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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1920-12-23, Page 2are Clea Ped 8 sold only in aled .iv'tight pehets to pr serve its native Mons a pieces the jelly-like mass thus form - s r, ed, Return to fire and heat to 115 degrees, stirring with a long wooden' spoon, Put aside to settle. Pour ai£ i l liquid, salt the curd and put into a, flour sack. l'ut the sack into the press and on top put another flour sack to absorb the moisture. Press for from one to four 'days. The longer the cheese es 'in press, the longer it will keep. This recipe eintaes four or five pounds of mild, creamy PART IV, red. But so they had done, and all cheese which will keepfor a long But then wonders were done in the the fiend of love in hien turned to bit- lance and the widow of old htmtsnaan ter gall and he set out to ruin leer. time if wrapped and kept cool. }acre Toms was provedW }iieh he had done. l4Zrs. Stewart uses a home-.,„ ale to be in the presa for her c]leess, with a 1>ssary t riot h thiclsfl in th a tench bel eyede this wielkedne len andthe made his plot of rocks on top to give the necessarythat %n the long run Providence never according, stole the things one by weight. let down nobcdy that really trusted. one, and then planted 'em upon her, Do 'tot try to make the cheese un- It came about, of all places, at the He !mowed, when dallying with leer less you have a thermometer, so that little tabernacle of the Primitive Bap- in the Past' inhert she ahandbag,t they of — -..-- ---.. ••-- --- you can exactly determine the degree fists at Ashburton, and them most E BY EDEN HIL GTTS. oaf heat concerned in the business heard with when she was m the dairy and the - ^ house empty reed Fane to her room �' ' own eyes. And s ver great lesson 'and Bot au intpxessaon of elle key in Unl lest x =Vary 3r s Grave ar in I'm sure, to all unlaellev•ng people a t ott,iawhere n had an re de Win. I st instc and such a$ say the Lord of Hosts Abbey. be tired of mankind pili general and Then, the day she was out, he put r--- --- - ; their own ears and stty with their h ' I .,. h:one in Fish. t aolvaerage, or at aril to your credit,;, • l that you put up day after day with The noblt't flattens stood in line I3r.^ .�'a f oi,tilzbia s;elmo!Y gr=n foes a , R • , c ' .your Mouser anti: In that most crucial hour; t , �, ,:.rt_n.averi^nee to y Re•*arding ditty as divine, ceee cif our meet rasp trl int fa,al .e9n t11at you sehaol y aurse:f not to be- a Terve eneeies of t€ ash et.e °ar ,ize3.. by the itdtIIntre, narae=it, sockeye.o;ite irritate:} o these th!ngsthings,T)Ye' To crush the tyrant's power. Ser.+tt1\e, thinking housewife beeoweS` Who is this warrior unknown ~irlig elle ch zati The `�" °e: e is talta;ted at haeieg to put up with lento here In glory sleeps, earned, unruttlbered here lie rests, weals of their Boin�s an all the things an her box, and having 'his warrior unknown; There was a revival meeting,and already planr-ed the fire, took a hand- k 1 d 1 tt • Th devil never ere ter fen u e er^ a est ound hien group the Empire crests: Mr. Blade had got down a very fine put an easier rob into the hind of a 1. Keep the ewwEii. son Amberola—lddison'tt greatpitoneerauit wtila the diamond stylus —and your choice of records. for only. ;Leo, Pay balance at rate of onl,' a few cents a day. Free trial in your own home before you decide. Nothing down, Wrong y for our New P son nook and pictures free, P. z. aseasoz�, B ttson Phonograph Y is?tzibnfor.. 01,1 Xing st. E., Toronto. »epi. 7Nt1 833 I'ertaga Ave., Winnipeg, ]'tan. 1 \i'indward Islands, and, es is liable, is under the fag of Britain. T11is is no new discovery. The To- bagoans know all at our it. If you ventured to Deform a r rive of ToLago that Juan F ernandee was Robinson; Crus..es island, yea- would be ' dan- ger of beecn:tin a hospital patient, for they are very jealous of this title to Nor how they there afore. ' goepeler with a wonderful flow of mad wean. Arid when pellet'', gone, j speech and a way o searehing to the everything was ripe for the wheat heart. Ile was a big suceees from stacks. He se; a light to them him-, the first evening, for he had the bless- :elf and went to bed; and when all ed gift of throwing light into the had Bane to zest after the fire, he dark places and waking the steeping crept down ales and put elle: letteri. soul with the trumpet of righteous- he'd half burned and thhandkercher nese. A big hearted, 'hard -mitten mane whre they must he found after. Andy but genial and not puffed up; because 'thin 'fell out exacta • as he hal}i every tang valet ;s li~aown e: nee tee—Lem :0x3 ^ ,t, E; f; trio c aprtees rot ;t y roEl �ove'ar .col:-". \� }tilt'- ltovat znatarneil from file throne 1e'd been R bad 'un himself Flu lis ordained. fame. .' z,ls zt` .°. dEr#na' 1, - a s And }lar irritability neje her, With I'.ntp:re round 11Ia11 11 ceps? trine, And only saved from the. burn-> . ing'. But then he had to pay the devil's _.- tate loe.yy. Ei 17Tari , tet t •' y 1� , 7e! point where elle sees to it that." ' it' by the vaice of Gad in the mouth �`R "can. `o t 10 rift the tt • of his fie}let\ wages, and J. er`three the of tidy' ing pjz Hjdrzen Heat, f:hat to t`: tl wit11 vita tett t tri a, ,t, * , a'cE' i i't °ti ts� 1 w)t)t as ea tr. i Their te. a ere mintage vita x Krol ^ and ma* it wes >. ' r, y.y v !2e e, lee aro Pl ort still ' hie pride and privilege to do to others torment, with the thought of his ruin-+ , ,,, of heat. and ower lie '} a ee , e 'e't 1,0 the r a new -at�ha4atedl That Liberty } lives; ed life aad' chat girl ata riean, he Le-: l aat :Lir: P e ane ix:Awe, ' e , , ace eat,, gas stove o x©v as he'd been done by and bung old F4 ' Te t ou t to s a • tnrse , alt i lRe waiting to to tappe , ,- .,;t. i B g b a had, 'tsithaut confesing, the ti4ron \\'e could da rvitiiour real and oil ren :nip ret int tc zs)nfis t In int .ere a," +luir:n<r tap r Ef1Jt :t ntrna tsi> n; ; ,o r in brick to sour halves ata. , S ing an ', o course, critter ul a an ld l hiddentill the t ewe n the British a. a a- IIyl C ,;t :vowing t; Of Britain's valiant bon.,, . ;Ills vYife S Trump; >' but that's vwilfh? Itrov9tloilee tern nn t.:a �•.1t.•t1 t alt,,ta to a,l .; t;trtei ttl�• 11e loflkg at+tlut lle1� xar� upp4rted ilio E;hapel,. be- 1' sources' tcf the earth. Lire makes llor boast .: S 'r- ,' . the 'n}a>.isttr; .- •`s , cud new ~ehenlioahs tank} mineral" of Co-' ,, d� s t.112., ave take the con; equences. Somebody L, t ^nge • i',2:i 1 rill+ ..it'll-. • is ng n' or' h and south £*one east and 'their son went Z}so and being turn -r Ya t.iiEa t;reatt':;t. value to the world's cont- eeli ti:l, e r l pl a li their n t 1s1Tc . E„) a\r;iy h 1 the zrritatx , I'r _Lin t had tof but t the way ana E:Elaf•4odbt i'lt v •st E� t+ tz luxury. may tie .urs-T,le.,: } ,' oil stave. i In virtue of the noble b ate to Wish he was dead. In truth,' hidden in the bowele of the earth, r-• ctst :t 3u>:ur' It heeunles iretatin, to tine house That •'mother” freely gives. :end young to the peri#tn*, bench anti h gh 1 y h' if d 'f } 1; 1 d help the nod weir. of atlaerin r s urs l p wife to have to as=e elle ald-ia iEioiled, J lam #)• ' zndc� a eauatless list to thE't harvest, Tomas his t}lii:il even v,ou lave gone 1 , A 1 F e^ d' d f F T tI d c 4nld we bel des'•1011 i 1c lea xe- Ct schen} the i1n1I took u the rosining, and it oma. m4 wise:: the . 'al='.itx ti>Iac-'ie. were :T:P- , , , t- weep ers one of tine, S cause thew daughter was chapel, to , p end in u duutg \,a1 sltottld rtohabh a t 1, a 1't ti } V; bile coma a of E12111ire rttrl Wally put nn hT }tear' to orrn° up and ping fibril rel .�:3::ittln iia llritit'lt many F,.i,�>-,1' 1)0\\ .L. '' t and ,.. , a pay, a caur: e, ,u is 4 ,. >•• a 72 . w, o: \Se8 . a' iEa4 evils a often 1 the r, vial we! ,� ":; lal,'cti€ their 1Tiial;g les. • out in 1 1E]. I h 12ouse\4.„ e va ` more sedans o late f g 1 that f t innocent in:•rete _ h dt h h c}ttitl� L, i,.:'.te.l . tette.. tia * ite,,es.. • e , ^ t •itchen! The E::aine from ret:;ions far; a tooko s ontng an interest in e :� i.rriattrll s., ,ti, inconvenien 1, �' business , ef the soul, which ala t eom- guilty. It killed hie mother, She have attune to, end they aro urging be t\" irtie tt? flee, l:e;'li oaf a ra .*'heti S,.aiiL,C �te€3:i to melte her kitchen mere. The n91kIeSt, at then oviR ellE'St, f`"1. ""1, rt2tlrtis;;f who is' When blared the trump of war. .^, t a..«.Std 1 , 4ffn't't"tteni. The housewife e , ".comas iia r& sea, ti ne , -:rt called to suffer \worse than the 'That is tine t onrlusion rcionflets awn among young' men rvitll tiaear`wilted away like a gather -col fl„wer, a;xpedition: to solve. the mysteries of ray to make in the world.: and died ss� month: t fter. I3v then , ru4t ,of the earth. Already some Anyway, he attended the cosi't'al y,outlB 7 cni \yas in (.anatla, for he left •r;"t 5 l,aixtnadc of thct internal Beat 1; t :�a twin. �; rita:te l Ever a house that is always "` ihP r ,., Froul Southern Cross to Polar Star, it the 1''lt:.) in ,.+nft,.:aii :1n.1 disorder aS'lie house A Tuna the girdled raced; meettnga with his parents, and Susan England ,iinnlediat, and was away al- , °ai is regions of l sale-eels7 <3erean i e niti a,e-' el waa keep, h€r iwpat' 8hi hope, h r alsva 3 sat beSidEt 'em 1Khe11 they? hof T' 111 foil sire Eat the trut)e a f the ec,a'tlt in 'tell ! i;l R; a i 1 afc> ,p in 11ri11ioxas from afar, y , }most 4 t e to prison I` believe; but his *Mier. t=ie ground ie trlppia an dput to war.• prison, > i* E , `,„,,^ ,i•'�d' i .a'El e3� They calve , ' .Came, But mush to tha amazement c'aitle to i,e 1•Wotrll lie Rants,} tG go Ittalt where the :avant ie issuing from ! p '�eash 13ritains Sag unfurled Eon tlr a Eere a. rte .'}it':?, Dr. Fri-, )ie for the Aged. , of his family after the.diseourses on ea.e i 1•the�v the• third evening, when- the people \1''141 I'F :tt :', a" l:t'•t'xlk:an ,li t..e The worloles dread tyrant there r''.•'2 Bk -..are tial 4. la:t"Ia, et : elven- The 1%.Z' ng tia).e of We 1.vesla a, met ,who had eaught the holy fire rose to 29i t, , ee •L•'tive' .n ors field; " go to the 'bench or testify', if young Ing the t'Etnan.n--?t,a. of t , z:'1'tt:ei,:, t•.:;'..f1,t1 seleateEi and cor.__T .r ;� On France and Fri d r Tom.didn't rise also'! As }fere} said: •°l len I :-ay ti: t the value of diet, if the old folk are to he' heti: ia; Nor shall that tyrant e'er forget, the n. ht ser uplthere 4idn't a1mt;rt r oosr= more on the a for . a health;; condition. Intestinal dis-s For, Britons never yield. seem n reason whhe years,hould do any that are due to diet are s o of the I\O11t of the fish than upan its p1021 to t a • and 'Liber' , unchained such thing, and 1 believe his father flavor, you roc 'how important it i prone to melte bttta:�ltnu and ;;rA:a:ipa Till Truth > y was a bit annoyed with him for the to };wars to wht:t the color ie Elate. The very uncomfortable.I 1 From fetters, shall be free, moment; but young Tont didn't go up, the PacitiE ; As to the actual dict, 7:e, p fir m;,v 'And itighteousneas, that God ordained, he went out, ante so ni didn't mind Best flavored salmon on Shall dwell from sea to sea. wast is least •1' n nonan; on the market; in mini that the body requires just was set at rest, for he doubted not the because the chlor is pale. The in-' snffekient fool to maintain life tied loss ,•est, .c -brave, •in glary here, youth had business elsewhere that called hint. felio>• salmon, of a rich reel color, for this reason the heavy protein' With Britain's 'nighty dead' trainee the best price, are ta'i1 the; foods, are usually taboo, t t i' ' this having; 1iE'li ace cool cereals no relation to exet.�1Ionee of flavor or, an,i some, stewed fruit for breakfast. v Free frons tba haughty tyrant's fear, If he'd known, however, what that business was, IFIr. been a good bit surprised; and indeed he was so before the night had ended. In a word, the heart of the amaz- ing young num was smote at last. lead, >eealuse o its co' or, ii, r, '.,,, s t w th er eallt • While laurels crown your head.Turtle might have t i better than tea or coffee. edible sul•eriority." :Wilt is mus.} ! With pail" saluic,n rrieerl at one- It is the wisest plan to eat the' Proposals by Hain. sent hint to 1'mladla hestead. and (2S usee. Joanna and her mother never 41;1 am-` It ie tut"0-t(1 that bores should be thing' agaia:,t hint, though they well Bunk to admitwater, which would be alight, 'twee thought in law. etinverte>d into steam and could then 3oauna, bewever, decider that elle be utilized for mecltanie sl purposes. wasn't much surprievil to hear the Excavation method; and 1 ry1 c1 i2lere hitter truth. Site knew before the ititave t►eell Improved so nlreri of re - deadly hatred, and when she was ask - end that the wan Gated her with a E,,,tnt ,'ear;: iliac it "lay he pasSfl)1 to. ed why rhe never told about him per- ,;111' touch bores and shaft° to a demi, seeuting leer for love, or tried to make o;. thirty ,wiles. a ease against hint for her own good t.t present the deepest well, ever name's Bake, , she explained that like bored is a hole six inches In diameter the simple creature ahe was. - on a farm in the United State% It -"Father always told 2210 that if a )tug been driti-en to a depth of 7,57e man offered marriage and 1 E1idn't 1eet, or nearly It able and a bait take him, I must never mention the gtte deepest mine shaft is at )(Torre subject, or name the man's name, out Velito, 1letzil, which gncs elem. about of honor and fairness to him, she 1: elf that of the rd, five .*'cowl w be }leaviast 122001 in theaniddle of the A oorrespand.ent wren recently 20- Heelgone to the police station, as a said, "rand whatever father told me. °2 nitre anu a itttn- payinghigh a price for reference day. Remember that a diet of bread, turned from Japan nays it is leap -year fatter place for him in his opinion to do, I always dict do," •.1s oue expert points Out, rtie have ofp time eat tend tot atm.:3'tell' :surely produce all the time in that country. than the penitent's benrll; ;and fleece That \seas Joanna; anti 'tvhen .rte early succeeded in aeratthing the w color only, while at the ..ale: hi a u 1 tr • to asked this a anise woolen have certain ways hest told his story as far as the de- came out of prison a. generous goy- eartles crust. The: real wonders ]taus we are a leatiag very :supply which anis use plenty e J P talils was concerned though all the eminent only said site wee dismissed yet to be revealed to us. is available at a very ntaderafe priee. and use plenty of the fresh sego- of arranging their hair to indicate + �' 't feelings an ono , fire and agony and horror behrnd it - iables, he never told. It was left for under- weever offered a penny piece for all Minard's Liniment Relieves. Colds, Eta. Why You Are Irritable. For erre evening meal cereal and standing men and women, who knew chord Itee-e called to endure! Govern - sufferings and his madness through when 'tis only - a question of their Gicver =Johnny, the veil darkly, honor. That never trouNes'em. But ••:pow, boys," said the schoolmaster, Young Tom had fallen into a frantic the nation's a thought higher minded ' I want you to bear in mind that the passion for..Joanna from the moment , lien the government, thank (od, .and word 'star' tet the end of a word means 'the place of,' Thus we have Afghan- istan -the place of Afghans; also IIin- dustan- -the place at the Hindus. Can anyone give ale unother example?" No one appeared very anxious to do so until little Johnny Snags rose and said proudly, "Yea, sir, 1 can. Urn- brellastan--the place for umbrellas." Government is about to make Robin- son Average perspiration from en adult saw Grttsoe's fsiaaicl into a national amounts to about 2?',• pounds a. day. nark and tourist resort. theira d d twear hats. Girls who wish to wed arrange the x to you ;chat t)Te,eek nail}; a:id light puddin Govern - e, w,itht.ut a stain on her character, but it1 it et Q'i floral is not always a disadvantage, Mit °cup custards wi11 be sufficient. butterfly and adorn it with silver or sometimes quite the reverse. hi being colored ornaments. irritable' In fact, ometlmes the WO- Home-made Cheese. Widows . who are looking for second et meat irritable. husbands fasten their hair at the back wean al.- is by Tempe aens. Ste\'tart, an Ontario fermi n o- of the head by means of tortoiseshell she'set foot FourftWays, terrible is a far more agreeable helpmate than man so successfully makes a brier. nd widows who are determined d to and milk toast, hair in front in the form of a fan or where love may land a man, to see lei, lnents never got no spare money ' 4 pins, a made love her fierce erre e from the beginning that it couldn't he and she didn't love hint. She'd made it clear also that her heart was not her own; but since her engage- ment to the sailor was a secret and she'd promised Bob Truseott never to little four -o Dorothy. speak of it, she didn't; .and young "Oh, that makes her look strong and Tom didn't believe it, or \wouldn't said her mother, believe. when she spoke of . an under - healthy," "Yes, that's the trouble," replied standing with another marl. In secret he fought for her 'rith all the fife Dorothy. "When T want to play that ;and fury of first love, and made her she's sick' and almost dying she looks t life a very difficult business, no doubt; so awfully fat and healthy I just can't fees one bit sorry for her." Child Marriages to End. r it R)1zt *. from tine first •ind she'd told hi the wife who is lacking intra y , ereatu cheese that she has a market to remain faithful to their departed But, mind you, being irritable aloes i for all she Gan make right in her Own spouses cut thier hair short. not mean that you show that you. are neighborhood She has not only irritated, or that you actually are ,iri-i- taught many tither women how to Make Believe, tated often. It means that toot► are make it but has given dernonstraa , t`ensitive enough to your surround- tions of her method as well. T wish my dally didn't have such a Ings ste that you ern constantly try- This cheese when finished looks like round face and such rosy cheeks," said ing to improve them or to keep them factory -made Canadian cheese, but is Yd D roth up to a high standard. If there a little 3cighter in color. The follon- never had been any irrit:,ible house-, inlr is her recipe: wives doubtless we should all •be do-' 26 quarts whale milk. ing hou.eevork in the horde of. our 1 tablespoonful salt. grandmothers. V4 a would still be dip- - i1 rennetatablet. ging candles and cooking aver open fireplaces and sewing by hand instead Heat milk in porcelain container to of by machines and keeping warm by 8d degrees, and while keeping it at stoves instead of by the heat from a this temperature for five minutes, s' it central furnace, into it one-half melted rennet tablet. It isn't always an advantage to be Remove from stove and let stand two entirely long suffering. It isn't an hours. With a.knife ,, cut into fine How Faces Fit Occupations. It seems to be pretty well agreed among those in a position to speak authoritatively that associated with the varioas aectiipations in life there is undoubtedly a type of face which more or less betrays the calling of its awner. Medical nen, especially :in bjspital practice. Bud activaitTtance with these types valeable. They may not be able, with the shrewdness of Sherlock Haimes or of -other acute persons,, to read a man's past, present and future by a glance at hint in the street, but they are able to gauge with consider- able accaraey how far the history of the case, as given by the patient. is a truthful one, and how , far it fits with - bis probable o0eupt.tion in life. Calling must certainly have , some influence over the physiognomy of the cabman, the butler or the groom; each frequently_ possesses a type of face which wears so characteristic u11 ex- pression as- to make it not difficult to identify the vocation. accompanying it. (' We speak also of tite legal face, the nuisieai face. the dramatic face, and the military face. This is merely a broad classifies -tic , and the best authorities disbelieve iu. the clo:ms of the keep'observer that he can differ- entiate to a finer degree. fere are tales of hospital physi- cian8 who claire to be able to say from a ;lance at the face that this or that man is 'a butcher, a grocer, a bank clerk, a lawyer's clerk, `a commercial tratieilei�, geode. broker; and. so on. but he hid his heart from his par- ents' eyes, and her sense of right was. such that she felt she couldn't do any- thing about it or tell her trouble, but. only appeal to him to spare her, Ile Child marriages in China must stop was deaf and blind, however, and for the Minister of the Interior has didn't. see that he was persecuting a just issued an edict that any person who marries under '15 years of age will be punished. Canada has a' very heavy annual It is thought that the fame of these fire -loss that is steadily increasing, medical men as rough and ready de- amounting in 1919 to $23,500,000, or tectives has been largely manufactur- . $2.90 per capita. Minh of it is claim- ed for them by enthusiastic friends. ed to have been preventable. But that many medical men do pos- gess great insight into the occupations letnard'p Liniment For Burns, of those that come before then} is true. The ctuestion;Is often debated whether physiognomy is a growth of vocation or whether it shows that the vocation chosen is in accordance with',the par- ticular capacity and ability of the per- son to whom it belongs. In other words; if the lawyer does not show the "legal face," the,.a.spiring minister the "ecclesiastical face," the medical student the ""physieianiy face," the soldier the "`military face,' and so on,. the question arises, Is that a sign that they -have mistaken their calling? Is the man who doesn't look a bit like a doctor" likely to fail because his physiognomic qualification is wanting? Or will. he, "whatever bis original fea- tures, gradually come to acquire the type of the profession to which he belongs? The answer to the question is, of course, that both theories are right. A certain bind of face, the'so-called scientific face, is so often seen among medical students as to prove that the otener of that Cast of cotuitenance is likely to adopt medicine as a 'career. Conversely, whatever the original cade- t)! features a medical man: may' have possessed, the -anxious, delicate and absorbing work of medical practice will put a stamp. upoe them. Etat woman who'd got no use for him and never would have. Be kept on hop- ing against }tope, as lovers will, and at last the time came for Joanna to go, for she couldn't stand no more. She never for a moment tho'ug'ht that love would drive the man into crime nor did she guess that after he'd made her mad one evening and she had spoke bitter words to him and called him a mean coward and bid him leave her alone, that his baffled passions would turn into bitter hat_ 'tw� tP:t:1_�C}D,iPt� Cot�stettTTFE. a very tidy purse coined along afore the girl took her sailor, And such a wedding she had at Ashburton as would have done credit to • as royal princess. Mat End,) Which Was Crusoe's Island? There is a report that .the Chilean But to what island does this report. The first bicycle driven by pedals refer? To the island of Juan Fernan- was built in Paris in 1868'.' doz situated off the Toast of Chili, somewhere about - 33 degrees south latitude? But is 'this Rol:bison Crusoe's is- land? It is Alexander Selkirk's island, and that famous Scottish satlorman, the subject of an essay by Addison, and of a poem -"I am monarch of all b survey"—by Cowper, was unques- tionably the prototype in fact, of his far more famous fictional : ueeessor, Robinson Crusoe. Defoe, though net a travelled man, had a eonstr1tetive imagination of the first order. He was ignorant of the position of Juan Fernandez, the island upon which Selkirk had been 'maroon- ed for four years and four months, and wbase adventuresDefoe had read in the "Spectator." 'What can easily be detcri lined, by the most casual re -reading of the great romance, is that Juan Fernandez, though Selkirk's island, is not CI•u- soe's. Defoe was nothing it not exact, His. "Diary of the Great Plague o! ,Lon- don," although pure fiction, would de- ceive the very elect. Robinson Crua soe, in telling his story, misses no de- tail of latit.ide and longitude, and he. not only gives els a fair idea of the, size of• hie island, hut states that at was near • the moue. of the River Ori- noco, about latitude 12 degi:ees le min- utes north. - 1tven if this lrati rot, been stated plainly, .th.e fact that the ship, upon, which Crusoe was a supercargo, was setting out en a elaving - expeditioin • ,from' Brazil to the west coast of Africa, and- was blown by a tornado out of its course- towards the West Indies, -would of itself rule out Juan Fernandez., by thousande_of :.:files'. • There > Is only one 1,' u:cl which, by size and 11osit;1011 answer's to Ilefee''s regU cements. Thi i is the island of Tobago, about twenty -tour Miles north- east of Trinidad, in is ane of the SAVE GASOLINE Your engine cylinder if reground and- new nti newpiston rings fitted will do flus and. put more peri in your Auto, Tractor, Stationary or Marine Motor than it ever had. Send for circulars. GUARANTEE MOTOR CO., Hamilton, - - Canada COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Osalbote TORONTO O *,kLi WORKS J. CLIFF • TORONTO warn You will immensely improve the tastiness of dishes and add tre rperadously to their nourishing . value i you use plenty of