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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-7-21, Page 2e_. The Kingdom of The Blind By E. PHILLIPS OPPENEEDI. 21410sura,c=21492M2912424M2.2* 1 Course o The Toronto nospital for Incur - three years' f Train - Allied nospitals. New York City, offers o. able% in affiliation with Bellevue and ing to young women, having the re - NURSES (mired education. and desirous of be- ! coming nurses. This Hospital has 1 ' adoptea the eight-hour system. The pupils receive unifornis of the School. a mcnthly allowance and trovelliie. expenses to and from New York. Por F further information 8,PP1y to the Suporintendent. figure. In every dream of that won -1 ( 'opeeel.ghted). esson, It is derful future, of a more splendid and . SYNOPSIS: , taiee and Lorraine have taug:ht her a t 1,3 e, Ite saw ltimseif on i .. rium hant Franc not French terriory he th The story, aritten in 1 916. begins ;.ede pinnacle of fame, himself actlaim-, with Lady Ansel.man's Itincheen-party want. Russia has far more to give.- bri, millions the streng, great man, et the Raz Hotel. Lorden. Araeag the Russia and England betWeen them can the berator. Ideance outside himself self • are Lo od RornseV, a Cabinet • pay an inlemrite- whkh will mak; d. ly as a phantasy. And now, Mster; Surgeon -Major Thorason, Germany rich beyoad the dreams o veonat last his eliance hed come. The min- Chf•ef Inspector of Field Hospitals; erm vour party, 1Nlonsieur his avariee. F utes passed unnoticed as he built his' fiaeeee, neeesose ceedtiers; her bro- Guillet, spread yeur tngs in aneit way op int* the future. He was Mel.. a nava? deeterant, and bis way that seems fit to e-ou, enly unti shrewd and caleulatirig, he took Bete rellan-"h” 0!ivc Merehm; Centain 1:0nold the hour comes, guard that document rts, you wu.1,1 yhur soui„ its pezsess,„ of the pitfallz he must avoid, Gee hen -r"ni"-'1", neahew a the hestess. home '`''' one he decided upen the Men whom with a woundel a"ni. Lieut. •lonYe7 would mean death to you as it would; gre.iaally end cautiously he would receives connnieshao ,On 3 "alySter) . to rrie." aaraw into his confidence. Finally he. ship arid ikle!or Themson .leeodes a mor,sie G in k h otoo e ument' s.ave the whole seheme oemplet tli aret.1,buutt,o,nw‘edra,it t -n in t doc leis inside Po:.'ke* ' bomb -3h II th • F e' e ''' , e ...roan, ranee hysterical-', eeeret reeseage from the battlefield. Lord nee:see' reeelvee a vieh.er and the i a . I see-eed." he sehl i .• - ; Ldeabsr.(1)12-7;lelealliresueTelilect.1 Tge:.41*". eonvdrsetion reeved. dee (71,-.:1-iiree.,Min.- „ quiet lyavhat ef yo4ur.eeuntry the.r. ?" ez*td'ueto'i;'..rt'7Itc,Ssteurtlaerrell.,%"i's" 'Ale-, eouritro ,will maize peace,"h 'rile doser-hell rang. He ar.swered it' 1.--... ,;:n.eee'e ;thezi.l;',:tr-ille ardews„ an,Fe ,i,t',.7c;-,„„I'iel'el:•V•tti"Intit:',!1:-.1 bs7t att..telLeoe a lit,.t2e !re.,Ipatiently. A. slim, faeltioni teing neeet Lerd Ttonieee e e.s... • " • ":',. , hi d . a Q.,41,..,:,... ...er.i,?s aur kmawle,,tte ,,,•,f the :hien i.,.en we taserve. er generr: there, ev'hose lace waS vaguely femiliar. . • . ••"1 • It sc-eal:e i ALeer'ea.r. chaplain. Geral.d- ..s war has "en the rerfeY'• to him. .. ir.e eea les 1",,:le:si,n's p!en, I'm an itri- oevams and arent sequence of, ellonsieer Guillot?" the ilea -comer He e'sroci•zila a...4 .• k ,•••%.• • il... 1 '"' Fut-.1- -"" e"e '''e It threw its warn- inquired patella . ,• . - Jan eleauev, twiees t ax . path or eeare•• Guiliet. howyd. The young, man r."Tth 4C'arvere for .F.selesiraa A.liniraay Vans ta the twe girls end T•••/' •,' , . .,. 1, . . p. ,, hanotel hon a earth • a .... . •4 k • • % • 6 ... . • After a wide in the park with Geredi- their lamas tee otaer aay °Is wa•dse`' , "I am the Baron D'Evignme," he Inv. ,7ir:net rotor,:$ 1, his rc,um to find idindfolded. No; only our i'ta,tsulero' anr.ouneed, "sezond secretary at the a b• eta? eire free: a eireherael. IIe mind, but oar pee•ple, enr Engl.sh Pe?' Embassy here." raree 7%7,3 scrv.•4nt that a neW hand hes pie. Ger eeetting men shirked their i Monsieur Guillct held the card and , inteee i the game, War Off'd'e r!tlIst" ':"tY" "r P.1"*°'-'°Pbers ""4 e5'saYlsts 'lcoked at his is tor Ile was ver puz- to :Clow !dm te rejoin Ids regiments Adam, theire, We prated of peaee e„ , Mena:eel geee to the Front to inter- el conventions, and we knew vcred eieh- c'T'se dim settee of forebodinir in times evy, leadnrin to -teal in u en WI view ilearat's• Genera! aril lia- his* weh diat we were Being rincelGralien humin nature and red blood 'Be so 1,4nd as to eome in. Meeesieur.:. eend. eeet raceared , , , 'i. * girls te Poteiser.oitth to vielt were '-ti the eeetreonag esetseelts. wle Berenheinvited"Wll yea not e, le seated and explain to me to what fney,a : en -,h.... -"Se ,apiee," an I tried watelied Germauy arm and prepare. . I arn nalehted for this honor? You; te diaeover tile :=Er'.71 eaeret deveee. W h turned for ;comfort tov:ards eur Thiu ,vering. heeatzte. Thomeen everne fehew sinners, America. and we prat-, do flat, hYanY 'ehauee* mistalie me. for another? I am Monsieur Guillot, . lir the: Graret is sespeet. tiered- tiol ahout 0:11TentIons and arbitration,. ielya. doee 1-deake their erongereerat. The end a hundred other silly abstractions. te, las! ef Lille" 1 Baron smiled ever se slightly as fere-la-ire- •7ey Gran,: ,edde 'alr,11 MOr.- A father' can wateh the punishment The a ra- V 11 the lillier. his el 11 Moneieur Guile .. Be- , le ,nwe'w al" * the me lh mea, there are many other Eng- „„ .Sliet,'e is no aliStake, Monsieur ".vwith', henen besilee me who will feel a cami.,-lot, he •S'aid. I coene to ou ,'Ii 1.-Ol-lcal. X111.---ie'eirehai melieezhely satiefaetion in the chase ", ll -'age from' "13." Ch!ef- He would "Y, .: .7!...;“.. tee, tiretat en-ainee.• eaertert c; their eauntev reeny who °e grei4;.Y honored if you weuld ile- ' '.. t.1....., ' -.. -N.!' .s. threued:' :". Frorae• are more Eneelieh even. than T." . eempariy me w the Malmsey. He I en en Oee none. -,d r nee tied: I l•rhig m ;• •• c eek *., -- • e • - f , , ' wishes a few minutes" eon' ration 'A , ens.eer +1114.0. tn..,:•e. :3,v,p4 ..71 Gal . .."'..'- ... 1 -';'.• .!f t,VoZi ',:i'''''.'"' , St1;4. •*1.-"•• file rerrenel ei'e --i. the nrit-er "el with you." l r neind wee ravelling swiftly Ao...h me" 11r . , oeilen e --' eu "a C ' II t t e.- - - toe:ea- urar, - •-,- ..,-,c .C.4 se ,.,-,.,,e, oe Fe, own. futtlie eehee-1 hieredulouely. "But there is' areatr.esa !some InIst.ke.' -""'''', -Thie ie tbe chance whieh cenies to -No releteke. 1 szsAwre you," the fo 4.. .,,; f....•.-4 a ..-•'.47,:;:‘,..:•;,. • or. retn." Le rut 'o I. -There ie De- •T°unS" 'Ilan In6isle4• i "i'd i " k•- aeie, "hi .: nee te lene, Gerihee, Del:eon:et. S01113, be- Monaieur Guillot dreve a little !melt a; .-,, - • Ye' 1 .1.'d'd ::',=;;.1.:2'• ...Ldeiee my ova: foil:Avers. My own our ', a into„The roomh, ... . - rid, aloe It ie a erreat campaign, this: "nut wriave 1 to do with the eta ofene; ..e - 1 sim:: .f.t.urt."` aanleneador, or witli diplornatie mat - :tare et any eart . he protested. 1 . . .. Grenet reec to his feet. ' '• :het :nee i, -..e true, a .* - t-1ay , .1 f , 1:311 hen.. on busireee, to see what can 1 ,x,,.,u: I rir... ,.......e.ti tee ay ..reit..re mere i"e- •e , 1 er„, - . .. 1, , be saved freen the wreck of mv af- • , Grneet t• i.. „ : ..., tee -et-. l iret. that *- • • ... .. 1 faIrs. Meraienr ti Andmeeaelor i hrdire -- Pre d 'he' eitesidn• aroun rie t: e no re , .. ere. ede, , f .a„ eereen- • • • . a ' Wen:Li:re- me for erethee uety tehon 1 .lav„ ...-- a ,.: te - Te"'e eer -r-r ieur Take The ll aein shoe!, Ills head. Needs. More About Yitamines. How do we know we are g,etting the neceezery vitamines, if no one knowwhat vitamines reary are?' demands a wernan who wants to know that her family is properly rouriehed Vitamines, as you know, are the un- determined food elements, reeently dieeovered; -vital to grcwth and health, yet not to be classed as a protein, starch or fat. Vitamines seem to be somethirar, like housenverk. Nobody netices it if yau do it, but if it is neglected, 0 ray! So no one thinks anything abent vitamines if the body gees itb quota, but if one is omitted, then loek out for disturbances. The first, known as fat soluble, is: not only necessary for growth, but its absence causcs. a serious dinease of , the eye. The seeond, known as Water; Salt:hie B, is ale° -most importent ter, g'eowth, and prevents beri-beri, adis-d ease nernmori in tee Orient, which is eharaerterized by paralysis. Water'd Soltdele C, the third vitamine, not only is important for growth, but it pre- vertl.. scurvy. It might abriost be cal - le: a cure for seurvy as well, for', where this diseaae has bon prevalent it has freouently been cured by feed...! raw vegetableknown to eontain, Water Seluble C. This vitamine is. easfly destroe-ed by heat, so it Is at. its be in uncooked vegetables. Tool, ler.g cecking kills the power of till tho! vitamines, ee in vooking any vegetable• the time allowed ehould he just enough, to admit thorough ceoltiag. Now, as to where the viten-dries are Fat Soluble A is found in the l'enlow-1 found. lug feeds: I. Butter, cream. milk; 2, egg yelks; fieli oils; 4, green vegetables. eab- bege, dried spiaach; 5, glan lular ergana el the botiv as liver and news: carrots, meet potatoes; 7, t - natwthaetse;r8., ogehirlin:,eisuofi:eiho,u1sr;191,ne the f- lowing foods: I, Yeast; 2, egge; 3, groin etrahryoe,1 4, who gratin; ;5, lrelele; 6, peas: 71,, whole or slelm-millt; 8, fruit and veaeai tobles; pevolereil and condensedi milk; 10, rags; II, clatece. Water S. Nide C rotted in the fol- leovinte foe.' -• • titee; emon eta' 3, tenratoes, raw or canned; 4, raw cab. • t 2 nips; it, lime Mee- 7 raw eerrote- 8 milk; V, staing beans; 10, beets; 1 I lieee wedded :n fear. Tealey I am a --- 7 • ; • •• . eree eecen. e• e o.. 0.• A'n e R • a ea; see- eereeia711.' w!a!et yeu are in Eire "There is no nestake, tny dear Eir,"' other fruits ani vegetables. eTteeaaaaeOe-ereat---aea-' "'Vet leader is the man with the biggezt voice and mos 'e pep, and he doesn't teach you how to sing by note. You have to find your cevn leey and keep on it as beat you can. Maybe a victrola grinds out the aecolopenhnent, maybe some pianist helps out, and again, maybe you have no aecompendment at Community sings sinve the war have beeome a big factor in drawing folks together. H you want to try one and have no musie, write to. tome of the leading music eteres in year nearest town. Talking machine companies and player piano companies also make records espeeialle- adapted for tom- munite- sings, Also write instrument mahers for seleetions. If your com- munity needs ,somethine, to bring the folks- together try- a sengfest. Nothing goes farther towards awakening a feeling of good fellewship auto sing- ing and pleying together. Taking the Poison Out of Printer's Ink. The United Metes Bureau or Stand - ante has been helping the Public - Health Serehe, be meld:10 analysia hike, to find out the eause of skin wh trouble ich commonly afflicte the workers in printing and eugraving plants. It tarots those parts of the arms and hands which are constantly In .eerittlet with colored Mina The trouble in some cases is a mere rash on the forearm e and 'halide; in 1.,• others the skin aesunwe loyally a seal- ly appearance. followed by idistera with itching and burning. Occasional.' ly uleers develop. 1 It is a serious matter, and has long! been a puzzle to physicians. The; priuters have been inclined to aterhi bate it to the ft:trod:action substio tutee for oil or turpentitie. Femme ; who have a dry shin suffer tamed; those whose shin is oily sr o least ata Meted. A thorough experimeatel inquiry has now led to the coneateeea teat tee miseldef is due to abserptioa of the oil und pigments in the Ink, and to Mel methods cemmonly adoptea tor remen, tug the int; frmti u the haude anarMS ° A dry shin is comparable t2A a Wei- ler, which readily idnerhe the oil in l:s th the Ine pip -netts carried with the ell. On the other hand, the pigments are less easily removed from a dry ekin than from a ehin that le al- ready oily. Therefore. in the t'430 4ar a dry skin more serubbine requir4.e1.4 whereby the skin le Irritated. ••••• S e Aut s B.EAKMC SBLLS 'r.: US= .11J) ears of an typos; cars sold sub., ject to delivery up to ZOO miles,.or teat run of same distance If yea wisiX, OA gore, order tas purchased, or purabsse, ries refunded, RING mechanic of your own chokes to look thereover, or ask ust e any ear to city reprosentatlY6 fre fnspeotion. Irea7 large alock abrara 01* bawl. Breakey's Ueed Car Market 402 Tanga Straat. Teal:NEW an easy capture. But he was mis- taken, tor the cub, seeing Mut too near, doubled itself into a ball and droped to the ground. The man got to the ground in Mower fashion. Mean- while the baby bear had climbed an- other tree. The surveyor, then assuming that the cub would repeat its taetice, took his pocket tape line, made a elip noose in one end, and placed it beneath the limb from which, as nearly as he could. calculate, the bear would drop, if it tumbled from the second tree aq from the first. Keeping the box end of the line in his hand Lite surre.yor climbed the tree. The cub waited until its pursuer was almozt upon it and then walked oat on a limb, as It had before. The man aa follov,ed. and the bear walked nearly to the end then dropped to the ground. As luck woula have it, the cub dropped outside the noose, but when he turned etepeod Inside with his fore feet. The luau Instant- ly drew the line. mid there was baby bear caught by its fore lege. It strug- gled and snarled, but only drew the elipknot tighter. The man descended to the ground, bolding the line cant. He lied quite a fight with the cizb. but Ilnally con- quered, and the little fellow eubmitted to be led home, where It soon became tame. The Debt of Honor. Our nation'e debts aro piling up. the war debt is immense. Du: one great debt we have to pay r.-.gardlese of expenee. It he the debt we 6:Me the man who rotielit tor us and bled, Anti veto ler healthy living Drake wear It is the debt we owe the zuen zho me wo!elen cairestead. coma with broken Urea. To etruggie owe agein to Loop their children mei their v;inas: Anieng the darkereed homee of theeo tho-4 :vette et diin And daily In the k•tr,ete tied sites we paea ra•ni tu uur Is Van:tile so (leaf and Milli OW not bear anti seo The unite appeal tit proud. brave men and ehilelren at the kneTZ'i . , with a how, the neeeseitita the rii7e that thi...s4 tv!itan;i:IMP aten o.. • arnRitslialtvtittle end et the work eeried ie. starved iii houees vahl and bare, bay!aline of the hitt I.;qtai; and wvirtel ht,d and - tea 4. faa .. 4 e ineiete I "1.Ve ell reel% iee " t onI to . hinge:en 1. «\i,. '«!''' he said, "in the which lone the most famous of us t.., etroved h • cooki usually accompliolled in rattier hrutal ; While wealth rd 1,:q1p go rolling by 'neer yeo 'zitreaeaa eneneieun yeene veree Yen arel I shall per- live sometnace in the ehadow 'fashion. washing with Mineral oil be• without a thought er care? --- . . "In i,i'.'..,; transiy- 'imp,: aloe: !a .„ue -see:nee-fed Parie,. and anene laity. If' the (Idef, •coulil find , : .e: iny greet doere •t•- deed with ie 1 may eat teal the werld se, I shall Halt? to say ta Mtnieieur Guillet of " 11 i '''-il 1 r•hw req.- :„ 0: 7.-,•,, a$ ..ve halt ...men her great- Lille., be will, I ain -sure, be ve7 it -del -- knee that 1 nal reasenize ;nal, rnen-d ;one, thin me end I nape; ea: hi:No .te1 hi a short convereatien with • eFeAdleelMen; ieur Henri Pailleton." 1 evol rene. " :ranee ne.e.e. ie.. enten - tdrelan evidie his way e, '.ng the ' Thelee Wft.=, a hrief, tenee oilenee. The vereenaent(re.r4ty en-riler, rem.- for th'. lift and man alio had tolled hims-elf Guillot i. -Thee .. .:••1..inieue the:: eee..en.led into the hall. A snilie WaS, was transformed. The dreams which J-. drd•.'l. edh„ ne. his lire. The torlt at last was. had Uplifted him a few minutes ago, • ITTR..1. Y.:,,'_4-:',. ' ". v.i. In the had a the hotel he • had paeeed. He was living very much , t,iriln.t''- ..v.a t.t•:•r., r-,e,-r.,.,fm.,11;'..:1'; ceme aerees a grew" ef reeembling . in the present—an ugly and forebode a!"ast, reene. sf ea; eerve ne lail. 11::-:12,:;.1-st juSt Starting for the lunchefm:ing present. The veins stood out upnn en the tea•le len-Neer. theni. . r..,4ern. A. tall, familiar figure stepped his forehead and upon the back -of his "I re..:1;vt.:1 11-4$," ; -...e annonn•!c,d, fer a moment on ore side. His heart hinels, his teeth gleamed underneath then iiiix,e w4.e'lis age teem the reeve a little jump. •Gerahline held out hie eoarse, white moustache. Then he hands I.,f the Kein hi ..:(2.1." I her pearl -glutei hind. recovered himself. :11,,n,,,ienr Cul:: - eoatel en his tx-,a1-1 ef.'eetain Granet," she said, "I "There is some mistake," he said, penien ineretaleue:y. - I.' I- war...ei to tell you sone thine' " "but 1 will come." I` "•-•''''s l''''*" ii-J'irteah t:vr411Et emr-:; "Yes?" he ansv•Tral breathlessly. ' In silence they left the hotel and t."4need. "1 hiee taken r..risor.er near i• She glanced towtirds where the little drove to the Embassy, in silence the te,.• v:Itige rtf 9iiray. I was eorieluat- t.,,,,,,,,p of people Were already on their, ed et eeee re ea- "e",trte''S eed tat -eel • ea., _ .1 e 4' ... -3,-oun7., man uehered his eharge into by motor -ear ee a certein fortified •-the large, pleasant apartment rat the ' ''I must rot stay for a Feconit" she • ground fiocr ef the Embassy, where e '.;h ..3 1 ''''''.-11 ."''''' '''°''''''-f:th 'r'ut co.miirued, drcpping, her 1,-eice, "but 1 vri.C.eli was at :hat tinie Vie hear:- the amliassador was giving- instriv.- . — . : wanted to tell i-ou—I aro no Ienger . - ronoters ei. en.• aerane Seeff. I re- tIOT:S to tWO of his secretaries. He ceive I ',hie .i...-zeonee tanee in the wey :bee,: 1 disraiseed theen a•ith a little wave of engaged to Major Thoaisen. Good- • his hand and bowed politely to his 1rL'avt? To'ai Yidd- 1 wha fr•[-ITI asl33te1,1 '''.:‘ rush of words tremblei upon his visitor. There was no longer any pre- ezer tiorde "erY r'en--rkabict advc•n7•, 7Ips but she was gone. He watched tures, to le,..jo'n rey rsgiment. You can text on the part of Monsieur Guillot.. ..,1-1,e-. slim, graceful figure as she passed He reeognized its complete futility. or,en that dozureent, Mensieur Guillot•sitly along the vestibule Unu joined 'Monsieur Pailleton," the arabas- feldreeeel to yeu. Guard it care- her -friends. He -even heard her little fully, theearla for it ie signed y laFedor began, "will you take a seat.? the' laegh as she greeted one of the men Kaiser himself. 1 haeve tarried it with . It is very kind of you to obey so who had w.aited for her. quickly my summons." "I had no idea," the • latter remark- • imagine, its diseovery upon my pers endoor, "this s myday!" ed, "that my preseace en England was wenlil have meant instant death." i known. I arn here. on private busi- Monskur Guillot was ,rossed in * s." reading the few lines of engnes the missive. CHAPTER XIV. The ambassador bowed suavely. Whcm hehad finished, he covered the Monsieur Guillot was a man of em- "Precisely, my friend! - You see, 1 paper with the palm of his hand and ctional temperament. For mare than use the epithet `my friend' because at leaned forward. There was a queen an hour after Granst had left him, he a time like this all Frenehmen must light in his eyes. I paced erd buepf a his little room, forget their differences and work to - "Germany will give up Alsace and endthedc'h7 high windows which gether for the good and the honor of Lardouned lee said hoarsely, "and will overlooked the Thames, raised his their country. Is it not so, mon.sieur?" retire within her own frontiers. She hands above his head and gazed With That is indeed true, Monsieur,' will ask for no indemnity. -What is flaShing eves into the future—such a Pailleton admitted Slowly. "We may the meaning of it?" me new for more than a fortnight in "Decidedly," Granet said to himself the inner sole of my shc-e. As you czin t dianti - as he 'timed toward- the future! All his life he had been a work in different ways but we week "Simple enough," Granet meinted schemer, his eyes turned towards the towards the same end." out. "A great politician like you big things, yet with himself always "No one has ever doubted your pat- . . should easily realize the actual condi- occupying the one glorified place in riotism, Monsieur Pailleton, the am - tions which prompt such an offer. the centre of the arena. He was, in haesadoe continued. "It is my privi- What good is territory to Germany, one sense of the word, a patriot, but he must rule lege now to put it to the test. There territory aver which s . . . it was the meanest and smelliest sense. is a little =sun i erstanding n Brazil, by force, struggling always against There was no great France for him every particular concerning which, the accumulated hatred of yeare? Al- in which his was not the commanding and the views of our Government, is contained in the little parcel of docu- ments which you see upon this table. Put them in your pocket, Monsieur Pailleton. I am going to ask you to serve your country by leaving for Liverpool this afternoon and for Bra- zil to -morrow on the steamship 'Hermes.' " Monsieur Pailleton had been a little taken aback by the visit of the Baron. He sat now like a man temporarily stupefied. He was too amazed to find any sinister significance in this miss sion. He could only gasp. The am- bassadoes voice, as he continued talk- ing smoothly, seem.ed to reath him from a long way off. (To be continued.) , • __a:. Petritytblaatiy.ECOttogny coratinati. ti of purity q - lhas made Maim Eakin uality. atri4 eocottotny gPowderthe standard I basing poRider ef Canada. Positiv ly contaoinsno glamor other injurious substitutes.' Its use insyres perfect satisfaction. 'Costs T.11,0 =ore than the Ai/may kinds" Mack in Canada E GILLETT COMPANY LIMITIED wee. TORONTO, CAN. mom-retr-ra. Comaneroial automobiles are dis- placing the ox -cart and the coolie in traarsgortation of orbducts in British Malay.sia. teinard's Liniment for Dandruff. • .. Ing followed .wlth soap and het water • To -morrow's Dinner. Biel Veal —perhaps sandeoap. er pumice tamp Across the sefEen plains of death Green Peies Creenael. Potetoes : Sawdust mixed with liqual green : helrel with a stiff linah. theee met, lurve chiirged and fought, Parker thave Rolls talap will be found 11103U11103Umore eGue- They Mere the eeony and etrain and One-en:et Cheery Pie • tive for Ma purpoee, weed with amen cur valve:len wrinight; Most of the work en this direnee may • water; and, if lanolin (nea.fv,t1 he ' They did not ewarve. they did not be done tho day before rubbed over the arm,: and bards he. vtlihii,ethe,i but ou ana en they Von! Loef,---For this any pine of fore beginning work it will make atlioll boiling veal will do. A shank is nice, easier the subeequent remeval of the Till in the rain of epliutering ehell but any Floe for slew will make the Ink' eeme oue tied gave -them rest. loaf. Cook until tender, remove from The upshot of the experimente is a the broth, whieh should be etrained rE"ec.""1"e'"1"ti°" that " miy-ture "i' :Thal' we. then, now forget the past ht and allowed to cool Roniove meat lanolin and olive .011, half and half, be senlebrera and ease from bone aril discard all grietle eni kept in the washroom where printers Aad Fey they have no claim en us, shred into small pieces. If ' the broth, change their street •elothea fer work 'sloth glorlcus 111011 11:1 t1107Re? . clotees. Befere entering the prees- hardens, no gelatine need be added. If , rooms eaeh worker sliould he required it does not thieken to a •consistency , to rub the stuff well into the pores of to mold, add a littIe gelatine softened in cold water. The broth must be re -1 ' - and arms,e end of each us in the street. {seed h heated to melt the gelatine. To cnehift he should remtthe ink with quart of brothallew fear cups of meat!a mixture of soap and sawdust. whieh . Beetow not on the deal. your praise, two olives chopped fine, two radishes, ' if on a nation's throne to -day our eutin• try telces her seat, It is the work of broken men that east will accomplish the• cbletn readily tool . they heed it not above, . sliced, and two sprigs of minced pus-lwithout injury to the skia. The men that live and sutler still arb C b' al d they who ueed your hive; bread tin. When ready to serve gar -1 Did You Ever See a Deal ml with radish roses and parsley. 1 .03. aim me, ae nu). in eep Vlinnrd sLiniment for Burns, etc. The Very stOtieS Cry Mit to US, too long have Ws delayed, Thc debt of honor faces us and that debt must be paid. Quebec, June 21, 1921. Canon Scott Greeri Peas.—Allow only enough, Tree belling water to cover, tzo that none! Canadians whose country owes so need. be poured off when the peas are much to wood, should pride thane tender • They should cook in twenty selves on knowing what the different timber terms mean. Sometimes pole minutes. Season with salt pepper and butter. Three or four tablespoons: sons speak of a certain article. as made "P t H " Steak Many people have attempted to of deal. When they are asked what of cream make a nice addition trace the origin of the term "porter - As Cherry Pie.—For one pie, kind of tree deal is they are at a loss. . louse steak to a man nathed Porter, As a matter of fact deal is not a kind ' allow a quart of cherries before ston- who is supposed to have kept a res- ing, one generous eup of sugar, three of tree but a piece of wood. Aboard is one inch thick; a plena, two, inches level tablespoons of flour and the I yolks of two eggs. Sift eager and thick; and a deal, three inches thick. The word is not used in the lumber flour d beat into the e lle . Stir n this mixture into the cherries, an trade in the States, and in Canada it 11 is fly pour into the prepared crust. Put into chie shipment of tusedimber to Great Britain. in connection with. the a tool oven and gradually heat. Frost with egg whites. It is shipped in this form because it is a convenient size for certain British The following proportions make ex- woodworking Industries. Since deals sotly enough crust for one pie or two are chiefly made from spruee, balsam shells, if ingredients are carefully mix- ecle One cup of sifted fiverfir, pine, and sometimes hemlock, a , twin secondary use of the word In England rounded tablespoons of lard, three tablespoons of water. is to indicate some kind of "soft" wood - or wood from a cone -bearing tree. In Parker House Rolla.—To one pint of Canada, however, the word is not used bread sponge add a half cup of butter, in this sense and "deal" always means melted, two tablespoons of sugar, and a piece of wood of a certain thick- ness. flour to knead. Knead twenty minutes, let rise till double its bulk, than shape into small round rolle, cut half -way through with a dull knife, brush one- half with melted butter, and foldthe other half over. Place in greased' pan and when light bake for about fifteen minutes. Community Sings. When grandfather was a boy, it was singing school. Now it is community sings. Different names, different methods •of leading, but the results are about the same, a get-together event for the oommunity. 111 grande father's day the singing master with his timing -fork led, and initiated the folks into the mystery of sight read - Catching a Bear Cub. Some time ago a surveyor in. west- ern Pennsylvania captured a bear Cub after a lively and amusing chase. He was walking quietly along when he saw the little bear not a dozen yards away. It seemed not the least afraid, and. he started toward it, expecting, an easy capture, but when he was within a few feet of it the cub turned tail and scrambled up a chestnut tree, from the crotch of which it gazed dawn up- on the man as If challenging him to .continue the pursuit. The surveyor threw off his coat and shinned the tree. The bear waited until he was close upon It, then walk - upon a limb. The man crawled ing. Maybe they .had a five -octave ed 'oat organ for accompaniment. : Now the cautieeney after it, again thinking of taurant in New York. The real reason for the term was be cause, in the early part of the last cell., tury, there existed in New York a number of public -houses waere ale and porter were the favorite beverages or- dered. These taverns or saloons came to be known as porter -houses. The proprietor of one of these es- tablishments, on being asked for a particularly tender and. appetizing steak, made the experiment of cutting the top off a joint which had been sent for his personal use. The customer was so pleased that he called a day or two later and demanded another of those steaks. The fame of . the tavern and its steak soon spread, and it was not long before epicures throughout the city were asking for porter -house steaks, and butchers, learning the secret ef the cut, adopted the teem themselves. Bandkok, the capital of Siam, is a floating eity, containing 70,000 houses, each of which floats on a raft of bam- boo. AUTO USED PARTS We carry o full line of used parts for all makes of cars, cleaned and free from grease 8,nd dirt. Magnetos, gears, springs, complete engines, tires �t. Highest prices paid for old cars. Write, wire or phone aeraleaeoemen USED palters Co., IMO nuudas $t. West, - Torontel Phone Parkdale 41.60. ISSUE No, 29—'21