HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-09-21, Page 2•
-49
Hini nei Himself To
,
do Imre that stegfy Macaw:1g
,ter 'Eapatitnagoaa"'"allwaloncly
the frgaglomonto acplod•to tollaue
ttaillitla %dr grid 14�12. tam up. sole la
---
1"CiggaBrana" lo ItVit.21=OCliAOWdala:
rat.r4 wait go the
meat aollphata .c1 tahlo •
'rho rcelreabitairsow-
trek, ' LaPporis ag40
caoalcaa,_gati toll yea lot bow to =a it, in stagy rtovalk
way, • Writ* for a Pau to Por„taraorral Ortico.
Patera overywherb hop Crown. Brand" 10,49, 10 gaa
9Q moil um -ami ppanci gaga Tarp.
Pru K. CANADA STARCH �O • LIMITED
georreicat, ergiotripa, ariaeryono, roar wituarg,
AliMers. ni",titv White' Ckirok:urrip,Oglisott's:Corrs
222 • *. *Ward+. Paid "Sitkr Mon" Viteatl Sarre,
•
rEl
3 ,•31.•
TIIROI5Gli
'•;.• •
.1••••••••••••*.s.,
never molar
shade • infliebed Ly JaaPer
'When be ter4 her *bat tberimarrialte.
as ate bad Male alliattea
r4lcr.ts 0 get the ebEl Caef tlua
house. • Ni the EttP.0 earl! was
oyesore and an er,..a.liabraz
her; toped* at 4074.--V44.401Y YORKSHIRE OFFJP,E11.
.iguornnt that she hvoW,X Was the, rito,,;$
ther-iM aways worrylPg her 0.ster
'aut the' re=on of IussWes presem-;e.
Aceordiniyx when Adn,, l'+*r ireaaaP •qf
har.linprOved. .911003 ad hi
ary, mOved away from ftePlieraeb
lodgings intohouse ot her own,
she -PIM The 401 over to the garra of
her rireatier,. North% Vbif Mr. W oe huterag, lawyer. %toy entered ea
ter, and heel always pad regalar yfer o Present otreusive in the Writ of
lir board ami keep. geed eportmen. Fra their Point Of
.1vir. Wafer did net object ta th141 view the pmb. Is a "Oreat, do," "Au
44dicon o bio, income, than& lag eat Dancistindya steW as ever 4.e.awo," "SginO
worked oceelonallyfor the picture f.FL . Rt utuit,.,wor
„04.0; and it was' on one of their lobscecf
.that he Caine 'Within the reach of ra Yorke* battargrZ viad tee4Caforne4
Jasper Vermont,
. One day he had.heen 'sent to play athaed vliisa7lrievartsto dtkaYtSdeotor °sfariocertaii;n1rk
d
the, usual proceedings- on Mr. George enamel:cents. He landed at, Southantp.
Harker! prestiming, natarallY enough; thee nLittrpneo
aa atrwtellrcigraldsi
e• hYumhattbsiongoil.t
that'bemg wznoneyienderho was rich,
This. is•liouerhe sees Mu opn particular
a
faonirld hmeaaartinergspat e had. a liking,- fog.'
• hit of *
• • "There's no doubt it's a great show.
• Johann "%lifer itaW Me, Harker, arlfl There's bound, to 'be Ups an deviree,
netWitlIstandieg the eb4eFe3 'widen of goarae, /rand in some of the Beebe
I time brings to us all, and the entire regiments there's good deal of snap
transfermation of name and surround- left: ' But, on the whole, I till* We've
itigs, recognised him as the father of gat 'em ; I dont fancy they'll
thecetrt
itelivihom he, bad once: so cruelly. ever get the upper hand again. I don't
de
N • , want to brag about our chaps., but tb,ey
The old man neverhaving heard theitseeune.rittiosnlitcao:turerie :',r.h171Y tattP°0"
name of Luey'e.betrayer-for she had t eke theth. throw their
ey're real sports-
,
'purposely kept , it from hini-knew betide up and .„cry 'mercy !'-they real -
'nothing. ((his visitor, and eventually ty don't knew how It's done.
Purchaoed -the picture, after .consuIt-
TUX. 40‘NRPOTR TOLD BY A
Thle. 'German Dliegait Deggrated
..1Aftth Most i..uxorgup
Taste.
'Oer wenaded, soldleth leaVe
qtrer to' the seeker .after tru*e sieom
" Or The Sunlight. of LOve,:.
' CHAPTER INT.-4Oent't1),.
When they had all ghneeethe boa
•Steed looking • at the emptycliaira.
' They 0.eargal, AS it were, typical of
the Weary, empty thours oe his life,
' ikna for the first time a wholesome
dieted° :of it all Swept over him.
' Day in, day out, an, everlastingwhirl
e -wherein. he and his companions
• turned night into day and spent their
lives, in a hollow round of gaiety, in
Whieh agenda', card, weinen and wine;
• were the 'chief features,. And Mt the
mall What would he the end?.
Then he shook himself from his
unaccustomed 'reverie; Adrien • Leroy,
the popular idol of fashionable society,
WO not given long to introspection.
•' "What next?" he flaked himself.
• It was Norgate Who answered the
Unspoken ritteri, by .announeing that
the motor was at the door..
'As Atirien descended -the stairs,
•
Jasper Vermont entered the hall bolo*
• • '
•
• "Ah, just in tine!" he-.. said with
..hiS arierible smile, ."You're Off: ,to
the' Park, I stippoee?" •
"I don't know. ' Yet" returned Ad-
:----rien-eVitaivehri---:"What-d0-ared thin
of the meter VI! ••
'Worthy even oI Adrien Leroy,"
• replied Jasper, with the faintest sus-
picion„a.;enaer; Which, however,
. passed unperceived by his friend; "By
; the way,” he'continued, as they walk-
• ed to the deer together, "I have knit
left- Ada in tears, poor 'girl; repent -
ma,
and won the heart of, a simple
mantel named • Lucy Goodwin,
Lucy believed, her lover to be e`NrY-
thhig that Wait good; and trusted him
even to the extent of her betrayal; so
that, under sonic pretence, young
Wil-
fer woe able to entice the girl to Can-
terbury, where, a few weeks later, he
deserted. her.
She wise the only daughter of a
widower, a clerk in the employ Of a
country hank, who broken-liearted at
his daughter's rain, threw an his
sitention, changed his name to that of
George. Harker, and fled to London
with his beloved child. Here. he
found 16 extremely defficult to obtain
work. His savings soon evaporated,
and else! further trouble was in store
for him; for one afternoon a mouth -
faced gentleman appeared at their
quiet lodgings., This was none other;
than Jasper Vermont, who in a long
private, interview with the unhappy
Harker informed him that he had
heard of LuOy'S'esgapade, and threat-
ened to proclaim her Shaine, if Mr.
Harker failed to...comply with a pro,
Position"he was aboat to make to him.
neinestosh , e -e ggeeted-Nvite-rbeut--of---hardt drinking, went --home,
one entirely abhorrent, to the ex -bank and it Wee. in his drunken frenzy. that
he had !truck Jessica. She, bruised
and frightened, fled. into the streets;
where Adrien Leroy Leroy found her.
Left: to himself -for his wife was
The result of this ;interview was away for a day or two -Mr. Wilfer
that, a month. or two later, a newr' fell into a deep slumber, in 'Which he
meney-lending .firm sprang up in a remained for the reit of the evening.
, . The Reef Went:05. • • .'
ing with 'Jasper ,who discovered the '-'I.t was as -we climbed out over. their
imposition at a Mance, but saw in the parades, %making for their second line,
pastor a possible new tool. . tliat 1 got my leg punetured. But it
Ile instructed Harker to obtain% A rildn't hurt a bit, and I went right on.
written guarantee of the genuineness Our chaps werein whooping fine term.
of the 'picture, anyl Wilfer„ beingdmit. And then, only a few yards further,
intoxicated at the time, for once fors, came that confounded sharp that
messed up my thigh; killed my. second.
got his usual caution, and gave the
sergeant, and wounded two or three
required pledge. With that hi his more, My platoon sergeant- wanted to
possession, Jasper Vermont had Wit; e'''-cay With me, but of course I wouldn't
ter in his power, and only left lair une have that. What he realiy wanted was
disturbed because he saw no present to get on: You get' on, an' give 'em
opportunity of using %lin. hell!' k told him And on he went with
N But when he wanted' him he knew the platoon. . •
that he had .only to exert the author= "I was in a 'bit of a smell shell hole.
ity; which the warrant •gave him and However, after a bit I Wriggled back
; • to that Boche front -line and crossed
Johann Wilfer would be his obedient it into a shallow' sap. • I was resting
aervant, as many better men were al- there when; if y,ou'll believe me, I saw
ready. , . a Boehe officer come climbing cau-
• The' picture he intendedihrough tiously up oue,of a big du -gut we'd
Mr. 'Harker -..-to compel one of the put six bombs In. Ile wae. a captain.
firm's wealthy clients to take as part He had a bomb in one hand and a rifle
of a loan, a well-known trick of the and bayonet in the other; and he was
worst class of money -lenders. •peering first one way' and then the
other like a burglar 'Oh vou beauty!'
Quite unconscious of the Bard that -
if . I thotight. And Just then he snuggled
S MOMIMPORTANI IT
IN YOUR'GROCERY ONE
P‘moNiStie THAT YOU. GET IT
COSTS 1,10-ZIORE, THAN Ira
itt!! 119114114Afirif
•
11 •
GIVE SHIELDS
'.• '
• Dainty Dishes.
' Corn Fritters. -To one cupfol fine-
ly chopped. canzied.Coth aild one egg
well: beaten, with one-fourth; cupful
Boar end salt and pepper, ..DrOp. laY
small spooaule in a tot, well-greksed
oyster.
blazer, Brown on one side, turn an
brown on the . other. The frittere
should be about -the size of Ante
,• Rice With. Tematoes.-Wash a cap.
of•,,riee and boll it: Take Seven Or
eight good-sized tomatoes, boil 'and
strain azel season With a little pelt
and allspice. • Take a, baking dish and
put in -alternate layers of tomato and
rice, finishing off:with a layer of toma-,
to covered up with grated •bread-
• crumbs. moistened with malted butter.
Bake .in a moderate oven for a good
half-hour.
• Lightning Omelette. -;.-Butter a bak-
ing dish put in the lAttom slices of
stale bread (brown bread is better
than white it dipped in milk) Put on
a layer of •thin slices of •. Bruyere
Olieete. . Take two eggs, beat up to a
froth, add salt ai•fi pepper. Pour inr
gredients• into a baking'dish on top
of the bread and cheese. 'Put into a
hob even until it: is brovined on tem.
Serve hot. .
Codfish with Egg Sauce. -Take one
Pound of salt codfish, ,Boil and re-
move the skin and bones. Fry light-.
hung. over him, Mr. Wi er, after a ly in butter, adding chopped -up pers-
down against a gap in their parada; ley, salt and pepper. Stir about con-
-Mak Wall of a trench) near the dug- sten* and add from time to time, a
out anebedded his rifle comfortably little boiling water until the fish is
line.
for. firing -at' our chaps in his second -
• - • thoroughly cooked. :Then beat upthe
. , Four Officers Sniped. yolks of two eggs and Cook for afew
minutes More. Squeeze oii. some'
lemon juice, and serve.
. If you never baked any peaches, try
this: • Wash some fine ripe peaches,
but de not, pare them. Piece in a
deep baking. dish, sprinkle generous-
ly with light broWn sugar, nearly dar-
er With •cold 'water .and bake in' a Slow
sooner done that than my next target even Until tender. . Baste frequently,.
bobs up -a lleanenant. I got liim while replenish the water if necessary, and
he was looting at his captain;
aimed for his shoulder blades, but the ._ it '
I serve with cream either • plain of
"And when a, private came up, with
got him ,whippe . . . , . .
Soda; and one teaspoonful of treacle.
'old gub. , kicked: a bit and 1
0,1.00, the head. .Seemed I mightes For. molasses oven- peones ru oz.
ur,
well be1-a grouse butt, and nothing, of butter or lard into 3,fi lb.
less than officers for, targets, Mind add two tablespoonfuls of so sow,
you. Well, to mai it short, two more: one teaspoonful -of ground ginger and
'lieutenants came up from that same cinnamon, half a teaspoonful of cream
dug -out making in all three.lieutenants .-2.
u.., 'tartar, one...teasP004111 of baking
apidatecl 'shops and houses with bal.. and one captain, and I got ''era all.
hand, and t i
he fear of God in his white rfic'sit•
with. rt• little batter; inilk;arot too.
these are very insecure, and locik ' as never a weapon of any sett in hic Mir.
if they might at any time .fall: into.Bake in ,amod,erate.oyen 15
the riier beneath.. ' '. ' • • face 'You re. a I3oche,!. I thought. minutes_. They axe lovely when keit.
Timber luis always, been largely: !probably:a batman (seryant),..bot cer- a• day or two in a tin. • - .
„ tainly a Bache; . and you ought to be Mutton With Currant Jelly Sauce, -
used dor. building .bridges, and the shot, but you've got nothing in your Brown two ;tablespoonful's butter, add•
earliest one of this kind on record is 'silly hands: it was too much like a three tablespoonfuls flour Mixed with
one-fourth teaspoonful salt ,and one-
eightli teaspoonful paprika. When
well' browned pour on . gradually 'one.
cupful currant jelly and six Slices -of
clerk; but with naoney running short,
and the thought of his daughter's
Misery should her secret be revealed.,
•whit could the father do but 'submit?
HMO followed eloselY en'repletion. She narrow street in the City, tinier the ' (To be conthined).
. - VOWS fieleinnlY to refrainfrom"ankina title of Harker's Ltd., and none of the, , , •-..-:—.------,---
‘ ' tutd Patchotili for the beim°, and ' numerous clients Who patronized it ,
:liege for the return of SOME. ST,4"t" ANGE'BRIDGES. `, ••
YOUr favor."‘ . ever recegni 4.-e that the manager, Mr:
• Leroy smiled gravely at his 'corn Harker, was s caking the literal truth
Panion's fliPpant tones. -, . .; when he reatedly asserted his own' One o em, in. a
f Th . • Britain,Coe Bach
-
"You make an eloquent advocate; itebetehee id'*the huffiness. Everyone. - ., .to the Ninth Century.
. but thews little need ibe pity in her: ,believed the story .to be a fictitious • tPrObably no town in the world has
. Case' her 'tastes are natural ' to her one, invented to assist hire in' his ex-.
class. I was to blame for not realist: tortions. , such strange 'bridges its-Srinagar;the
Capital Of Cashinir, in ,India. .' The city
' I'm it before, butihe'll be well eet•up Time passed on, and DacY's Pretty is Vent. ee the hAid.ss a the River.
for tliti flattire," he said, arid forthwith face: and modest Ways, Perhaps . her •Jhelinn, which is erostied . by many
dierniseed the subjectffrom his miniL very' sadness, which 'clung, to her. in wOoden,bridges lined yvith old and dil-
1 never-ending reniors.e„ caught bhe
heart .,of a simple-minded man, one
John •Ashford. , He 'was, a flourishing
grocer In ,a village on the banks of the
Thames, and was then -staying. in
London: on a visit.: After a hard
gtruggle with, herself the peter girl re: -
the course, I should rpm; let alone the ti.iiiied his love, and ventured to be -
last. rise, ' ..NOthing can touch the dome his wife' '. - ' • ;
- roan.. If I weren't ateggar, rd 1 Witter, from enquires Made by Mr.
C"°r1(41T.001°.0! bitOt *itlituineas." Harker, was suppesed to . be dead..
' "Do it for ,ine," said Leroy careless, None, . she thought; knew . her secret
tie , hc'. climbed into the Waiting except bartether, for Lucy believed
. Daintier. Which was the latest pur- that 'Vermont had einPloyed kr. Hail,.
I
chase. . -. . - ..oat of friendship •and sYntpathy;
• • 4That, another thoasand?"' asked and did not knot* oplil long after .her
•' Jasper altruist eagerly. •. '. :marriage' that she, and, therefore ter
• 'TWA J,Lyau like,_!•said-tiri-f-riend, husband; were in his poWor...- So she
OS the chauffeur started the ear; and Ventured to grasp .the happine.ss held
with a ensile. to Verrnent he took his out to her, . thus strengthening the
chain which bound her father and her-
self*.in. slavery to '' Itisiter Vent:Joint's
will,. , For if they feared disclosure
before, how melt mOre did they dread
it now, when Lucy was married to a
man who pride hiniserf upon his good
name and untarnished respectability!
°Johann Willer, hoWever,. was not
queried Mr. Vomit -Mt • . . dead, nor had he left London. He had
become a niember• o , .a gang of in-,
•genious raseels, wholived by imitat-
ing the less known .goins of the old.
masters,. and Naming them off on the
credulous public and wrolthy- vollecb-
ors aft ,gennine: The•impostures were
very eleverly nitinipulated; and quite
a little syetem was -instituted tio
brinethein to perfection. Mr. •Wil-
fer's part a the undertaking wes
"toning"; that is, giving to the ;Mita --
tons e n ce , 4 i f istiriessrand,dis
' Norgate, removingthe folding ,catel. coloration huppesed to be produced by
_itiblei.."what with bringingin street ago. ,
vienchea at one o'Cloeh in the morning; He did tory well at this" business,, so
• and. they 'muntn't be: dieturbed, if you Weil, indeed, that te took a house!in
please.' • . •. , • . , Cracknell Court; Soho, and if he c'auld
. jasper Yernanii Was instantly ..'0,3, have' restraine illiiinself • from the
• • tbe olert, He was not above eacour. • drinklog, of lyer end .spirittehe wopld.
Wring a servant to 'gossip, and, al- 'have lYerell . in .'eoreter-ttagg eireem-
' though ;Norgate-wan-nof giveir th,--eiha:-1- onbaliceg*- " • ' ' ;
in :thin :direction as a role, upon the \ Thia -perpetual intoxication , eventu-
.....,..._
--ii-iireaelit o°&.iiiiiion him grievrince Ott, ., iltnaniteltritrarli-utintr•Vitr-Wilferia-
:hetteriott1yrivand:Vermontatia-a0on--!-eouritentince,- -and .corvverted -his face
• in poratesaiim of such Alight facto as Into a earlcature-with i'ts Mottled
akin and bleary eyes -of . the • good,
looks :which had ,Won Lucy Geodwine
ear
. • aoarian Venter.; hatileata aflepted had ale& degerierstPd an w.011"41ne"ght:
. 1441
father, Was a Gcrrman by birth, and leo". • All true0 'flit• Gerry* .noe'nt
(*.son. of an Innkeeper in one of the had been eareftilly obliteralyeil,- in or.:
tiny village§ on the WWI of the Rhine, . der:that no , teispielon ehonid be Arens.
In hitt youth he had ettalled an an art- ed• whop Ceiling a faked picture. Ile
. attident at Munich; but, flinally, by played the part of n Cockney to fro.
tie Idle and diatiolute hehavior,.so an- (106tIS' and so well, that that parti-
gered the,antliaritiea that he had been - miler adroit Scented, air it were, to
'compelled • be return home. Virineof be his mother tongue . .
therurel life there, be finally obtained ' . An the yeare went, by even the gang
from hitt parent; etifficient money t� heehaw tired of hie habitual 'Mortea-
. conte to London to Uy hie fortune. tion, And WY, neeanietatIly gave him
• titre he Seen oltbained,' nom Work enmployment, ,tto that he tr,irned hie
'front the smaller art dealers, 'Which ,atiiention to neenery . painting foe the
. enabled him to livit in compttrative stage, In thin way, when engnged at
--,40111torti PI I lied it not heett for hie the Itocklywhatn Theatre, • he met
. . unreliability, end his loVo of drielt ho Martha Pelthatn, Adit, lestrten dress-
ininht have risen to be a gothi artist; er, stiel by meson; of homiting or hla
A • Wiltee wan alttruktonle. yonng folweelth finny persuaded her to marry
-Ite*,, hi them dayri, and while on Otto hitt, It Watt In that manner net
•4 his Wandorkog tout% in 'Kent he met Seeelea hell 'Oat vane under hie otony.
, .
• But, Jasper, what of this, chestnut
entered for the obripplechaud?"
Vermont's dark, restless eyes drop-
ped for a moment; then he said 1ight-
1Y: •
"Do • you mean that Yorkshire
scam? Oh, he is alright! Can'6 run
Vermont stood looking after him,
his gaze almost evil in its fixity; then
• he turned end passed pp the stairs. In
the dining -room . he found Norgate,
clearing away the cards and glasses,,;
• in no very amiable limner.
. "Has there been a luncheon party?"
"Yes,• sir," answered .Norgate.. ag-
grievedly; •.'Mr; Shelton,' Lord Stan-
• . don and lVIr..paichorn.". ••
"And . hridge murrynired •
Vermont inquiringly.,
"Yds, sir; and from whnt „I hoard,•
I believe Mr. Leroy lost." .•
"Ah," commented the other softly,
"I fear.. Mr, 'Leroy ;always (loco lose,
doesn't he?" ,
"Ile's triode me lose my time t� -day•
xvith hill fads and fancies," grumbled
• Could be gleaned.
'
"'You canet I was Mad 1 had my
rifle andplenty of ammunition. I. -be-
lieve in the plod old' service rifle.
Never did bother 'with revolvers and
things.. So I got a beautiful bead on
this ehriii,,and a second later he was-
-1 wonder where' dead Boehes go !'
, charged my breech again, and no
eohies and lattice windows. Some of
that which 'Julius Caesar made across 1 sitting bird,. YOU know. .Couldn't man -
the Rhine, and Which he describes in age it. Here"'I shouted at hiin. And
his "Commentaries?. •, • , ' do yeti know, he, fell just as if ro shot
. The roofed -Kapellbruelie, at Lu- hint -
"I tried' hard to remember some
derne, is one of the interesting. It
crosses the Riyer Reuss diagonally, :GerMan. Well, I managed to Camber cold cooked mutton. When meat is
back to that trench . and Poke the heated adda little.more.salt an pep -
and has e hundred, and twelve trian- Boche with the butt of my rifle till he per. '. .
vial' paintings hepeeth the; roof; re- fauna himself a little aact, stood. ,up. . •
eording the heroic deeps of the Old 1 meant to see that blessed dug out Eggs A la Creole three table-
Switzers and the' -, inifferirige of their . Perhaps they've got their bioclniilg spoonfuls batter With one tahie§poon-
patron saints) :. In the midst of - the genenal staff there, I theught. .! ful finely'ehoPped onion for three iiili-r.
Kapellbritehe •stheale an octagonal , ;-, "Dieter Dugout" , utes. Add one ° and three fourths
tell him in Ger- cupfuls tomatoes* drained from the
tower, 'which formed part of the for- •."i had to get the Boche's help; but
Rally, I made :liquor. Cook eight minutes: Put in
tifications ' of the tam in the thir- 'coiddn't think host. to
teenth century. The bridge was built Mde wliat I:wanted. Pi one tablespoonful capers, one-fourth
in •1333. . •. - . . ' . •, him understand. .'Look here, obsty,, teaspoonful salt, a few grain of cay-
I id' 'lel Ille sehen dieser blooming enne ead five eggs beaten• slightly.
• One a the 'cufious and ancient
bridges in Europe is that at Croyiand,
in Lincolnshire, which is supposed to
date from the '<ninth • century. No
road now p.asses. ever and no water
under it. It consists �f three pointe
'about, you know, by :our six bonib • •
arches, whieh meet in the centre; and But right at the back of -the fowe:i two eggs, one' cup sugar,. juice and
the• Ascent is so.steep that only foot corner• there was a sharn tvvist to rind of one lemon, one4i.alf cup cocoa=
passengers can go over it. , Upon the
bridge. is a seated figure in stone of a
robed •Saxon king. ..
- -
sa
• dug -out. it theta' • Then I sahl,
•Donn•erwetter,f.' and grinned at .hlin
to show there was no 111,feeling, and.
he managed to make connection.. •
-.Chat 'dug -out wati' a 1134. knocked
•
Ceok until of a creamery. consistency.
Stir constantly and scrape froin bot-
tom of, the plan. • . •
• Lemon Cocoanut Pie. -One clip milk
000 leap!ng tablespoonful carnstarch,
.. .. •add
' 'the right . and. a ..door with broken hut: •Heat milk in double - oi ,,
mass panela;•• takee from a firm -house cornstarch dissolved: in cold water and •
by the look , of ,it. ' Through that we stir until smooth, add yolks- beat', ,
4.4:. . ., , , left, down four steps, and into a re -.: en. with Auger iinel leniqn. Add elicoa- ‘.
went along along a 'passage,-aurned to the
gular boudoir: Deg -out ! Why, there nut Inst. -Cook .fiye .minutes and pout
, -WANT A ..11,.,ASTING4 -PEACE; : . was ti-TurIceY carpet on the floor and ,siiito...„„,..0 and add two tablespoons isu-
711-baked iplecruct., Beat whites
.1. beautiful - tapestry .. curtains . to the .1 .
.
+tar Spread- on .top of filling and
But liNienitai 8avaitta Insist ' an In- beaks.... ,Never. saw anything like it. - ' • - ' . •
otte., ei...... pontimw; _. 4There utv.vet7rutoo
ld a
efe three .easheasof beer, brown ,in •oven- .
'
,•
Headed. by Professor von Wilamo- myself right qway. "Therti-wtraii-about :--- - • •
-77"---7-11sefulf-Binte
• ;
witz-Mollendorff; present., rector of the a .hundred .eggs ; . two eut hams, pate
University Of Berlin, a group of Ger-de foie gras in, little jars, sausages, '. Clean white enamel furniture with
.
severel boxes of cigars, - a eatto of .
• hies of etikes and chocolate. .. There •
asd los.turpentine . .and it will keep' the gloss.
Bath sponges should be hung out
•, ''
• .
men Savant', including Professors von ' a gramophone,
Glerke, .gahl,. Eduard Meyer, . Sch.ae:. `clianlIniann•.
1 Were. an electric hell, a stitart typo. in hot .sunshine as often as possible.
fer,and Adolf 'Wagner,:issued' a; maid":
in _round a lot, of ribbons and things froin When making sponge .oaked in pat- .
festo. on the.Accoed anniversary of the • maw.. .,
and in one of., the bunks I
"beginning ef-.7the -War, „reeding, . ty this •see, that the oven is very riot.
part, as fefiews: . _•- '• . • -iad1eTrdBe2 and a si.e. air .lat 01 ti---34--Mitc'ereani-cheeSe-with--Chili---pailee
"We diii.not take the eword in • our'glovee. and -serve 45 lettuce salad for a relish.••
. ..
' A---fri - . 01-40 . e8e, ilo3y..___•, , Pick-a-BaCk •ori the, Han. . . Let beebri otand in. cold .water after
that -We have had te'draw''It; We Will i'llileiliii--. despittelettse-ond..411.0e boiling and they will skin...easily..
.not, catteot,, and must not, put it bark- ledsti papers on 'Ile tablevand got the, . 'If a any rent is .14(1* -,(1 to tomato
inthe Scabbard ithout having
,,ab..• batmen to lieht me .bacic again to difr.s.-aui.) it will give it a delightful ilaVor.
. :W
Mined a ;peace Which bur enrrales else 140'1. Thar" wilan't a; livtag aoal.' to. To clean rusty knitbing; needle's. rub
: .}....bc.,..teinvolko-40: ki,„p. • ititt this. lei. roUlid 113, tthe trench,_eot• LI with..kerosene And polirh with pumice.
peace cannot be won without the in.4 , gltglialy .iia dc:spicin..ar. ineitaiam.e" am Some ' deple put ii-sinall bag of
- • • . , o-. ny. t e. 5.1Ute
erease. of our pliwer and without the: ( w ill , 'Vine. ,ns iC e t e piano 0itlTrd1mrlre.
. . . -
eXtension a the area; in which our 5 : "lin made (lake a good Job or perry- away, .
. .
will .will decideover war and Pellet!, Ing me till We got cleat' .te .the old. sap ,‘ . . Shoes should be well -sunned and '
For this we Mast have Secure pledges Nye need to can %limners', because of aieed,. and Several .pairs: aheuld. bo
and real guaranteett:"' .. Ito high scent, on our own frOlit. And • kept {II use.
CoMmonting, on the manif esti), .. the there he got a. chance, bullet through. in cleaning painted Woodwork it Is
Vienna Arbeiter-,Seitting, • it Socialist hie. lett Irsteeritthet a ..earrow shave. bettor to uee a strong kerorictiae,wa-
for my OWYL leg -and Mainly critnipled
ter then any kind of Soap. .
organ, remarks': . up like paper. Be watsn't really
'Milk will keep sweet longer, if it is,
"All these' profeesora may he qiiite
cepable wanes in ' their oWn' speciol .m1°•tint'llit°1104r of ttrhoaitibbleallidrriging . him, put 'into a stone Jar.. that has been .
"Iflow old are.yeu /4 ' ..., • -... 7:.
subject:4, but this talk of their3
injurieue and foolish talk.P. ;
"PM •going to be married ..re'it.'"
• ' An „014 naehaiet. : • . • ••• , had another bullet • 'le lila ahouidav) 'toe hands. thorotighlY, wftli • soap and.
• i..s, . ohlitt: Idree. :In. onew, tilny.b.otaltriogli,i0 .bitoolft:i. eime.ettlitel; thoroughly cooled.on...tii, aft. it wi.lbir'iliti:th 01
• aild'wnelAng Illn" 1410" t°511' '. Th°° alloW it to ,dry. The polish Will then
cover at last, though hY1. thet time lie
1 war all rigift,- and .130 *Ile tile hat -
empty . Nat then, But I got ilIM int° bewtten 0`0•Iiiihi•no the • sto• vo,..firsit, vat)
When milking salt flub, All a Mega
. "Eighteen." • • '. ' '
.Visaivel with tvater, place Homo
1 irne,,a • no 1 don't . !mete
"You will tni‘prele perrple.''
Antall atitice in the bottom, mai opitthis
,
, Patienee and :laird work are the
veant. my Natal/nor cluorei will say." . patentee of -
•
ley the fish,' akin side uppermost.
The good housekeeper ia the one
who keeps her house in perfect cop-,
416,a all the tinie instead of having
a wild hoaseeleaning over. little
•
To wrist china' silk waists utiehlite-
Warr soap -suds. Then rinse in two
gool waters and roll in, a Turkish •
towel for • two hours before ironing,'
• •For L dainty, unfermented punch,
take. the juiee of three leinons, Juice
of one orange, One pirit of grape Mee,
one quart of water, one cup of sugar
If you are mixing a pudding or calte
with a wooden spoon beat the mixbure
,with the back of. the spoon. It is far
eerier arid becomes beautifully light
in half the time. ' • ,
In winter time, when apples have
lost muck of their acidity', if a little
salt it sprinkled over the apples be-
fore the crust is put on, it will great-
ly improve the flavor of the pie.
Graham 'gems are nfade virith two
cups of 'graham flour, one tablespoon-
ful of lard, two tablespoonfuls of su-
gar, two -teaspoonfuls of baking -pow-
der and salt. Mix stiff with milk.
• If you desire to remove the 'skin of
• peppers, drop them into boiling water
and simmer for five minutes, or scour-
ing them slightly and placing on the
broiler over hot coals a few minutes
will loosen the skin.
Great care should be taken in handl
ing fruits and vegetables. Where
they have a natural, protective cov-
ering, it should not be broken. Tlien,
to secure the best result, all vege-
tables, .except dried peas and beans,
should be put on bo cook in boiling
water, and the water made to boil
again as soon as possible after vege-
tables have been. added. Careful
washing of •111 vegetables is anothet
iinportant item., And all green
vegetables ,roots and tubers.should be
crisp and firm when put on to cook.
PASSING OF, HANSOM CABS:
. . ,
London's Once Popular Vehtele Was
Patented In 183C
The hansom cab has had but.a short
life; says • the . London Chronicle.
Efghty-one years Itgo-oli Dec. .23,
1834=Joileph AlOyaluii Hansom, it
well-known architect, designer of the
Birmingham Town Hall • and the
founder of the. Builder newspaper,
took out the patent for the cab to
'which his name Was gnven. He after -
Ward sold his rights for $10,000. but
-the money. was never- paid. In 1881 -
the year preceding klansom's death -L-;
there were no fewer than 9,652 licen-
sed haneoras in London, and •t� -day
the vehicle is seldom seen, .
• There is one soca. in London en
which,' by the provisions of a tpeeial
Act Of Parliament, •4 tah-stand. may
net be apPointed., "kinder - the Act of
George IlL, e. 1:34 s. 3,5; the inhabitants
of Bloontsbury square 'obtained powers
to prevent any such stand being erect-
ed near their dwellings. "r
•
-•
A Careful Witness.
•• During a recent • trial it •became
necessary to take the testintony
curiously reserved witness. • •,
"What' do you do ?" asked the law-
yer having himunder examination...,
"I -am very well," was the prompt
butuneipected answer;
"I am not asking as to Your health.
I want to _know What you do.
• "I Work."
• "Where do you Work ?" •
""In a factory, 7 "
"May I venture to inquire :what you
inakeln the factory V•
-
"Yolk want to know *hat I make in
the factory; that tight ?"
• "Precisely. - Answer: without further
eircumlecution. Tell the . court what
. •
you make. • •• .
"I niake $10 a week." •
•
TO SOLDIERS
,--••••••m•••••.•
6
TI1IN STEEL WILL STOP A
• VOLNT.JILANit 1111.3,1413fi.
•
Sir Conan 1loyle4rgues That Attack
41•566.60
Wield(' Be Put. oo Level-
• . With Defence. '
• Sir Arthur 00nOn Dayle, the fam- ,
bus English atithor, writee the • fel:I--
lowing letter to the LontionIimee;
To the Editor'ef the Timee;
Sir, ---It Is a year now since Yott
were good enough to allow me to ex.
Moss some views ebout body armor
in your columns. Since then, so far
as I.knaw, nothing has been done, but ,
now wo have get so far thatthe Min -
later of, War admits that something
of the kind may seineday come
• along. To inc it seems the most im-• •
portant questioq of any, and I ear-
• neatly. hope that you will pse your
influence to keep it before the notice
of the authorities. . .
.Upon July 1 several of our.
sions were stopped by mackine-gun ;
fire. Their losses were exceedingly
heavy, 'but hardly. 'any of them were
from high explosives. The distance
to traverse was only about 260 yards...
The problem, therefore, is to render
a body of mon reasonably immune to
bullets fired at that range. The ;
German first-line trenches were thin- „.
ly held, Co that once across the open
our infantry, would have had no dif-
ficulty whatever. • 4
Like That of a Roman Soldier.
• Now, sir, I venture to say that if
three intelligent' metal -workers 'wera.
put together in consultation they
would in a few days predate a shield
whie.h would take the greater part Of
those men safely across. We have
-
definite facts to go upon. ,A shield of
steel of 7-16 of an inch will stop a •
point-blank bullet- Far more will it
sten one which strikes it obliquely,
Suppose such a shield fashioned lik8 •
that of a Roman soldier, 2 feet broad,
and 3 feet, deep.' Admittedly it le
heavy --well over 30 lbe., in weight.,
• What 'then? The man has not far to
go, and he has the whole day before .
him. • A Mile in a day is good pro, • '
gress as modern . battles go. Whet
does it matter, then, if he •carnes a.
heavy, shield to cover hint?
Suppose -that the first lineof storm-
ers carried such shields.. Their .only
other armament, besides their hel-
mets, should be a bag of bombs: With
these they clear up the machine guns.
The second wave of attack with rifles
and possibly' -without shields then
ceanes along, while the heavily armed
infantry, after a rest, advance upon
the next one. Men would, of course,
be hit about the legs and • aims, and
high explosives would 'claiin their
'Victims, but I venture to say that we
'shOuld not again see British divisions, ._
held up by machine guns and shrape
nel. •
WhY Can It Not Be Tried At Once?'
Nothing elaborate ie needed. • Only •
so many sheets of 'steel cut to size
and
furnished with a *double thong'
for erm-grip. Shields -are evidently
• better than body armor,since • they
can be turned ip any dipction or
form a screen for a sniper or for.
wounded mem -
The present • -private COntriyances
seem inadequate and I can well un-
derstand that those who could afford
them would sheink from using a pro-
tection .whiclf their ceinkades did not
possess. Yet 1 have seen letters in
which Men 'have : declared that they
owed 'their lives, to these primitive
.shields. • Let the experiment be made
of arming 0 whole battalion with
proper onesand, -above all, let it be
done at once; Then at last the attack
will be on a level with the defence.
Yours faithfully,.ARrt uR
• C6NAN. •
DOYLE.
461.1.MMONIMIls•••••••• •••••••7••;61,,,••=01,1•00surgam:m.ym
-
STYLES•
IN these days
. AL, ef -short skirts hosiery
is a most'Important part
o one's costume. It be- "
ca -use they are to very Im-
portant that most people
buy .Penmins, for In 'so
_doiogjey know.theyare
receiving maximum va ue
• in eveiy way,'
There is a line made .by
Pen mansepecially for you.
.P.anm,ktrra LImitod
Par(8
r;:•••