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Exeter Advocate, 1911-9-28, Page 9Hints for Busy Housekeepers. fteelpes asad Otlter 'Valuable informatics at ;Particular Interest to Wom▪ en Folks. INVALID'S DISTILS. bake for one hour in slow oven. Can renergeuey Beef Teat_ono pound 'be Served either hot or slieed cold - of shredded beef, one pint of water, place the meat in a saucepan with DESSERTS, colcl water, stir it to separate the Banana, Fluff. --Slice six lerge meat, and allow the water to ex- bananas, sprinkle with lemon juice tract the juice. Leave for ten mill- and greted eocoanut, and place di- utes, then place over a moderate "reetly on ice for (me hour. Then are, and stir till it simmees, then mash smooth with 4 WOOdeti Speen) tiOltr off the liquid, remove the fat add 4 scant cup Of powdered sugar from the surface with paper, and and the stiffly beaten, whites of two serve at once. eggs, which should be lightly fold - Fish in Mille—One whitefish, ed in. Pour into freezer, turedee milk, salt, pepper, half teaspoonful the crank about four minutes or of butter, and half a teaspoonful until there is a slight resi.stance, Df flour. Butter a pie dish, lay the when one-half pint of whipped fish in it, aucl cover with milk eream may be added. Freeze to sprinkle with ,pepper and saltoand the` consietency Of mush. hake till the flesh will leave the Rice Blarie Mange. -Ito a dou- ' bones when gently touched. Take ble boiler put three cupfuls of milk, up the fish, iay it on a dish, put the a pinch, of salt, and a scant half - milk into a, saucepan, thicken it cupful of rice, which has been thor- with butter and flour worked to- oug-hly washed. Cook uetit the milk eether, and pour around, _Garnish is entirely absorbed. Soak one - with ParsleY and sliees of Millen- third of a box of gelatin io cold Barley Water,—One tablespoen- water, dissolve over hot water, awl NI of pearl barley, lemon eind, add to the rico mixture. As the auger, and one quart of water. mixture begins to thieken add one Wash the barley and put it in a ing half cupful of powdered sugar, Min With some lemon rind and two or teaspoonful of vanilla, and a wine - three lumps of sugar, peur boiling glassful of sherry, and finally add wetee,, over, and let it etand for one-half pint of cream whipped to six hours - streiu for use stiff froth Turn into a wet mold Emergeeey Barley 1Vater — Ceoe and, zet away in 4 Cool piece until deseertspoeeful of pearl beeley, a needed, strip of lemon rind, sneer to taStg ,47,.. 7 and a quart of boiling water. Mix O elessertepoonful ef barley 'with a GRAPE RECIPES, wineglassful of cold water into a Gape 1)-10°--Malte a 1101 Pi° smooth paste 3 pour this into a ste,t, carn7totthheelr im)iee.as )(3\coaisihdothine regarakiilnegs pan contaieine, one quart of boil- ing water and stir over the Are for and relw" tile' skins' Tile° fill the ave. luilluto,, Flavor with lemon pie with the ekies and spriekle two god sugar, either or both, accord- Pe°,unds of 11°141. and and oaine- Ing to taste; allow the mixture to .aa'f '1.11)4131s of sugar aver the 3"411S' pool, and strain. Put on top erust and bake. The re - Oafs Feet—Olio calf foot, aim quart of milk, one small anion, half a, head of celery, small piece of le- mon peel, ono ounce of butter, one Dilute of flour, sliee of Imo; el:Lop- ed parsley. Put the prepared foot tleness, wet thoroughly with warm, THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY it/i'i'l)vi"g l'fe7 there' be 4. MITI - ado of fish. here the life of water, dry in sun, Furniturc—Qood polish is made of one pound melted wax, one pint turpentine, one gill_ alcohol beaten in at the last, Apply with soft cloth, eand rub well. White spots are 'easily removed from furniture by holding over it a hot, iron. When quite warm rub hard with grain of wood. G OE S MA D ERIN Ct OPERATION Students Have Desperate Struggle With Surgeon. A strange story of a surgeon go- ing mad while performing an opera- tion is reported by the St, Peters- burg correspondent of the "Petit, Journal." The scene was Chita, in Siberia, and the doetor'a patient was a working man whose condition ad- mitted of DO delay. He tves chloro- formed, and two assistants had placed everything ready for use by the doctor when the latter, much to their surprise, hegaia to make ierelevaret remarks, Be took up id bistoury, however, an made the required incision with his usurd skili and preeisien, his assistants being thereby reaseured, Suddenly he burst into a laugh, saying that ell their trouble was useless, adding : "It weld(' be better if we finished him off with a stroke of the knife," In a flaelt the assist. ants realised that their chief had gone maxi, and one ef them placed himself botween the doctor and the patient, whilst tho other threwil lomself upou the limatic and an- dea,VOred to tercet, the knife from his gresp, With maniacal rage, the• doctor etruggled with his aseisteet, while the nutses tied from the surgery in terror. Another assistant, hew- . , ever, with ready resource, con- tinued tho operation already bee gun, and when the medman had been overpowered succesSfally eompleted it. The doetor has been placed in an asylum, maining part of the grapes may be THE DIED CAGE DANGER. used for eelly. Concord. grapes muse be used. isou Gets Lite the System Grape Catsup—Five pounds of . , , ,, Through Carelessueee, three pounds of sugar, one pint of. ripe grapes P'es'ea from 11-1m stems' BOdSteadS - and birdcages are In a stewpan With euough Milk tO' vinegar, one tablespoonful each ot among the sources of plumbism -- cover, add the onion, celery and le- cinnamon, pepper and DIGITS, Wien- tile (leadiY lead Paisen disaase---aa" half teaspoon of salt. Bail the cording to a report by Dr, Robert mon peel, eook gently till the meat Is tender enough for the bone to Edeintee in the current "British grapee and strain to remove seeds be removed, place it an a dish, and and k'ill'' Add the ether ingredt. diNtiziaiLasl Journal"aBiinognhatnilio. industrial keep it warm. Strain the grave', ants and boil: until thick, "In put- thickee it with tho butter rolled in ' ting together chandeliers and gas flour, season with pepper, salt, and COOKING AND VEGETABLES, fittings, white lead is used in the x few grains of powdered mace and joints," he says, "and it is the cus- Hints on cooking vegetables; torn of the workmen to test the serve. Garnish with sliees c'd lo - mon and chopped parsley. After preparing vegetables, place joints by sucking the air out of the in cold water for some time before tubes so that in this case thelead , • Boiled Ceffee.—One egg, a small using, Always let water bail be- is probably conveYed direetlY into teacepful of milk, a few drops of fore putting them to cool, and con- tho stomach." The process which oesenee of vanilla. Beat the egg tinuo to boil until done. figures highest (with seventeen thoroughly and mix with the milk, Turnips should be peeled and cases in a list of eight -four in. eau:: into a buttered breakfast cup, boiled from thirty minutes to an stances ef plumbism) is tho paint- covdr-- withe, buttered paper, and ,.hour. • ing of motoiecar and -coach bodiee, :drain fel ''.tlrenty minutes. Tura e out, sift a little sugar over, and Beets, boil from one to two hours ; safes, and stoves, whose glossy, en - serve. then put in eold water and slip skin ler/KA-like eurfee4 exacts ia, he/lee' off. toll from the workers- owing to the BREADS. Spinach, boil twenty minutes. lead dust inhaled during the repeat. Parsnips, boil from twenty to ed and sand -papering involved in thirty minutes. securing a perfeetly smooth surface. Onions, best boiled in two or three House painters come next, and on waters, adding milk the last time: tho same level as regards fro - String beans should be boiled one teuency of poisoning are the girls and one-half hours. who smooth down trio paint of bed - Shell beans boil one hour. steads and birdcages with their Green corn, boil twenty to thirty hands to get an enamel -like surface. minutes. Cases of lead poisoning among tin - Green peas should be boiled in ners and kettle makers are aserib- little water as possible; boil twen- ed to the mixture Of lead and tin ty minutes. used for the inside surface of kettles Asparagus, same as Peas; serve and saucepans. on toast% with cream gravy. s •Cabbage should be boiled from le YEARS WITHOUT A ROOF. on to two hours in plenty of water: salt while honing. - , , . Whiter squash, cut in pieces and cake compressed yeast; into the hot I boa twenty to forty minutes in water place three large tablespoons lard, Allow to melt and cool. When perfectly cool pour into 'the yeast mixture. Add three teaspoons salt and three teaspoons sugar. Care- fully siftthree quartz „flour and add ,R34,11713zy. beating with a W0061.011 spoon ,or paddle until you have used it all. Finish mixing' with the hands ancl set aside in covered pan to rise fel. two hours: Then put in pans; let rise again and bake. This bread - can be started. at 8 o'clock in the morning and baked by 11 o'clock, thus doing away with the old tedi- ous way of baking bread. The beat- ing makes it very fine grained. and takes the place of kteading with 'et -ends. Virginia, Spoon Breach—Stir -in- k a quart of warm salted milk a teacupful of fine yellow corn meal and four eggs well beaten; add a, little sugar, two heaping table- spoonfuls of butter, and took thor- oughly. Turn out into buttered baking dish and brown in the oven. Serve hot with syrup, honey, or lust, butter.; :When properly made Is smooth -find fine, slightle thicker bhan thashed potatoes, and iri the e-e-delicaey of flavor bears no resemb- lance to ordinary corn bread. Three Bread Recipcs.—Take three pints NV-atC1', 'WO ha and one cold. Into the lukewarm water place one Aged Couple Prefer .to Sleep Under . the Stars. ' - Living near Wereenswould, a small quantity of water; when done • somewhat remote district of East press water out, mash smooth, sea- Kent, England, are two remarkable son with butter, pepper, and salt. disciples of open-air ..life. One is ' known as "Molly,f,2.evho is 80 years CLEANING. of age, and the other is her son "Billy," aged 60, who is a, chimney 13rass—Wash in warm soapsuds, . "Molly, " and ")3illy." are using wpollen cloth to polish lac- • sweep. • ' ' • -. I • , anveterate blelievers in fresh an, quered brass; clean .with cloth wet •and carry their eonvictions so far in alcohol. , that they will not have a roof above Copper—Polish with hot vinegar . their heads. , For 14 years ' they in which salt has bean disselveci; have li-sed in a, chalk pit 'however finish off with an oil to polish; .-.inclement elic ' Weather ,may hall. Nickel—Cover with thin poste. been,. .sQme time ego a friend pre_ pentiue end made of •emery powder, with tur- ,seated them • with a hut,' thinking parts. 's'weet 'oil 'IP es"4"rtar theY would appreciate it. They . slope in. it for. one night, but the Steel --Tea remove rust applythick 'nex morning they set fire't , .t de - paste of emery powder mixed with c armg that it Was "too ,stliffy' a equal parts sweet oil and turpena ,1,,,, fa sleep a, MEATS AND DRESSING. tine ;, finish. by rubbing with woollen' '----n-e.'in- 0-il'n''9inpg''.11.3.',i,' he (.i ep:'th'orf .:vin_ cloth and a dry powder. ter =Tilly', found ;a foot.:. and, a . Veal Breast and Dressing.—Get a - B,r.onze--Wash in soap suds alla half of .snow on him when he awoke, , three pound breast of ireal and have ammonia, dry and polish with tri- bri:t he ,aaki “it Naas-, quite warm the huteher cut a, pocket on the boll cii: rotten 510110, mixed. with on underneath." taeat side for fi'lling... Filling : One or paraffin. Rub off with soft aalf's heart, ground, one-half loaf cloth. ' ,. . NO 1:_lop cARRaRs ,. minced Bermuda onion, three leaves chloride of nime dissolved in one , 01 brea,ch ohe egg; , one quarter Drams—Flush with four 'ounce' There is no, hed_carr3ring Lia-tJaa..)- , , . Of ',sage, powdered.' 'Soak ''bhe bread gallon `.6f water, , , , ' .., : , , an. The native builders have; a In luke Warm milk and Water, then miti.ors___.-\,yine with , cloth. wet method of 'transPorting metar :squeeze it until nearly dry and add -with :alcohol. , , which makes it seem mor'e, like play . nil the other irwredienis: Put in- Waedwork--Wine with soft cloth than work --to. the onlOoker. One , , , , . . ta the veal -pocket and 'salt and pep- dipped in gasoline, ; which ,win re_ man makes this up into •balis' of per the veal. Lay two slices of salt rnove all grease, fing,-c.i, marks, about 61b. weight, which he tosses azai.k. ever- the top of brul,st. - Put sinok,: 'Or .'dirSt c . ' ' ' ' to ,a rnan who standS on a ladder . , , , midivay between the roof - and the fea, slices' of dmon 'araund, at- ' Iano,letith—LIVIPe Cip with.' m .. circling to taste, and about one Pint water and ,a little kerosene. ground. This man ,deftly catches , of water. Ptit in a slew oven for Gilt, frameS-L-Wipe 'off ' -With soft the. ball, and then` tosses it up to a two hours .:.hd baste often., ". ' , oloth. cliPpecl. in white of egg beat- man who stands an the roof. ' ilainburg.:r iloaf.----Three Ponmls en ,a ')cl mixed, with one ounce of -hamburger, six onions Sliced ChM, soda ; afterward polish with ,silk Genstant use'ef b''Ird water.is in 'Lwo tahtesPoonfuls salt, pinch red cloth. ' , ' julious to the good. .,appearq,nco ,0 epper,,teaspconful al,chilianowder, 'Leather flu:nit-arc •-=,-,-Creani with ,one's finger -nails. .1.-1 about,ono Ioaf stale breed well; hot, inilk .and 'Polish with thin 1WX" In ancient 'times he Offen, '41 'Beaked ih' ho1a Water. ' Mixr'an to - taro Of melted wak and turpentine. 'hand cf a si'di ' ',i', 9.,, urnt,apa ether. with rhandsin shape 'ef a ' -1ThiloW furniture-cTe ,Vlean 'or fi'om the bodyraa G., 1 , L, ' Oat:Special, ' ' af cover )\i'13. 'tomato sauce, and .igli- 211 alc'3,o to pre'vent' from brit- of disaa-ace.., ,a re`TETINATIONAL LESSON,. 01:013ER, .8.. Lesson 11. The life-giving strea Ezelt. 47. 1-12. Golden Tet, WV. 22. 17,, Chapter 47.—This chapter be- laga to the third and last great SIDQ000tit%li 11<)afPttehr°3 lart4t0e' -148--Ilwabificohf tsheet forth a vision of the final glory and peace of the redeemed people of Israel, The preceding chapters of the section gimo an account of the teMple buildings, and of the ordin- ances of the temple. The two clos- ing ehapters, ineluding the lesson, deal with the life-giving stream is- suing from the temple, the boun- daries of the holy land, and the dis- position of the tribes, Verso 1. Brought me back — He bad been in the out court of the house ot the Lord, There the peo- pie were accustomed to worship. Now he is conducted into the tem- ple proper again_ Ezekiel, belong- ing to the priestly class, Was mi- nutely familiar with everything that pertained to the temple, as an e4- arnination. of previous eliapters will quickly show, It must be borne in mind, of course, that he is still ie the land of 'captivity. What he de- scribes is part of a vision, Waters issued out—This figure evidently had its basis in the fact that there exist d e0nrieetiOn with e thae tenxpe hill, from which the waters flowed into the valley east of the city and so madetheir way toward the sea. This stream had, before Ezekiel's them, supplied a beautiful figure te the prophets (eompare Tea. 8, 0)., The Orientals enlarged upon thel blessings brought them by such 1 streams of water. This passage was, the basis .cif Ilev. 22. 1-2. Right side of the house This woad be the south. The stream God comes to abound there can abide, no death 10. Engedi---The modern Ain Jidy ("kid's well"), situated on the west shore of the Dead Sea, about half way farther on to, the nortli, in all probability. althongh it has not been actually identified, lay En- eglaim. The great sea is the Medi - t -rranean. 11. The miry places---The.se are the marshes about the Dead Sea. They are to be left as salt beds The saltness of the sea is due to the strata of salt reeks surround- ing it, 12. Whose leaf shail not wither- --Compare Psalm 1, and Rev. 22. 2. The leaf is a thing of the spring- time. But, with the godly man, it has a Perennial freshness. The storms and frosts of the year can- not blight it, for it draws stores of hope and promise eternally from God. Mereover, it is for healing. The s3-ispathy of the godly man is a Potion of healing for the wounds and sorrows of the world. Neither shall the fruit thereof fail.—There is a seasonable fruit- fulness, as well as au undying fresh- ness about the good man's life. The end of good man's life, its purPoso, is fruit. The freshness and beauty are a. term full of pre- mise. But the treo must ever reach forth to the bearing of fruit, as it a will always under the enrichment of the divine life, NFWS FROM SYNSET COS MUT THE WESTERN PEOPLE1 ARE DOING,. Progress of the Great West Told, n AN lain° 'wardnoaho FsIWPieeLtlitvilsmalrP; nt et: °Pe n A Dutch bank is to be establishea Calgary, Alberta, A permit has been taken out for a S40,000 hotel at Edmonton. The grain yield in Manitoba it between. 17 and 30 bushels to the acre. - A Jarge addition is to be built to the a., Eugene Hospital at Oran - brook, B, 0. During Augnst, 1,330 erioaina! cases were disposed, of in the Win- nipeg court, The City of Nelson, B. C., has,ap. peeled for provincial help to ran,* down fire bugs. It is expected that a, regular satur:ilertatTi. isaermviozavi4.,illwroa bo A. new Incinerator is to be erected n the, garbage wharf in VIctoria, at EQx1traofroSO4M8s39, were engaged in ANCIENT COINS. ---, ° nil of Geld and Brone limn Money Discovered. A find of geld coins was mad tv.•o workmen at the Roman eavations at Corstopitum, the Roman city near Corbridge, N r be I , England. sioilmlso, tier:ors:4h aliiioirbkocounb r small bronze jar, and as 34, took dame of the -coins. When an former years. The coins were i tuTal:TiSesSteia)fsotiiilet:ceaxyca:,a.usitgisitabh:ratssalltted been conducted in a neW tel he period of Nero to that of Afar - as Aurelius. The largest number xamination was made it was found ouzo, eoins in 4 Very 'geed state the director of the works, not present at the time, the fore ihat' here waa 109 gold and tw of rvation. They rangod fran 1 in irei Q an expert on behalf of the cro,,vn. Ro e by Oral- a ent 1,..„5 miles nerth of Wunapeg ex, 014 of settlers to Um Dog Lake 2e trig in the igatiou block, east af ,241'n ta:aory..p. it, have offered prizea for the best alfalfa grown in 1012, n Fozt, It is said that a. big find 0 silver and copper ore, has been was man streleictin Yellowhead (B. South Vancouver to provide for tbe influN of school ebildren, “Deadman's Island," off thet coast, will probably soon be aequiri ed bx the City of Vancouver. The vital statistics of Victoria: r August show a total of 00 births„,' 00 deaths„ and 80 marriages. There is at present elate a rus pursued its eourse eastward, pass- ing the altar en the south side and coining forth into the open on the right hand of the outer ea gate, 2. He brought me otit—As both the inner and outer east gates we re e closed (Ezek, 44 and 40), the pro- N phet was led from the inner court by way of the north gate, round to the outer east gate, where, from the outside, he saw the stream yore of the Emperor Trajan, number. The aneient coins found at Blaele emerge into the open at the south t ide of the gate. 3. The man—Re is not to be iden- t ified with Sehovali, but is an im- t einary being, a symbol of the re - 'elation of God. He has the attri, utes of Gool, being bright like rass (Ezek. 1. 7), and speaking e vith authority (Ezek. 40. 34). The p inc in his hand was of flax, and p -as used for measuring greater dis, e ances, as the reed was used for a barter. With it he proceeded a b iousaud cubits (about a third of a b ile) from the point where ,ilie a 'Ater emerged from the gate. At D le beginning the stream barely p trickled forth" (margin to verse m , but already it has become ankle e eep. .1-5.—The water rapidly deepens b MAI, a mile from the temple, it hi as become deep enough to reach a L an's loins, and, with another w ousand cubits, it becomes an assable river, one:that a man can- sa t pass through unless he swim. God's blessing,s grow more and u ore abounding as they flow on em life to. life. This is the first o et about the river of life—its full - ss. It is a picture of the new a of restored hope and felicity in rael. God is enthroned in the gi mple, so the waters are repre- tal nted as -issuing from the, sanetu- y. Whatever blessings are en- on -ed in the better day will be from ha d, and there will be an abund- an ceatboolbitetchieesmiretdha. t will leave no - ng tha, . On the one side and on the to ier—The river flowed down thi ough a gorge, or valley, and, as pea s usual there were trees on el- he r side. This suggests freshness bm 1 fruitfulness. The Paradise on itis first page of Scripture, as well or that on the last page, had trees wh the banks of the living streams, righteous man is like a tree nted by the river. There he is Petually nourished. The • palm e of the Easteattains its full per - ion only as it is planted by the er. a 111 ti re 2) li 111 th no So fr fa 00 er Is te se ,ar jo3. Go an thi 7 otl thr wa the anC the as on The pia per tre feet \vat aumbor have been retained for ho National 'thiseum of Nntiqui les and the crown propose to re, ward the finders for those kept, landing them back the remainder. All the *eine are silver pennies, ith the exception of a silver half- enny and a silver farthing. The ennios includes Scottish (long ross) coins of the reigns of Alex- nder III., John Bahia], and Bo - ort. the Bruce, The Irish pennies along to the reigns of Edward I. nd II., and bad been minted at ublin and Waterford. English ennies of the same reigns were lilted in London, Durham, Cant- rbuay, Berwick, Briatol, York and sewhere. There arc also a tinni- er of foreign "starlings," The alfpenny is of the reign, of Edward and was minted at Berwick, bile -the farthing, minted in Lon - n, is supposed to belong to the me reign or that of Edward 11. NCLE HIRAM TO TITS NEPHEW n the One Priceless Treasure Which all 3len Share Alike. "Stevey, my boy," said Uncle ram, "one man may have more ent than another or more co -ar- e or more money, but there is e thing that no man on earth can ve any more of than you have. d that is time. 'Did you ever stop to think of 11 Or maybe you haven't 'come it yet, that of the most precious ng of all, the same being, I re - 1, time, nobody, no- matter who is can have any more than you There can't be any favor - m or special privilege or gouging monopoly in time. You get at's coining to you anyway, and no man on earth can .take it away fr°'n-l'An3d'olli.sn't this something to be cheerful over? Why, Stevey, it's the 'grandest thing going to think that• of the most valuable thing of all we've got as much as the man mobile. 13ut, an,c1 now gt2ig- ;In do-svri to the 'sermon, Steve -y, this most precious thing of all is the thing of which we are most, -waste- . "We get our full share of it sure. but we waste it ourselves shocking - Don't waste time, Stevey, please t. As you feel now you've a million years ahQ4.,,,-.1 of you e „les,, plenty'of time; but time is one of ,those things that once lost can neyer be recovered. Don't 8. dep sou Aka All ern and in t er., heal som of ti Into the, Arabah—This is the ressiori of the Dead Sea, and thward as fax , as the of bah, a distance, of -105 miles, this country, besides the east.. region, or wilderness of Judaea, the Dead Sea, -is to come with - he range of -this onflowing niv Vliate".ver-!is,,touched is ed. The desert place shall blos- e e like tho.rose, the bitter waters don' 10 sea shall 1)e made sweet, and got ything shall ministoF to man's m°1-. both .anaterial and .spirituO, is the Jewish coneeption o the doni of- God: op earth, but it SP_ a picture of the I .., e-grcin ertfe or the unfailing grae.e 0.1 in the, human heart. Every living creature which meth----ilefel'I'il)g to the,smallet- am as, especially the fish of sal - 7:3 Even in the waters of the that rides by us in. a $10,000 auto ever good This king al prop 9. .`7404* 'ORM ler si ad Lea, which are 'destitute of waste a aitinute ,of it. When you nlaY, Play; sink t1f, it ilf,ierly'; 1);141 , When.fI e all -your tirric. Don't clwadla wouldn't have time to earn ,rng if th4:y hati to put their as 41r,.0 en, de. ship carrying, 7,000 tons 0 ulphur for chonneal works alon‘ e Sound, landed nt Victoria, B.C... e ether day, ' future Kildman Nan., is to al.' 00 animals the 'freedom of the as a herd by-law has recently en passed, "ongars are multiplying at, at rate in the Bayonne countrY. . C. A passenger al.mg a trail recently met on iess than 1iv4. Deer and other game are being destroy-, ed, This yedr, for the first: time, inen were brought from the Paeifte, Coast to assist in harvesting opera -1 tious of the central. -west, Groat activeity in the Revelstoke; mining district is reported by ex- perts who have recently visited that section of the.province. Tho first. shipment of 1011 Fraser: leer ealmen, 2,000 cases, arrived; recently in Vancouver, and was shipped to Great Britain. It is proposed to pipe natural gas' from Bow Island to High Rivero Alta., for power and domestic par -1' poses. The rate will be 20 and 331 cents per thousand, respectively. Over a hundred poaching boats; were seen recently taking in sal -1 mon by thousands, off the west' coast of Vancouver Island. Most were operating within the 3-mile1 limit. Coal has been diseovered within, ten nines of Sort Geese* and it is the supply point for the great Cariboo gold district, which bat. produced one hundred million dol.) lars to date. Owing to the cancellation of the close season for salmon by the Federal Government the packers ow the Fraser had been able to put up' ,appro-ximately. 210,000 cases of all kinds of fish. One of Elko (B. C.'s) most re- spected citizens, Fred Sheridan died recently from acute blood poison t' - in... A friend in a joke had crown -1 ed Mr. Sheridan with a cigar; box,f and a splinter caused a slight scalp scalp wound, with ended in death.' -se-RA.1,4116N CHURCH CLOCK. Made by Villager as Coronation Memorial. The church clock. dedicated. on Sunday at Wootton li,ivers, a Wilt- shire village near Maidhorouglai England, as aeoronation inemorial,; . is pl,:obably without an equal f It was'iiiade by a villager namedl Spratt, who-, - hearing that local funds were insitfficient for the pro,'; posed addition of clock to the, church tower, offered to make, One provided assistance was .given the heavier 'work a,nd the necessary' metal and other material were sup- plied to him: • All manner of,matemal—including parts of old bicycle,s perambulat-} ors, %reaping, tnowing, and thresh - i machines and a, tia aff-cuttek--.L., was brought to Sprat. 1,vhosFke- taVe 1.'k?eMbieci Is gr t el S" of trItel:! which have 120 teeth each' WPAS.0 taken front qis, se d separatorS ' ariel otAer o s was ti,;ie„ ta. .e7ro .41241' eltorean neini " • et, a 57 11 7,e 111 1•• `,1