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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-15, Page 2ift 11) ••• 1 It°reel SheaIder for AM'S hand, whieh lie gripped herd, hie veice had. le Veer ring in it, • "You Inlet let any h,ailit hanpeill t her, MM.° whilst I'm alive," and if "her" Meant Pelly to QUO. Man and IcittY te ' &Metter it Made ne fligereneeSinge th terOv Were, tOgethet. Thu 'Reit tUrned, away from the v--4 Vault TAIVILon Corrals and rodesilenstly With his Men: FROM THE oRmil . Every sealed packet SALADA TEA. lat. filled v4th kph, Tours!' '13193 SEALE'D PACKETS 011ifYs. IMAM /Amu OR coktptu 11,4•••0•01- Ten4erfoot s .00ln By ewvE pH iLuPps' W04 -EY, (Author ef."Deldt :Geld in Cariboo'," Eta.) through the night, believing that he had spared. his Wife the pti.411 a vwctr which he was rnlIninfr, not knoWings 'kindly fool 'that Ite was, that she had. read him 'like a book; that her heart had yearned te hm fAet he steod silent- lr praying Over her, Marking but 134 • ginseng the Cause of her palenees •azvd. that alms net he, was the, one wile, had spared the ether the Painof that Which they Ixneirr could -not he a.voided. A. rancher's wife We a soldier's is obliged sometimes to that, chances even With the life of her best belov. ed- nr4, there would bg io raaCh,. lng° ,1•1.•.••••••• • the. sugar bowl is° CHAPTER XIX., "What is yonr programme, 'Al?" whispered. the Boss; When the ranch lights had 4a out. behind the hog's back • "I 'was calcUlating to make for that gulch as leads into, Grouse Creek. We. 4, res.enti, . "could leave'our,horsewthere, and a .01t,,g)Ttlt XVILT.---(Cont"&) 1 Al went (int and retnrn.e p y other relics of, the Old Country still • • IT til leo they had I. "Ws the nearest yvater tO•the place with two fair -headed young Sneak down it to KluileWria'S` camp." "That'C -$0,"• Put in AL "41.'•• men; beef -fed giants with gaiters and • "Kew do . you know he is camped P4- th there? g 50 MUCh as au old Itlooch e • at rancherie since tlie "How do you know, Al?" . sent one the. breedS to pros- necti," `‘Where.is he?" never back. I didn't cal- culate, as he would: but.-.1-thoughtKd he better' With them than with us .if that was the kind of. swine he was, Then I sent Dap here and he says they've all vathoosed: Don't you, Dan?" , , • "Every last hoof of thera:" •••• For a moment there %was a dead silence in the room, the. men puffing quietly a+. their,pipes• and staring in - clinging to -them, w been looked upeat with Certa3n1wbere' Jim saw the smelce, rnieht ITtot be. there, of eourse, but it's worth amount of disfaVor at 'the KiekY nOt beloriging to quite the same class [trying, •Wu might get the drop on the whole outfit if we did a good sneak at as most of the English brportateionC L;,,u4..or • - , and' as intruders. whose small hay 'r.We might, as they won't drectin of Its purity and ',:fine" grannia00)1 give it .the highly sweeten- ing pow'er!,-* It „dis- solves _instantly in, your teacup, or on yourbreakfast cereal. 2and5-lb Guiana , 10 and 20 -lb Bags 3 The All -Purpose Sugar" Eggs out Of the Usual Form,. Eggs :With MuebroOms.-Sliee the la Minutes in a little butter seasoned with pepper an milt and a very little water. Drain, put the mushrooms in APIC dish; break enough egg to cover them; pepper, salt and scatter bite Of butter over them, strew with bread crumbs and bake until the eggs set; serve in the dish. , • Pineapide tegethlr two..tablespoonfuis eacit'a butter and flour, add a Cupful of grated' pineali^ ,ple, .sugar and salt to test& :Add the Well beaten Wilke, of,, five eggs. Fold' in the stiffly beaten whites of Pre eggs; cook two minutes to, a • buttered pan; dry in the oven; fold, turn into h. het, platter and duse. with powdered sugar. Serve, with grated . ,• Jam .Omelet. -Beat the yolke of Alte eggs light, with a tablespoonful of 'powdered. :slider; Into this :stir teaspoonful of eornstarchi dissolved in three tablespoonfuls of milk, then the 'stiffly beaten whites; Cook in a frying pan until set; spread with strawberry jinn, fold and serve as dessert. - • Egg Timbales, -Beat .five eggs slightly, mix with one cupful of milk, season with salt and pepper, add two 'clipfuls of clumped cooked ham, put into buttered custard cups and bake hardlY-bttliffiAonnassunfmg-thia-offensive; but it isn't — tence and the presence of hera likely.. They aren't , white men and. senses on the alert, a tiny bright lea upen the range, but in the straits to the Woods talk.". • star showed for a moment in. the .Which the Rolts had been redieed the Fairclouglas were aceorded . a very we gilt the drop, it's only- three hearty welcome,••althongh their ohm 4.'1' fore They'll run, sure." • ous scepticism and too loudly pro - That is the spirit of the West. claimed iniifference to an3rthing that '4a pack, of mangy Indians could do, e , Three to one WabOut a fair match in y of the Western man, if the' was a little trying to the old harids.. - one is white, with rather havy odds on the one, awl history has proved that the handicap is not too -heavy in most cases. although, • some "fool :whites," as AA would, have put it, may sometintek"get left." . . . The 'Boss, at any rate. seemed sat- isfied, and the five went on silently In the dark/West which was of.the kind 'which absolutely obliterates' every- thing. A chinook wind was blowing, One 4 those curiously- Soft warm winds which occur in British Colum- bia, cutting the snow oftthe hills in a few. hours like a red hot knife. BY their ears they could tell when the3r life, don't bregk any . more • trees were riding over prairie, for then; Dan,'-' and so 'Saying he led thein back there was only the whisper Of the by the way the yhad come. • grass at their feet, or through timbers At last he stopped. • There bad for then the soughing ,of the • trees made Weird music for them, but in crept into the sky the "faintest siispr- that sOliii cramp bleakness you might- chin . of light. Black darkness 4 have. burst your eyeballs in'tryiv to , would, ave appeare o mo men eovor the outline a ft ph* still, butc•crottonwhesde whoseeyeseyes had be-. edge of the timber ageinst the .sky it sufficed to show. a hollow land: and your efforts wild have been in vain. • • (To be continued.) , s ssm • I at, s so but if they spot uS be-. gloom ahead of and above them• . "00Shl I didn't know that we were that. clgse," muttered Al. •that fool hadn't have touched his Are I'd have blundered right into them. Lie low, boys." • • , For a quarter of an hour the five men • lay motionless„ and so still was everything that before the flfteen ininutes had passed, the Boss felt con- vinced that the light which they had seen must have been born ontheir imagination. It. amid not be • that there was any live thing in such a silence as that:. But Al did not share in this feeling. • • - "It's a icy none 'of the cayuses, whanie" he Whispered, "but it won't do to trust them any longer. Let me git past you, Boss. Now feller me back, : Go eaey, and for the love of the 10g fire. Ater So manY Years of ,"The Chileotens have not been. near • - undisturbed' peace, it seemed imp"- your place yet, Al tells me." , Sible to. believe in a general rising 'amongst B. C. Indians. It was al- most as if the cattle had turned, on ..the cowboys.' , • "What are we; to do, -TIM?" "Well, ,Relt, if these Indians were "No, sirreel I guess they know \bet- ter," replied Bob Fairclough, handling a new Winchester with. meaning; • "I hope so, indeed, Mr .Fairclough, and I daresay that We exaggerate the danger. having ladies and an invalid to * not Chilcotene„ X' should say AO we take of Would You mind staying had seen the worst of it, and it might with us for a day or two? Half of us '.!• all bloik. Over; but they are Chilcotenar are going out to try to round up Khel: mid Chilcotens. are not like ether BA 'l awna and his 'band, and your presence ' Indians." , ' , , " ' * I and your'S brother's tycluld relieve the "014 theta" Coast Indians is like a tedium of our absence for the Ladies, .- Peek of wet hens,". put in Al. "These "- - 'mid give them a greater sense of safe- , fellows are mean as wolves. They' to, . . , - .- wili6a out that.,6m1v6Y.sparti:61), ileYs . ,"Why, certainly. ' Delighted, -I am Coolaa' pretty clean." . ,•?' . . I sure unless you would like to have us .• "That was a:long time hog And all; along with you and leave two of your htl...ijeg;leaders Were hanged." 1.1 men behind. ' Jack is a capital shot, -"That's- 11 you IcnoW,131i-gctlEhel- lyou--know, used to shootatWimble- ewna vas one Of the 'ringleaders,. and ton, and I can beat him a bit most he wasn't hinig,..woreeduck. None of 'finies;" .. . . . the ring-Ieaders, were hanged. The Bolt milled at the ingenuous, state - fellows til4Y.'"gaYe UP Were slaves, ment, but he. wanted Men who could " that's all There wasn't •aChileoten . hit something more difficult than a amengSt :them. Government knoWed target at a measured. two hundred And yet with the instinct of a hem- % but couldn't de riothing." • ;•tyargik from ,a rest. That style of ing pigeon, old Al led them steadily , "De yeti remeraher, Doc, that smoke , shirting- . would do from the ' tanCh on, never complaining of the dark - that I the -tight -I saw -late yesterday '''' f.,...77, Windowt, but if it carne to shooting ness, never hesitating, or asking quee- ' -evening?" asked Jim, , - . .1. off -land from the saddle, he pre- tions, and .his companions felt their "In the timber : towards Grouse ferreci to trust some of his boys who way after Min, trusting implicitly to Creekr- • • • • - . liacl never Ifeard of wimbiooi. his guidance and to the instinct ' of "Yes." • • - "Thank You, very much. But I their horses. coat.is solled.rifb briskly with •aleobel, 4 will leek news • miler been taken out of hie.* good itliallse-r-arster the application of liquld ammonia. Kefore wearing your rubbers rub them well with vaseline. . Let them remain a few days bora using them., If your oven 'barna feed on the bet,* tom WO your iron etand and Put it Under your pan it Will not burn. The, systeMatie bruehing of the hair every nigh,t will do., ginch tower keeping the hair clean and glossy. ' If hot grease is spilled on the tab- le throw Cold water on to harden it and °prevent it from soaking into the 'wood." irt-e-pan of- water 'until firm. Serve - garnished with curly parsley: , Egg Jelly. --Half a pint of water, half an ounce of 'gelatine, the rind a half a lemon, two eggs and two ounces of sugar. • Place the •gelatine and water in in enameled pan, 'add the thin yellow .rind of the lemon and let. them soak until the. gelatine is soft. Strain the lemon juice into the pan, add the sugar, bringing to boiling point, stirring. all the time, till the gelatine is perfectly dissolve'd. Cool slightly, add the well -beaten •troiks and cool till the yolks thicken, tben strain into a large basin.. When the jelly is nearly set add the whip- • ped whites of eggs and whisk all to- gether till jellied, Serve in a glass dish. • • . Egg Curry Balls. -After stewing a chicken mix, four hard-boiled , eggs, some finely grated •bread crumbs, rments . to, indicate* the • Put a crossa-Ontditethheyin:wroeldhaOvn tiny s trouble in.areaaingt • To eleall white buckskin floes take A small brush and make a lather of ticouring soap; brush lather thor- eughly into the Shoes, and, when dry brush off. --------- If eggspoons whiCavencome discolored after using, are rubbed with a little conunon self, when wash- imnaggivap.4 the stain will diaappear like Kitchen oilcloth will last much long- er if pasted on to the floor instead of being tacked; the latter method causes it to wrinkle and to ,easily crack in consequence., - -When pitting away -a-eilver- teapot pr: one that is not in everyday use place a little sitelt across :the top under, the cover. • This allows fresh • air to get in and prevent 'mistiness.. If a hot water bottle is cracked and leaks, instead of throwing it away, fill it with sand,, and put in the oven till thoroughly hot, and it will an- swer the purpose as well as a new one filled With water. 7, • Finger nails Indy be kept clean' if, *bctfore undertaking a piece Of dirty wail.; the nails are drawn across a cake ef soap and filled. • Afterward conn -meal is excellent to Use with •soap, for removing grime from the hands ' • • • A zinc covered table in the kitchen ID a most desirable part of a. virell- enuipPed kitchen.:,A nine cover can be put ,on an orinary pine topped table qt a cost of less than two dol - fresh butter and a little curry pow- lets, and the saving of work in scrub - 'der, meistening it with the well -beat- bing is Worth considering.. •, • . enraw yolks of twit eggs. Form into In Papering do not put the new pap7 dainty ,balls and drop into the stew- •er, on top of the old -peer off every ed chicken about five ntinutesi before bit of the ow. Wet the wall with a removing it from the.fire., • brush to soften the old paper. Scrape A Relish for siicit off, and then•put ,on the new paper. he piste psed Wall -,paper she " eggs, remove the shell 6 and Cut •the, 1.• fully -talc are- be welled cooked. rd After corks have, been used,awhile eggs into halve,s crokstvise and- mtaacehd tc6ohal.• they sometimbi-beeme so ,mm,..,„DinaPet Of THE FC2161WING INOREG* AIIPPIONI OMR 035tHATf MCArtilk ller30011/04 AVM. NO LEGS, BUT THEY NYALk. British Cripples Deceive Onlookers , . . By Brisk Movements. . When a wounded soldier Or -sailor is sent to hospital nowitdaYs the amount of patching up made possible by mod- • • "I:remember, but you • t ink think you must be content with the.. "Better get off here Boss," Al said ern science is. so Wonderful that by :ilia that iswherethey are? If they place honor.' will. be geed' to idlest. , "it'S bad going: Hold on to the very nature of its. Success it es- liad been thete they woitV1 .haye 'Seen know that Oki "such.shots are• wadi-• your stirinp leather and let -your' herse papas full appreciation. •Thus, if you us, anir.ctit us off." ,ing over the ladies' safety, I'll take see h fine looking young man walking round briskly with no more support "I'm not Sure of that 'They might the trail' te-night, Min." • than it walking stick you are not Like- bav'e been scared that, one. of ne • 'Bette.i let me go instead, Bess." • ly to realize that a 'short time ago he come along after me," but. he himself remained in the saddle. ' . It has has to be more than bad going to o must stay,. Ina persuade an old cowboy to foot it. would break bee o a • • . tw • ' ,woillci he safer far „them. to round Us "thie a 1'61 .,011.up, teie, at the ran. ch.,‘,.. , and you have had your share of fun." I "Who's that blundering idiot?" he ' •.. "Toil think that they have cut off • Jim hesitated . and prepared to ar- ;hissed a minute later tis some one .0to, cormininicatons then?" , . 1 gee. . . . - 1 I broke .a stick, "can't you move yew° "Besides, • I don't. want the. wife to. hoof without knocking the trees, down. . . "With. Soda Creek and Faireloughs: / think that, there' is any serious • dan- 1If they ain't deaf they'll hear that in yes. That's what: I'd, try to do if . ,. . , ger, and if you stay behind she will , Soft Creek bar." :was in their Wade. .Ars plan is the , , think so Much of my going. She I . Though the old man's language was . -.right one : We had better go after not first _mow is, worth a will argue that if there was anything ;more picturesque than accurate, a . ' them The it ,woiet 6 to let . really to be done .1 should take •igood many things 'seethed ,to have dozen later on, and wi, best man with Me. See?" , hetuf.1 that unlucky' stick, Until it thein think we are scared,. hilt Finally it was arranged in this , broke, but for the solemn soughing *Must leave a 'strong guard with you' ,. . . .. and in the dirk, long after the ladies of the. trees, the ' dumbness of the "Yes, ,I mean,...to " said : the Boss, .• had retirtd to rest, Dick. Holt stood woods' had matched the darkness of • , rand the ladies." . for a minute looking down at the face the night. You would have thought waking 'rap ' arid !taking coMmand. , he loved; se white and 'calmly lovely that weeds and Prairie were alike lin- , "Piek your men to stay Cembe.",. old. in the thoonTight ' : - ; tenanted, had you not ' remembered • i,"/Iovr,would, it .be if the doctor, • h It was too white, he thought, and that all those -who. move .in them by night, are stalking or stalked, seek- ing the life on -another or Audder- ingly trying to save their own'. :As the stick cracked ,. there was a rus- tling in every bush, a stir In every tree, unseen feet • pattered, unseen wings fluttered for a moment, then again all was still,--ilistiniing. • As the Rife 'paused with . all their It • had no legs at all. An impressive number of marvels of this.kind• is to be found at the Queen Mary HosPits.1 at Roehampton, England, where the fitting of artificial limba is being ac- complished on a scale that •has. never been known before: Loss than flve months ago Sergt; Kent, of the Fifth -Wilts, lost his legs ID .his country's service at the Dard- anelles. The Other day, consciously proud �f his facility, be took an after- noon stroll round the grounds of the hospital, vvith only two 'walking sticks to help him.- For six days he has been relearning how to vralk-a joyous ex.; perlenee for a Man who, had contem- plated a life with crutches. .Iif on of the limb shops disabled heroes. were finding •their feet with the aid of parallel bars: In•otdet that the legs may suit them as nearlf pet- fectly as possible; it is usual for the men to take their first •steps in the practising room before the limbs are finished. A ohearmed man strode along a corridor., swinging the one arm‘. -his left -as he walked. His hand WU gloved, and when the fingers gripped those of the visitor they 'Were -found to be unnaturally -hard. • The lower Toma, two of, e breeds, and then a hideous vision came to him of 'Fnireletigh 'bays itaYed vilth you 'and how that face might be when he next ..Anstruther. - I'M afield about tlie -••• Faircienghs. I doubt if they Will ever saw it ' : -• • • - . . . get hira:), . • . • , .. . • I . "What a fool t.am," he muttered to • himself., "and all because a parcel of • ''.:.... athoirs ••,• as W It- .i)elieve,"n word about the rising, and ' • "They're in the Corral now. ' Weill . efr,e.. sca.r:_e:1...t., !kik oVvii sli, all fOrs•, tuhte_Tyta.;... he readkoa -over 'his - White livered Siwashes,•hurned inY stheks. • Even that was rather heroic "Go and bring thtin in; Al.": I, , . .. Natio:c01110. CCIAITAONS PIO ALIJ NEWS FROM ENGLAND NEWS BY MAIL Asour JOHN" BULL AND HIS, PEOPLE. filecarrences In thti tared That,R, , Supreme in the Comma'. "dal WorliL • The ,chilichprd at. Meopham, Kent,• ID so full that several times lately human bones. have been uncovered. The death has oceurred in Sunder- land, of Mr. R. H. Gayner; one of the • oldest shipowners in the 'north of • England. . St. Anne's Home, Streathain Hill, .where 11,000 refugees have • been . dealt with Since .the war., has now been -closed.- • The miter gallery a s,t, pours . Cathedral, which has. been eiesell fer several months, has mscr bsen re- opened to the 'public. ' 4111': 'The Prince of Waies' Ettail bas reached a total of $2:9,3....,9,0185., Of this ,. sum 613,74000 has been allocated to date for distribution for relief. Sir George. Sherston Baker, judge of the Lincolnshire County Court, *as fined $6 for insufficiently shaded lights " on the night of a Zeppelin raid, ward in Millis Hill House. Mili- tary Hospital, • Middlesex, is to be named after Gladstone, who frequent- ly slept in the -room when a guest or Lord Aberdeen. • Sir Frank Bowden, ivhe itcs pre-- viously contributed largely to the funds,' has cleared Off' the -whale debt on The General Booth Memorial: %Ike, Npoattriinshghcaomu.• ne of Bushatn, near : Ratfiester, through' it's chairman, r, • John' Benjamin, bus been fined , 5 for neglecting to shade the lights du ing its deliberiit19ns, „ " At a meeting of the Essex • War • Agricultural Committee, Lady Petre, re..*lexit_of the Women!s Committee, • reported that 2,187 women farm Work-,: ' ets .had been register -ed - •• Wouncled-soldiers---from7-11-enleY part of one -arm was artificial and the merits, 1m --can- te :r-eitiarkably well. With which, a the deceiving sWilig of the limb. were operated by shoulder movements. Pri- vate Chaplin of the Welsh Fusiliers • the owner of this. w.on rful hand, otlie accomplish- Kgg Soup..--Tvvo pints .of „ chicken nres of the Prussian Government res, else but the Substitut. ,a of exercio er • "It was a, bit of a, Job- at first" le stock, -cupful -of -eieellar -one egalhat their own Poles the sup') - comWffe'd. paste with a little finel pepper and , add one tablespoonful. of and that the contents of the battle leak fowl, season to taste. with silt out. Thismay he remedied by put-, teasponfui each- ting the corks in boiling water and minced parsley, one leaving them until the •water cols of melted butter and -:made mustard and a- dash of cayenne pepPer. When I They will thc.; fit tightlr. thoroughly mixed fill into the whites. Heat a cupful of fowl. stock, season with salt, pepper and a tablespoOnful of minced parsley, add three table- spoonfuls ef cream. mixed with one tablespoonful of cornstarch. Let boil two minutes and piur over the eggs. Cover/ closely and set in.the oven far. • GERMANS WANT pettAlo. Would "Liberate" the Poles' is the • Way. They Tell. it. Chan of Military Hospital formed an arch with their crutches at the- wed- ding at Brookwood, of Miss' Edith M.. ' Dixon, a Red Cross nurse. Damage tO the extent of $50,000 Was caused by a fire it the premises' of Messrs: William Greenwood,, jr.,. spinners and manufacturers, , of '• .0xenhope,- near- Keighley, --Yorkshire-•-, The death' is -announced at the ago of seventy-one of Mr: M: Colmore,1 for seventeen years, Birmingham stipendary magistrate and chairman . five ininutes. Serve at once of the _Warwickshire Quarter Sessions. COrporal - recently " Orange Ojnelet.-Beat the Yolks and cellor's recent speech dealing with the whites sepitratelY of five eggs, coni- "liberation" of Russian Poland and at Hertford, Castle presented by the the Araltic Provinces has given im- mayor' with a gold watch and chain bine and season; add five tablespoon- fuls of cream, in which has been dis- soilved two table.spoonfuls of corn- • :That .part ' of ,the Getman mense satisfaction in Germany. It $7,50s and an illuminated address sub - is net so long 'ago that Germany Was Scribed ler: by the • townspeople 01.. starch Pout into a buttered omelet credited, with advising Pretograd . to Hartford pan and cook slowly on top of the take sterner .measures against. Polish The London County Connell Educa- ; stove until the egg is, "set," then nationalist pretensions, and to curb don Committee has .expressed approv- plaee pan inside the oven to. finish , the propganda which the Lithuanians al of the scheme fOr .training women cooking. Spread one-half .of the and Letts were carrying on fel- as for the boot trade The women will omelet with orange preserves and quiring local government. be 'taught ' clicking; sewing, finiihing . serve on a hot platter. ' , ' .But, now. all this is 'changed, and and lasting Chicken on the Nest. -To Make this Germany'- steps into the -arena as the •-'To qualify women now engaged in °nest carefully hollow out h large lib,erator of Poland and the Baltic the leather trade as forewomen and sponge cake; Prepare some shredded Provinces Baron Von Engelhardt, a supervlsOrs in factories, the Leather. gelatine by soaking in cold water tilt well-known Bavarian writer, has tak- sellers" Company. is, arranging foz moderately soft; Mix a little spinach special courses of practical and juice with it to make it green; then theoretical in tion. " ** • cover the cake, outside ad in, with it. A new an elephone ex"- • Fill either with the boug t candy eggs change has be • at Ports- ' or these molded of fudge in egg shells. that the entire region is permeated Mouth. ,Iti is the larg t of its kind; Place a toy chickee on the eggs 'anlrI with Germanism, and that •the domin- in the country, having 7,000 lines con.. present each guest with an. egg at. the conclusion of the Irneet. ' Curried Eggs, -Pry an onion in but- ter; add milk and a teaspoonful' of sentiment, Those who have. not re- Dunrig his Majesty's visit to Alder. curry powder. • Cut hard boiled eggs mained German are renegades. •shot he • started .700 s•oldier competil into halves; arrange on ii dish; pour After an historical review of the tors in a cross country 'tee; the col& the _curry crearn ,Mixture over, them provinces, Baron Engelhhrdt speaks petition forming a regular part of ths • and not boiled rice around the dish. A of the various methods , of Riiseifice; - physical training -of the: trOOpio`'''71.fie:..' - tiny sprig of parsley put between the tion pursued by the Tsar's Goverif- race was Won by atearn ot the Dun,' • givei the dish ,an inviting air., Ment and holds up hands of horror. ham Light Infantry. , ,' , • - : en Alp the chdgels on behalf of what he' Calls. the "German" Baltie Prov- - inces. Although they were Russian.. Provinces two years ago, he finds new nected, or 5,000 more than any alto- • Jon- of Sweden, Poland,. and Aussie has not deflected the inhabitants from Matic exchange previouttly in exist then • German language "kultur," and ente. . • To' six eggs use a;C: two ,teaspeensfuls of flour ' or ` corn- starch; if more eggs are used make the . dressing accordingly. ' •ds nt-the., sthps- tesken-hst....,the, ±,914,useet', vites" to impose Russian ways on the inhabitants. if the baron had re, called the..cruel and persistent meas- . . • .• , • • ...THOUGHTS PGA THE.:1DAy. • Physic:, for'the most•part, is nothin -admitted. "You seeit's a•left hrs." Irepip;oenfilulpouofr_siLltenbla sga_lthsopto_oriofnuil oofe the arbitrary .aerfbitthrtieryDasnyessteomf So!cfhlreuswile,, .beaten yolks of -four -----eggs, -diluted pievailecrfatiosearhAlsac or -- which 7inds,bictmate6dv_eWri.neopyeatinger_Maki.ittAllnwiinkt. g' "'CI A' sound disc ' ' • • •41:""4nee;--:Adrecitisioan18 .:1i.t 8:i Wald) . 1 with , halt a cupful • of cream. Re.; raine he would have been more reti- • heat and serve at once in bouillon :cent with.r,egard to Russian rule ' -To kneW.. and Understaoci otfr, own • -The-he Works out _a_graniliosc minds is Prdbably the most. -.cliff' I " .ctips:... . -------c•-...tiEW-A1.11.01/1ATIC GUN. invention of Question of: Aerial. Raiders, . ' .FOR -PRESERVING...., Red..Diaiii0d,... • . is now....pto.tnil,, nently placed on every package ofSt. Lawrence Sugit. , . . . . Absolutely pure and .perfectly aqes sugar As, guirculteed by this Inark. . , • .OW4 Ailgat is hate for eVC.ty: purpose-tweete'r and 'mist wholetseinelmt it is 'indispensollto • • i'ar preserving and ; other klacis erten &one fernient- idpn' and Prevent A.10' . . , Household plan for the settlement of the,`.‘ er- man." Baltic Provinces with German colonists. "We badly require lands i%,.n Italian non-CommisSioned offleer Ale lie' Will dissolve ntedicin• e stains: • • , igliteers-. lies -invented ,a_`..5.00clal • ,.. ,„„t° . .„„. ,,,,„ ,,,„,, 1,4 ,:ki,,.. for eolonlzing purposes. , It means •"`"1"114 ..r. S''';'"' .daily.4tead,. to us. It means also teleineter for anti-afreraftguifsi Whose • '''''.5' on -3"" aim is • autoniatically rendered P.riteti, know that yeti do so. . • • .that we will be 'Mlle to attain Mil, . cany uheerfig, • ' Clean cut steel buckles and .pins t • • - • i lions . of Germane who 'are otherwise • For obvious, reasons a detailed de, • with powdered pumice stone: • , 1. , . . . , . ,,,, seription. Of this wonder fill devite,•• Cigar or good cigarette. ash rriakeS iti. danger of bieeking o ft in us.. ft T • Whieb pas been adopted in all, the al'. an eimellent polish for. silver . . , tied armtes, cannot be glitir. .1; Con- Paper bags make Very good -'cover- '-She-"Didn't you say - You'd ' go 03ts ere mirror iittached! to the gun' imrs for jars isrith food* in them : through fire and water for me?' Ile ID which the' dbject;flrid et, aeroplane' - A, slice „ anal style. for every need. and in fine, media* or 'coarse . . LA ICK'SUCIA/1 IIS.411.11 ' The ' good housekeeper goes over ---"V'es; but Mowed if Pin going her feed sUpplies every. day to avoid through bankruptcy for you." • Or airship, is refleeted In inlet!' a Way that the gunner le:enabled not only to determine antolhatioally. the diStance heteteen the gen and the target; but to ,ealcutate the speed ot the alrertift. Irite iS graduated .so that, the distance and the .spbtfd of the target Can' hit age -ermined. at a glance and no time Or 'ainnitinitiOrt 'is lost k .Provid- ed the enemy tilreraft is Within firing ratigei, and the rang Of •the etitiair- craft guti has been considerably in- creased of late, the chalices of its be. ing missed when. the opeclal telemeter used are reduced .to less than I pet cent. • • • . • Three out of five seaplanes were tirotight deivn during a recent air raid Antona tied abotit eight Attatriee ticroPlines were bit ausl 'destroyed or captured a few weeks 1.14o at the trent. waste . • In Using dented vegetables for te cream sips the liquor sheuld be dis- cariied ' •' • Thick blotting paper under 'deities wiir Prevent hot dishes from Mark- ing 'the table , Worn table Itapkino are Useful for drying the lettuce when preitaring it for salad • Blotting paper saturated With tur- pentine may he pliteed itt drawers to. keep t1 moths away A e notent washboard is a eotriteitienee the hatbroott for wet& itig out tannin articles ' When the than'velvet cellar orillia ieu t. ork-thatvector sett e f (we etlfse Ives. • -Professor Latta. - To me Russia is: the meat faseinat- - . ing dountty in Ithe world at the pres- tat moment, a country that isa•;con-- 'timidly vuxzting 'r -• „Sinipson.• • , 'Danes' rind Work ID Danes, all lions of farmers, are go ing front Denmark in: batches of 20t to help make up the shertage oftabor on Englieh farms. • • • os) . (EblIVAllibilitUlit6). "Silver dlOsS" has been ding OutirteS, fOr nearly 60 years:. perfect starching In Canadian 14 dry In One pound packages 'and ibt pound fancy enatnelled*.tida. Starch THE CANADA STANCH CO. LIMITED Makers of "clIouat Brand" and taiwrecat, CAADINAL. "Lily Whito" C, P i .1 Syrups, and APIANTFORO, FORT WILLIAM. Bonlou's. COM ,i1,?I'eb. 211;