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The Exeter Advocate, 1917-12-27, Page 6• OR, ween A DECLAR sift s ATION OF WAR. CHAPTER XVL "I saw all the cloing's that happei. under the sun; and, behold, all is vain, and a grasping at the wind," In the same plain pulpit ru:Whic,lh a, quarter of a century ago John ulu ietrodticed Inineelf to his flock, he steod once more, not so upright in- deed as on that long distaeunday, --with narrow shoulders stooping, and bleached hair tossed back from his higla for.thead,---but with a light upon his face which had not been there, even then, This was the spot on which his natural shyness always dropped from him as drops a cloak. But to -day • there was more than a mere absence Of se -consciousness: a strange new aggressiveness of demeanour. The mild brown eyea were no longer the •eyes of a dove, but rather of some fierce bird of 'prey, poising t9 sweep -upon its victim. sired did I deny them, and re -fused no pleasure to my 'heart." • The words of the preacher -king rang th_rotigh the crawded space with that penetrating note which "nervous ex- altation alone. can give. • "And as I gaaed upon all the works of illy hands„ and upon the doings which I Have accomplished, behold it Was all ram and grasping at the -wind, That afternoon Fenella sat for- a er, since she svas only half aware of T E "Fenella,, you have. been, reading too many novels" said. Julia severely, after a l'ong and orninotie pause. "I Shall have in future—" • "Leave her alone," interrupted Al - herb, th a voice almost ,as measured ae usual. "She'a, a little overdone, that is all. • It'sbeen rather a hard day's work, what with that long ses- "that reminds me—I haven't congra- sion in chapel this morning and every tula-ted you yet upon your eneeess in thing. She wants a night's rest, taInilig the bear, Duncaii has actual- Don't bother Tide, Julia, and don't take 1y s v'tlachatavn his snit, and all is away the novels from her. She isn't szneothed over." a baby, atter all, The deep -red blood rushed a to lipHs,e bliuntisIel;deswiwthiliccharehl:saelynasrmroillsied g. ne "Oh, hag he really?" she breath- watchfully M their sockets o lessly asked. "I am so glad!, Oh, (Tbe continued.) how generous he is! 1 scarcelyex- pectV—I did itotsltn,ow what to' -,hope ANCIENT HEBRON. The disturbance in her voice was so Most Venerable of Earth's Cities an evident that Albert, glancing at her • Rich in Historic Interept. in surprise, ancl reading the same dis- , turhance in her glowing face, was for Hebron, recently eaptueed by th a Monient just a trifle taken aback. British forces in Palestine, is a ver By an association of ideas, which was ancient city, figuring, le fact, as on more instinctive than reasoned, his of the oldeat in the history of Canaan eyes sought the broad -shouldered fig- Its medern Mohammedan name is U ure fast diminishing upon the road. A Khalil, or Khalil asaah, eFriena, flue specimen of manhood, certainlY .Goag, 5 aid to benve been so name —even in his Sunday clothes . He re- membered having heard that half the from.it,s •s's°eiatimi Abraham 1;11‘1,1I130:1"1 -i',1) N C()NV,F.'31rING SIGNALS. • Many- Cleve -4• P wets 'Used by Spies, to nfinpart In.ferMation to 'Retreating Huns. Prosaic 'aetivities of small fel:niers. must 'take' plttee, in northern • in the shadow of the great guns. Ac- cordingly the French artillery officers did not think it at all remarkable when d a farmer with two'red COWS and one white One drove them down the road every day to the pasture , while the C German and 'French- shells shrieked Y overhead: • I3ut, after the three cows, e strung out in single file, had gone by the German artillery flamedgforth in reneseed actisty. '• • . cfl It seemed imbued with a startling presdience- ' regarding columns. of troops, files of supply 'trains and lo- cations of new guns, A„hrench offi- .cer bocaine interested in that proces- sion of coWs. It never seemed the same on two successisre occasions. 3Sometimes the'syhrte cow would leas , , Sometimes tlid•phite one • was he- , ween wo o Somelimes he farmer would whip one or the other of the creatures ahead of the line. girls in the village were secretly : — • • : languishing for Duncaigs favors. Per_ fear sacred cities, the others, being' haps it might be as well to put a stop Mecca, -Medina and Jerusalem. It to those viSits to Adam's cottage. But lies Only twenty-one miles southawest even as he formed the thought, Albert of Jerusalem.. smiled at the grotesqueness of his own The city of Hebron is referred to in faney. The ghost .of an idea which the Old Testament in :Numbers eta, for a Moment' had startled hifin. *as 22; Genesis 2; Joshua ;:dV,, 10. I not to be: taken more seriously than As a sanctuary it was the3mest •fam- ' any other sort of ghost. and there was no gain wider the sun." His body a little drawn back from .w Ion while upon the shore. are reported to have aojonened oat ous of the south, and the three patrie..... archs--Abraham, Isaac arid Jacob --- pulpit -wall, upon which his thin hand as this, then, really. the avhole Hebron (Genesis , rested, he paused, measuring the eon_ value of those goods which she had xxxvii 14.) A legend has it that gregation with an eye which, seemed been taught to prize above everYthing, were all buried there with Re- • h e • i 1 d ended in her ears 'e•v• "-You have heard the words before, ever since she could remember any - all of you—for they are not mine, as thing? An empty grasping at the old oak as pointecl oot at Mamre, near you know wellg they are those of the \tvhianstdithougbCtOnestned"3„arettiontb\evaesonbsotreirin°e! bybaies tslplaiet;3°LiAiebra'olelzr'te „Asia the man who perhaps ef all men on earth, either before or since, had taken the tion itself was not all surprise. Al- Promised Land ventured to- Hebron, fill of all the goods of the earth,---- most it seemed to her that she must and Joshua was said to have destroy - who a i 0 [ e partly have expected this. Had not who had fed his reed 1, itl g Id 1 i ed the city •before giving it as, a heri- appetite with delicate meats, his 'met Lady Atterton said something very these to Caleb. and made it a city of to challenge contradiction w os pia ses la so ecca and Sarah, while even to -day an with the beauty of women, his fancy , 1 e 1 w len s le a_ ,ec . as eve). ref ige Th • the ." • en le place hgares prorm- with every decide that could amuse it.. success such as My success?" and had is' • ' nently in , the histery of David, for it Nothing which his eyes desired did he! answered herself: 'It was not success was here that he Was anointed, Kins, deny them; it is he who says it. And , at all—it Was failure?" a3 st over Judah, and then ovee the the end? Beheld all is rain, and a : How strange that her father should tir whole of Israel. • (II. Samuel ii , 174; grasping at the. wind! It is the ,sen- I preach siich a sermon just now! She - tenee of the Pride of Life, spoken by I had heard of people the course 'of ve 1-3-.) . kbsalom also made his at- one who had tasted • it to its dregs, I whose lives had been changed by such -tempt to capture theThrone from:He-- and found but bitterness in the cup;--, things as a sermon or a book; but bron, but soon -after that time it dis- hy one who had plucked the fruit, and, whether this was to be for her one of appears from marked prominence in in whose mouth it turned to ashes. - those decisive turning -points she was Bible story. In the A.pocrypha it , is And this man accounted the wisest 'still unable to discern. She had heard, mentioned howevel-• , as being the man of the old world. I too, of earthquakes which, by levelling. 3 3 "And we, my breathren, into whose the walls of prisons, had set captivesj place that Judas Maccabens tools from ears these words of wisdom have been " free., Was it possible that she ha,d ' • • called ever since we were children, been living in a„ prieon until now, and- how do we follow their lesson? Are that the words- heard that morning --Control of Insect Pests M Cauada. we wise enough to learn by another's had been words of liberation? Al-. The annual report of the Dominion experience? "nahe foolish and blind! most it seemed to her that some sort Entomologist for the year ending We will not believe in the bitterness of chain had fallen from her. And .March 31st, 1917has just been issued of the cup until we have tasted it our- now she peered about her, blinking her by the Department of eAggieulture, b • nil , b g , e ..r ; h selves-, we grasp at it, we pursue it, eyes in the new daylight, and wonder- Ottasva, and in its twenty-foue pages a brief record is given of the activities obstacles. And when we have reach- She went home at last, dazed,hay- of the officers of the Entomological ed it—we -find that we have grasped ing drawn no practical conclusions the wind. Rich or poor, high or low, from her reflections, and seeing noBrancla The necessity of peotecting that deadly thing, the Pride ,of Life, clearer into the future than she ha,d all our crops from insect p.eats with a' has as all in his clutches. For what seen that morning when she had at in • view to increasing crop production Is is the poor mass's envy of the rich but the chapel, quivering; as though Under more urgentthan ever a this mesen tl - t thi • t Pride of Life? a lash. "And some of us dream only of gold, and of the ease it brings, and of the luxury in which it will enable us to revel—forgetting the while that eaee without work is no ease but Weariness, and that the grosser luxury swells the more quickly it pallso— a there must come ae nes .o woi s; nves ga ons on ne Inc rich man who has been only a rich Pe°13 garden and greenhouse, fruit crop$, vere ecclesiastical disci line of the day, secular interests were enjoying, than the animals. "This also is ,grasping at the wind! time. The establishment of regional • • Had proof been wanting tor he i entomological stations, of which there nerves being off their balance, it would are now ten in different provinces„ has have been supplied by her very greatly enlarged the scope of ,the strange behaviour that evening after words and the usefulness of the officers the cold supper which, on Sundays concerned. Concise statements are alone, replaced the orthodox meal. given of the progress of the following an day—and t ti i d th tThey were alone m tne bow -window- f be it the day of his death,—on which ed drawing-room—the three young o sects affecting grain and field cr pS, and after the somewhat , man, blushes to find himself no higherl se • forest and shade trees, stored grain mere safely do as the minister was domestic and °the). animals, the hollI3e- their rights,which the could all the and other products, insects affecting 1 "And some of us again dream only of hearing onr names in the mouths spending the evening with .Adam. hold and public health; the introduc- of raen, of Seeing, their backs bend be- "Well, I'm blowed!" exclaimed Al- tion and colonization of parasitic 1fore us, us of revelling in the pomp and beet, lifting his face from the latest sects arid studies of natural' cofitroig ch-curnAance of .fashion, But if we Scotsman, "Just listen to thi-s: field work against the brown -tail mOth sit down to think we shall here blush " 'Elopement in high life.—It is con- in the Maritime Provinces; and the in - again; for who woulcl be honored be- fidelitly affirmed that the Honorable spection of imported nursery stodic- A cause of' his gold -bags, or because Miss Lilian Larrington!—("That's brief statement of the work undertake of the chance of his birth? that pretty girl who was staying with on ee . ith a view to conservation f will "This al.so is grasping at the wind! her mother, Lady Calder, at the Bit- . ..,, o c lege partieularly -birds, is also' given - "All, all is a grasping at the wiled hop's last year," interpolated Albert) '''-`, • which has only this life in view,—this —"left her home on Wednesday nightThe publication does not contain any, , atom of time lost in Eternity. ' It is accompanied by Mr. George Butt, recommendations respecting the con not here that our satisfaction is to' under whose tuition her younger trol of insect Pests, such information he found. How -should it be, since it brother, the Honorable Edward Lai.- is bl' li d • th b 11 t. pu e e u e ms andl• circu- is not for these •things that we are rington, had been recently placed, and gars of the Entomological Branch. made?: Our soul -hunger dernandS has since been clandestinely married comprises a brief account'of theyeaes other food. And what holds back'to him. Lady Calder hag fallen ill in , work and will be of interest' to all the hand that proffers it? The Pride, consequence of the shock received.'" who 'desire to learn what progress is of Life --only the Pride of Life." I "Good gracious!"was all Julia could being made in this line of scientific In the chapel not a head moved, and say, hayingemerged from her novel, research as applied: to agriculture searcely an eyelid Winked. What in orde.r to listen. ' After a moment's , Conies'inay be -obtained on application had eome Jeer their minister to -day?. earnest reflection she added: "I sup- ' to ie Publications. Branch Depart- --eor that something had come over, Pose she's mad." him seemed patent to the, least obser-' "Either mad or bad; for she can't Mem' of -Agriculture' Ottawa. All en- vant. Nevdr had they sen the flame smeouslymean to remain Mnrs. Butt all gues respectmg insect pests should within him leap to high as this. For her life.,' ••. be addressed to the Dominion Entomo- minute after minute they listened, a' "Why shouldn't she Mean it?" ask- logist, Department of Agriculture, Ot-' little bewildered, for in truth the ed Fenella suddenly. - tawa; such requests and enquiries may Pride of Lite,bad as small a place in "My dear child; because people be snaiied free �f ree of postage. the hard-working community as it can brought up as Miss Larrington has a., ca—a_ - have in any bUt tIN-b of monks. What been brought up don't shakedown into There 'zee 1,381 publications of all had they done to deem -ye this severe the soli of life which the Mr. rnorai scourging? they asked them- lead " Butts kinds now being issued in Canada, • Selves., even 'while carried away by; "But if she cares fOthhn enough ?f, cluding'138 daiIie, 4 tri -weeklies • 40 • the current bf ardent .and "The more she cares for him—that semi-weeklies, • Weeklies, 222 trifle awed by die fierceness, whieh is, the• more passion• there is in the. monthlies, 1-bi-inorithly, andl6 quare contrested so strang•ely with their pas- matter --the quicker it will fizzfe out, to/ARS. useal inild benevolence of utter-' and the stronger Will the reaction be," mica. He was speaking like. 'a man 1 explained the youthful philosopher, moved by personal hatred, almost with as much assurance as though Vindiativeness, That Pride of Life to, half a eenturyi'of experience stood•be- which he shot his arrows Might have ,hind him. When the poor girl been an enemy with whom he had a' awakes from her intoxication she will deadly seryte to s.-ettIc, find herself 'caught in her 'own toils, 'Yet not'one among the congregation' and the natural result will folloW. guesse.d that for the moment, that' Really, Ern quite sorry for „her.'and Imaginary antagonist was clothed in,he ' e -was such a good hand at tennis tho flash of Ronald Maeglivray, john„' too 3"' • thriself searcely guessedit. ' He was ,1 "I'm not sorry for ecr ail! burst I ' not preaching,at anybody, no -L' acting, out,Venella, with that kind of yehem- upon any reasoncd motive, but pUrely once which betrays a tension seeking upon ono of these niiptilses that will riot lin de,nied,--tearing open his soul, In order to save, it from suffocating undor, the burden of the disappoint- ment '0,d -doh bad fall:en upon it, Behverin the chapel and the•13,ectOry of ilios,9%,'ve:ay sinall incidents oc- curred 171iialt• P'ain thoi, Inc 4Th pot.- more come 10\76 -V,runt than to, be put 33 .cytripi,v 3 tx0Speatio-ri ,; to the t,etit 1111a e to the IfisintoeY,4ate She brOke,get syli;••i „a.e%at , ho -5 , nteer 1 ' •PA) '•'tlt "[es., 4;n Di4n31 ii!issed tlidYift.:';with, her (mil *oil ,[•• 13-14s3f, fella -tee, anti, hardly •fthein 1afel•0' - hTaolo nn41 •,•••,•/,, Fuit13 :0, Laid _I3IJ11I,1YnI relief, and with dangerously shining eyes. "I thinlr she is to be oniried, not pitied. It must be a glorious thing to care for anyone as much as thst!--beter than anything chic in the world. and to, have the courage tO give it all up Sol' his sake. What • aspine,`, fore- , Vo iad,.,,Slie:nnt heard Wet' lips,? .The In the two pairs ol rc(ly oarifuse,d "FreqUently ": • the foianation : altered several' times in the half -Mile jour- : , ' EverY chengd in formation Seemed a • utterly needleSs to the purpose of driving three Caws tO pasture The offse[jr 'apprehended the man' on the waY"oaCk-3, You will not :eee the • sun se high in the het:I:yens to -morrow," he remarked casually. "You' hide nost done 'welle-foe Prance!" . The peas- ant's face paled. Ile tried to pretend' •astonishment„ but his fear iind con- fusion were too obvious. He told his Story to the drumhead court that con, - veiled to listen, „The': GeernanS; in failing back, had arranged a "tlxee cow" method of signalling. The-theee animals. were capable of half a dozen different formations that spelled al half dozen different truths .conCern, ing troop movements and artillery accuracy, He was paid well by the Huns and coached far a couple of days in the tactics to be pursued. before they fell:back, Tire' Paella,. officer Was right.. The peasant,saw only. one. more sunrise. And -for him 'thero was no Sunset; - "Silk Si vnal- " Another eleyer expedient for signal- ing was that employed by • the. "Woman of the shirts!" She :seemed always washing them.. "Hp on a little , knoll ,where .her . house stood they . flappede and .dancect on the clothesline:in .the fresh Morning sun-. light. -Back, Of' and befgond that knoll: the guns•looreed sullenly; •their, smoke •Phimes 'lifting lazily like"' blossoms of white „against the' green hills-, The shirts "flapped—red, and: blue and white and red againsoine very close tbgether, some ,widely spaced. After a few daystheY arrested that•wornan. Terror-strioken; She babbled her enn.!,i fession of the "shirt signals.'' She\ DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME 1. n efitti di es avbe gs oelti, al tiellirely'sw lel ilicteYils2Thrlytit'ial itliy:o.:(8.1\e:tell:—CpBalt.alltentlieellile':'asYnil:1:geeelso,tlidi:)nfilicifpse: in the jar when "I'he pin.cliasing of cheap or low-grade pouring in the boiling water. canned goods for home consinnestion is ,Be positive that the jars, rubbers 0iwt esiinlielisicloolseosskisbi'lliega,r.ltoin• fleilaT,ey agroteledlermesailicletss To suecessfullY can vegetables. and ipliteigeloeireriet.12,iiilceelno:,:laiiiiNebio,:ailknp;;ysniii:::1,, p;11:easin,itt:iloceii.l.al'alab. oiiiini: pt 11 .itieinleedda id-tsg;r; maids, cliilte+ Tdifesoatslniesdotbbs:eaisfell::::rofems:tto.;eili:•ieil:1;iegi ,::l..oeyct:taus'ict,itstle,dsr;iii: dt: 1 -hzs goodadsndf cle),::::11'1,:: •• they do not hep for at.:113ria looq-willgiia,ntlhait•ioetefs her, must also come under this rule. time in their natural etate. , additiona,stsootrt:epialtnPt;roif,drhuarbbilloiegmthe win: Vegetable Structure veg•etables will prove a most welcome An their original cost. ma'iely-catinnilieerls ter seeson, besides saying . Bacteria .• , cells cover all .yeeetables and they are completely steriliz- ed this bacteria will,cause fermenting action to take place in the jar, and then -the contents will be a total loss. To. Can AsParagus • Select • perfectly fresh and young 'asparagus. , Wash it earefully to Xe- - move the sand. Peel the stalks care- fully and trim away all the hard and water until all the asparagus is pre- all the large 'canneries, and is much pithy portions. Let it lay in cold pared. Then tie it in convenient preferred because it gives a beautiful bundles for easy handling while appearance to the vegetables. It can blanching and cold dipping. methods. Blanching—Have'a large pot of wa- be succesefully accomplished with the same result s in less time than by other In using this method, the_vegetables ter boiling-. Place the asparagus m , . boil ' for . ten minutes. Remove and cold dip by dropping into a pan of are blanched, cold dipped and then this water when it starts boiling and packed packed in sterilized jars, the rubbers , adjusted and the lids partially tighten - very cold water. ed and then processed. • Pack into the jars, Li thejarsIloselyasit os sioththe tM end down, Cold Dip ep.rervePnitit carascildrg silver Cold clipping of blanched vegetables [ I while filling with boiling water. Re- to is mbekinegt•heeamrtifiazimly ecloloolllsgehd , move the knife and put the rubber and and also to set the coloring matter so that it -will not easily dissolve during the rest of the. process. Be positive that the water is boil- ing rapidly after the jars have been placed in the water bath before, coent- ing the time for the process, Remember that no food iill Spoil that is absolutely sterilized, that bac- • teria, spores and germs are exceed- ingly hard to kill and that only long The cellulose stet:la-are of yeges tables is tough and fibrous' in char- : acter, ,and because of this the vege- tables require along time—from thee's, to five hours, ---to ' be completely sterilized. • Many successful canners use the old sectioned time method, that is, to heat it - to the boiling point and cook for one hour, then seal. Repeat this procese for three enccessive cloys. • This is a troublesome method ..vhich requires, considerable time for handl- ing and cooking. Newer' and more modern methods have elim plated all this. The Cold -Pack Method This method is now in general usein lid in position. PartiallY tighten and then process in hot-water bath for two hours after the boiling has started. Remove and tighten the lid securely as possible then invert to co61. When cold, store the jars in a cool dry place._ Poiats to remember for. successfhl. results: The asparagus must be young and fresh. Wash cavefully to remove any sand. and careful cooking will accomplish. Peel and remove the pithy parts. , this. • HOW SIT ALL I USE THE LEFT -OVER TURKEY? Turkey Erni:ice—One cupful of 1 slices of toast cut in triang•les. Coy - small pieces of tuekey, one onion, one er the toast with a leaf of lettuce, then. „ green pepper, one-half cupful of lay on two thin slices of turkey, then. gravy. Mince the -onion and penper one thin slice of ham or bacon and: fine, then parboil and add to the minc- then another leaf of lettuce. Cover ecl turkey. Moisten with gravy and with a second slied of toast. Garnish heat until very hot. , Serve on toast. with olive, pickle and then serve with, Turlsey Terrapin.—One cupful of one tablespoonful of mayonnaise on. two tablespoonfuls of Emir, one cup- ' To Use the Fillingsd-' Cut the cold: leaf of lettuce.3, cold turkey, cut in one -inch blocks, ful of! milk. Season with one tea- boiled potatoes in thin slices,- use spoonful of salt, one-half teaspoon- about two eupfuls; put in a frying pan, i'ul of Worcestershire sauce. Blend in Which four tablespoonfuls of short - the flour and milk and then cook for ening has been made very hot. Turn . Add the cold turkey _ the potatoes in and add one and one - five minutes. ' meat. Shake or toss until Very hot. half to two cupfuls of :turkey filling. Add the - yolk' _of egg and a ' (la sh of Heat thoroughly and :add one cupful nutmeg. Serve. of gravy or sthek; cpok until moisture evaporates and a brown &let forms. Mold into sha„-Pe by plishing to the side of pa41.„ Turnsout on c. hot plat- ter III tin -and -let Shape and then serve. -Turkey Broth. -.--Crack the bones and ' then 'cever with cold water., Cook -slowly or one and one-half ' hours. 'Strain and cools until reduced to one-half. Blend two thlespoonfuls of corn -starch with five cupfuls of the prepared. broth, then bring' -ici a boil. Add ane teaspoonful of finely chopped 'parsley and then serve. , If there is not a sumcient amount of broth add Turkey Club Sandwiches.—Use two milk. Try this; it is delicious. --- ---_,------------------„n„ ___—_-_-.-- • COTTONSEED EROM II. S. • The average depth of the English Channel is 110 , feet. . 1- 1 id I f • 1 eae soi ier country or silver•ai follewed. the , i.ip,Struetions of the re- 'treating Huns. - • : 3 Sheep have been -used • to signal. 7 Chimneys smoked on alterngte maim- , . ings;' stopped suddenly and smoked Again. Peasants who would sell their cenntry for gain have stood against stone wallS. Signalling is an interest - Ing thing—Pizarro raised his hand tor the famous massacre of the Incas and historr 1j aenletecavith incidents 3aYheye things, wereelintleed "not what theY seemed."'ears'-' `Stranger, weirder sig•nalling than that 'done by spies in the present War, however, has never previonslyo been lichieved. Calls You As Coffee- Boils. A- gas stove which -arises at dawn, 'oils the coffee and wakes you up When it is ready has been invented by Gemaro ,Roea of Brooklyn, N.Y. The gas.burner has a pilot light to which is attached ae clock mechanism. A dial river the clockworks serves to tell the time. A smallm d s used to set the,,alarm, igniting and extinguishing - devices. When. set the burner under the coffee pot will automatically ig- nite at a predetermined hour and boil the coffee for four or five minutes. The flame will then lower of its own accord to slow boiling for another fiye minutes, after which it will. shut it,self off entirely. The coffee is now ready foe you and an alarm. is sound - The old question is hen answered n a few palatable receipes. Turkey Fritters. ----One ciipful of flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt, two easpoonfuis of baking powder. one upful of 'milkeone egg. Mix the dry ngredients together and milk and beaten egg. Mix to a,sinogth batter and then fold in one cupful of: finely. chopped. cold: „turkey,:...enie-half, tea- spoonful of „pepper. Mix wed,- then Try-in hot fat' and serve, with, Chili sauce; t 'TIIE LOOK i1iF HATE" e Girl y, llobby ko t- 5 on luoidng• at 010 333." Republic Will Supply Canada With Necessaries -for Home Consumption. The United States Food Adminis- tration has completed arrangements with the Food Controller of Canada whereby cottonseed, oil and its pro- ducts may move into Canada for local Canadian consumption, There will be no re-export of these products. As Canada raises sufficient hogs for its own uses, export licenses for hogs will not be granted for an indefinite period. The policy of the Food Ad- ministration is to see that Canada is supplied with certain necessariese from the T.Jriited States, required Tor feeding their own people; but no more. Regular licenses will be required on all shipments as heretofore, but no licenees will be issued without the approval of the Food Controller of Canada. Many ,•.1 ,44 People a Make a g t ir ig l• rame•us Rote/ , ee for the Walker I-Iouse (The Houee of Plenty) as soon as they a+rive in 0 Toronto. The meals, the service PI' and the home -like appointmonte constitute the magnet that thorn there. . - draws " • Noon. Dinner 600. Evening Miner 75e. THE WALKER HOUSE Toronto's Primus IFfotl ToRoNTo, CANADA c;&.).1:wa'treipshilesaS''CT3.a.b.plesee2 e4 35) VsAs'grsAliaWalW?,lecoilig[1;•-sZiss/eSaalaSss'iI • 0 • :. i, 1-p. ...z. J .ti ' : Coronado Beach, CeHfornla Near aan Dici„jo POtO, MOTORING, TENNIS, BAY ks,•TD ATMNG, Pais.87 10 AND BOATING. HMO is equipped, t • F.')cpriniclor SySterki AMBItICAI T OHN J. , asesassatrgasetscaeffesea t with. AutoTt:u lc or , • 00 035135 ""'"I 11