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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1917-12-6, Page 4f r •. lIotcl liel Coronado Coronado Beach, California Nur San Diego POLO, MOTORING, TENNIS, BAY AND SURF BATHING, FISHING AND B6�TU G. 18 -Hole Gel! Course Hotel is equipped throughout with Automatic Sprinkler System. AMERICAN PLAN JOHN J. HERNAN, Manager �E c�sIs OF About the nus DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME Twenty -First Lesson—Milk and Its Derivatives. Milk may be called a perfect food, the location, curing and manner of containing as it dues the five necessary Ch Hese food eltments regdired by the body to maintai i life It is the first food storing, give many varieties. a large is a valuable food, containing amount of protein in the form of food, for infants; it forms also a perfect casein. It is a concentrated food for small children, the protein and when properly combined with oth- being in the form of casein, which is er foods furnishes an econumiai nutri- readily digested. The adult requires five diet. additional food, owing to the activities. The by-product of butter is butter - Milk will nut supply all the needed mi,k, which is greatly esteemed in elements.- The carbohydrates are in Europe. Many of the 'foreign race tics form of milk sugar and tat; the contend that the use of buttermilk fat is suspended in the milk in the prolongs life by neutralizing the bac- Buttermilk 1• Old Tea 1422,10All Right Old tea and fresh tea, poor tea and good tea, all look alike. r : o wonder a woman often gets a bulk tea she doesn't like. Red Roee Tea'in the sealed package is sleety* fresh. always good, always worth the price on the label. Kept Good by the Sealed Package loth 1!t SE REDR TES► is good tt FRENCH RECLAIM DEBRIS OF BATTLE EACH ARMY EQUIPPED WITH A RECUPERATION DEPOT. Salvage Labor Saves Millions of Doi. Imre Yearly to the Nation. The Arabian Nights wizard who turned old lamps into new was the veriest amateur compared with the modern French woman through whose hands passe:. the debris of the battle- field. At the beginning of the war, partly owing to the rapid movements - f the armies waste was prevalent 0 everywhere. The currespoRdent of Inc Associated Press, while marching form of tiny globi?ea, thus riving to feria of the intestines the milk its clear, white color. The is also strained, the curd halted and Y y � with the soldier., then saw thousands , proportions of fat in the milk vary beaten with a wooden ancon, then y. t. � ,. �' ,A,t" of garments and articles of equip ion the Mo PLAY. . i and a B A Famile.rsying Crack the ti hip in is due to age, condition at.d feeding called buttermilk cheese and ovists in Britain, roadside./ where the fro p FArlyMorning. of the cows. greatly eyteemed by our Rrendmoth Music A Profession For The Blind.' hundred ot soh m urrchuir masters as maneuvered, advanced or retreated• ' Savin the tens Muskoka. ka cow i i placed in suitable containers Collect lett over par ver bars will carded clothing and arm t d 4ecluded spot— and permitted to stand fora period of in a clean bowl. Permit ft and defect. That to a to the fact thatR ne- FIRST APPEARANCE AT BATTLE Itto music aside when rapid movement was just OF THE KEGS. doors and rest and study tut to the top and form a coating over the ❑ quart Meson {Tutt )arc pensatwn in which Lamers p i, from an sweats t not LOONS 'TORPEDO from 2.8 to 8 per cent. This variation worked into a smooth mass. This is strewn over the field o s heti fought, '111E Cream. ere. • A party portions of cream that no creatures are favorites, but a I well. It is expected that these num- Nobody thought of g r of us were camping on the � Whe i milk taken directlyfro/.. the To Make Butter at Home. la the animal kingdom it ►s observed may t� materially increased owing; of thousands of dollars' worth of wit- -' shore of one of the lakes in us oPermit it to stand certain compensation balances every s thrown was a quiet An a greater amount of w n st the place where ydu can,livt out- time, the fewaterulea, which are light for three or four days to turn. gi ex every a attention is now being given er than the water of the milk, will rine lace one cupful of this cream in a truth io unwed his `Essay on Com- cessary. Overcoats, tunica, shoes, ore. one -quart Add one �'nit uta it in the institutions fur the blind. ra scarfs, cartridge pouches, We had risen at seven o'clock . one entire surface of the milk. This is cupful of warm water, testing the down for a fact that for everything The aforesaid report shows haversacks, belts, cape and w• erpr morning, and were cortgrat th meter one has missed he has gained some- investigation among several hundr hheets lay shott the ground in truce selves that we had missed thing else When Nature deprives a persons that E6 per cent. of the men sands. t an f th women art of the of 1 f et o h Great Britain and France Con- idered Their 1'se l'nworthy u( a Great Nation. lating our- flailed cream. Cream is a wholesome, cream and water firth a errfrppo thing of palatable form of fat. Modern methods It should be sixty-five degtkes Fah - t atr01- now use a machine for separating renheit. Place rubber lid on jar• he beautiful day, when our h The Spirit of Economy. ed ftp from the beach- cream by gravity from the milk; this Shake continuously for tea ms of, peau` immeasurable oss8eyet thattsatmesNa known per sheen successful in their "You lazybones missed somethingh t t the apirtt o ++' t nd' to emit cream to nae to become lumpy. I lure, once thoyght cruel, fur a blind pe� o,t,y,_ generally present w con moo son o have eliminates the period of time for ants, and you will feel the can n imine s ° s a mg pe the jar 1 now benefie- musical occupations. This report su - Since t • fine ith titp by not being up early this morning, lthe top of the vessel. The derivations Drain off the buttesrmilk and plane, ant, makes up the deficiency by an •x- Bests the desirability of ole—has reasserted its au - On the�itorning of January 10, 17?@, British' he said to ua. `1 saw the moat or by-products of milk are butter and the butter in a .bowl of clear, cold wa- traordinary endowment along some eon to combine the position French pr P men pacing, t e ec e o lderful sig t a w cease. ter. Add one-fourt eaapoo other line. I organist, or "Music teacher, or protea- thorny, and now everything that can low rtpa lying in the Delaware be- the whip' g water un So o{ten it is that finest of cump•71r sional singer as the case may he with be tved is picked up and made use - low Philadelphia PAW a number a We begged lite to tell vs about a, Cream is permitted to stand scar- til it shows no trace of milk. For sations, the talent for music. There is that of pianoforte tuning, so flit in tui, ash of the armies lice been pro - kegs floating dew the river in mase but all he would say was that it ,fain length of time to develop an acid tie butter in pats and place in re- j no doubt that music is one of the most the event of s falling off in hie protea- vid•d tth what is known as • recu- of ice. A boat w s launched to pick been a marvellous aught, "sad that if ferment. The object of this is to giw frigerator to cool. Care must b°I suitable professions for the blind. In' the a work he can resort to the more Aeration de t, whose dot it is to isle them up, in the hop th, t they might i we would get up earlk, the next morn- ;he butter a desirable flavor and $ gken nut to scald the cream by using in a amine and retrieve all that is par { ` elver laroma or this ferment may be addedlwater that is too hot. A few drops agGovernmthe wears ofent report ethe blinri t is aruundalas cirumetanceshdictate.wa from the debris found on the field of 1 h d k t the be -h little hale ago --a tam- h h teaspoonful of fly of loons playing crackutter. salt and work, changing the contain something o value ue. in Just as the boat was being swung g we could see it or gore be added to give titan on It was just growing light Inc next to the cream is thenochurned lactic d butter cream in the tc act of carrot u • may he but- color Grate a small car stated that there are almost 1000— loose a strange thing happened. One morning when our host led it, crowd of The ) the bu of the kegs. striking an ice cake, b ter milk drained off and the butter rot and place . up with a tremendous report, send through the R a volume of wateras high as theibeach. He told us to settle our mastheads of the vessels. (behind • screen of pine scrub and Al once the/ in cheese cloth and, few I oa sleepy, yawning nature lovers t worked with pure, cold water, Salt! wring to obtain the juice. This but 1°g 1 wet rags down the . ,vee i id added to the butter to preserve and; ter may be given to small children or het tmprbve the flavor. Butter contains to invalids. the buttertnill, eland a f.ewli e was the wildest ex- keep about 83 per cent• fat and is a vol ble Let hours and drain ole the water that has silent. food for energy. o Sweet huller is made from tr n to the top. Then place a piece m and is usually sold unsalted. {cheese cloth in strainer, ex- citement. Drums were beaten, troop Loons!" he whispered were floating pointing t turn m then h riversfi t ng t o edge. Guns from the ships and from • the shore were trained upon the kegs. The cannonatling and fire of small I morning. That one off there by him-+ arms gave the impression that the self'is the father; those others are Cheese is made from milk by special Work well with wooden spoon to a "cabala" were attacking the city. Two little ones and the mother." process of fer nt a milk with a • smooth alt green char We watched the lions attentively ed wiithtd rennett.. eThis cheese whthen en used ped ery fine. or red pepper,chop - ed three kegs. hit by the cannonshot, blew up. For days the firing con fora little while; but the birds did not fresh is called %cam and cottage; Mold into balls, and place a piece con- tinual. d presently we began tp doze' cheese of nut the top and servece of Thus—in what is his t•itally known I and nod Suddenly a long -drawn cry Many other varietie are h °fit; I butterDtilk. on shore were hurried tot e some dark spots that °a i will not keephelength of time Ion the water a short distance from any gt +buttermilk and ?et drain for two hours. usually turning cheesy. low place the curd in a howl and add: shore. "Sa}ne ones I saw ,yesterday Cheese I One-fourth teaspoonful of salt. 947 to be exact -persons in the United Kingdom thus afflicted who are fol- lowing the professions of music, mak- ing of musical instruments, piano tuning,, etc. There are at least one - on lettuce .1 lstlr,`•,an „ b Sour on tlk.maY be usedin as' the Battle of the Kegs—did did the tor- t like the shriek of a human being shat- special processes which, et er pawn make its first appearance in war- I tared the silence.' We awoke with a USING THE CHEAPER CUTS OF MEAT. fare. its utilization was quoted by start, but fortunately no one made any ox or a the British as illustrative of �`Ameri- (noise. Cheap cuts of meat—that is to say, meat hammer for the pure can devilishness" I "That's the male bird waking Rejected in 1812. , our host explained. "Watch the res the tougher or les:; choice cuts—can potato masher or even a large hestvy be made acceptabie to -us spoon. - Heat a frying pan and brown k- the meat on both sides, then put into The inventor or the infernal con- now.. pal»tes by thorough and caretr... "We rubbed our sleepy .eyes and ing Here are suggestions thot lend a baking pan. Rinse the frying pan whoivance was Captain David Bupedoes white wa-' manufactured the keg -torp i stared out across the grey- variety to the ways in which beef, ham with boiling water so as to nave all at Bordentown, N.J., Be filled each' ter. The mother and her three young- and chicken may be served at the the browned meat juice and, pour this keg with kerosene, to ignite which sters had wakened, and were moving ore meal a day to which wShave water over the steak, using enough I patriotically reduced our meat -eating.' to come up halfway. Add seasonings there -was a plunger that, when struck, over toward the father, who was slow- and cover. Bake until tender. This scraped a -flint on steel. I1y approaching them. When they all Broiled Flank Steal: economical dish and there Fulton, the man who made the came together, they began to frisk is a very about in a merrygreeting. 1 flank steak, salt, pepper, 1 tea- is no waste. steamboat, invented four kinds of tor- pedoes, and took them to France in We were delighted with their antics. spoonful butter. Buy a /flank steak I Baked Meat Hash 1812 with the notion of selling them. "That certainly is worth getting up the size required for your family Medium white sauce, hot mss But Napoleon refused to buy them; for;' on of us whispered, enthusiasti- needs. Ask the butcher to score it potato, lett overs of meat. Put meat he thought such instruments of war- Cally. on each side or, if you do this your- I through a food choprer, first remov- ftre unworthy of use by a great na- "Sh! ere's more coming•'• �e'au_ self, use a sharp knife and score ,ing alt gristle and bone. Season high - Great Britain,- on the same tioned our est, peeping through the diagonally across the meat, in lines I •ty with salt and pepper. Butter an icon: - ground, rejected them. screen of Tinian - one inc`: apart; turn most :.tial score' earthenware baking dial:. Add en - Colt, in 1843, invented the aubmar- Presently, the family of loons fell in opposite 'direction, making small • ough medium white sauce to the Inc torpedo. He laid mines under wa- into line. with the parents at the ends diamonds. Score both sides. Thq ground meat to moisten and bind it to -I r and exploded them with an elec- and the children in the middle. Then, scoring cuts across the tough fibres gather. Turn into the baking dish, t spark on shore. as it at a silent signal, all of them and makes the meat tender liketrloin. spread over in a layer, the hot well- ring'the American ('fell War the I lifted thetr•winga and started run- Heat a frying pan red hot, dropin the i seasoned, mashed potato. Bake in a river. and harhors'ot the South were ning across the water; they looked steak, turn quickly back and forth to hot oven until brown. freely . own with torpedoes --or mines,- :just tike a lot of school children ray- scar the whe?e surface and then re- . Jellied Ham as we s ,old call them' nowadays. Us- log,. With their wings half -extended duce the heat and cook more slowly. I Turn steak frequently to cook evenly.i 2 tablespoonfulq butte{, 2 table - der. aphi' ical, loaded with the - and with their thin f moving like der, floatln • �i few feet below the sur- lightning, they sped on fur's full quay- A flank steak trill cook in ten to; spoonfuls flour, 1a teaspoonful salt, face and set :R by percuasioh, they ter of a mile along the shore. They twelve mieutes. Season with salt 1 cupful chicken stock, 4 tablespoon- 'lice in t course of that con- travelled at an almost incredibly fast. fed pepper, 'remove to o hot platter, fuls cream, 1 teaspoonful granulated pace. 1fyou have ever skipped stones spread with butter and serve. gelatine `;I cupful cold water, 114 cup - destroyed, seven i'nin ironclad*, eleven fuls cold boiled ham. Make a white wooden vessels o ar and six trans- on the water you know what those Round Ste k is ('aiuterole sauce of the butter, flour and stock. ports. ' loons looked like Aa, with a great i = — ,noise of splashing, they skimmed 1 1 round steak- 114 inches thick,' Add the gait and pepper. Soften the Lightning does not g' erste heat in along side by side and left five rip- 1 cupful flour, 1%'`feaspoonfuls aalt,I gelatine in the cold water and add to its path unless obstructer piing wakes behind them. pepper, 1 tablespoonful butter. the white sauce, add the cream and --_-- — -- Suddenly, without seeming to ower. Pound the flour, a little at a time, the finely chopped ham. Turn into a their wings or to pause for an inatnnt, �to both sides of the steak, using a shallow pan, pack solid - ofd let chill. Inc loons wheeled about in * short, - Fertilizing the so labor efficiency and adds greatly to the farmer's ort income. The extra yield, less than the cost of the fertili- zer, is largely ,pure profit. it increases farm 9 ... e 1'j O 0 I >,r,.a. 11,01 Many People Make a B -Line AIME" for the Walker House The House of Plenty, as soon as they arrive in Toronto. The meals, the service and the home -like appointments constitute the magnet that draws them there. Roots Dinner t)Oc. livening Dinner 75c. THE WALKER HOUSE r ees' 1 1<On-MY Hoer TORONTO, CANADA Rats Reasonable (,co. Wright A Co., Props. 4 FIELD CASHIERS AMD PAYMASTERS �l: FRANCE CA111 DOMINION EXPRESS FOREIGN CHEQUES THE *U1' WAY TO SEND MONEY TO nit SOPS IN THE TPENCHF c circle and tame skimming back over ` RAISING SPONGES. Itched, even bottom and are clear of thein course. Two of them —the mo- . behind slightly in the process of turn- No Satisfactory Substitute Has Yet small cutting o angPiattached by d disk and placedwie r in g the circle, and could not catch up Beek Discovered. thecord water. cement a few weeksad the spongn', w the this - it whip g that the Although the demand for sponges attaches itself firmly to the disk. At', jok of this We could hardly game was for industrial, sanitary and domestic maturity, when the sponge has been' on th could hardly keep from , ea is steadily increasing, the gathered, the disk can he used again. they and one of the youngsters—fell i impurities, In planting sponges the. The business of being a man has its advantages these days as well as its responsibilities—especi- ally if someone thinks enough about him, his needs and his wishes, to choose for Es - Christmas gift battle. The correspondent visited one of these depots et Orleans and there found in operation a scheme of sal- , vage which eaves the French nation many millions of dollars a year. It is run under the superintendence of offi- cers of the army reserve, mobilized at . the opening of hostilities and ehosen for their experience inr commercial at - fairy. Among them are bankers, man- ufacturers and men drawn from many achs. They have at their machines of the latest model, m ly • of American origin, while thg works are drawn from among the wives, widows and children of soldiers, Ger. man prisoners and men of the oldest classes of the French army. Some idea of the extent of the work lune in this centre alone may be ga- thered from the wages paid to the wo- men and girls employed, which amounted in the month of August to approximately $100,000. There are at all• times stared in the depot 'articles of military equipment to the value of 510,000,000. Every day in summer an average of thirty motor wagons full of debris from the battlefields arrive and In winter this number is -increas- ed to an average of forty-five anion.. New Shore From Old. Thousands of odd shoes, worn and muddy and torn, are sorted out into pairs and then cleaned.' repaired and made ready to be issued again. Some - a condition that they tcannot be used as soldiers' marching boots and then the uppers are detached and refitted to wooden soles, forming clogs which ars. mush appreciated by the soldiers during their service in wet and muddy trenches. Odd pieces of leather are stamped nut into buttons for the pgjs- ones' uniforms. ' - f More than 8,000 women are em- ployed in this depot alone. A few figures as to the results ob- t#i-ned in this depot will demonstrate the economic value of the system adopted. Two thousand cartridge pouches are repaired on an average every day at a cost of about one cent each, whereas neat. one+ would cost eighty cents each. Ry the repair of -.soiled and torn sheepskin jackets a profit of $1,500 daily is made. The mending of overcoats saves the Gov.- ernment about $3.000 daily. With. , piece% of cloth cut from old uniforms the women make 8,000 pairs of cloth slippers daily, each pair worth forty cents, while by piecing together old shoes n00 pairs of new ones are male every day. .U.1. TRADES OPEN 'r(1 HEROES. - '�Gill�ette S.fetyRazor loons a outright to see how the three purply is rapidly diminishing. The i Among the important points in the f t keep the auPP 1 trade are the Caicos' Most men are practical. The welcome gift is the rueful gift—the Gillette --that fiti light into a man's intimate personal life; makes things easier for him, and proves its quality by the way it shaves. - At any good Hardware, Drug or Jewelry Store you can pick out a Gillette Set that will be sure to give him lasting pleasure. If yon have any trouble getting what you want, write us and . we will see that you sue supplied - GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED, Office and Factory : Gillette Euildiug, Mor treal. ..:1 MADE IN CAN' O" rtwowr� Tot .. .......__voato ova. loon, ahead spec along o known banks have been largely sponge r — - - tlead he that they had mined, and how fished, and cultivation seems to be lslaitds, which form the southeastern- A HOLIDAY the two behind tried desperately to o{ even approximately : most :•\part of the Bahamas. The [•1 with th the only way catch up wi them. When they had all re•ched•thc start - keeping up the lupe y. ing point they paused for -a momen , Many effarte have been made to pro- milts widA I while they got into line again. We vide a satisfactory aubatitute, but no The U.S. Bureau of ,Fisheries has : could hear them chuckling softly. Then one hasyet discovered nits that _ is estimated that the cost of planting they stretched out their wings andver entirely adequate. Loofah end rubber, sponges, which in Florida is $229.50 an once more tent their feet flying over acre,' would be in the Caicos Islands, the watat.° the most common substitutes, do not owing to cheaplabor and the Wound-, ossess the proper absorbent and re-' We sat there in open-eyed and opee- I P • - mouthed aittonishmtnt, and watched silient ilualitiea. The United States ane/ of sponges for cutting up, only •the birds repeat the race again and. Bureau of Fisheries is interested in,$14Fi.20. )again. Their enjoyment of it did not sponge growing, and is beginning the cultivation with satisfactory results. He Wnew a Bey. seem to /.bate, nor it they stem to Dr. H h' Moore, of the Bureau, who, Little Tobin: "Mamma, didn't 'ye n ea tired. They kept At the Raine un -:has written numerous studies on the ; til the silvery waters began to grow , sponge in Florida, has said that in ,soy we lhou!d always try to make oth- farr years, cuttings of sponge@ will er people happy?" i rosy in the dawn. , Then the game ceased as suddenly Mammo: "Yea, dear." i had begun The Niels whirled Ri'nw• to about eight inches in diameter t Cee in' 1 ills Tobin: "Well I know n little t d laugh- nod mi boy the 1 could 3 Pi Pa t • r And a t The sponge sponge\banks in that archipelago are AY BULLETIN has become a neves+cry, about fifty miles In length and ten THE SEASON'S BEST F1('TION • quarter ounces back to the starting pain ing heartily y m oncrete t! mush more valuable t an notes, settled down on the wah•r. The •r' NAmma: "Who is the little bay" performance had ended. wild sponge of equal bulk, the bottom little Tnhin: "Its me." - of which in most Cassa must be cut away to remove redront, coral and Cook the veRe'ahle naritig ,hot are sund. The waste port of • wild in the private schnol� of China a sed to chickens. . (sponge is frequently on.! third of its teacher is paid about one halfpeney a Feeding sheep in inv-, marThy pas- tures is about the nest unfit, nraide condition tinder which they can be kept. h til a medley o an n make ver • happy if 1 f soh loon ucight, and that the sponge o� had is .tt bu candy with five can y bulk. Moreover, wild sponges are day for each pupil. often badly torn by honks in remote- The heavy sleep that follow! great ing'them from the sea bottom. Arti- exhaustion is less hcreticial than or- aciatly grown sponges have ! arm. dinary steep. LONG LITI T111 ZIDO at 10 1y Maly Itoberts Shisibart, It"111 irr."w the grey lest of Mt4. nlne- 1,ar't'w 4 r i s.ee •• • New Terre TS mea. TSO IIXDt&O Dams as Ily WtWWlam Me=ael sad Idyls Samar .A mystery of the (trent Laker, 5. (and If not better, than • The 111101 Man'.Eyes.•. ?U1Walt 1? 0 •r Z21, or Thos, gWho fly OaWLe L SeClaag. This hook reflects public feeling In typical towns and cottony dletrlrts tttroCsnuh, ani showsti with women ars doing that'. bit In the war.. The whole book is strong and fearless. but always, comforting god healing TSS 110A9 TO 41rsiner'AwnIw:- 40 Dy Dlses1or S. Por•tor. A isltghtful love atom. hl the author of '.fust Tonal/ .. /SIO $y' a uryD I 51 SS DOeg., Evan .tour• wn,uelr,g than "Nalnn,-r'e Dress Putt. a *OVOa011LO 'ANTI CLAUS 81.00 at ta.r.alta Sloboleoa. A ehrlstn,aa story of mysteriode sur- pris I and a 7nyfuh holiday Nvlrlt, by I the author .,f 'The House of a Thou- sand Candle.." POLLY AND TWO 7SIw0511115, >K . N Sy Mama 0. Dowd. All lovers of "roily et the t!oepltsi Stair' end 'Polly of Lady Osy Cot- ters" will want'to read this new story by Or same author. TSO gaiyi*aa - - • 01.40 tael Sy 1rsdsrlek Orta teartlatt How a charming heiress attempts to sways a horde of suitors by • map. rises of ennsortence. TWO BIG WAR STORIES ODONLYS, The Plata Tale of a Cana°1ag S1T0lf1gfa'1 MOO • - Wits went N sot >ti :111•110 Sormaa 111•11. ay Loots 1,I..'O.,,t A vivid anal graphicw�'••ount of now .f A new edition of this famous tribute the ?trot Cot- th,go,nl,t.e.atwd by to Itch•ner'e Army One of M.H.C. Perfects Plana Which Will Make Factories Training Centrism. There arc now 39 different voca- tions being taught in the vocational training centres of the ;Military Hos- pitals ('nmmissonlinked across Can- ada. This nlmbef will he increased in- • ` definitely to embrace the whole cate- gory of industries in Canada if neces- sary when the present plans of the Commission to place men needing to learn new tra, by reason of their injuries, in the stories have been put into operation. • The co-operation o the Canadian talanufacturers' Associ on has made lit possible for the Com sion to *f- ifer the men this inestimab advent= age of working under actual i ui t.ris% conditions in learning their new trades. -—'-4--- immediately after a cold is taken a very hot hath is often very useful, hut for relief of a chronic Bold, warm aha scat the sailor ks baths are less useful than cold ones. banet the war. People with a tendency to take cold Publisher may "harden" themselves by daily cold baths. Toronto THOS, gLLEN