor the :Ways of a provincial
politiciari. It's' so blanked dark it
fairly drowns you after that glare,"
and he looked towards :the blazing
stacks. "The Wins kinder sunk out
of sight in it." ,
"We shall have to send some one to
• .
warn the Faircloughs."
' "That's done, Boss. I sent Dan.
He's up half way to Grouse Creek by
now if the Injines haven't got hies,"
"Thank you, Al, I think two of you
had better come in and sleep in the
house 'to -night, just to reassure the
ladies. The rest Of you had, better
seleep with yorir horses, and there will
have to be a couple on the look out
all night. ,' They might try to rush
You will like.its
Fine Granulation.
Buy your sugar 4/4 these Peat, 2 or
44h. carton, which you eau p1a00
directly, on your pantry sheltrqs.: -
Just flit 0.ff dlepanter and pour .
out the sugst as you need it. .
Tatra:144V
ntatted
of.ttow.convo
table is a ,eroas.bar for hanging Up
spoons and other utensil‘ Two Ver. 1
tkal lathsare- nailed to the side of
the table, one at each end.. The trans -
verso bar is, li*edr tetheso This is
provided with hook% ,eed •fQ1104, a
,convenient reels, The books. inar be
..sereWolik to. tho ,edges of the table.
To wash' Wo011eit atockligts • Co that.
they will net .shrirds .13: quite Cay.
.Firpt !brad :some yellow poop latoa.
srnai tin'011eeptgic. 'Coro: it v:ith
401A water, and let botslowly on the
StOVc 14 a jelly, Tao BMA tool.:
. water and, with the' boiled Soap: make .,
a &eft iathr. . 'Waeh. the, stockings •
in thi,..... yubbing .woll and Using' no! -
tpii
Water, wring. Out, and -get UV the air •
todry quick:1Y..
„isIsuiii.,11110111111''
• t I 1111111‘111t1
comes also in 10 aw:1204b bags fOr house •
-
wiveswholikotolitty iolargerraviti,es•
Oand 5-I Co
"The .4114itrioose Sn" zo znul.20.1b Bags
s •••-.F.9T.
FitOrtfOUTSCO
•
ss Dainty. Dishes. •
• Rhubarb Cream lPieS—Stew rhubarb
as for sauce and sweeten. To this
add a little cornstarch raade into
paste • with cold water, and beaten
Y011at of one or two eggs. Bake in
one crust and use whites of eggs for
meringue.
— Tomato Tapioca Soup.—To one pint
of strained tomatees add one-half
tablespoon extract of beef, one ounce
butter, tico tablespoons minute tass•
iota, one and one-half pints hot waters
salt and pepper to taste, and boil for
fifteen minutes. Serve with fried
bread or toast. •
• Harvard Salad.—Scoop out centers
of small tomatoes and fill with follow-
ing mixture: Three tablespoons
creamed cheese, one tablespoon minc-
ed.• ..parsley, chopped mushrooms to'
taste, catsup, salt and peppee, six
"NOt whilst them Muniinations is •These are your batages?"
turned ;en,' said Al I guess you elm , "No, they are Ira's:" ' •
sleep solid to night When Ws dark .."Of courie. I ought to have known
it will. be different. But. see to • Jim's pecking; effective, but a trifle
thesloOksoutos-.Bossi-when se-V--dre: Hereslet-meloosen-them a
them two. Out of sight," and he point. little," and his • 'deft fingers, which
ed to Where something lay in the sha- Were at delicate as a Woman's and as
dow oft :he stables. •• • • . strong as a inan's, played about Aa -
"It was a pity as it was Kinee-. strather with astonishing rapidity.
'shave" he added. "There'll be no, let "That's better, isn't it?"
• A.nstruther aiglied, "Yes; I can
move now, I think, without fainting,"
"But' you must not; at least, not
much. Jim was • on the right track,
.but he certainly did not give you much
lase---You-donit drink muck
you?" -
"No; not much."
"And you're nottwenty-five.. Lord!
Lord! What could hurt a man who
doesn't drink and isn't tvVenty-five?
You are doirig splendidly. No, you up .now until they wipe us ont or seine
"have not hit an Y one, inorc's the Phi. one lets daylight . into old Khelowne.
Where -dia Yon think Yon saw -.diem V.'• He thought a heap of Sineeshaw."
"Over there by the Store.-houte"
• „. , . •
...But they ceuld net get in in
the thee. tricky:We-fumbled to their
genie. Just . go and look at the house, That night the watchers watched in
Al,' toriehing his anti and whispering, -vain. The three and twenty stacks
t'stiy." nailing if the rnissus has shot. of good hay which should, have been
straight." , . • ; turned into beef at thirty , or forty
''• The „old man nodded. and wept Out. d011arit.a-•head,'flaredup and then died
egainsferthe _lantern. When.he re- in the white day light were nothing Your gate was not worth the ride, but
perhaps we niay have others," he add-
- a eouPle. of "miniitee.he was. back down into clear red heaps of fire, and
turried again—• he -inn -did -the Boss a—hilt-grey spots" on the home meadow. ed cheerfully, "now thatoldKhatowna
key., . s. • . . They had been licked up as clean as
"I thought , as you allus kept that the mist was by the sun, and left lit- has broken Out." ..
As soon as the doctor's hisepction
yourself, Bess.", •
•.
• "Where did you 'find it"
- "In the doer of the store house."
:•Rolt looked :down at it for a.rao.
Merit. • "The old devil," he muttered. outside the corrals, might sugest the
, "Jest so. But how did he come to recent presence of the Chiliotens to
get It ?" , '.. those who' knew what lay below; but
'EWER AC.CIDENTS IN PIRIO;
Street MiSIMPS Itainged With 'Dia*„
appearance of IlueSea.
• 'Me Prefecture, of the Paris Felice
has issued statistics of ;street ace*.
gilts in 1914. and 1.915, from which t
it appears that in 1914 there Were 77 -
Wed, PAO wounded and 4$,280
cases of. Material' damages, a total Of.
68,492. ,For 1915 these. figures Were
respectively sa, 16,268. And 28,839,
'total 0016.
The figures • show that accidents
' Apple Sauce, Wight and Wyeng. have 'decreased by one-third, , the slim-
., inution •being ,sliai to the dirsappear-
a jusaidonkintlaftrothmetrhee arreesumltsa.mse,enwrhoenrce ante. of auto:bases from:•the Streets
and there One =St eente to the con- and to the general decrearie in ,the
number of vehicles..
ways of *leaking a simple dish of • After the first Zeppelin 'raid- in
apple sauce.• • .
We may cook apples so that each
piece .shall remain Whine, but this is
not a true sauceP For the latter the
more completely the, apple goes to
pieces in the cooking the better -s-'
that is, in the end it shoudl be per-
fect "muss' or puree. .
• Another advantage of sieving the
cooked, apple is that it need be neith-
er pared nor cored, both the seed and
the aldn 'adding flavor, , It• will not
DIRT
241)1141111111
Nom or 'INTEREST mum nta
I3ANKS BRAES.
What b. Going Ou in the nighionclo.,
• Ind Lowlands of Auld
SW/a,
March, 1915, street lighting was de-
creased and when agitation was start-
ed •to resume normal illuznination one
argument was that the darkened
etreets caused more fatalities. and ac-
cidents than Zeppelints were likely to
cause. The second Zeppelin raid put
a sudden and complete stop •to this
agitation, but official figures seem to
show that. • reduced illumination
meant also a reduced number of 80-
the
as long to sieve the apples as tO cidients*
I
• n the last nine months of 1914,
pare and core them, so time is actaal-
with normal lighting, there were 59
ly saved and additional flavor gained.
For plain apple saoce: Wash and killed, 14,851 hijured and 33,162 Ma-
terial damages, while in the cores-'
French dressing. Serve on bed boiling Water, which hastens • cook -
fruit and just cover with
51, 12,853 and 22,542, eachcategorychopped- °Hype—all moistened with quarter ponding time in 1915 the figures were
cress. a ing. Mash the frit as it softens and
showing a decrease. Those statistics
Rice and Tomatoes.—Butter baking' to the bottom. When all is soft ri
" • stir so that the uncooked top will get
of course do not prove that decreased
dish; put in layer of boiled- rice, dust through' a strainer and sweeten to
•with salt and pepper and dot with tiny ,taste. No two varietiect of • apples
bits of better: Add layer ef canned require the same amouat of sugar,
or fresh. tomatoes and season with and in gen'eral too much Is used. ,The.
salt, pepper and butter.. , Proceed in sauce may be cooked after it is sweet -
this manner "until the dish is almost ened but if it -is to be eeten at, once,
. For the past fifteen smentlis 8ucs1
'useful V; Ai 'D. -hoepital has: bee •
cenducted in the Abbey Buildings, at' . •
FocrorbssAstioriestt;,s •bY, the :Steals!. Red'
• tMis "Ligon who hes been,-
meiriber of the, teaching profeisil
for colter 50 years has intimated hie • .
nreesaiignAtta tbirlot Public Schdol! •
othf:A
• Operations are ism in progress in
,connection with the deepening and ex..
,tension of Eyemouth harbor, which
when completed will greatly expedite'
the landing of the fish. •
The strike of the jute workers in'
'Dundee still continues. and no effort
has been made on either side to brine
the dispute to a close. Thirty diet's:, •
and 'Workers are affected.
• The Red Cross Fund raised by the •
textile and drapery inside in Scots •
land, it le expected, will provide at
Jeast ten motor ambulances. Over ' -•
£21,000 has been subscribed.
The Committee of Prissi Council on -
Education in Scotland have appointed
Mr. A. 0. Curie, director .of the 'Nes
tional Museum of Antiquities, Edin-
burgh, to he director of the BOA.
Scottish Museum.
The death has occurred -in his 91st .
year. of Mr. 'William') Whyte, retired;
tle niore trace than the Indians who
had. lighted them.
• These had vanished utterly.
•Tvico Spots of" fresh turned earth,
was over, a council of war was held
in the dining -room, whilst Jim and
the doctor cut themselves vast chunks
from the boiled .salted beef oti the
table. ,
• "Pity that the boys did not over-
haul some of them," said Jim.
"Yes, it would have saved a, hull
lot of trouble," agreed Al, "weideauld
have given them their •medicinetright
there. Now we've got to take it to
them " •
full. Make last layer of rice. Pour
• one cup 6f tomato *Igor over all and
bake in a hot oven twenty or thirty
tainutes. .•••
,
•
• Scalloped Eggs.—Boil six eggs un-
til hard. . Have, ready three-fourthe
cup buttered cracker, crumbs' and one
• pint white eance. Sprinkle bottom
of buttered baking dish with. crunibs.
Cover with one-half of eggs, chopped
fine. . ;Cover eggs with sauce and
scone with meat. 'Repeat and cover
top with crumbs. Bake until crumbs
are brown. Ham, chicken,' sausage
. • •
,..;••••
, "OM Mary must have atoien it from these and the charred railizigs where
my'regin when she came begging this the 'stacks had stood were all the
'afternoon." •; traces they had left. ,
"Guess so Women had ought to do From the hog's back to the black
therr own ,chores;• I oint got no use timber of the enclosing hills there
• for iiijins round a ranch. They've ; was no sign of a camp fire TIO hint of
•'got all the•rifles." I a man's presence, and one 'by one the
• "What?" ; l scouts sent oet from the ranch came
'All theta spare.• rifles -and three Or back' With the same •story. The In-
forir dozen boxes of cartridges., I . dians had been about a score in num- high for nothing. ' 'When %juts start Season taste, ram p
or veal •may be used.
Bacon Roll Stuffed With Chicken or
Turkey.—Spread thin very cold
bawl with minced chicken tor turkey
Mixe_d with, the left -over gravy. Mix
• a little , cream and . dust With flrielY
minced, green pepper or parsley. Roll
and fasten- -with- wooden swekers,dip
In ,batter and fry in deep fat. -To
make the batter ,beat two eggs, add
Iv is 1 otzl oynteo.foonuer tchutliefauslpbo or enafduiflsoaulrt. siftedeat Per much easier to hang if the paste
the amateur will fin be p
one-half cupful of tepid \water. Add hanging
well and add one teaspoonful olive oil.
Creamed Potatoes.—Peel enough pot-.
atoes.to make three cupfuls, cut into,
• .small cubes. Mix in one tablespoon-
ful of,,butter, one of flour, salt and
pepper to taste, and one tablespoonful
this is not necessary.
• Household Hints...
illuininatitia is not so deadly as nor-
mal for many fewer vehicles were on schoolmaster, at his residence, Dens;
Just try drying the wool blankets
on Curtain stretchers if it is wished
lo retain their usual length and width.
• To remove tea or coffee stahis pour
through the stained part boiled water ,
in which a little borax has been dies
solved
, A piece of charcoal plae-ern-proritEr
Shelves of the fefrigerator will absorb
any unpleasant odors and keep it
sweet amellmg.
• .
Window • shades that have been
streaked can be cleaned by taking a
hard -•crust of bread and rubbing the
spots where the shade is streaked.
- Wind- wrapping twine into balls
when taken from parcels. • It is an
•easy way • to dispose of it and it will
be fchind useful in a great many ways.
• When doing ,a little home paper-
.
•
is applied to the wall instead of to the
paper. •
Burning the fingers can bo'avoided
by equipping the metal knobs on pot
and kettle • covers with good-sized
corks; wired • oil with bite of picture
wire. •
the •streets, owing to want of light,
and the normal life of Paris, which
used to coritinue till 3' closed
at 10 p.m. ••
„Strangers on their first visit to
Paris often wonder hew, .many: Per-
sons are killed in the •'streets. In
faet'they rather • seem to. wonder that
any 'one) escapes'. death or injury;
Theloregoing figures give the deaths
and injuries doe to trenicars, auto -
buses, atitomobiles, carriages and
bicyles. • If the figures for autom-
of parsley. Cover potatoes with Never place a good piece of Inrni-
boiling water, adding a teaspoonful ture very near a fireplace or register.
of salt; .boil until just done, but not The heat dries the wood and glue, of -
"You think that we can't afferd to broken Heat milk in double boiler, ten causing crack t where the parts
nistoun. He was one of the • o es
parochial schoolmasters in Scotland.
The death of Mr. W. Weir Grieve,
the sheriff -clerk of Lanarkshire, has!
reMoved. one of the best-knee:Fri of-
ficials from the administration of the '
law in the County Buildings, Glas-
gow. • , ;
• A .party of 35 French and, Brash
members of the Franco -British Inter -
Parliamentary Comniittee recently vis-
•
bodies: .
ited Glasgow, where they were enter-
-tained by the corporation and public
°bilis alone are wanted they were m
1914, 36 killed and 7,958 injured;in , A petition in which the Lord •Pro-
• -19i.fe-40-killedured. The ivost is asked to call meetiug,of the.
automobile causes • most aceralitr l'eltiseriesed-Olasgestrito seensider—:thes:---
•then carriages and carts, then
tf
cars- Bicycles . caused two deaths ,
•
•
leave things es they are;" asked Rolt.• tut, flout sznooth, do same with butter. • are Pine g •
knowed hijuns since I growed orase add to milk •and boil until thilakened..
piece Of soap handy and' occasionally
When sewing, stiff material lia-ve
'"I• don't think about it. I hain't .Pour. ciii eonie. of this het milk, .then
d stick the needle' into it. YoU
• h' The rifles are thei had. they left and trail to say to be wiped out or they'll come back once or twice. •Then pour into h•ot easier and vvill not break. -
racket of this kind, they've got slide into hot milk. •Let bubble up find the needle will go through much
should say, . though some of tlaem ber, and were not now to be seen, nei- on a
serving dish and:sprinkle parsley over 'III • Ut 1 U ard asAGN -
Wen t • e P
experienced among the trackers guess-. chickens to a dougimuts . Ain't
, .:ferty:•fives, and half the cartridges whias way they had gone. The most like
, 'Were for, your fifty hundred and ten. that so,
" Guess we bustled em a bit or they ed that they had scattered, and it was But Jim was busy eating and listen-
iumte. But Jim would be back, said ing. He ties not much of, a gas bag
woUldn't have made such A fool break , poesilale to say where they would re-
' as that." • - • any wet, the men said. ,
...Whilst .they .were speaking Mary the:men, and Wen they colild make up But at last even lifs' appetite was
;Bolt .had remained unnoticed with their minds what to 4 ' • '' ' appeased, and heturned front the
theni. , Now her htdband saw her and :"But 'Jim did not come. 'Though
.. bade her ran up stairs and tell the they watched for hire from. hour to men to the Bins.
I'M afraid that it has got to be,..leirion juke. Mix and sift one and
' other two that it was all over and no hous; though even an ordinary ;suer Bolt. There are more Indians out one-third . cups. flour with two tea -
harm done.. , . , than` the boys think, and it's a vast spoons baking powder and one-fourth
- • . lin ordinary, haste might have been
- Who - she; bad gone master and , back before the second night fell. The deal More serious than I like. I saw teaspoon salt. Combine mixtures'and
.. .
man- faced: each other for some mins; dark came again, and with it no jirn two bands coming this way on my cut and fold in whites of two eggs
:utes in -sileace. • . " ' ' ' C"lbe" ' ' - ' '• -ride -to Soda Creek. .s.l Met Khetowna 'beaten OW stiff. Turn into butter-
• "Can't save the .stacks, Al?" •'Neither. did morning hilne hint, and and rm afraid lie has raised the whole ed mold adjust butterST cover and
"That .don't make no odds.' We've
splenty left!! •I
„• "Liuppose so, it sise are lucky, en-
ough to live to want it." '• ••
.`-f.Oh, we Shalt.. We'll pull through
• oll right, but I Wieli the women folk
Were out of this, atsSody C•reek or••
• Victoria." " '
"You thiek: it is war, then?" . . ••
• l'Irou lietiVirifaT: What '-did--thnT
Strawberry Sponge Pudding —To sert the poker the bottom, and
raise gently, leaving the poker in the
_
them. • .
yolks of two. , eggs add . two table- fire for a few minutes, . This causes
a draught, and it makes the fire 'burn
Spoons of cold water and beat until
very light, using ' egg beater. Add brightly. • .
-To remove creases from clothes
two-thirds cup of Bilges gradually,
Which have been packed • away for
still beating, and tWO • tableepoons
• some time, hang in the bath -room,
then turn on the hot water tap. The
steam will ' entirely remove the
creases. • -Press afterwards. . • ' •
. ,When popping corn put in enough
corn. to cover the bottom of the ;wire
popper; then drench with water just
before placing over the fire.- •
111 -Very
it was .ficit until late afternoon on the
ly before their led horses .into , the totintrY side."
fourth day that two men walked aloof- (To be continued)
prrals. •°
kitty, wh'ose impatienee was de-
vouring her, saw thein come. Jim Was
• smoking, gf eourse, and -Staring about
him . as he slouched along without a
sign a haste; Without a thgut to tell
that -he -bad come.- Surely' -never -any
each year.
SCIENCE FACTS.
•
question. whether enemy aliens .thould
be allowed to • teach and reside and •
enemy alien professors'. teach,. has
',.!1.1.11.1.1.941.111111.11,0•611•I
been opened ler-aignatpres--on' the
Glasgow Royal" Exchange. .
Owing to the rapid enread of fire
suicides among .miners • than -among' a large number of girls were in .tlan-
any Statistics show that there are fewer in a block of: warehouses in Glasgow
; ger, but managed to escape through
o6tohmerbincliadsscooaft_ivhottirteerrs. and ti a covered passege. A porter and a
sers stretcher basbeeninvented in boy were cut. off by the' flames and - -
atiwoninedfawItToyaTlbBe Burghs
by lazy tongs that ,it cari be folded age was estimated at $60,000.
which the two parts are so .connectedihaAultedthtehrcosuagvhea . •
.An electric lamp bo be mounted on „at Edinburgh it was stated that
compactly. , •
the handle of a safety razor and take ' great diagiatisfaetion is felt through.'
0a,d0m00intiosttihileti°fnundt,
Patented, by an .tnglishman to aid the National Relief Fund. GlasgoW
current from a belt socket has heen has
Ssachotsl.aarnihd,sdat$t1h,3e0
shavers.
•
Wireless stations to be erected by and only $30,000 has been returned
the United, States navy. end. for distribution,
\the Philippines will be the most povis •
erful inthe world, having a 1,700-mi1e
adds •
• :Wouldn't Stand for It:
In, Cleveland they tell a story of a
To. signal time to vessels in the her:
boy\'h left School to work for - a
• bor Lisbon has ereeted two light!,
*Mph are automatically illuminated ,
five migutes before each hem- ari41 ex- ;
tinguished at the hour. _ .. ., 1 etriniall,1°Iteiw
smaH inanufacturer. The boy was
dull, and his stupidity annoyed his
garseadtislych. argSeed,.after a week's
The motion picture industry, ,wmen 1
uses •silver salts for sensitizieg filmot
is ' estimated to consunie 15.,09.0,0
that be the last of you." You're diss .
turer to him on Saturday,. "and let
"Get your pay," the Menefee. 1
ouncesRusiaofissihlvoelrdinegachat pyeetarrog.,ii..and. t.hane
boy at work in his former place on
prise that the manufacturer saw the
It was therefore, with ,great sur- -
. .
United -States alone. ,•. charged."
fcf.Pinsviteit°tni onf esa taulde a aPbPylinai
limbs° 1: "What are you doing in this shop?"
cceosmpheltittlho.ne
Monday morning.
s Driven by a smell electrie'moter, a.,
.rnmiallchilfinaelluwiliiicohi Markel:cult:1 only about A.
square. foot of desk reom. has been , "Yes, said the boy, "and don't yott
demanded the menufacturer angrily.
"I ditcharked you 'Saturday!" - • . - . •
do- it again. When I told my mother
she licked me." . • .. • '•• •
steam one hour, never allowing water
to 'fall below. beilinS, point.. Wash grain will pap. and Much more quickly
then without the added mciisture.
and hull one quart berries, cut into .
For mud stains on dresses dissolve
quarters and put into bowl or brush '
_ _ _ .. lightly and sprinkle with one-half eup a little carbonate of soda in water and
BERLIN PRICES DOUBLE. sager. Let stand in warm place uss with it wash the lined Etains. Another
plan. is to rub the stains with ti cut
.-- • til serving time Remove Plidding
raw potato, afterward it...moving the
Some Have Trebled Since War Start, to serving dish and pour around pie..
,
• potato juice by rubbing it With a
ed, Says "Vorwaerts." pared strawberries. .. „ flannel dipped in -water.
invented that mpltiplies end divides as
well as adds and sabtfattii. •
mt4iled T:Oni,-,-"liideed! • I
Maud -7-"I see the old Colonel is
Man—"I've mneivnelornbaeireen;_a,hTl_ehetno
thought his fighting days were over.".
•
•-- .
.ys aosiPue'°i:eaf' isMYta vt self a lot of worry.".
• 'want them rifles fee.' . They, „ only. Man walked as slewlY as Jim Combe, .A comparisee "Vorwaerts" of • ' preeent -dust. when- ...4laningal
' burned it° '.tacks to ge't a.sh• ow at:the miter :-any man'Tatiked less like. the Berlin food prices in that -city -no.*
•
Potalooes cost 8.. centS for a - small'
• , •
instead of swi.oping with. •a
express teetsenger returned. and in March, 1914, shows they have brporri, use a carpet Sweeper..or 4
T.here was no anseter this,. 'hot , "He rogsn't seete in :a hurry'," said doubled and in many cases . trebled
• I small vacuum cleaner, and then take
' . store." • • .-
. she WO listertizig heard the heat of Kitty, and there was a world of dis-1
since the war started. 'lune and rub your rugs °Ver.. They
I a cotton cloth saturated with gaso-
• , sack of ten pounds, as compared with
•
Doctor Tells HOW To.Sttengthen . : , 1 etch;nts a 2s in ,Mar1914. mSausages,
' • which \vac 2'tenind, haVe
•
Eyesintlit 50 per cent In One. .
iI, . _ i has mei to pay 72,cents a pound for
,1 ' risen , to Iii cents, while' the hosusfrati
Week's Time In Ma4 Instances' IT: 1Z 4. e esenpoanfo2i;
81 .t n 7 icleillItesrrlIXiin
' .
. •
war. .,
'
A •vrce, :can .trave stretl'ifthen their (les so of; Who Almoost the .greetest rise shas Men
• Villed and ILtrtrie., the trouble pod expense of ever getting in fats. Margalillo gone, up from
front. 34 cents' to 61 cents; Dutch
S.
ie Son optii tablet in ot fourth of a glass
le itt yon, woor gingseto yriny ,,t,onttertuiry ionefited by tel. 'ellta to 86 cents a pound ;butter
, • glanses. klye troubles of many (Icecap. a,
diti„,3701,0, vi,14,0,4..11, and, as a 14,16 er4_, lowing the simple rules. Ifere Is the pre*
Weaktiesfies? If om. you will be glad to 41`tiPtIr'llI' (40 to 1111Y tirftv('' tletir? gtore-
add get a bottle ef non•Opto tfttilets, 1)rop
• ktitive thIlitie6irtlitig to Dr. Lewis there is
A Hint to
June Brides
Dan' i cooties year tire
of E.t.fle, 01 (1
Sturch to int:414. IvItutgoo.,
tutd Paddir.gt There aro
any number di dishes that
• will bo all the better for a
little
Fpr D!stemper PagtrAIllatigtmli
eserarszacas. rrivrir
Sure cure'and preventive, %trot -atter how. horses a$.
any age aro afflicted or " exposed.!' issues given' on
the tongue; acts on tho blood ;and 'glands; expels the! , •
poisonous. gonna from _the. boO.•, 'Cures Diatetnner In
Cogs and Shoop and Cholera in 'Poultry, Largest
ins live stock remedy. Cures Lit Crippo .,mong human
beings, and is a aim Kidney remedy. fly the bottle or •
dozem---0tit this -Out.- -Keep itrt-Sinow-to-yoUrarBgglit$ •
who will get itt. fpr YOU. Free Dbolclet, ." Distemper,
, Cavaco and Curtis.' Flpicia1 Flgetita it/ttrItett.
'OPONSI EirEDICA.X. CO.,
- chemists and Exoterioicurints. commit, u•
•
; will look- like ne-W, and be perfectly S.
free from lint. •
. Embroidery of. VerY kind that has
• been washel or .sleanett with petrol
. 414.14 ironed 011 the Wi'eng side to
••hrov.• 6 ' embroidery . n relief.
There should he 'sat pill of SeVerol
til!ekiteris of flannel,. ro••that the • ems
broldery cart sit& into it •Nvithout
ing flattened. . •
bej-
An improvement over boiled corn is •
• toaste•d corn. After boiling the eon '
'six minutes so AB to cook there partial.
ly remove to bread toaster and
place over hot Coals, turning, until
they they are browned elgely: The
delielout flavor, thus imptiVred is well
worth the glare work of preparing,
If your white shoes have become
too •dark and dirty looking to be dean'.
ed they can be turned into smartdook-
ing brown shoes by rubbing them' over
with a mixture of twenty drops of saf-
Min and two tablesPoonfuls of Olive
A. TWO APPliellt10118 Will b,e,rentfir-
ed to Make the color daric enough.
A useful addition to the kitchen ,
-oheesea froth 24 SO 66 cents; .flour is B .
one-third dearer, porridge emits twice
of wafer and ollow to dissolve. With this as muss, and rye flour ji; half seals% ;
ilanuantion .will outekly dinappear. If your •
dank. You nhontc1 notice roof eyes .as near.. ThfF, inos2bs astonishing
liquid bathe the oyes tWo four times .•
eyes Are bothering you, even take rienna; while chacalate Pawder 118'
o.tepn to Save Vain 4141W In fore it is toe .en frorri 24 to .54' ceets. 'Coffee new
real Itotte for Yoft. w•licise eyes were 01 •
• faittng soy they hove had their eye:4 re.
ntozed-Ahronall the pritiel.plo of: thin. won:
derflli, free pro,seription. • One mon 11113 1,
tatPl• tOtttg It "t 'WV;• rilniTif blind ;
could! net Ate to read of 4111. Now / enn•
rcaii• everything. •tt 111141111 any glassea rind
. oyer4 oto licit water ally more. At night
tjtr,•w.„011,111 Rain. dreadfully; now they feel
nue :tit tile none. It wag MO 11. miracle to
titc;' A lady Sittil MIA 11 anys 1 . at
' asented easy mita or without
losror hut otter wing' prc neription
can even read fine print wftlinlIt • 014114405.' (&49 t111114490 $0:113090 11) Alti,tiVuthait ht /104 tirluri;;; pouM.
Up perceptibly right front t Start and 1n. is Cocoa, rom. o cen s a •
been cuivol) elf they lind,eared for their eyes eoste 56 'cents instead of frem fig to
1 Itis 0,04 Id 004.1 tlam: flea.000 al a %for rtmarkkble Su• ar only -about a. cent dearer,.
fro„4„, Aflot•,, Plumose ie cower ttio ithrma '
• Or fifteen days i.tocrytiling aceina tient% ' r''ItIttiat.14';Xctil'vc1711;ticngt.c7.1111:iTclicirl'annVe°-`m'n'hi` eOrttillnillf..1 r....e11 under cents a
slneafa ean trait alowaril ohnon toAtton-• 6117:431irtyllef,r„4,14irtastttptitli.ttzeiltftptet,;ive:r.,,,41. fact that (lei many, which foiernerly •
• • aele thAe.and. intlitylitdes more will be able itrotit'vrryhtittli P‘' exported a lo 'se aniouilt • ot. . beets,
late, Ninny hopelessly 111Ind might hri,ve I
1n. time. • 42 cents two years ago. .
tt j!,r I/011'0404 Vlint tri011 PU1111114 W110 Vt'i,ittegOrPt,Itittlitl nioneJt..ntt elet
That i-.4 accounted for by the 1
CORN STARCH
Chicken Croomottes.,Creented Ede
...Gravies and Meat. Sauces sato a
moat del eatable r lc n ete and amoot it -
nest wherQuaie With BENSON'S
Oar recisci book is fan af praMical
aneastions- Iota of caorl things,
easily pronaired.• Write tor it copy
15 ota.MOritteat Office.
• • - It to sold In TorOnto 1»> N6.retinas, Drug Co -earl no long,..r do so.
•
,
tilttAUkDkStAftCfl GOSLIMITEO.
meevetm., 4Attousat.
nactorrontl, 2i9 vontWILtiant.
KEEP tifttn1 SMO E$ i4EA
112.- P. CALLE? CO, OP CANA0e. 1 To. OARAOA• •
1
•
a