HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-06-22, Page 6•
• 1.
•
is pilekea Ly automatic
.ery inatle014 wiLite tOtt0.11 bags
aD.4 carton at tile refinery, .
Thie hit far safer wad Mort sanitery then .Ph
•eugeepaekedhYlieed in a ive*paperliag: •
whichlareaksatetouelh Nehatthtouehee
LNiIG SUGAR until yea opera it your.
J: st eat cifftho Corner of the .certeet
anthheilh hat the suger as hoe nee4 it. -
I .54b Othhellfe
10 and 20,1b Bags
411.Parpose Sugar'
TcuOcrio9ts Wobipg
By 'OWE FhtihhIPPS hkettlgy,
,(Atithee.at "91.10.1a• .0old.- in :Carl beget: g.tc.).
,GMABTEB XIX,(Cont'd.) .
"We'll tie the horses here, and wait
, a bite When we can Prettynigh see
Our _sight.% hvehl begin • Our sneak...,,They're a blanked sight neater then
h thought they was."' ' • '
AS he spoke his, 'words were juiti-
• fled. ,
The black belt of gloom' which suf.,
teueidtel the hollow in Which they lay;
Washsuddenly starred in cloien places
by %flick red jets of .flaree, and the
the
• silence shattered by.. the ringing re-
ports of as many` rifles, after which
the darkness came back again anh the
silence, but /lir 'the streaming of -a
wounded hope. • .
hGuess they beat us metle sneak,"
muttered vki Al. cease •"Get into
cover, boys, quick." g . • .
• Probably no white man but Al could
have .led the ranch lichee through
these Woods at night as Silently as he
had done. They had stirred no heavy,
beast to ptececle° them and carry a
warning to their foec.There had
been fluttering of disturbedwings'
in:front of their advance, except • that
once; hat a warning need not/ be
printed in large type for an Indian to
see it. • . .
Ever 'since Den ."broke that tree"
-the stalkers had been stalked -without
suspecting it. • ,
When the volley was firedDick
'Reit had had his eye on the exact spot
irewhich one of the red Stars of light
had burst. • 'En had heard the bullet,
sing past him; and for a fraction 'of w
•
Pine timber; There•theyebrew. them-
selves on sthe .grOund, Soakedto the
hone and panting heavily. ' •
'"What'ecier??! Are we going to fight'
thern-Izereeth'esked Reit et-last-istand-
ing .un to let smile -efethe Water- drain
out of him, '
• 'Tight Injunshn timber?. Not Much
We're another Ave Mieutes before
they'llmiss us, but the light's coming.
They'ta getting impatient Hear
04 the, . •• • '
•
"That" was another volley poured
into the hollow,
"Ilailth Misted us yet ,anywhyre
:Are you good for iifiotheh 'burst,
Bose?"' ' • •
"If it's 'not' too. far." Rolt's 'running
days were over, and he was, a heavy
Man, used to riding.
'-"No, it -ain't far," and the . old men
beganto hun again as if he had been
flee and twenty, Tema and the other
'Indian' 'loping along , as easily .as
:virelves, whilst Dan the big -footed, soh -
pea 'wearily far behind: ,
. At last on the extreme edge of the
pine belt, Al paused. • lleyend the Om -
bet theepee ectunity rolled down to-
wards the -Fra•set and the down had
our 9nlys chance and a slim
One. It's got to' be that cherry patch,"
Als aid, pointing out to the open.
"There ein't.another place in sight as
Would give us .e show," and he set off
running again at top speed for a' little
four -corned patch of •• wild cherry
Nth; about a thousand yards from
„Seeend seen-the/Irene figure of e ,timber.e " ; •
the
ethe man who fired the abet. ‘tee he heirdt lookedaboutaabnouotnaeinya,;
s badayoucouldplace
' to it. . .
ariee • of the moriteritaty Imagine', lying as it, did in 'a' hollow
Centuntedthe darkness for and containing no timber big enough
e away fleet him all ell idea to serve asa shiele against rifle liul-
so that to 'have replied
would ertlykave,been to waste reshot
.*:•aed betray his cown; hiding -place.
He was lying 'eche'bebinil the dead
horse waiting to Snap, at the next star
which should appear or. to 'Meet the
had not re
The••', br
flash
.hinhe „
of loea
Its, but there was nothing better in
sight, and it, achiust one, thing in its
favor. -h. .• ' ' '
• For se'v'en Or eight hundred yardsatleast on one side, and for evert or
eight 'Mites eyeey other side there
rush which -Might have -fellowect had was no cover of any kind larger than
the attacking party consisted of ;white the thin bushes of sage brush and the
patches of bench ...grass.' A coyote
Ile had had no notion how -close his' fel- , have crawled through that. un-
• lows weree, He eehd toe hear them seen..., It seemed impossible that any-
•' her see the outline even of the neatesi
thing else should. .
,e-hushse It wasstili pitchedeek-on-the Realizing -that at -anY--nlonlent 'their
„grolina. • . enemies mightreach the edge of the
• suddenly e,,hhee. closed round his timber: • 'Wet and his companions.,
thede, and a voice • whispered., ; . 'raced over tthe space interveniiig be
• "We've got to wriggle Out of, this. twein the Pines and the cherry bush
°pen% lift your head, but just slew at headiefig speed': When Rolt crash -
round on eour,belly•anh anehi it after ed into the edge of the cherry patch
Thera's no hurry. slow," he had not iesither yard of ,rtinnirig
• "But the the hoises?" asked Ron. poser left in him: With ri feeling
"Yours is dead, -ain't it!! If they that he had not known since he had
want to ahootthe'ethers we can't stop: Won the quarter at Rugby, he dtopeed
• • blank them; orneh' and Rolt: where he Was And lay still.- • • ,
e who by this time .had, his headnear hEtichted them so far," Panted Al,
,
•
old Al's 'mein, saw these hrew quietly scheerfully, 'and now I guess we'll
away from hem ' take some killing. Out With your jack
, Initiating his companion, Ron squir:. knives, boys; and I'll show you a
mod on elle. belly through the hush trick as I learned of the Creesh! and
which closed over him, se that it, was .he began to hack down the boughs
only with the Utmost-. (Wiest* and and young trees all round him, Wilk• ,
'half by instinct that he Massaged to ing with thein a kind of "Wicky OP,"
fellow •AW.Of 'whose tortuous eeeee or small circular bothy, such as In-
:. :geese' he COUId 'gee but little,. 'even diens use for bath houses. Over the
when .he -was within - length efhtop of this he threw his blanket,' which
• vele • • .., ' ..„ . •-• I he had carried- strapped tohis hack
• , "He. knew that he was; goirig. &eve ; until thhe, and oyer that. swain he pill
• ;hill, and that the. grimed under hiin ed kose Soil and soda, keeping a nerv-
was • growing saki and softer; until' • Gus eye all the time on the edge of the
•• at list he _might atmeat as well hav timber.• '
diem everinining but hs.eoutd see no- • "Chuck YOnir coat eher your atlas if
• .thing.'• • „. . . • you haven't g blanket," ,he • said
ewesre all eight now," Al staPpedto; to Reit, "hod then fix it this way,"
whiaperlia when Reit Was ,heginning and he went :cleWn his knees and
• • to wonder whether he would not rath- began to scratch with is knife like
et be shot than go • en -inv. farther. .. a• deg who Is going to 1/. Y a' bone. •
•
. hihWe're in the crik bottom"- •;: : All the earth he took out he pile.
. • eeeetee; have 11:lessee .upon the- blarikete, thieWing with .it
Al gave a low chuckLe • • .: *me mid leaves and small boughs; un -
"Pretty blanked cold,,' ,e h Wdll, til When he had finished with it it Mk-
• -we'll cure -that. WeIhe got tmoire ed like, a '.g.reet ant heap just suffi-
• pew hike twe•yeareolds. ,. Are". heel cientlh within the eohdh of the brush
• ready amd: he rose to a crouching ,to Seve it -from 'detection. , -
.hositron, : • . Then he: lent kelt. a hand with his
•Ateel3-40-ah-llead eneunhe otheeinghthehboys .to -.110-the
• ; e. er, • New come And ,ere'll heat Paine t,their respective earners, nncl
-them' yet" afidsteheling asire inn the hhIlove hoys-eshove: like hell :if you.
old • frontiersman. led his -companion ever want • to eat bell, beef arty More.
• alehgethe ,eseelhehottoine ender* h the--7-ky ain't here -yet,-but-They-can't be
:ehelter Of its hanks. into the heavy long 1164.4
actor MIN lid w:To4irOrie then ..
4,3?eq04,0 50 per. cent In 'One.
' Tgroelit.friany Iristarthes
When me,U ars working for their
liveit la reervelloae Ipit jOanali ea
don. Ill * heilth those men,
?
* 0* up AK ab: hlr* 44,1
nit joy yin te:11 ugon'
bawl ve ea a low °hire Ai 04
thont*1 into 'thoix hulas tilo taikits
Into their horroVfai,
There Was tiO Sign ck,f Indians that
Rolt tould see,,hut"as Al lay motion -
loss he limitated him, aml for * full
,fifteeatultuiVe almost helh his breath
,in lia berrehe
At the enda that aerie he heard *
vacs:, behind-himo- and ttltning, fitielt'
Al lying at full °length in the liertk .
celenly whittling a pipeful: ter teliciathe
1 - mi@y•Qatet •see me, here," he said'.
"I'm tee faih back in the Scrub. Hese%
'Yen got, your bury goad and deep.
Iheep a Whittling of it out so as you
can lie hew. a! the hullete'll go Wren
you. Savvy? I'm. nein" out new to
take a passear eiel see if thern ferti-
.Alcatieris leek natural."
h hDoiht be such e fool," boinnland-
ed the Bose. . . h •
, "A: ' ain't hui fool' 'Retie. ".No Injen
ever hit 4• man at a thoosend heeds, •
ana,Phe get to home how Our, little
show will etrhife. the gallery. La -
wise I're.,:enxises to imew it we have
a hull licillse)", and so shying, he stet&
a match and. Wandered out int) the
11co'Cronin Conlon -Out at the freezer
rho BENSON
And it is pretty hardvio-nik.for
PIM more doliaioanthenaChocolets.
Vor.a, Fignee or .CreenrCustard With,
emit, niocio of eastereecoraParole
Oth now'Rectpo Book "Dosnortennd
endloo” toile how sad how nutokto
too. WrIto for a. tOpY to our biontreal
Office -and beano. iota your **Soot
to ;and BIIISON'S. tttost4O.PitY in
Cutieria for inormese half a ;opium •
Tag smagii co. isorea
1,$esmcAL. •panel N At,
00.0Affil0flto, 216 from' W01-1-tAlf•
4611000137.tairairialy
. . _
opon, , •_
•
world the -hid' felleveestrolled • along
Straight,towardS the timber, smoking P. PARE. FOR
In the meat tfriCenCerned way' in the
he ;11*a, arid looking back coma,
Monthly at his handiwork, "Mid for , • ANOTIER•
WAli
hist
about three -hundred yards ,he went , •
'hrunolested. „
esERIVIA,N NEWSPAPERS TELL •Ole
-Theheeeehot. --wah,e'hredi ; . • •
earth was kickehr elp a hundreh yarde ••' THE SCHEME,
in ',rent of hon; and his hat fell on •
the ground whilst his rifle event to •
his shoilider'and his own shot was was TO Ttrain Boys in.• the Arts of Milt-
behoed by evm more from the- cherry.
Patch,' under the cover of which tiny '•tarismA-4"A 'Era's
volley he railled back to his lair.' • '. Very Birth.
"All right," he said, - he he trawled. •
'under his mound"' ',the Peats is ell 'After we win this war it Will nce
took and the curtain's up. It's just behoove un to become inactive and
three hundred yards to where I drop-, , indifferent. In. fact, Germany will
Ind MY cap, antcl now I'm goiih to put still continue to have powerful and
in time higginh If I was you I'd do bitter enemies, and it will be our duty,
the seine, It's goin' to be eafer une. as the Japanese pay, when a victory
erg -mune' than up a tree by and bye'. is won 'to set our helmets tighter on
and Lifter that for a long time the Our hes":
Boss sew no more of AL
•• CHAPTER XX.
The Chinook. Wind which had been
blowing -before midnight had , drop,.
pech and in the. last hears of 'dark-
ness had been succeeded by a crisp,
clear air with more than suspicien
of frost in it,. sq that when the dawn
game, it 'spread through skies of such
rare lucidity as are never seen except
in high northern lands. •
• „Along the horizon the light .• grew
gradually, until in the east the heav-
• ens were of a pale lemon color, so
clear, so titterly fine and transparent,
that the gloom of the rigid battier of
pines hurt the eye With its contrast of
'stiff solidity: ' . •
Even the pine bele itself was not
imite-peoohe zgek.h.is _the, dawn. The
tops of it were touched ' with a pale
glory ezid, though, the gloom- of the
black boughs swallowed up the light
that, struck them, a hole - here and
there was"eaught by it and brihfitened
with a wash of tenderest golden grey
But the prairie welcomed the dawn,
These remarks, made by. the late
Field Marshal Von der Goltz in a
speech in Constantinople sosne months
ago have found a ready response
thiroughOut all Germany, and the, Ger-
man newspapers and periodicals that
reach in England, tell of the 'scheme
that is now 13eing disetisied in the
empire of preparing for another. war
after the present conflict is over.
•
Develop Militarism: ' ° •
Accerhizig to the •scheme outlined,
militarisin wilt be mete deeply reoted
than even it this.time, and a boy will
he trained to be a 'soldier kroin al-
most his very birth. ° As soon as a
hey enters 'school at • six years 9E age
inStruetion in military Matters will
begin,, and will form . an important
part of his studies. Drills will he
held in the open air, and Spartan .sirn-
plicity -mei 'discipline will prevail in
-his bringing, up. Ile -will be • put
through a seveie course of athletics
will be exrr.sed td all hinds of wea-
-him' and hardship, and phyeicaliy his
body will be hardened in order that
he may be phparecl to meet all the
which flooded its frost -touched sage •vicissitudes of a• campaign. . :
sparkling silver, from the pines' to the
brush, so that it rolled :in sheets of When the bey reaches his twelfth
year the &Mille.. will become ,still
cherry patch and beyond as far more strenuous:, and, several hours
as the eye could see'towards the ,still daily will -be devoted to military train-
shadohry bed of the Fraser. . ' 1 ing iez camp p especially selected by
The dawn had made all tlengs Plain, the Government.- This will continue
had -ezziphasized every outlioe; the il until his eighteenth , ytar, when he
„peace of- it called attention' to every . will be Coneitered ht to enter, the re -
least sound which might break the 1 gulae armh
holy Stillness of the Wak'ng hay, and 1 .
yet Rolt, 'listening in his 'burrow, 1 Army of Boys • '
could not hear so much as the break- I During the schools term from the
Mg of a twig, or see Wsign of -life in helfth to the eighteenth year the
the direction from which he had fled. : boys will constitute It big army by
(To he continued.)
' ' 1 themselves They will have 'their
, ... .......---„DEsE;
army corps, brigade's and regiments,
MACHINE'GUN hiTED;". I and they- will be commanded hy gen:.
• • ' I eralp, colonels, lieutenants, and ea.p-
Italian Lid Decorated as _Result of :tains :selected from the hays Whom
' Unique Adventure. , • e., I the hie general staff of German will
, t censi r best fitted to fill such posi.:-
Haw a mmhiirie gun was forced to thins, There Will he regular man -
desert the German tinny is recounted : obavres, and alzain battle, and notti-
year-old Italian volunteer in the Rua-.
in the story of the heroism of a 16:1 ,. c
in will: be -overlooked or left 'undone
to train these itoss to be .,,the : best
army -Constantine Zehollie-f;
sian
"soldiers the world has yet seee."
whose part as the leading figure in
1 For girls there • will • be training
the episode earned one of the two get.' I. along the same lines. Athletics ;Will
George creases he has wen. form' an important part Of it, and
•
Overhearing his commander 'eh" Spartan '. edhurrince and indifference
pressing a wish that emeseene "would , to pain and :suffering will be their
silence or capture" a gun which was ' training also In addition, they will
Motioned at troublesome Proximity • receive special instruction. in musing
to the Russiae trenchee, Zap-oili; aa ' thewounded, and will he trained to
his own ieitiative„, crawled en his 0,01.4, up strong and hearty • women,
the positron . of . the -gun, returned
stomach for, a hundred yaths; located :fit in Oath . way to 'be the wives of
soldiers
from the danger • zone 'aeh conferred I :The Military 'spirit , in Germany,
'his trench fellows, and crept: ler". . irtetead ef subsiding after-1MB War,
once more, this. time dragging
a 'e°" • %vitt he more and more 'encotiraged,
of stout 'rope. 'Iteachihg •the gun, he eed. pamphlets advocating these mea-
tiee one end around it Without 'being ; sures are. being widely histributed
distevered and again, reaelicd his "in i throughout the ermine. . • ' • ,
lilies. With the free end of the rope in
his. clutch. ' ,. - ' ,. - , - hh ,„ . es • -
Presently the Gei•Mans were aston- ; ' :Jiies.Experting umbrellas;
• •
ithed to plefered the gun didappearing •
The export trade in Japanese ums
toward • e . ussiareerenc ea, it; we 1
.--tireilas :r. rapidly ineneeleg: In re-
sticeepsfelhe dragged hielm their ,ects-, •
cent •yearethe experts, amounted in
peadione-o-railehereol-Germane -being ies
Wiled „ in ati effort to j)revent ,ite des :• yailltz,:to $8„500 000, Rohl this . yeah; tho
narwre.,, -.. .. ,. , • • . , .. sefigures • ere expected:, :to 7h -a .0t.eeedea;
, . . . L:,_.i... ...,:. i,.. i.; • . . ., :..11,1anufactinera in Japan aranoW over-'
••. , . - ,
.. .
. - i lielInie.d wIth orders learri-Chinae-Tedia
. All: in lit' worth haying., bee Itelleand other, eottritfies.ie the Sonth-Pite-
prige. • It intit be paid for in . effort. : ',fie heentise of the frilling' ;oft of ini..
and in.' tears; ' and; cart be °lied on .no i ports tvore Etighiedhand Enrope".gen-
cheaper t,eritis. ' ' . - I eraliy. '.
•
• ,•.
A; ,reee Iereeereption eon fen Have
. . e • • :,. , • • : '. • ,. ,
to ntrengtrine titelr.oycs no as te? be oporoll•
Pilled and lik,O at gonie..- -• ' 'the .troubio.• and etneniie of o:yer . getting-
. .."x;iittadella Po'., 111.D.Y;OD*.Obn.t. gliiatio-s? gil:igettrtti'reg: tvroVflbeiftitaillg lotliCs4r.ifIlif
rc.•:, you it vietirn or -eye strew or .etlier qo
Pentrnostatif•,V • f no,: .yott will . be, glad'
coo,W fitst seeerding•to Dr; 1..owis theta is and get A ,bottle ok Itoli;OntM, tilbeti. pro
sowing le Annplo .tulen. Ore, a the afe-§
to. striation: •• Go to WISP •,actiVec4rut Igor
'-one'lloia-Gato tabletin e troth Of A gla
' foiling eny tboy hovel . had. their „are r
041. lytype for gon.• fdanv -whose Oyell,reri of *titer AndAtileW to dissolve. ' With th
n • Otered• throligh the prioeiplo • of titlewon iliond hattra.tlie oycs. tiff:. to 'four 0140
, . 0?51.filltrot; .proadripmn...,otio,tridd, salts dolly.; Yon nhotild, flatlet) your .4eyes.:0114a
' . rEflt1 at 411. - . No10; 1 en
.. Oftt4 .tr,Ing it; `,1' %un-, ..alin_ent bit 4 uo pereaptibly right. frOtri t116.•stert and iti
. efolid notsee to
tlaynouttion will, guielily disappear, If yo r"
. tosh,oserstiting witeaut tiny glasses on eves aro bothering 'you, . even 4 littleto
ta a
" a.ly'nyca do. not water nee more, At hiph
eteeto saes then pow beforeit
•• they would pale dtead:tul/V: *now they. e . hue. . Miley eoteloisre 'blind inight havi
.s . . . , id •
.,;fin0.0.011.,tho tttnez: xi ulg,like a eeseea•; •fa, Door. saved. It they,their . led eared for eyo the: A 'lady .,who uned it -aly.S: ".Thm at
in Owe, " •• -
,
• meseheige... seemed-. 'hear •with 'ot. without Von AnDThet.,,o:onitafit, rt;iiktitt .0 *100,40 atom.
• oairt,1( but Aftor• • ming, this' pronoriptiol
xtr.t• ate *off 0 !Whiled
Irpoiva
141•$ Val outC•tod, Mord; ' .1344.000 . to* reitietotikatolo.
• , er thresh days overstbuie .seetne ,ohfontee. • tehif, tAtentutt•tolneekr
ectetta Odd ovIdatrolteadattdbo, tetn.'0 .tOnuftiOk
tall Or OM tend lint pi,int witted glansenc" tee4-h,110
o
4 gootontedlt 0 offdtosttloto elqoight fig teht to one
It" is ' bolld ottellitit'.'thotisando hes WWear leddleo ti•d•In toottrinspulaoortfuodthe 10'. IC ats 6
tatildfitf 'tali ftbio''' ditoor'fl tbooi in •s, r, i.1 s ..
bfltisfii fee ..asee y ,n. -1 e and to oti of 110.141 fa
. 10.40' tilefaria blaitttudeD ;note will bo able itrotottOOri ir. fool Aloy014122:0 Oh tiktttiorfottotood_og
.2t is seid,•;in 'Voiront# • lir Valat1 'Drill:Co. .
, . ... .
• ,., ,.• - - , , . . .
• ' •• \
••,, . • -
'. ' 4.,•
NO, 2 CANADIAN' OTATIONARY HOS ITAI. AT ESOULth(leik. •
. The picture Ohm a .vieve Of ibe mate. buildbig which was kfornletly a
echoer, now being nee& taidet an effieient Canadian chaff of doetere
VIZ O. nillitary ht4tit•Ittli. :It lees been In operation lamest Mite the beginning
et the war arid • bus rendered levaleable eervicee The hospital le under the
commend. of T; Clerk°, feeble:rite Of Toronto .- •, )
' • '
,
Dainty
i)1811;
Kidney;( --One ean
beans, ono fineiy cat onion, six sliced
eneurnber pickles* salt as • desired.
Pour over salad dressing of oil' le.
mon Juke and paprika; toss, and serve
on lettucerleavez, •
• Tomato and Bean Saelede-PeeL znedis
ereettieed," ripe; firm tellatztees; scoop
out seeds and part of pulp, salt and
invert. To one cup baked berme' add
one-half Op tomato pulp, one Anjou
chopped Ane, and. two stalks of celery,
chopped very tine,. 1Vbt With French
dreSSIngi. fill tomato cupseand ehill.
Benet Fillet Of Veal.-Rentove hone
fro*. fillet, which is thick piece -from
!upper; pert of leg, and fill ertvity with
highlh seasoned and Very moist stuff.
lug • Tie On skewer into round, shape.
Dredge with salt, .PepPer *and flour..
Put strips of. pork over top and halm
Allow one-half hour to pound. Colter,
with battered paper' to'heep meet freak
burning. Add water when hear hal,
browned and baste often.; •
'Cherry Bread:el-Fill deep earthen
pudding dials two-thirds full of cher,
wee blackberries or vein . apples.
Add. e little sugar, but enot __enough.
to Melce.very Mveet, and put just:
enough water to keep fruit from stick-
ing and grating or two of nutmeg.
Pat and pullihto shape piece of
bread dough just ready to knead into
loaf for cover for fruit. It should
be one-half .inch thick. Lay &tier
fruit and covet with soup plate or
another pudding dish that fits tightly.
Bathe or steam pudding with fire that
is not too quick ler at least oneJ101.14
When done, tern out on large" round
platter, fruit, On ten. Serve hot,.
with sugar and cream. Delicious:
Baked Cherry •Dumplings..-eSift te-
gethei one *hit flour, one-half tea-
spoon salt and one teaspoon baking
powder. 'Rub In one tablespoon short-
•ening. • Addsweet milk enough to
make soft 'dough. Roll out one-half
inch thick and cut into fonreinch quar-
ters. Fill each seputre with as many,
cherries as it will contain and sprinkle.
geuerously with auger. Fold edges
of humplingseeer enh place them in
floured pan. • Bake one-half hour and
serve with hard pauce, or cream and
sugar.;
Margaret's -Cake.-One cep sugar;
2 eggsel1h3 cup butter; le cup milk; 3
teaspeonfuls baking powder; pinch of
salt; efi teaspoonful powdered cinna-
mon; enough flour to; roll. ;, Cream
the butter and sugar and then add the
• -wed beaten eggs. with milk and the
• other ingredients, mixing in the flour
gradually until there is enough to en-
able you to rell•the mixture out about
3h -inch thick. . Have the . oven` very
hot, and Sprinkle .the cookies with
sugar •just as you are putting them in.
• Scotch .Shortbread. - Half -pound
flour; , 4 pouted butter; 2 mincee. su-
gar; rind of Se lemon; 1 tablespoon
rice flour; a few strips • of angelica.
Take out one tablespoonful of ,the floin
. and put in the riee flour instead,
then add the butter and the grated le-
mon rind, and work Into -a smooth
solid dough. Roll out thin and put'
• into triangular pieces. Pinch the
edges into a little ,up and down wave
prick all over the top with a forkand
put ,a small strip of angelica in the
Centre of each. Bake very gently for
,20 or 30 minutes, and let them cosi in.
the baking tin, '
Berry Sandwich.--Cloie white bread;
butter; powdered sugar; berries; le-
mon juice. To about 12 large berries
take a tablespoonful Of butter and an
equal quantity .of the sugar; cream
the butter and sugar well together and
put en ice to harden. Mash the straw-
berries and a tablespoonful of lemon
juice together and rub through a sieve.
,I31end •the fruit into the creamed but-
ter and sugar and put back oh the ice.
Cue the bread into very thin slices
and cut off the erusts. Spread even-
ly. with the mixture, and either put an-
other slice on top and Cut into sand-
wiches or roll up and tie with a white
eibbon. ' •
Braised Beed and Carrotses-Have
butcher cut nice, piece of, htjelset or
shoulder into suitable pieces for serv-
ing, rejecting su eriluolis fat. ; Meat
a little bacon f or drippings in.
Icettle, Usti 'meat in fat and sear it
quickly on all sides, Awe let it simmer'
until puicei that have been liberated
are absorbed again. Let ;the Meat
brushes; but theenet- let it womb.. .Sea-
son with grated onion, salt an dtieper,
there Pour Ott, enough hot water to
make nice brown gravy, almost cov-
ering .meet. Cover and let • simmer
about two hews, theni add scraped
eareets, sliced lengthwise, laying -them
on 'top.; :In about an hour everything
However, this de-,
should be tender.
pantie on age of beef.. • When serving
heap meets in centered dish thicken
gravy- with a little dissolved •floar,
Most of the moisture may he re -
Moved by shaking the currnutS in a
act14.114407rwealrlhtbke°714e ofo th; spread °0u5 et'
on a large dish to, dry. •
It is more economical to add pepper
to ouch dishes as stews at the last
minut- • It yeai seaF,ort therm at. first
Much of the aroma is lost in the pro-
cess of cooking,. and therefore more is
required.
'It is not always eeonerny ceoli
slehtlh' eePecially in the OfiJie of had
oots or lentils. These take so long to
cook that -if you are cooking on a
gas stove a great deal of gee is •ueed
• Haricots,. lentila arid split Peas, should
&Naha 114 left •to ' teak 'oVer. night in
mad Water fulli 'st small lump of drip-
ping • added to the salted water in
sesoletitche4.,,ththeeyinallboicloecodi 41.Th. allIsn19741Phatfo to
thit time. . •
7 ;If hliu want to economize in plate;
gush knife Powder try leibbing icnives
Of
forks and smile' with e soft ref( diP!
Ind in: potato water, • This removes
•toi stains And *arm soapy water and
a chainois leather, are. sufficient ' to
keep silver. as bright as fleet' be.
$ Paraffin is. an -excellent pubstitete
for Metal polish; peciple who have once
used It generally think it much better.
• Things to Remember. ,
The secret of a light. osnelet is to'
froth the eggs.- One egg Well beaten
is worth two not well beaten. s
When a' pudding is boiled in a
basin, it should 'fill the basin.
Roastinh meattannot be basted too
much or too ehtei.
-The pert Whichhis to be thimiost in
the dish should, when hoilieg be down -
most in the pan. ,
Salted ahd smoked meat should be
put into cold "water, brought slowly
to the boil, then shinnered.
Water boils when it , gallops; fat
-when it is BUIL
Puddings made with suet should he
StilirfilirleMniXkeethup is used, spring
.
with the salt. ,
Green vegetables should be boiled
fast, with the saucepan lid oft.
To leave bread or vegetables in
stock or soup turns theae -eatables
sour.
Root vegetablesshould be boiled
gently, with the lid' on the pan.
All vegetables,' excepting old pota-
to* should be pup into plenty *of
fast -boiling salted rater. •
The liquor lifted in boiling meat or
roots should never be thrown away,'
Soups and sauces may he made of it.
Broiled meat must be tailed often;
put the cut side to the fire. •
A handful of salt will often clear a
hie from , smoke fpr broiling.
When baking powlems has been used
there must be no delay in bakinh.
The bars of a gridiron should be
greased and . made hot before - being
Meat from which soup or gravy is- to
inaed should be put into coldwater.
If a pie or cake browns too quibkly
while baking, a sheet of paper should
be laid on the top. , '
Puddings should be plunged into
pienty of fast -boiling Water, and Isept
boiling hard tilt done:
, MUNICIPAL SANITATION. -
-
'Prosier -Facilities for Deritruction of
" • Refuse hhould be Previded,
• A garbage 'hdiimp" is a disgrace t�
any city: Or town. Of What advantage
Is it bo. remove. the numerous private
eubbielz-heapp he build, up a gigantic
connnenal rebbieh-heap? - Is the un-
eightlyiese or the dangerous filthiness
ni, any wise reduced by piling all the
refuse . into on e vast, festefing, dis-
ease:breeding mass?' , It may be some
advantage to those parte of the town
'remote from the dump, but only at
the expenee of some, other portion of
the city and it ie grossly 'unfair. No
true citizen from a high-class.resideth
tial district could feel satisfied if the
;cleanliness d'hieeparticular portion of
the town Were achieved by the. ubter
spoiling of some other portion. . Any
man who is proud of his eith would
feel as much -shame that theta should
be a filthy civic backyard as thatt his
ovni baekhard should be dirty.. The
. only. satisfactory- Method of removing
.refuse is to burn it in an incinerator
or, felling thet, to have it buried.
• Impressive Sight.
- hBliggins always has. 'an, air of in-
' d itytheys .a btouutt lhiemi.s"
one of those Pee-
ple who can get credit, fen making a
garden when they are .only digging
,
; hshing ;therms." • :
. " • :.
-a-da
The hospital issupported by means cif
The first chttage "hospital in ' Jan
. - , -supported 'hy a•-munleipality -was-
opened last week hie Beverley; Alta..
boil smooth and eent areued carrots.
''' :.•.hoine Wa-hs-a-ht:iivizai; , ' •-h:
By thiestime vie ate all of us inure'
-Or- jess .fainiliar--witli-advice on the
subject of economy and do not need
reminding- to pee up odhp and ends of
lefead in. puddings and to save vege-
table peeling -for etoch.• • ' •
eihtit ihrte -fife Many' little• ways. of
Saying' not generally known or apt to.
he regarded as toe triVial ie. matter. I
lhowevers nothing, is tom tzeirehortent
to comYl-. hi these daysi. arld,leireri Irk:,
theut c -f map' soolvadd usednehdphars.
.1•3.ixleti iosii. eiutrvp rci fe iotnig3, steohahtura!•yloyt .io.uti., w, c oriaskt ci. I.
ng- - . ,, • • " •
ilk puddizigh, for inthancehahould
I:f
'
ft.'le Moltedniakty it wastes iv
akt3 be 'cooked sloVily, because if
inil
evaPoration.The same "rule apPlies
to soups, which should always be gin
mored in a covered vessel. On the
-
.other. hand, if you areboiling bones
f.or stock tbey should be boiled frith
te extract the goOdzierle. ' . " -
After Waltzing currants for Cakes or
puddings they should not he/dried:too
quickly or they will lose some of -their
goodness6' The best plan is to 'Wash
a cittahtity at it tithe instead of wash.
ing just the imbiber you require for a
hettidulat dish.
Q•41.44'inktai
O.Y.-
•
144coaCabaciato
, favorite yee4 foit
tit 1 ir Pal
001:94340atrvououco 4;;Trio.45sr;50. tz
MAK CANAOhi. wlidoeoraa nottr4.":.
ioNno* hos math Wci; Do
not etpehinteh kaolin eothinti.
jou, so. $tooci,
ST CA
hest
.EY/,011,111I LT ,
TO1i01,11‘,,n0Nt
weemzei isotharet
essessseeh-
,car
•
From the Middle We;
sEriirgiori onamo ANti BR
TISH COLUMBIA.
°Marie' limn and Girle Are
Items. item. hrthithivincegt.0..
0:ivilhanlogitprranh.att -atlePteethe daYli ,. il
• ,rarnters' ' Elevator CeniParlY arin
letting more cOntra.e.ta hi VagarY% -
..74amwlapa,kiaeteofepthtstWistothd: Mti ilrallinllginclicoee t
'1.,ittJoihens130uoroitsh, and littl.e:daughter werd:
drowned in the Assiniboine River 4
i
Pte. Rerbert Maybank, of Veinnipeg
Ereipoio,rtweaderaAseicinginafateetriop. battle of g St;
Three hondred, delegates • attende 0
the final banquet of the Retailers
Convezhipis in Regina recently. •
d. *eWnta. Illy. itsto5tima'nr kinilnilePdeg; .fwehllOw 'le;
hurzied soldier, was exonerated by
coronet's jury. '
Winnipeg is no longer the he
quarters: for Musketry training eche
in the west. The final:Clarets bent
forth will be held in Ottawa.
The girl students of Mount R
liege; Calgary, presented "
,onderful Rose" and "The Man in
Moon" for the beriellb of soldiers' emli
feet!, ,
Winnipeg hag" Bemired a nurse who.I
will iniztruct the district nurses. 9
Manitoba in child hygiene and nos
health principles for use in the nuthei
campaign for ha germless Manitolette
Francis C. Locke, who recently en
bhe cable wires And dainaged talth
graph Instruments in the load relthf
ciffice of the British Government's end
-red cable routs funning from Austhill :
lia to Londozi,-Dng., was sentenced ah
Calgary to a year's imprisonment for •
the act. •
t
Mrs. Nellie' McClung, inan adhresg
before the people. of Vegreville, Alta.)
recently, said -she was proud to lieh
in a province - where women were
handed the . vote without, feen or !-
trouble. ' . ' .
'Seine Vancouver woman, 'whose
name is ' not known to ' the 'local,
autheriblep, will be the .possessor Of
$10,000 it she :Corresponds. with the
'solicitor of her brother, Michael Clits
ford, who died in New York recently*
at the age of 67 years.,
The followifig is a list of these wile
recently.. successfully: completed -ch
officer's training course in Winnipegl
A. H. Ritchiern, P. R. Bearek, II,' M.
McGibbon, R. V. Rounding, E. D. Coxs
worth,. C. H. Gordon,.F. 11. Sidney,
IL Bowen, Rete Geo. Riersterid: -
•
• . ,
- Mere "Appetizers. - ,
Dr. Wilfred Grenfell, the Labtado
.physieian, tells the following anzus
Ing story about one -of his trips
e komatik, or dog sled. It -*ugh
to 'be said &St of ell ethat Docte
Grenfell often has samples of coin
&eased eatables 'and, nonfreezableg
foods sent to him '
, • 4
He and hie, guide were.on the way
to -a :distant villagm
,boy
where a g,
hoteas reported to have "found hies
self in his stomach," which' Mea•ns
it
the semi-Chauceriandielect of Lahr
dor. that he was afflicted with irelig
%time The guide "cleft the split
(split thee wood); and prepared t
luncheen ,of steaming tea and pork
buns, one. . of the few natural fooda
' that really hoes"not freeze. •
"Where," h inchhied Dotter sGrenfellh
"are the eempressed-food "tablets ? hi
• gave you ti Month's supply this inhinh
"Oh," aesereted the guide lineage,
sively,'"I ate there after breakfast,";
, 0 ungrilh bit intohis pork bun.;
• If. They Don't Disagree:
\ 'It takeg. two to make a querrel."
"Yes, andvery often tt takes - a jury '
:to settle •
. The truly eller:it:able-mar! thinkiethe
beet he cap of ail tnen. He looks for,
their good poicits, e,sehentit their bade
hes.
'k\V *WO,NAMMAlt.it \"4',4x;%*% •
•
COnteln zureteld and thue heap the loather soft, protecting It against
hseethege. They etantierilieuid ead,paste In 6.06516 feria cied require
only lielf the effort for a brilliant, lasting Alms; Easy to use tee
all the fandhe--children end aheits. Shine your etioes M home end
keep them neat. ; 0. 641.1.Elt CO. 00 cethent.Lis
trft NAMObt4 CANADA
••"'".
•
liEEPYOUltSlio NEAT'
,kte
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