The Exeter Advocate, 1918-1-10, Page 21-1Z
Cousins;
DECLARATION OF WAR.
CHAPTER XV1TL them: agaill that keeps you away and
Two days had passed sine the musis that makes you hurry off so early, be
eyenhi t Balladraehit, without fore the quarrY hors Are up 1 want
the bubble of. Feneliese eunnseisadeeau you to pet that reer Away ;from Yell,'
action having yet' but. ',sue was. ana. Miss, Fenella. I saw You Pass now on:
loyin the inter al, br tin hehself -Your way to Bessie—for ,father haa
ERS
1NTH OUDS
SENSATION OF LoopING THE
LOOP ‘5,000 FEET UP.
erbert Sykes, the Well -Known
ish Air Pilot, Recounts Some
Experiences.
against the shock which inust needs ,been. ailing worse than usual, and 11
come. lier decision c.oeld not bot take staved away from the quarry—and I Why do I like looping the loop? of the difficulty!
d 1 t 11 ,ou his It Well because I like it that's the Nature having compressed 'what
who
evs. row, will ever
persuade them tp fly eXpresS' the de-
sire for me to take Omni upstaira
after I have talked to them for a min-
ute or two. •
Once I took two girls up at the
sane time, and the trip tame one of the
most enjoyable I }ave made, although
I was tickled to death most of the
time. The girls weighed about ten
DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT IIQAIE
stone each, and as one would not go up Twenty -Fifth Lesson—Children's Foods (Continued.).
W thou ti o was a osw
to do at first. There was no room in
the machine for them to sit aide by
side, but, as usual, I found a ,way out
lier family by surprise seeing flew foll,owe you seie o e •
,
The child 'between the ages of six
and fourteen years needs plenty Of
nourishing' food. 'The brotlYi.: at this
time formeineW teeth • end.'rnalces
ditional demands for. bone and muscle
retructure. "
likes „soups, meats, vegetables and
some home-niade goodies. For sup-
per he may care to eat macaroni and
cheese dishes, vegetables, Whole -Wheat •
and rye bread and fruits. Have the
children drirdc plenty of mi k, avhieh
VVell-cooked rereAls;:plenty of milk, is a cheap but, nutritious Coed.
much it had taken herseff by surprise, breaks my heart to think that you 'reason, and becauee a 'fellow must 'what there is of me into smallbulk,
-arms to her that she kneW She could not be. I shall never epeak such up ne tge clouds,
never nitury him; and before she slept w°T.(18. t° Y°1-1 again." !lonely if you are content to set on an PIY removed the three of them, put
spread Isis :should be afrAid me• 1311t You need- 'have something to amuse himself with am forced to use cushions to enable '11°111e-1/lade bread, well -cooked, green The growing girl will requite a
where it's prettY ese to see over the front, so I sun- ,Iireert,arbrioePniflsmollohse, itaeigpeetsliteip. alttvitelfi 1ht, datiaitntYtrisyeftrnatiittriteieolt,einaldaieto• Ine-Fic'r
et
the child s diet.
It eves when Ronald liad
d t t • 1 h, she may like
not marry lum. She had at last been the road which separated them, grave- urieFor diner she
the face. one t,f his words and movements, yet abialea;aasn 'd dessert. of the engine to ls'eep you company, • id sa't behind us. oftentimes form a dislike f sin -certain
s .
her lap Her iris
un
into looking- her own. soul inhly, calmly, obviously master of each says Herbert Sykes, whose duty' it is Everything went well when We were foods, Do not seek to convince the should eat meat or its equivelent,
$o this was what people called be, with a new stamp of pain upon his
to test aeroplanes before they are dee *climbing, but when we were in the air child of the goodness or the necessity
s
in love? She remembered the strange faee. ,- 'livered to the fighting forces. -
trepidation which had come over her Fenella nodded vaguely, aware of al Looping is the joy of my existence,
on the day of her first visit to Adam's coneruleive contraction in her throat,' and it is my intention to keep on do-
eottage, Nadine she waited outside for such as usually comes before tears. Ling it until I have created a record
her father's summons. She had "You believe me, Miss Fenella ?" !which will take a lotsof beating. What
thought then that her heart was beat- '"Yes,' she uttered very low, I I want to do is to climb upstairs to
ing because of the fear of the sight of "And you will come again to the about five thousand feet and do somer-
death; but now she knew that it had cottag,e, without fear? You will
been, the dawn of love that had been come in and out, as in the summersaults all the way home. My record
,
near, and whose thnill her unconscious days? I would not have father suffer stands at thirty in one circle, and be -
soul felt. Also she knew why she threugh my fault." ' fore I achieved it I did about twenty -
that ing.ht she kneev also why she could stoPPed and looked at her across even keel, with nothing but' the noise one lady in the pilot seat andi sat on When children reach this age they. soups salads whole-wheat or rye
vnegiseltaacheleosf' tea andYladabenedogfr'ilieet
erollildren
desert.
I found my cuehion a bit nervy. Shee
eating the food in question; rather and chocolate may °
wus trembling in every limb, and try new Ways of serving it. i
Fried foods should not appear in the Use the reciPee for Oatmeal Goodies
put her arms round my waist and
hugged me tight.
every time the machine rocked she
lent should
estbieons.er
average child wil le e -
d s oncea suitsible 103' children.
vMecleaatto
lreaitst equiva.- Twelfth Lesson. They are especially
The Tale 'filet Faired.
, , a. ' ay, preferably at the noon meal. The
'(ingerbread-
Oh, Yes, it was niceand all that, and 1 c lid sweet „ . ,
meats; therefore it would' be well for Here ia' a, two -in -one recipe for malt -
as I had never been hugged in the air
by a girl before I took My hand tfr the mother todhave the .ehildeen help ing a ginger , cake and also some
her in Making these delectable. good- cookie: -One cupful Melasees; Ones
the mintrol, and, slipping, it into the lee, - -Have Old-fashioned gingerbread,half eupflour afive:itable,Snoon-
„
oatmeal and crumb cookies once in a fele shortening; one egg.Put the n
while. gredients in a largenhOWn and mix
Do not get into the hal* of giving thoroughly, then add one teas:Peel-dui
the children a few pennies to .buy of baking soda dissolYed in one table -
cheap candies of unknown make and spoonful of Water,' two teaspoonfuls
origin. ginger, One-half teaenoonfels'.ullspice,'
The bog or girl more than fourteen one-half teaspoonful salt, 'one . tea -
years Of age Will require entirely dif- epoonfulCinnamon, two'cupfals
ferent food. The boy, owing to Mix thoroughly. !Place .two-thirds of
strenuous exercise, wants plenty of the MiXturein a bread or cake pan and
the coarser foods.. He will eare little hake in a moderate oven for' thirty -
or nothing for soups; salads 'Or dainty five minutes. To the remainder of
desserts.. He craves meats, potatoes the dough add .enough s flour to 'roll,
and the plainer and more substantial Roll one-eighth of an inch thick, then '
desserts.' It will take care and fore- cut with a tbreeinch cookie cutter and
thought to arrange the menu of this bake on the bottom of an up -turned
period bofaywiilenjoy,
childhood. for broakfast oven,
pan for ten _
minutes in a hot
The
:
hot cakes, cereals eggs, hash and ” WhOle-wheat flour may be Used in
other homemade dishes. For lunch he place or the white flour: -
had been so assiduously encouraging. "Yes, I will come." five, and finished up the evening • by hand of the lady. I squeezed it in the
the enfortueate Ronald, ---it had been "Thank Yon, Miss Fenella, And, looping the loon on quitai a different: fashion moet approved by readers. of
Aunt Ermyritrude's penny novels, and
thus assured the Maiden that the was
safe in the air with Sykea.
It's a. pity there isn't: a sequel' , to
this story, but although Prn a daring
enough chap in the Clouds with a lady,
I'm not a bit of good at. love -Making
on drys land.
COMBAT CHILI) MURDERERS. •
Safeguarding .School Children of Eng-
' land:During Air Raids.
A bell' rings sharply in the school-
room. Fifty chubby, childish faces are
turned toward their teacher. Some-
where overhead drone the motors of
greatest: revelations of my Me. My airplanes, British. and German. The
; range .Of vision was amazing; and children at a 'signal slide from their
everything:I saw had such a weird ef- desks and lie prone in the aisles,
feet that I realized I had:made a won.. Their little faces are preternaturally
derfut discovery. What I had heard solemn, save where here and there an
, was merely a hit of mud; Which had irrepressible youngster persist in
dropped down and struck the tail,' and giggling. For the hall a hundred. chil-
i as the latter seemed tobe coming up dren are lying face downward to save
towards me and everything below talc- themselves from the:splinters that will
Mg on a new look, the excitement of ensue upon a German airman's, bomb
the new experience got such a hold on alightinghipon the school.
.Me: that Ihvent on looping and lolOping, :When the Huns are .abroad in Eng -
and :finding Out for myself the exact land—and air raids are a frequent oc-
i sensations of a fisnon the ceiling, until
I realiAed it was time to flatten out.
to proteet herself against the thought
of Duncan; and for this he had hacl
-to suffeih All this she admitted,
thank you too for believing me. 1 machine to any thave everi seen in the
,
Would rather Cat out my tongue than: ate; Like to bear the story? It is
let it say a word that (meld disturb. Tether amusing.
without .reserve yet without joy. She you." „
eould, not fight Against lei IOee i 1 "That is all: I suppose," said;
N
had,. contrented her ftallsgisown, safeeTrenella, with a very faint smile, and
iti'e'Vrdir that 'a royal scion making an uncertain step onward as
up secretly in the shadow of though to close the interview, While
mple might confront the usurper an immense sense of desolation began
of his father's thrones In its cradle. to Wrap her gerund. ,
elle might have eti'angled. it, had she "There is another thing as well. I
been aware of its existeuce, but at the wanted to explain to you how I came
first meeting already she knew that it to be in the Balladrochit gaeden the
had outgrown her own strength. To
kill it she could not. hope, but neither
did sheamean to surrender to it.
Of Course, she :Could never marry
1
other night, when the music was going
on. It would make me mad to think
that ' you could believe I was spying
upon you and upon Mr, Macgilvray."
another man—the had learned that in With a glow that was almost a pain
that moonlight night—but that simply the blood rushed to Fenella's face.
meant that she Would never marry at -"That was you?" she exclaimed,
all, since at the bare idea of becoming standing abruptly still. dI thought:
Diemen. so M‘DormelPs wife social pre_ it wae a g,ar dener ."
A Fly's -Eye View.
One night,: when. I was on my way
home with my 'bus, I thought I would
turn over, just by way of relieving the
inotonony, and so: I. jammed her nose
down and got her Over comfortably on
her back..
, Almost siinultaneousilv heard a
crack behind, and, jumping to the con-
. chision that there had been an accident
to the rudder, I tarried my head round
. look.
It wae a thing I had never done be-
foeee and what I sato Was one of the
indice. carefully fos'tered, leap- ! "It was I; but I had no more thought
ed to ,arms. Besides, even suppos.' of spying than of robbing the houae.
ing herself sank so low as this, there I had rowed oven with a message of
was her family 'to consider. The father's to Mick IVI'Laren, the head
mere thought of Albert was enough togardener;--his first wife -was our um-
laut an extinguisher upon audacity.' -
sin; the minister's .sister, you know,"
For between applauding the action of added Duncan, with a trifle of
a Lilian Larrington and feeling cap- ' emphasis, "and father was keen about
able of imitating it, there lies a gulf., seeing him, because of some money
It was as a misfortune that her attach-, matters concerning the children. ,• I
ment chiefly struck •Fenella as yet,' meant to come straight home again,
partly also as a disgrace. She was but the music seemed to take hold of
even a little angry with the cause of Me, and I couldn't get away—I've al-
it'. all. Why had he needed to cross ways been foolish about the music. I
her path at so critical a juncture? thought the garden was empty, but as
Why, especially, had he, by- revealing I came round a turn I saw you and Mr,
to her his own secret, troubled her Macgilvray. I did not hear a word,
'with glimpses of such a passion as she I swear to you; but I couldn't help
had read of only in story -books? A seeing that your hands were held out
shade of irritation had never quite left to him, and I knew what that meant.
their intercourse. In spite of the But I went away in that same instant,
punctilious "Miss' Fennella," there had Miss paerealgasse-,
LeerSia,.4,..7ant of obsequiousness ,atlesmatre-dmnau she dared to ,e his eyes
his deme11,1111110griderfUtiesetfalgei-vainty just then she would hay seen the
smarted. He had SO many ways of expectancy upon his faee Pass -into
giving her to understand that only, an signs of hesitation, the bie11 stiuggie
accident separated their stations in being ended by ,some '-‘Yo*rei.: spoken
life. Arrived at this point in her re- with a sort of artificial steadiitess, evi-
flections, Fenella used occasionally to dently calculated' to soothe /fillsaises-
braneh off into surmises as to what sible alarm.
would have happened if her father, in- "God knows that I want to wish you
stead.of taking orders, had remained happiness, Miss Fenella; but there is
in the quarry, and she and Duncan had, just one more word I need to hear
met on the same social level. But from you before I Can do it; just that
these visions, being recognised as dis- word which I asked you for once be-
furl:sing, were quickly put aside, fore, when Bessie came between. Tell
One other thing would he more dis- me with your own lips that your heart
turbing still: a meeting,—which was; is in it. and I shall rest content." •
why, when called upon by her -father to i "I don't understand ' you, said.
visit Bessie Stuart, the forester's wife,' Fenella, in a flurry, understanding the
whose precious baby was ailing,' while perfectly, and even in the midst
Fenella had set out in some trepida- of the flurry wondering how she would
tion. The chances of meeting Dun- have stood the searching tone of that
can at his sister's house were not deep, judicial voice if indeed she had
great, but they existed. That danger been guilty before the bar of her own
was over now, and Fenella's face set heart, - •
"Mr. Macgilvray has .gone away,
said Fenella, and even in saying it
wondered why she was giving this
unnecessary piece of information.
"And when may he bereturning?"
"I don't know—perhaps never.",
Again the speaking of the words
se•emed to be quite unconnected - with
any operation of her will. •
A. moment of tense silence followed
before Duncan said, in forcibly calni
tones:
"But 1 believed—"
'So din; but it was a mistake. I
have sent him away. I am, after all,
not so base- as perhaps you thought I
was, Duncan." -•
Her head -went up as she Said it.
This time the triumph of meeting -h -La,
eyes with rescued self-esteem written
broad in her own had overborne e,very
other consideration, ' That soniething
else besides triumph might be written
there had not occurred to her, and yet
it must 'have been so, for Duncan,
meeting that gaze, shivered suddenly,
as though at the approach of fever.
When, after a moment, he trusted him-
self to speak, it was With that extreme
and rather ponderous slowness which
is the most elementary way of govern-
ing a glowing exm ement.•
(To he continued.)
homewards. But there would be
Adam's cottage to pass a second time.
Even ht going, she had caet a quick-
glariee, in that direction, hoping she
was not observed, though at this early
afternoon hour there was little- fear of
- Duncan being hack from the quarry.
As the pursued the thought her step
faltered; fon at -that very moment the
road appeared, to her to be not quite
solitary after all. She had caught
sight of a. man's figure sitting on a
sbene by the wayside, immovable and
apparently waiting for something.
And by that atone she would have, to
pass. There wee no side -paths in
the desert and not a scrap of an am-
bush behind Which she could hope to
escape his eyes. Not that at this dis-
tance elie 'could see his face and yet
_ ,
never for a moment did she doubt his
"„icientitY-
After a brief pause of flurry she ae-
aotately mended her pace, having sum -
moiled alf her latent indignation to her
aid. What right had he to waylay
her an this fashion? What had they
to say tO each other? With stiffened
meek and 'tightly compressed lips she
stepped bravely forwards, determined
truielely te get over whatever might
Or- coming. '
When frcan a little diatanee she saw
him rise and again remain immovable,
the determination of the gesture made
her courage waver somewhat; and
when, nearer still, she could disting-
uish his features, a sort of mental diz-
ziness began to blur the outline of the
plan of action jusrb laid ready. To pass
hint by with just a friendly salutation
hod been the foremost- item of that
plan, instead of which, at the very first
sound of, his voice 8ie found herself
standing still.
"Mies Feeellal" Was it really
those same two words which Ronald
-ahregerprg.ea two evenings ago? et
'-' are waited --for you herd, juat to say
ate word- -a bouli. father," he added
quickly, as though's:in antwer to her
outspoken feana. 'N
"Well?" Alb Said, as‘enaiateally as
her .Ceat-beatieg heart waaild allow.
"He is pining Sorelg afteie you; gour
visits have' become so rare. But I do
not hiame you, 1 blame' neyaelf for
those mad words" 1 said, to you that
Senday, hefote the eoltiage. f can
reileas that it is the fear of hearing
Still Going Strong.
By this time it was getting dark,
and as I could not see my hangar, I
was forced to fly'on and on for miles
until I could make out a safe place in
which to land.
Ls the meantime there was the
greatest consternation at the aero-
drome. All my friends, who had been
watching me coming down in somer-
saults, were hurriedly throwing
stretchers into motor -cars and dashing
off to find anything that might be left
of poor Sykes.
Hither and thither they went scour.
ing the country, and, to make matters
all the worse, it took me about an hour
to find a 'phone, and another to get a
connection when I found it. I met
part of the lamenting crowd on my
way home, convinced them that all
-was well, and after supper I decided
to go back to Shepperton, where I had
left my aeroplane, and put a cover
over it for. the night, as it had coin-
' menced to rain.
An Unexpected Loop.
We set .out on a light car, and as
the roads . were muddy and full of
holes, I made the journey en the radi-
ator. Everything went all serene un-'
til the journey back, when, with your
humble servant still sitting on the
radiator, the car dived into a particu-
larly deep pocket in the road, and be-
-fore it stopped dead turned over three
times. I was still sitting on it when
it settled down peacefully, so I think
eI can lay claim to being the only avia-
tor avho has looped the loop on a mo-
tor car.
There is really nothing except ex-
hilaration and excitement in looping.
I knew it is difficult to convince lands -
"men that this, is so., But come Up
wit. me, And I assure yeti that you
won't'at to go home sarithout doing
on or t • tunts to finish up the trip.
I have take three girls up who had
never seen an am
Large quantities of milk and meat
should not he served at the same meal
-eXCapt yhere 'there are children to he I
fed, because both these foods are rieh
muscle -building elements and one 1
provides enough of this without the
other. Milk, however, is essential to
the good health or children.
This is the season when gardeners
are making plans for spring planting I
and thete is always a search for plants]
With sweet scented :flowers. A, Dacka I
of Mignonette- imed will produce a bed
of sweet scented flowering 'slants.
Roses arc favorites and the mos -infra -
grant are Gen. jacqueminoi, Caroline
Testout Rm.] feieh Fireffaine. The car-
nations, li1ie, tuherroses, -jessamine,
boneysuCkles a od the fragrant foliage
plants, auch as the eose gerahium,
lemon V er bena, ni pek» lavender,
may be added to ilis lie. of Moat pope
tiler hugrant flowers and planieg
•lane in their lives
before, and each one of them finished
up with my machine , ing a lover's
knot in the air. Fact,1, assUre you!
),
The first girl I took upstah's was en-
joying herself immensely t 11 I gave
my inachine_a dip and lool'ed round,
with a glance Whieh could eadly be in-
terpreted to mean "Shall we 'everse?"
IIer face went very pale, S e looked
worried, and shook her hea frantic-
ally. . ,
Away ,we flew, and when I bought
she had settled down a bit I jarnied
1
the nose down again .ars at sliot ) Ourlot
my head. Her` reply was even
emphatic, 50on we flew until 1tho
1 would make a third attempt to
her consent. ,
This time there was a sparkle a n-
ticipation in her eyes, and thong her
,
Tar.te 'MRS still pale, it looked dletou
mined, At a nod of approval ):from
her 1" began to loop, and hero) e we
reached the aerodrome that litt te lady
had Made three., semersanits: he told
me she liked the SCI1SatiOa IMM,MSely,
and would not have missed it. So e
'A Mild Flirtation,
' "TinJ, is Ivhaf they all say, ',' id 1.
,
t
1 afippose 1 must hare the I lack of
neve
tght
win
currence—every precaution is taken
to safeguard the school childrenasays
Popular Science. The whole nation
shrinks from the consequences of a
bomb alighting in any of the coast
town grammar schools. Yet every
step- :that British ingenuity can sug-
gest has been taken - to safeguard the
tiny youngsters - from the darts,
bombs and shrapnel of the Hunnish
airmen.
The desks themselves afford con-
siderable protection from flying' splin-
ters or falling beams. Each child is
coached, accordingly, to lie prone upon
the floor in -tha shelter of his or her
desk as shim as the police signal is
flashed' , to the schoolroom. In the
back Yards—where they run if the
danger is not too imminent—are huge
concrete dugouts, well sheltered with
sand bags.
"I know of no other spectacle,"
says a British army -officer, "that bet-
ter 'epitomizes the brutality of these
slaughterers of children than a rely -
poly' British youngster in an unforti-
fied town, lying prone upon the floor
to protect its body froni- Hun bombs,
and a little child in Belgium trying
with terrified and inexperienced fin-
gers to adjust its own gas mask as
the hell-spumed green gas rolls
nearer."
es
A SPECIALIZED "TOMMY."
Why the British Army is a Highly Ef-
ficient Fighting Force.
The British Army of to -day is
strong for individuality. The enlisted
man, as" well as the officer, is encour-
aged to develop himself. Whenever he
shows aptitude in any particular line
he is given opportunity to let his tal-
ents have full swing. This keeps him
interested in his work. British sol-
diers mostly talk shop. They take
only casual notice of things outside
the big business in which they are
engaged. •
Tommy- is now a scientific, special-
ized fighting man. He has learned—
and is learning every 'day—tricks of
warfare never dreamed of by Kitchen-,
er's men. Many of these he invented
himself. Others lie hasiacquired from
the Germans—but he never halts to
improve on the latter, as for example
in the fine arts of sniping, geeing,
grenading, and camou-
flage.
Tommy ia cheerful because he is
confident, He _knows he is a better
man than the Boehe. He hasn't the
slightest doubt about the outcome.
These are some 'of Alm reasons why
the British fighting machine., has
reached its present pineacle of effi-
ciency,
Plantes and Kerehiefs.
The principal' effect of the recent'
announcement that the British govern-
ment had placed orders for 36,000,000
yew& 'of linen 'for airplane sails has
been to indicate, a seaveityof hand-
kerchief linens ifonsome time to come.
Inasmuch as the faheic weighs about
eight othicee to the square ylind, the
ordee will 'cause the consumption ot
upward of 18,000,000 potonla of linen
yarn,or much rogee than the,total o
t the annual yield
'War -Time Menus.
Breakfast
_Cornmeal Porridge
Teat •Marmalade
'Pea or Coffee
Dinner
Fried Cod
Baked Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes
and Onions
Tapioca Pudding
Supper
' Turkish Rice Brown 13„read
Butter Oatmeal Cakes Apple Sauce
Tea
Turkish Rice.—Wash and drain one-
half cup rice; cook in one tablespoon
dripping 'until brown; add one • cup
boiling water, and steam 'until water
is absorbed. , Add one and three-
fourths cups,' hot stewed tomatoes,
cook until rice is soft, and seaso,n, with
salt and pepper. •
Breakfast
Oatmeal Porridge Toast
Stewed Prunes Tea or Coffee
as Dinner
Baked Haddock -
Stewed Tomatoes Mashed Potatoes
Lemon Snow
Supper
Succotash
Bran Bread and Butter Baked Apples
Tea
Succotash. -1 can of corm 1 cup
milk, 1 tablespoon butter, -pepper and
salt to taste. , Cook , slowly for ten"
minutes. Add an' equal amount of
cooked beans. Serve hot.
' Breakfast
Oatmeal Porridge
Tea or -Coffee
Dinner
Oriental Stew Carrots :Potatoes
Baked Apples
iSunper
Corn, Tomato and Cheese
Stewed Prunes Toast Tea
Corn, Tomato and Cheese.---% cup
corn, 1 slice onion grated, IA teaspoon
pepper, 1/2 cup strained tomato pulp, 1
teaspoon salt,- 1 cup grated cheese, :3
level tablespoons of sweet chipping.
Melt the dripping, add the corn,
tomato, salt, pepper and onion. Goole
for a few minutes. Toast slices of.
bread and when -ready to serve add
the cheese to the mixture and as soon
as it is ready remove from the fire,
and our over the toast.
Oriental Steve. -2 cups cold mutton,
cut in cubes, 1 cup of water, 2 table-
spoons dripping', 1 chopped onion, 2
small cold potatoes sliced, 1 cup cooked
peas, 1/2 cup rice. Season with salt,
pepper and a very little curry powder,
if liked. 'While stew is heating boil
one-half cup of rice. When tender,
put into hot vegetable dish, hollow'
out the centre, and fill with the stew.
Serve at once.
- Tot st
The Useful Cranberry.
'Winter is the season of cranberriea
when other kinds of fresh fruit -are-
not plentiful. They contain iron- and
acid and can be used in so many ways_.-
that they ought not to be passed over'
even when sugar is scarce. They can
be canned either cooked or uncooked
although few housewives are aware of
this.
To can them uncooked wash and
pick over the berries. Then put them
in jars and, let cold water run over
them for about ten minutes, Fill
withcold water and seal.
In Scandinavia cranberries ere dried
by being stringed. They, are -used
first for Christmas decorations on- the
tree. Then they are hung up to dry. •
Cranberries make a good filling for
pies and tarts. They combinewell
with other kinds of fruit in 'preserves
and jams. . In sauce: for a pudding,
in a jelly, added to apple snow or plaM
snow pudding or frozen into a sherb4,
cranberries are excellent.
To make cranberry pudding allow"
twos -eggs, a little salt and 4. tablern
spoons of flour to a pint of cold milk.
beat smooth and add a cup of chopped, '
uncooked cranberries. Steam two •
hours and serve with sauce or syrup.
The King of Space
An albatross in a storm ds won.
derful eight. No matter how furious
the gale, no matter how 'fierce the hur-
ricane squalls of Cape HMS, the gdeat
bird soars up against the blast grim
and serene. Then wheeling, he comes
sweeping down on the wings Of the
gale at a speed So tremeedMas that
it cannot be less than 80 or '90 miles
an hour, when, describing a low but
immense circle, with the tip of his
lee -wing just brushing the top of the '
giant waves, he again takes his flight
upward against the storm. No living
"ereaturescoeveys the idea of boundless
freedom so perfectly as the -King of
Space, the "Wandering Albatross.
Many
People
Make a
,Toronto's
Famous Hotel B -Line'
for the Walker House (The House
of Plenty) as soon.as_they arrive in
Toronto. The meals, the ser -vice
and the home -like -appointments
constitute the magnet that draws 81them there. ee,
'
Noon Dinner ,50cr
Evening Dinner 75c,
THE WALKER, FICYOSE
Toronto's Famous Hotel
•
TORONTO, CANADA
Rates Ressonabl,.., '
Geo. Wright e.r Co., Pxops. 81
ands they are very valuable .in the diet Q-1-Y10.iiiitsifterie'AliMealn-VS:'11'selsSieseeree'eladrielatIW
, ZIIINIT1010CAAA.
Coronado Beach, California
, NFai. 3,12, .n Dietlo
se-l'i,10TORING, TENNIS,
BAY AND SUrit BATHING,
FISHING AND BOA.TING.
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Ho,tel is equi:::(1't1Qh:oluf°r
rhiavith Aulamatic
Prillider SY, stem.
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AMERICAN PLAN
J. HIS:RNAN, Manag0