HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-9-7, Page 2riiirommara...orels.
ints for gusy Housekeepers.
Realties act Other Valuable Informatics
*1 Particular Iszerest to Women Folks,.
1110026,1190
LOLTS.
White Mettatain Soup—To one
level teacupful ef eelet cooked rice,
add one Ounce of dry grated 'cheese,
one cupful of vegetable stock
!liquor 1 -email -lila fr,..em. euoltieg
peas, eahbage, etZ), one arid one-
half Pints of het milk, one level
teatipoc.n eaeh J. ask and pepper
Put these ingredieats :lata a Sauce
pan, Stir' over the tire unti,l it
boils, the remete teed pour -eate
saaP Plates. Beat the white et one
egg until stiff, salt lightly; witIO
I
a teaspoon dispese the egg in little
euads -on toe earzace ef tlze 'seep. ,
te with cone-shaped wafers. I
able, Mulligatawny. — One!
Wes of all kinds eat,
-\k until tender
ee ptf er. Pa:al
-eugh a se arid retura to senacel
pan witb . eableepetieafal of 4eag
Pour, elle tablespiful A curry
e„ the SlUIO of ground nuts
f half a lemon, a tea:Too:aro
I and half a tealleonful
per.Conk for twenty minutes,
and serve with whtsted
white
One cupful
VIN- chop -
ns„ one tablespon
one carrot chopped
of' boiling water.
a( unto
itub
one pint of tw
flour rubbed into lit
eattl,a altspoou of
If teaspoon of pepp
tite fire, reheat, and s
t -td
th
'core, add to them ene-
f seeded raisins,
he same of apricots, a c -
f ground nuts. Pour
of belling water and
the fire for forty
minute,. Bmave rom Arc and rub
through a sieve To the liquor add
ane cupful of frult juke, juice of
•oranges and ono lernan, one
f -water. ChM and pour into
Ln g 5ternmed glasses. Whip one
cupful of cream and with a tea -
dispose in the chilled irnit
bilkrn. Serve witb graham
wafers.
Potato Whisk Soup.—Roil three
medium ized potatoes natil done.
tash fine, add a teaspoon eech Of
salt and white pepper, a tablespoon
of better, three cups of milk, one
and one-half cups of boiling water.
Place on fire and let come to boil
before removing from fire, stir 5n
the beaten whites of two eggs, and
serve at once with crisp salt erack-
low Tomato Boullion.—To one
quart of cooked yellow ‘amatoczs,
add one-half teaspoon of baking
soda and place over the fire; beat
the yolk of one egg and add to a
pint fu milk; into this mixture stir
one pint of boiling -water; mix -well
with the boiling tomatoes and re-
move from the fire. Add one-half
teaspoon uf celery salt, a pinch of
salt, and black pepper and serve
hot.
.aor*
sugar and beil uot more than eight
is fine and Y.107er fairs,
Quiz -Ace, Jelly, --Boil the parings
ia water to 'Cover them until soft.,
the draie, don't sqzzeeze, ndcl
equal parts of kgar, and boil izatli
reedy to put ia glasses; will be
how twenty marates to a aalf hour,
APPLE HINTS.
the
felt w
need, but
Where E
Wel-IWO, i „zece.leat eeunomy
ean for tonne use seme tho
first green satiee which itaii• been
strained thigateth the 4.^01ander end a
eweetened ttaste. a$ no ether
sauce hee quite the eame flavor.leteet e. teeotioe of 1.34.1_,ete3,, 4nd
these days of high priced foo
ereen apple fills a loe
only fer the preSe
the winter stare,
at green apple
Th checks bleedipg wound, and for ("Jebovah is gracious") wa.s called
bleediag of the mouth or tongue a. Shadra.ch ("The command of
wa.sh in cold water in 'which alum Altu"). Miehaei ("Who is what
has been dissolved is very effective. God is i") was called Mesliaeli
Paint Must not be serubbed -with ("Who is what Aka is7"). Aza.riah
sandsoap, or it will be worn off, ("Jehovah his helper") was called
Wine off with a cloth dipped in Aliednego ("Servant of Nebo").
hick eteds of white seap and rinse This practice of giving a rie\V name
with a clew) cloth wrzieg frem hot to a persen entering the service of
atwer. a foreign land was eoi-nman
Dishes which contained eggs or la pretee servants . tee
pastry or dough should be -washed days—This was a, kind ef mystic
in 'cold water,. sinee by washing Persian week, a sufficiently loaf?,
them in hot water the adhesive sub- time fo test the results of the pro
-
stance is cooked tiles harden- pe.., -,ed iiet
tal• tlailse—lregetahle food in general
in sprinkling table linen use a is meant, besides ktates raisins,
large salt ,ehalter, and in the water wed other freits,
put a little eold starch—about ie. Their eettetenances appeared
ablespoonfel to a quart of water
Tite linen will iron aith abent tilt araer—er eeetYpti,'eYses7onalessoee foaffteeerttiltel
erne stiffness as when new. a (Gen, 41. 2). ft hes often been re -
Glass is an ideal shelling for marked that monks and others who
lichen Oaset, as it e" be kel,)t at frequeafly have a clearer skin
an so easily. 11 this is '410 eaatar zacl livelier :health,
t
it th'. shetves white and give' a 16. Took away the.7=r dainties
con. a_ e —mei. This is a`asitY The Hebrew implies that, the treat-
seetteeed eta does, awaY with he ment hetame babitual.
je 'ty taf papere. 17, Gee' gave them knowiedge—
Te whiten handkerchiefs which, latex contented to etatasse intea
beoarne, „a bad et010,r thrtang" iectually as well as physieally.
ss wasning, seas; teem iOr a Compare, verse 4. NO tecliaieal
Thie, makes .de:-ight411 !t!, warm •water, and bail them next,
ieenie a. .tielict:ey teaned aPplIday in tIie. useal way, and they Win
MO when miltad whiPPett evnie eut looking beautifully white,
' arid Se:rVe'd .^.;41 Sikerkket glas--1 onoking, -getwos. all those
A eavonfal ef red ra.spberrzee
her preserve$ on top IA
$ may add interest to this dish.
Any good apple eanee May be mixed
'ith canned eherries, cranberries,
other.fruits with good results,
se war apples make fine jelly,
,like to add a little lemon
Iawl peeling or 4 Xwe 1W3'n' A. rice dish tnat, elnldren like is
grown underground should be
cooked in cold water, adding the
lt before they are done, and they
shanld be kept covered while eoele-
ipg, All of the fresh or green vege-
tablee should be put an bOiiing
water ad left uncovered ea that,
they keep their eolor,
• /eel, as our grandmother* old; prepared .lity cooking a, $caIlt, cup,
(laced to hers prefer rhubarb, and all aro
iee. Add
inS of
ful af
and a•
Retura
. Good
P -
FRUIT RECIPES,
Fruit Salad.—Cut in small pieces
six oranges. Mix with half a can
of sliced pineapple diced. Add a
dozen marshmallows cut into bits,
then add broken English walnuts.
Mix well, On each salad plate
place a lettuce leaf and some of
the salad. Dot over with mayon-
naise dressing. This is delicious
besides being a beautiful decoration
in color for the table.
Grape Juice.—To make it jest like
thab you buy in thedrue store, pick
the grapea from the ;lents, wash
them and put in a granite kettle
(tin discolors it). Heat until the
juice flows, then strain through a
heavy cloth. Add as much water
as there is juice, and to every quart
of this a cupful of sugar. Bring
to boil and bottle,.
Brown Raisin Bread.—One cup
corn meal, one cup rye meal, one
cup whole, wheat flour; sift to-
gether, then add one teaspoonfal
salt, two teaspoonfuls melted but-
ter; add to this one and three-quar-
• ters cups water, three-quarter cup
molasses, two and a half teaspoon-
fuls of soda, one cup raisins; steam
for four 'lawn.
• Ginger Pears.—Peel, core, and
cut in very thin slioes. For eight
i-ounds of sliced fruit pat into the
cettle the juice of five lemoes, one
eup water, seven pounds sager,
one-half .pound ginger root cut and
seraped thin slices. Let sugar
dissolve before adding fruit. Out
• peel of lemon in long, thin slices.
Let fruit and lemon cook slowly
or an hour, uncover, and put in
ar
ab tppo ,3elly.e-Wash the a,p-
lee, cut out blossom end niad
enly,, paver in the kettle with
"a4.ateceeer, Well, ^boil till• '
r: in, CD a, s.nek over
ekUice and eager
lie ;farce twe eta
rniu-
t13e sugar in • the,
then add hoe -
5
d, Excellent j.elly is made with
one-third apple itree and two-thirds
plum, or equal parts of each.
Fer jell$, de UOE- peel, but wash
thoroughly and, eta into quarte
halves with seeds and eoie left in
cover 'With -water And let came to
Strain the best part of juke
jelly add the 141 -gaining pulp
nd juke, after thorough cooking,
;trough the colander and make
into marmalade or butter, using
' lots af orange peel oat fine and a
little juice. Lemon s fiae used in
the same ',ray.
The best marmalade, however, is
toade when none of the juice is put
aside for jelly. but extra juice ad -
tied to the natural sauce .nad one-
third sugar or more may be used
and cook to a jolly -like consistency.
The above is as good as orange mar-
malade. Others will prefer the le
men.
A good butter is made of rooked
dried apricots by steaming the juice
and mashing the remainder, or tak-
ing same through colander. One
pint of apricot juice, one of the
pulp, two of apple saute, one heap-
ing pint of sugar, or more, if de-
sired, the rind of one lemon. Cook
until clear. And everybody knows
that good, old-fashiorted apple but-
ter isn't slow. •
Save time in making apple sauce.
Don't peal the apples; cut them up
and bail them; then put through a
colander. The sauce is jest as good
and it takes a quarter of the time.
PEACH RECIPES.
Peach Shortcake.—Peach short-
cake, with almond and whipped
erearre makes a rich baking pow-
der crust; roll out about a fourth
of an inch thick, cut with a cookie
cutter into rounds, butter half of
these, and place the unbettered
ones on top. Bake them, split them
open, butter them, and fill and
coyer each one with fresh peaches
cut in slices and sprinkled -with
powdered sugar. Serve hot, sur-
rounded by plenty of whipped
cream, sweetened and flavored with
almond extract and filled with
chopped almonds' about one-half
cupful.
Peach Pudding.—Peel and stone
six large ripe peaches, fill the cen-
ters with -Wiesbaden strawberries
or Maraschino cherries. Put them
on the ice to get cold. Make a cus-
tard of one cupful of milk with one-
fourth pf a cupful of sugar, yolks
of three eggs and a tiny piece of
butter. When thie is cold, flavor it
with maraschino or almond. Line
a dish with slices of sponge cake or
lady fingers, put in the peaches,
then the custard. Beat the whites
of the eggs stiff ,and then add them
to one-half of a cupful of cream
whipped stiff. Sweeten and flavor.
Cover the custard with a. gagnish
of cherries and serve cold.
• HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
An asbestos mat under the bread
pan will help the bread to rise,> on
a cold night, as it will prevent the
bottom being chilled. The orclin-
a,ry stove mat may be ased.
A back rest, for en invalid, which
'will be found connaetable for one
cenfined to bed, is made of a wide
board, well padded, and s'lipped in-
to a cretonne tallow case.
A safe paint else -nee is as follows :
TIVO,querts hot- water, two taale-
spoo,efuls tuz-pentine and one
piut .of slcimmed milk, with neap
enoue,h to make a weak suds.
Coarseesanclaper shottarl be kept
'the h "nel used for serab-
f,, elite ea and
Ina that, has
stile an n the process ce
lurn in the house.
000:
ful or rice 2t1 illl'ee ettpfu13 of water
for $.'iO minutes, then adding half a
olpful of raisins, a, cupful of milk
a a tablespoonful of butter, Add
.o a little sugar to snit the taste
Ad a pinch of salt. Stir well oata
Ok a Intik longer, mita Oita, lads who had renounced the Ins: -
Water thut fresh vegetables have11Tr;
el of the courtbecause of relig-
1 hee'n eetrited in 1 May be added to the i '
ons scruples They were to faee
4
Sic3ok pet for flavor. All bones, severer trials, but their steadfast -
I stale bread and left -over moat ness at this critieal period of their
iscraps may also be used in Ple etaek ' lives proved /him of gow mettle,
pot. which at this season ehou/d be besaiee, being a most eaeeneet pre,
strained off twice a• Week, be liquid paration for what, was to befall
thou, Their escape from the corn
MOD corruptions of Oriental cour
life was remarkable. Their be,:ng
leeted to stand before the king
Ignified that they were to become
his personal attendants. This was
naturally a, position of honor and
' finance,
°O. Magiciaris---The word is o
Egvntiap origin, and was probab-
ly taken from. Genesis and Exodus,
where it was frequently used, and
fers to those who interpret
dreams and work magic. Anyone
who was acquainted with the oc-
cult arts was regarded as a magi-
cian. The Babylonians were world-
enowucd in their skill as eneban-
ters or devotees of magic art.
21. Continued even unto the first
year of king Cyrus—The date would
be B. 0, 538, or severity years after
this event, making Daniel an old
man. As a matter of fact, he is
mentioned (Dan, 10. 1) as being
alive in the third year of the reign
of Cyrus. 'What is meant here,
probably, is that he continued for
all those years in the character of
a man •of great wisdom ie the city
of Babylon. .Amid Seductions and
pitfalls of a position of influceee
in a heathen court, he dal not fal-
ter or flinch.
knowledge is intended, They be -
sagacious, versed in suck
tioaledge as was prevalent at the
me, As a general foreeast of
abet is to fellow in the book, it ie
farther stated that Daniel had un-
derstanding in all dreams and vis-
ions, The Chaltlean$ attracted
great hapertanee to these, bet, like
Moses and Joseph before him, this
youth, thoegh in an‘aliea land, ex-
celled his teacbers in their awri
Reid.
18. Brought theta verse 19
,hows, the 'them" refers tO all the
Hebrew youths mentioned in verees
3 and 4.
19, The king communed with
tbeme-He tested them by familiar
nversation. Among them all Was
found none liko the four faithful
tecoled and the grease strained off,
Then it is ready for tbe foundation
I of soaps or graves of all kinds,
1
1.1-1E SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY
SEPT. 10.
esson XL—Daniel and his com-
panions, Dan. 1. 5-20. Gohlen
Text" Rom. 11. 21.
Verse 8. Daniel—In the reign of
jehoiakim, king of Judah (B.C.
CC), Nebuchaduezzar, king bi
Babylon, besieged Jerusalem, and
took with him to Babylon certain
sacred vessels of the temple and
some Jewish captives. Among the
latter were Daniel and his three
ompanions., Ilannaniah, Mishael,
and Azariah. They were chosen,
with others <A singular beauty and
intelligence, to be trained in the
service of the king. Doubtless they
were not more than fourteen years
of age (compare Isa. 39. 7).
He would not defile himself with
the king's dainties—The provision
had been made that the Hebrew
children should for three years be
fed upon the feed and wine which
emne from the king's table. This
was considered a great honor. The
delicacies were of course the finest.
At the end of three years of such
Jiving, the "children" were to
"stand befere the king." The de-
filement of this diet would be strict-
ly ceremonial. The 'Sews, especi-
ally in later times, laid great stress
upon dietary laws. In this case
the meat might be that of animals
CANADA'S LtillIBER CUT.
White Pine Gradually Tieldin to
• Spruce and B. 0. Woods.
Interesting statistical compari-
sons may be matte from the 1910
lumber report, prepared by the
Dominion Forestry Departm,ent. Of
the tweney-six native species of
wood which together were cut in
1910 to the extent of four billion
nine hundred million board feet,
JEAN
ry Malcolm Mortal
"It's the doctor?"
• "It lei"
I Old Mrs, elurne.V tried to lift heti
4tuother'll be out to-rnorroiv, ,and
ought -new to namet- he day%"
, "When you will!" she said,
- 'Then, three weeks to -day?" he
0, his voice still glad,
, ,"Yed,"
' ., There was a pause,
; "Bessie!"
"Well?"
'An't you glad, dear?"
,eelf up on one elbow In heel, as young "Of eourse I anti"
Pr* Thomas), by far the finest and lie took het inlets arms and
twat poplar young Ulan In Dream., bete '
;time, came with her, ton, Jcilin, kite r . . r .
:the eiek-room, She Wail Vert '111,, Om: The doctor had been to see Mr
;
lady, butt he ehqer)t young doctor oln Gurney on the eve of her weddin
Wars Seemed to helng with, Win a noW day, and after saying goodbye to hi
enee of Weal strength, patient h2 had taken ..Toim out witl
1 "And, bow's Mrs, Qurney?" he itistcdt blee lute the atreet. MS face ..WILt
going over to the bed, . Ecrieus. and John noticed it '
• "One!" , "Nothing WrOlug, doctor?"
kiese4
"That's good, tint's good!" he an-. The tioetor turned,
'oirsitned, "that's how I want yeu to "aogla horth, hunin bc laid. '',You'V
joek at things; weal tioca baeo YOU uPl got to know it, and you must take fl
then!' well, Your MOther never Su
The old lady laughed ohrilly. ; again; site is blind for Wei"
"Oh: but it's not you, dote, "Dootor!"
dear John, therein "I'm so sorry, John i You muiattil
The doctor turned to John. take it reoro to heart than you can
"It's the news he hasi" enewored; you havoo verything to bet haukf
"What'e this?" heip. It's part of the scheme al
Airs. Gurney, • for, in that your Mother is still wtt
"The newel"
"Ys i I'm eaying the news, It's' "And mother ta bettor otherw/aer,
put new life hit° men Id bones, Da "Infinitely!' —the doctor got Mt
Thomas. lie's promised his old moth: his dog-eart. "She's a different w
er that, soon aci I'm up and about.: man; but, mind you, John, no shocksii
he'll marry you Beast° Doane." . Good-bye!" ;
"My, .Tohni" the doctor cried; John wee lust entering ble house!
his la 'toed news!" --- When ea mall boy caught blua by thel
iti k;• geed new, the finest, that.4 sieeve
Quid her* the mealier rattled On, "IV,lisa Deane told ine to giVo Yei4
te-daY. loina'a Just eee et thOgo John their the proffered letter wit);
dear men, doeter, who wants a lass td shekina hand; things had got lad
ni7ekdftlit.tedrohettoulr,abnudtbsuoluilyellniemed; aitilninleerZ open this letter,
better with Bessie, and ha Clreaded
Athttadn yotherse-e4str,sY' rtelce tab eweb,,,4Le ts t men- _bait:nmeointgeirne.laes fuedeodoeers. eweitoupe jneesda_ilti
t140 best in 13rnIntnnel" ' and he did net Want them to iies 3319
"She la Joau eagerly assented; reed the missive.
It'e so geOd that I already feel hettea taipt.
and the doctor' eoaded his agreement.
Then het urned te hla Pat -lent "Dear John," it rah, ---"I don't al'
we YQa to forgive me, don't espeet tha
Ihna,11..:r;rilaa8ttllik-ribgnehttlit'lle3gr3it'asy.ce4:11.46"rfaule'y Let
tt yboeetl:a gnu' iatue ci 1r gkh.7;vitotbratthledolanstottwdel
Serve it. I ani so sorry. You bay
"They'r'e ail right, doctor"
Menthe there has been something b
ja;Ybesalve la'raipeoukrItt hey erel But, III' eeeen us. and toeteeeil, John
elve mel—hes been that I love
Dowastaire, serae ten minutes latere caller man. The ouly pod thing
the doctor shook John very warmly -
by hte hand, . buy() done ie to leave Breatritune
etteq., weu done, 4,0enar 114 him to -day and saved you from tear
was saying.. ,,you,vo done mere thea. ryieg me. Ile la Charles Legge, We
ar all, a uou"oe love le a very gomi la be begn X°73 to f°rgtVe 1)0041
medicine for Ina Mother, The 0147 John, 1 mu sorry. 1 um sorry. 1 arm
lady's far, far better; Your marriage. serrYI My chief fault is that bavej
11 the dectore in the -world could do °S° to b't Insrrled- °Insgnw t"nY
will give her another good are' been too lunch e't a' 'coward to tel
you, for no woman ean help her love
en weir jobn cried, team ee his I am ser, aorry!"
Yea,
The letter dropped from Jae' ,
Suertt7ainly; I hand, and fluttered to the round, HO,
stood for a moment as still as death4-,
I just as pale, He Was thinking, not of,
"Well, as T said, wcm net be very
Bessie, for she had killed his love for
careful indeed, The eYes arc not sot
well; l'nx only frightened--" • her, but Of hie mother!
"You don't mean she'll be blind, doe-, Tb°
tor?" shockai Ono must always keep face
,,deotor's words: "John, no;
tO face with a weak heart; a moment'd
The other hesitated.
'That, or course, is the dmiger: :neglect may mean the end." '
*John. I wanted your mother to wear Indoors Ile fund Joan. Ills inothefi
proud of her 'wonderful eyotilght,' and
glasses five :Verve ago, bot, like se N4ca'amoortleisiltelunffiry, taTiotimhis surPrise, Jean.
"1 know caailtglhatbohlat It, .11,obliliellr" v'oriheedi
Many old people she was terribly
•
new she'a paying the penalty. There's 1 had
lute!), no excitement."
another thing: she must have abso- wiljsohbiarokloconkelvdithdogNgctria
to her tearli
"Yes, do! lier heart is still weak .
911 be very sure of that; e ,osbfaitio:ra:ecinitNiee,fesetirtlrhyte:,!Itpai.a”dwatsi_evaear prreeatiti;eads zhoowls1
"But mother! You know what the
—he held out a hand. "I'm sure you'll
do it, John!" doctor oaid, John. It would kill her;;
"Why, of course I 'will!" he saki so. She couldn't stand it. The
sure that I hope you will be very hare
John. l'rut .disappointinent would be rrible."
"But it eouldn"ti I 'wouldn't lot it!,
"And good luck to you,
He broke off, and, throwing'
"Thank your a himself into a chair, burled his head
John's tone; the
The doctor loolyreodunugp mslalanr,splyieacaetl, hinanhdis ohnanadosh•wsTbsehnoudledaenr. laid a gentle;
was very grave for that of a happy,
lover. A thought crossed the doctor's
mind.
"It wasn't an excuse, „John?" he
asked.
"An excuse?"
"You are going to be married sown?".
"Yes, yes," John replied. And
this he showed the doctor out into hie:
trap.
, John, aa a matter of fact, was sorely'
troubled; for the first time In his lifet—he had known her many years—Bes-1
'pie and he had quarrelled. To him it!
had seemed the most joyous, the most!
natural thing in the world that he'
'should go eagerly to his sweetheart
to ask her to help him. Besides'
'which, all that he asked was that she
would marry him at once instead of
waiting until the spring.
It worried him that she should'
have demurred; that, at the best, heri
agreement had been a very grudging'
one. Loving her as -he did, he couldl
easily
did not going away to -morrow, and when we
improperly killed, or of animals worth over seventy-seven million grant a favor miorelethan this. I were back -she would not recognize
dollars, the first nine were conifer- "Ah, well!" le sighed. Bessie al., my voice. • The folk all would help
prohibited as food (Deut. 12; Lev. oils or soft woods Spruce was the ways was a strange lass; that's her; us, and—"
11). Then the meat and wine might must important-, alone forming over fascination. The prettiest and stran-, She hesitated, and John let the se
have -been consecrated to heathen ont-quarter of the total cut. Spruce gest lass in Breamtune. it'll all comet were
rsutsahlenlg. In
thousandawthoughts
deities, and partaking of them and white pine together formed hirlwind soturgehanits
.Antiochus while in the year previotis these twO right."
epite all Dr. Thomas's skill, her eyes' you, Jean, he said, presently, sealing
From thatd ay old-, Mrs. Gurney's through his mind.
would be equivalent to a recogni- barely one-half of the 1910 cut
tion of these deities. health speedily mended, save that, de:' "I'll try,, to be a good uhsband to
Epiphanes sought to force the JeWs species made zrua nearly three-fifths remained very weak. The .doctor the bargain.
•
to eat unclean food in this way. of the total. The decrease in Pro- gkanredwtothabterallwas hopeless with re-, • • •
• 9. Made Daniel to find kindness portien is due not to a smaller t eyesight, but he tohl,no, The next day they stood, man and
—Like Joseph Egt-pt..he had of the tWO species, , but to avecraY one- era?? islua.e Bessie:,
kindled an affection for larnselr; in, great inerease in the amount of• And eadh. day Bessie sDeeeanaen anedhheer,:ri was saying.
andrto b wouldmmind ean easy,l 1;
efirlc.tatainic.;,a.inait:Igietuastptesalliteoeoec j.:11
We'll just have to da
"John," she whispered, "It would
kill her!"
"Ay!" he exclaimed, looking up:
`And why remind me of it?"
"There's a way!,"
"A way? -what way?" r
"She need not know, John; she need
not be told. I'm very like Bessie, my
voice--"'
He jumped with a cry from his
chair.
"What d'you Mean, lass? What mad:
ness is this?"
'John—John," she cried, "you under-
stand! Don't make It so hard for
me!"
Something of the girl's heroism,
something of her beautiful spirit cams
to him. •
"You mean that you'll marry me,
Jean, to save mother?" '
"'Yes; of course I do! . You knon
that it will kill her. The doctor sayZ
so. And she'll never see again; the
doctor told me as inuch. We would be
not appreciate a lo '
t)hueti hea,rt of his,caytoes• He had dougl.as heinloc.lt, ced.ar and yei_ .i?vilsrtse.rauJernaerty'.
calw`leieytdwere , twod sweeeert: gi
the
pritiee of the eteatteas looked fay, bia. One quarter ef the 1909 cut
mered
them thra-c physic 11 all
orablv npoe it ' 'was formed .of these four species, loapsrstee5ji'tj• ya,B aeleler7rematirirtri:11
displea,secl if the youths appe..a,Ael
irrRf
Lijivelfs(jinreesshinelf, becaus:e 'if taogtill'aedelealaieavr°slaaig'ic:ftwhiniteitpsinixellsptoorOte- gealeidtn'eof tjaoehn,fallete'rtsauolant love you!" breathed with al
ther aricl
nneta,enly. a Y as iv' satciPPlanteeloh'Y sProale-ie,;,e altahceung.oh tjlaele: ..fwvrhoelitnet owngaresoavtihnneothmearf ta; t e could I not tell stberial.
.
farther
head—The, king week' he greatly four was irtcreased by 70 Poi' cent the invalid, reading- to her, chatting' mon have 'w -hen teat arra c,c“aie /i°1-1
ja so would endanee,r my While in 1910 the total cut of thj, less, her twin spent
11 s' 1
Then aic,t i)ani t t, tual cut g the h td
tzezeuc to make White pine lumber iseinclergoing with her—ever, it need searee/Y be, love. • '
•
at the top.of the list wlien it v , and, try as hec o Id tl
while Bessib flitted in fnt 1,1saommeeled- a3;r:Yotuhee7-11°1unlega
•
,motberm, be outi, cHnorro ',Oh J.th rnmantos.talin,
long hours ty''ith P,e,rpael)rhs'aps " she eaid in the 7-1.
eankdne:lio.urralnitd;, 11:91' ' y,,o1111 be just Jean. And
Alned,
passion of the hero of a first-class
I to make his request, and the mow Pine Produced In British Colurn-
Ttewart _He was ecriain 1.1 se . rise prediceon of Ta,st '
L e'en, (
tiottrisatnent, it was, the anee um ea ea, us iY. p men ed, VALOR 1.1NAIDPRrCIATED
• objection on -the ,-f the eenuch year tha. wnite, pine had nearly ol Bessle 01.w, evening as he n' Li d 0" '.t
'Continued'. "tber6'iS rieth-r
reached its maximum cut has rac- seeing bei back 6 WaS "Yes'"
he
arete eel , tan n ; , , ing in all this e orld that I would
chtean-' {a‘ the en true Iles Year the 1909 005 lieine Ira glad of that' not do for Y°11° To be by Your 'id° 1'
.Tohn -was silent for a few moments; ,would e "roughest sea, fight •
ag's aisPI easli re- no ac tniar's L'0 decreased by -4 per re aie or forty -Ko knew that Bessie had understood My waye"threu lie ,raging flames; ,
subatalioate officer• who acted ttvo 'million feet. Yell os inc'P- in well what he had meant, te convey td,. end walk il 'through the;
as a sort s,1 getardlon of the Jewish creased ill ile eta:nearly no Der cent% tier, and it angered him that "te
to, ea .1
in British Columbia during on.e , s ouie thus' calnala ignore the matteree , 'anxiously'
. Jirineniah—Upon enter- .7.eai• This, eatrease 'at ever one "Bessie"' -----------
110 1 "
01r3aliy',10 elan; cio pet tiley heel how-Jr:6d aud
exc aimed, catching: ,'PromiSe me yeti ei° do any
rfi• " her -arm rather roughlyha such thing.
been given names less sziggestive of se metent, a-} raise ,-4? - wrong with,:yen la
Ti;;n :11;?*c.:Itg.erraev,d, •S:,e7,1: Itreo261anr' 6fas
idcd``Ged is my judede"':was aiv- ing irt one veer Tee
ship To Deeiel, whose name sig- elace in ireportane
Obstinate woman. • ' . ci e
,
en -,the nate.° itcsile,e4 in ea e g ,ba,sam an, ,the,.four most imaost-
dearhe con
'%eV Protect his life, llardwoodsl
their ,,Je-,vreleceene-ctiee and ever-- place en The' sneeze,' linOW' CI!" ,
ahe fh llow,-me,thus'ere.
$r)
01
14