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The Brussels Post, 1916-3-23, Page 3usew# ealffer Selected Ricipes. Groundnut Macaroons,—In parts of the .South, from which this receipt comes, peanuts ure known as ground- nuts. Grind in a meat chopper enough nuts to fill a pint measure. Beat the whites of two eggs stiff and dry. Add a pint of pulverized sugar and the chopped nuts; rub the whole together thoroughly, then spread the mixture on tin sheets, not buttered, and bake it to a delicate brown in a slow oven. Cut it into squares, and serve them either hot or cold. An Irish Receipt for Potato Cakes. --Boil' the potatoes thoroughly, mash. and season them with auk, moisten each at least ono apple a day. It will keep their systems in :good con- dition. Hard boiled eggs chopped fine and mixed with mustard with a little cream and seasoning will make a de- liclous sandwich, To keep ferns or other house plants fresh and green drop a little castor oil at the. roots, or milk. Both will produce good results. Fly specked mirrors should be wash- ed first with cold water, and then polished with a chamois which has been dipped in alcohol. To clean a vinegar bottle put in' some potato peelings, fill with water, them with milk, work into them all and allow to stand till the potato peel the flour they will absorb, and knead ferments. Then wash. the mixture into a soft dough. Roll It is a good idea to save, if pos- it out on a board, sprinkle it with sible, a definite sum for furniture re - flour, cut it into biscuit sizes, and placements. This applies especially bake the cakes slowly until they are to the keeper of a new house. brown on both sides. In Ireland, For nice dish rags, sew two salt where the cakes are 'called potato bags together. They will last longer fudge, they are usually eaten hot, than the ordinary rag of cheesecloth, with butter. Sometimes they are fried etc. Flour bags also snake excellent in fat. dusters. - Fig Pickles.—Three and one-half When making muffins drop scones, pounds pulled figs,' five cups sugar, Ste., dip the spoon in water or milk. one quart .vinegar, one ounce stick The batter will not stick to the spoon, cinnamon,' one ounce whole cloves, and the cake will be more even in size, Wash figs thoroughly and let stand Keep a watchful eye on the Child - over night in water to cover, Do not ren's school lunches; if they have drain off this water. Add vinegar, (good, nourishing lunches they -will be spices and sugar and let simmer gent- I better k to stand the strain of ly until 'figs are thoroughly done school wob and syrup is a little thick. One-fourth this amount will serve six persons, These cold days, before hanging out the clothes, wipe the lines with a Cranberry -Pear Pudding,—Place in cloth wrung out in.soltwater, it will bottom of pudding dish slices of stale prevent the clothes from freezing to sponge cake. On top of these le -y' the lines. quartered canned pears. Fill dish Toprevent rugs from turning up on 'little more than half full. Cover the side s.tick a piece of heavy cloth with layer of cranberries sprinkled' about four inches wide on both sides with sugar. Put in oven and bake; and on both ends of carpet. Stitch on until cranberries are tender and juice • wrong side. has permeated rest of ingredients. Cover with meringue of stiffly beaten FOREST PROTECTION. . whites of two eggs, sweetened with two tablespoons powdered sugar. Commission of 'bonservation Has Is- Brown delicately in oven. Sued a Report on the Subject. Loaf Cake.—Two cups granulated sugar, one cup butter, four cups pa- stry flour, six teaspoons baking pow- der, one cup milk, six eggs, one and one-half teaspoons flavoring. Beat sugar and butter to cream, add egg yolks well -beaten and any flavoring desired. Sift -together baking pow- der and flour and add half of it to ealte, alternately with milk, and.'re- mainder alternately with egg whites beaten stiff. Bake in large tube pan in moderate oven -for forty-five to fifty minutes, Full amount makes nicebirthday k t According to press reports, Sweden proposes to cut off the export of chemical pulp to Great Britain_ Na- turally all eyes are immediately :turn- ed to Canada to supply the threaten- ed deficiency. The Commission of Conservation Inas just issued a report on "Forest Protection in Canada, .1913-1914,", which is of 7iarticular interest in this connection. It contains mach infor-I elation respecting the work of the provincial forest services and of the federal departments intrusted with Now a Sergeant sletaIi a'TOMITCH. Seventeen -year-old girl who le s (remit -We' two years as a private 11 Serbia's army and has been promo - ,ed to sergeant for Jicroic conduct. P CANADIAN TIMBER EDUCATING nig. BLIND. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL, WONDERFUL BEAN Doty Soldiers Who Lose isght Will ' Be Cared For, A statement has been issued dealing with the work carried on at' St. Dun- stan's, London, by the Blinded Sol- diers' and Sailors' Care Committee, of which C. Arthur Pearson is chair- man. It is stated that men have learnt the difficult act of reading witb the finger-tips in a fortnight, and that men who have never seen a typewriter INTERNATIONAL LESSON, GERMANY CAN'T GET MARCH 26. The Great Multitude—Review. Gold- en Text: Revelation. 7. 16. 17. have learnt to use it accurately and 1, The Bible and the crowd. The ab a fair speed in the same short Scripture deals with men in the mass space of time. These are exceptional and with individuals. It faces the There is a little bean, sometimes cases but as a 'general rule Braille need of the crowd and of the single green, sometimes black, but nosily to the Sacral ubllc iu this counts , wltieh 300 DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF SOYA BEANS Manchurian Product From Whose 011 Dynamite Can be Made reading and typewriting are acquit,- soul wrestling with its destiny. It yellow, snore or less unknown ed with remarkable rapidity. i closes, not with a vision of a few Gerntanjp badly wants, but can't get. Men have been trained in poultry chosen individuals or a chosen people Tie Soya bean is its nano, and iC farming, and others are building up lifted to eternal blessedness, but of a is nue of the mask wandertul produe- businesses as cobblers and earning great multitude winning through to tions 01 the soil we have, It can be amounts equal to their weekly pen- the Eternal City-. One of the greatest —and is—used in manufacturing dos- sions. Several basketmakers. are needs of Christianity is that its one of things, dynamite and high ex - was so earning good wages, and makers of preachers and teachers should learn Plosives being among them. picture frames, brays and other to think religion in group terms, They 1 alo Before v seethe a tongs beans that the articles requiring an expert Icnowl_ must get the vision of God which edge of ornery find their time fully Jesus declared was minutely personal, import duty was specially talten off and profitably occupied. Among and yet is slog raider than the race,, them; now, thanks to the British navy, she cart only get the beans by other employments for which men are he ancient prophet shows its the! smuggling' them in small quantities being trained are. those of masseurs, compassion of God brooding over theIthrough neutral countries, tem, telephone operators and divers. of that great city of Nineveh, "six -land because I had been successful in shorthand writers by the Braille sys- helpless children and the dumb beasts She wanted to grow them herself, An urgent appeal to the public is score thousand that ]tnew not their starting crops of soya beans iu both made for help in carrying on the right hand over their left, apd also West and South Africa, I was ap• work.much cattle." Jesus shows us the preached in the matter. I' told the The Lord Advocate, Mr. Robert heart of God as the tears stream Germans that the beans would not Munro, K.C„ M.P., received- in his down his face when he thinks of the grow in their Country, which was doubtless unpleasant to them says chambers in Edinburgh a deputation needs of the crowded life of Jerus- a writer from the directors of the Edinburgh elem. Soya beans come from Manchuria Royal Blind Asylum and School, con- 2. A community religion. The les- chiefly; one-quarter of the cultivated sisting of the Rev. Dr. Burns (the sons for the quarter have been the ground there is occupied by the chairman), John Laing, David Dick- story of the develdnment of a coin plants, which stand from one and a son, and the secretary, A. W. Fisher, munity religion. The little company half to feur feet in height and bear regarding soldiers and sailors blind- of the disciples is enlarged into a com- pods of about to inches in length, ed in the war. A letter on the sub- monwealth working out their common containing two sew five seeds, ject was sent to the War Office from life together; then comes the story Marvelous Use of the Bean the Board of Directors. The depute- of their reaching out, touching far In all, there are 300 different vari- tion stated that the feeling existed cities and gathering in other peoples; eties of soya beans, and how wonder - in Scotland that blinded soldiers and the host of witnesses, heroes, and ful the beau is can be seen from the sailors belonging to Scotland should-• martyrs of the faith are unseen help- foilowing uses to which it can be be cared forand trained by Scottish ere; they belong to the company. Now put: people. comes the vi ion of the great result Human consumption, as a vegetable, - a- —a glimpse of that great far-off clay like marrowfat peas, and in prepare - THREE YEARS OF WAR. i when the life of God shall fill the tion oY soups. earth, when for the commonAs substitute for meat, specially peopled manufactured, Astrologer Says Germany Will be De- the rough places shall have been made I Manufactured ea a substitute for feated in August, 1917. simple and'the crooked places chocolate, straight, when in the justice and Preparation of macaroni. "Sepharial," the noted'London as- flesh of the common life all As flour for biscuits and brown trologer who predicted the' Boer War flesh together shall see the glory of bread, in 1899, the war in the Far East in the 'Lord revealed. The purpose of As artificial cream and milk, 1894, the revolution in Portugal and our religion is not simply the salve -1 As a substitute for coffee. Preparation o4 plastic substances Users Decide on Its Use-txclusively the present great war, recently gave tion of souls, but the redemption of and atificial horn. p bstances in Construction Work. an interview to a London paper in the world. I Special biscuits and food manufac- • The decision of the various Doman- ,which he declared that Germany 3. Is the individual lost? For a tared Por Persons suffering from dia- ion Government departments and of would play her last card in November long while the church has been think- betes, as the beans contain no sugar the Canadian Pacific . railway to use this year. ing only of the individual. It is truly or starch. Canadian timber Only, is a decided ad- ears was in mid -heaven at the said that Jesus has discovered him. As a basis in the manufacture of vantage he the utilization of Canad- time of the birth of the Kaiser," said We can never stop thinking of him. sauces—such as the famous Soy ian timber and, therefore, marks a de- Sepharial. "He has followed the wild The crowd cannot deal with him alone. sauce. finite gain for the cause of conserve- impulses of his nature for so long that To find him and save him . we must' The beans are ground into meal tion in Canada. t he can hardly hope to escape at this find his relationship to the crowd and; for feeding cattle. late hour the dangers which are now the crowd's relationship to him. We In the 'United States the beans are Southern pine, even in 1916, when P fed to stallians instead of the ordfnarl' Canada was at war and when there ' signalled. He is doomed to extinc- must lift the pressure of the crowd horse bean. was a great decrease in the consume tion and ignominy. from his life. We cannot leavehimFor the extraction of. oil and menu - tion of lumber, was imported to the 1 , "The Germanic power, in so far as in the jail after the slum has robbed facture of oilcake. n c ay ca e, etc. the erre of our forests. it is identified with Prussanism, will In China the bean cake is used as a Orange Fritters,—Two large or- extent of 96,000,000 feet, having a his life o£ strength and surrounded toes sweet one cupsugar, one- I Forest fire protection is assuming' value of over $3,000,000. In previous be broken in August, 1917, when fight- it with Sidi. We cannot take him out .fertilizer in sugar pianattons, and to g p e' g ' a large place in public attention. It is years,verymuch largerquantities ing will cease, and it will be nailed of the crowd. We mast change the' the rice fields. half cup water, one cup flour, one- g b fourth teaspoon salt, three -queries obvious that if Canada is to continue were imported despite an adverse down in April of the following year, slum if we are to do this. This will In Japan the cake' is used as as a wood -producing county she when the terms of peace will be fin- manure for wheat and various other sup milk, two tablespoons sugar, two y1 trade balance for Canada and in thenot take responsibility away from in., crops, oven for cabbages, planted with eggs, one tablespoon melted butter, must conserve her resources of this face of a supply in Canada of better ally agreed upon. dividuals; it will increase it. It will the seed. one-fourth teaspoon vanilla. Divide natural product The report treats timber at an equal or lower -cost, "A. year later there will be a revolt not let them escape by saying it was; In Manchuria and Japan it ie fend oranges into four sections after peel - Through of the fire protection of grown and manufactured entirely against the Junkers. not their fault; it will set them to for cattle, horses, mutes and hogs, ing, slip out scads and remove white forest lands.along railway right -of- within the Dominion. "A great depression will contipue work to change the conditions that Helps in the Making of Margarine skirt. Cook in syrup made of water way. Through co-operative action The Dominion Government has ]n 1 over Germany for one hundred and overcame then. I But It Is the oil of the soya bean great headway has been made in Be- past years used many million feet of ,seventy years." a 4. Body and Soul.. There is no des- which gives it its greatest value. The and one cup of sugar forint i redents curing the reduction of forest Southern pn various y by losses Sthine in public works ' "Will you venture on any other cription of the Holy Citthe pro- I oil is used efoithe r -nut tuamito •a g Gyc g y folding naccer ox whites through forest fires traceable to rail- prophecy in connection with the folding in egg whites last. Dip or- but henceforth Canadian. timber will �„ ange sections in batter and fry to . way causes.. • I be used to the exclusion of the foreign . war? golden color in deepfat. Drain on' The forests of British Columbia and article. Douglas fir will replace I I further ser, a great forward a er, dust withpowdered sugar and on Dominion lands in the West have Southern pine in such works as Que-' movement, on the side of the allies, in C P ' g !been dealt with in reports containing tahe West .in March; also, some signal servo. P S bee and Montreal harbor improve- successes for the Allies in April—es- the Potato Cake.—One pound potatoes, results of special studies conduct- meats and IIndson Bay terminals.I one-halfpound flour, one teaspoonful ed by Dr. C. D. Howe and Mr. J. H. Douglas fir has been used entirely in pecially in the first week, ' P White. The Trent watershed in In July I see that the Keiser will baking powder, two ounces butter, the Toronto Harbor works, as a clausal ne-half teaspoonful salt. The 0. Ontario, has also received especial was inserted in that contract calling be really ill, and disposed to intrigue op attention, a report of an investiga- for peace. Lassoes .should be first'boiled,.' p for Canadian material. The action of. then peeled and mashed thoroughly, tion by Dr. C. D. Howe in the town- Baron Shaughnessy in ruling that' "And I predict that Germany will p thereare lumps; iten met ships of Burleigh and Methuen. This Canadian timber only shall be used in play her last trump card in November. so that no n psi t district is important in that, while In that' month her sleet will emerge, the te butter and mix itand the salt in- p works t the large Canadian to us railway and the greatest naval battle of all to the potatoes. Sift - the flour and of very little value as an agricultural shows,that large private users are and add,area, it is being. repeatedly overrun also Finding it consistent with present, tines will be fought. It will result in baking powder together by forest fires and the little remain- a decisive victory for the British knead lightly, and turn out on a conditions Co use Canadian products. „ floured board, roll to about one-half ingmerchantable timber.destroyed. It fleet• S Other consumers throughout Eastern _ _ • inch slack, cut into triangles and bake is suggested that the area be placed Canada, large and smalls will follow LONDON IMPROVING DOCKS. on a well -greased griddle. The origin - Forestry the control of the Dominion the leadof the tivo largest users. al recipe calls for milk or cream; but Forestry Branch for protection from Architecture} and engineering prates- `rust, 7ilxtensions Being ii'Iade to 1{ecp the potatoes iters are so much fires and for reforestation, !sloes also are rapidly replacing South - snore watery and less floury the —''--'— ern pine by Douglas fir and tate mi_ Pott m the Lead. above gives the best result , Whei l TOYS MADE IN CANADA. ported moods by the bane grown pro- Despite the was• vast improvements hl'1 LB s ul <I the i Sed to policewomen, England, after six he cakes are cooked well, snlit, but -I duct. and extensions are being carried out of the body have been removed. If months trial, is beginning to like them, phots and seers which does ttot,sp'e- na cifically declare that the physical nigh explaslve. Soaps, linoleum, 'l:a- 1 y die rubber, substitute margins, needs of life are met. They declare paints and varnishes in place of lin- and again that there shall be no want seed oil, edible goods ane toilet pow - and no complaining, no sorrow, no der, waterproof cloth, paper =- crying, that God shall wipe away all brellas and lanterns; salad oil, lubri- tears. This lesson does not merely eating oil — in China, for greasing give a figurative description of a axles and native machinery—lamp oil shepherd meeting the need of the instead of kerosene oil (it is used on sheep for food, water, and shelter. soytt.sh railways for burning), The Thet prophets and the apostles were soya nil is also used for preserving P P p sardines, and in the place of lard and cottonseed oil for cooking. Soya beans came second on the list of China's exports, about £8,000, visions of the City of God they liter- 000 worth of them being exported ally mean that hunger and pain have from China in a year. been removed and shelter has been — .i. provided. For they see that city built LONDON LIKES POLICEWOMEN upon earth. Their dreams had :then - face to face with the active physic- al needs of the poor. They endeavor - to meet them. When they write their dation. It is no mere disembodied Their Efficiency Overcomes Oppost- bliss that is described, but an actual tion That Was violent condition of community life from Although nt flat violently opposed which t e sinofthe so an t ter and serve very 'tot. If there are To b Replace These Previously Int - f es- - —aft oLondon docks in furtherance of h tune delicious'the scheme to peep London the lead - any left over•, they portedl''ren Germany. �hIODEIt\ BREAD FROM HEAVEN, toasted. I ing port of the world. Ottawa, March i i,—T}te Depart- •hand �Yith FVitich rile Israelites '1V era A stew deep water dock has just "' meat of Trade and Ometnerce has been completed near the Royal t\Ibert 'Useful Mits. I recently received several inquiries' Fed in the ,Vildernesa. Dock and the East India Iinpor•t Dock Always dip the hands in cold water'front England tis to whether Canetti-:, Not long ago the wind carried into of seventeen acres, has been modern - before making pastry. ; inns can supply toys to take the place the Persian city of Kermanshah a ices andis now breached by a channel Plaster of Paris if mixed with vines' of the German toys now excluded large quantity of what at first 1:lte eighty feet wide and thirty-one feet gar can be worked like putty. i from the United Kingdom, 'people took for seed corn. Somo of the deep, while its north and 'east quays i' With ,a view to encouraging the faller material, says the Adelaide rove been widened bytwenty feet and A good cereal coffee is an exellentl 1 thing for the school children's break- manufacture of toys in Canada, both Prec•'Peess, was sent to lt;nglatd for new large transit sheds built. Liners fast, b for the hone market and for export, examination 'by the Royal Botanic of 8,000 tons me now using the clock. All suet that costes into the kitchen Sit' George Fester has arranged for Society. The Wise then declared it At the London docks the former •hould be saved land clarified by molt- in Toy Conference, which will take to he manna, probably the sante kited narrow entrance to the western dock lair place in the Royal Bartle Building at with which the Israelites were fed in has been widened to sixty feet, and a Y Clothes that utast l shor' time must be the church to -clay caned as much about The first report of the policewomen's the hunger of the body as the prophets organization shows that, contrary to and the apostles, it would have a more the popular expectation, it is just vital message for the sin of the soul. their toot which is earning the po. 6. The twofold gospel. Man's licewonten at good tame. During an dual assure, bacly and soul, flesh and east coast Zeppelin raid policewomen frit is intorcle tendert•. Eacli needs were asked to assist in peeping order NAVY'S WIRELESS IS WONDERFUL HOW IT IS USED TO GUIDE THE BRITISH FLEET Wireless Telegraphy, the Youngest of All Sciences, Serving In This War A correspondent of the London Times describes as follows his exper- ience in the wireless room of a British We heard all kinds of things ' on' that night which are seldom heard' together and under' the same coedi- tions, We heard the Russian nom- mander-in-chief in the Baltic; we heard Madrid; we heard the German commander-in-chief, from his fast- ness across the North Sea, and ft amused me to turn ,,ne wave 'engin back and forward between the Ger- man and British commanders—the two voices that meant so infinitely much. to us all—to contrast their tones, and to imagine what they were saying, We heard the British eaan- mand'er-in-chief in the Mediterran- ean; all these, of course were east signs known and recoguized, but there were many others, coming no doubt, from places as diverse and remote and as kindling to the imag- ination, which we did not know or recognize. Yet they yewer for the most part voices only—voices and no- thing else. To the men who took them in they were voices representing groups of figures or letters, and there their interest in them in any case ceased; but even to us who had ac- eess to the codes and ciphers many of them still meant nothing, just be- cause we lacked the key to the par- ticular ciphers of letters of figures wkich turned the jargon into illumin- ating sense. Not that it would nen cessanily have been interesting or exciting. What one did recognize was far more exciting—just the infinite de- tail of a vast organization which never speaks except of business. As I was turning away a bitter cry came from somewhere between Iceland and Ire- land: "Daffodil to Ranunculus; 2,0se for me addressed to you at happy pounds of marrowfat peas intended haven. Request you will, etc." warship in the North Sen 1 The Youngest Science ' Wireless telegraphy is the youngest of all the sciences that are serving the navy in this war, and it is not too much to say it Is the chief. An orgaa- dzation barely 10 years old, which has for the most vital part of its material the unknown, it is remarkable for the efficiency with which it has sustained the enormous burden thrown on it, never failing, never breaking down It has done more to change the con- dition of fighting than any other single thing. It means the abolition of independent action and the con- summation of highly -organized and concerted action. It gathers infor- mation, distributes information; it gives orders, it makes dispositions, scatters ships to tea four quarters and concentrates them to within ten minutes of a given time at a single point ou a blanch chart, and it does more wonderful and fateful things than these, of which nothing can be said here. In the olden days a cap- tain of a ship could get out of touch with his squadron and act independ- ently. The admiral of a squadron could set sail, and once he was over the horizon he bad nothing to consult but his' own ideas, and nobody to consider but himsetr. The admiralty, once it had formed and equipped the fleet and appointed the commander- in-chief, had little further part in the strategical and tactical disposi• tions; war was made by the cam - mender -in -chief, But now the wire- less tentacles reach everywhere, and there is no element in which at com- mander is free from the supervision of the Admiralty, If he flies up in the air it can follow him there, and if he dives down to the bottom of the sea, although it will not dive af- ter him, it will be waiting for him when he comes to the surface en - mitring where he has been, and why, Even the commander-in-chief has the Board of Admiralty, ever at his ear, and an idea conceived in a Cabiuet or War Council in London may be transmitted to and imposed upon the fleet far away at sea within alt hoar. As to all this, it may briefly be said lhat its advantageous are obvious to the men at the Admiralty or trans- mitting end, and that its disadvan- tages are obvious to the men at the seaward, or reoelvieg end. It takes much of tate burden and privilege of ittiative away from tlttt sailor, and Places it in the hands of the admin- istrator or statesman. sp 1 in the streets. An excited little crowd; the other: the body to strengthen the of tired women and children al one, spirit and the spirit to subdue the street corner could not at first be Por-; ----el.-- flesh " "--l. -""---`-' flesh. Jesus proclaimed a gospel that suaded to go home, once the raid was' • helped each to help the other, that over, because of a suspicions light' led them both into the ideal life. An which remained in the sky. The police.' evangelist recently asked, "If a man women calmed iheni, says the report, is hungry, shall I give him the gen explained that the light had nothing to pet or shall I feed hint 1" The answer do with Zeppetius, but was merely the 1 t Venus, and sent the crowd is, both. For the second development Mane 'en , rinietly to their bads. { he corner of King and onn'u structs, the wilderness: fern-eonctetc jetty 800 feet long by of our commwtity li£o we need that T -low the policewomen intervene to c fro;tel n „ lotonto,'ott the 28th of ll.u'elt; be- Manna is derived from n taittniislt .106 fact wide is naw in full use,, with both shall be clone .together by the stop arrest. fights is told in the follow., sprinkled r. �i.h , `lint water, ginning at 10 o clock m the morn- throb known as the Tamarix mien- &ethic story sheds of spacial value sante group. When the politicians ing typical report: very int;. ,'A Mtge number of t,antples fern. Iu, the form that the find it it'.� r Taal unci sugar, 1331the impound.: only are looking after the needs of ••A serious fight was taking pines bo- rer use the oven on irons equine r , s Wer • i'orn et•- 'Tor r 6 _ •light,tween two druniten soldiers who far re arias dishes which require re of German toys such n Were is not the natural Product of the Shish ing stat ion fire water is Rept bat tow the l ody aft, water, flood, and preparing tshould have been In. camp. The men clow cooking. ' au ly imported into Canada will be on but is caused by insects of the coccus and a half feet above Trinity high wn- shelter, and the preachers only are }; rshiBition to holy Canadian menu- family --at fe,nily that includes the •a• marls. looking after rile needs of the spirit, had taken off their coats to fight. Tho People who wear ell' the howls of I tt n polacewener cleared the crowd, sneer tueturers what the Germans supplied, cochineal insect. Al,Tilbury clocks for large liners then comes disaster of church nod It r i their shoes unevenly can germs them. need the fig to s, persuaded them to and rheic tviil be n collection oft The Cioccus itlamliparus, as the olio of the now sheds has An area of state. The needs of tine spirit arc pnt on their coats, and made then ,sown on n grindstone. Amcrarun t'tys to show Svhat cur percents of the tamarisk: is called, 'ISt10t1 square feet turd two others the needs of the body, and the needs slake hands and return quietly to lions wet mutable on the woadu l 1 s semi i` s washed and neighbors an tate slatted States have bores holes into :the plant in order to have an Aggregate of 86,000 aquaro of the body sane the needs of the sp cin•v ti polos a c<ci n e , been tlnitg to replace demist toys, suck its juke. The tiaras lace asst lits ttvarsicle 'est 1000 feet rl sound community prngrcin must they will dry gracefully. „ ] 1 fret, wily , s in u' • ss re sir liras 11 it hoped that all Canadian Mann'. i s fluid that hardens into a sugary long by fifty feet: wide, is making minister to thorn together in their l{^sns teras. glass Jere g iris. camp." Art Important Question. Promoter. (enthusiastically).--Thcro is no doubt that the scheme will pay.' Cautious Inventor—Oh, none what- ever! But who will got the stoney? Forgiving without 'forgetting is ai dee i giving a receipt t for good 1 like p , money without signing your mime I0, it. es„ 'rids Saves opening boxe;a to llnd ftartwrt'rZ of loyt will send exhibits :ol• ad and falls 111 irises to the rood progress, Joint relationship. 11•• ati,nlm' kind Vntt wafts.' tier that the cvhihri?on will hr aha -1 pollee. I i r , i •are eaug'at tap by the wind and blown art the Victoria and Albert Clocks; Credulous. hila. ply tits, f left m a sunny y tarn-. dew ,1)1(1 riven ilonly of air, I,imitrd. 1 in t;real (•1(41'4 io the l:unotnvli?tg other she's at the west anis south "She holieves i+v,rythintt :+he is ' • • tel , • . 1 s cover the S .Pin' ."Wh did you slat your Bitty ids., neighborhood, tcert India docks; one at ldillwall with tette doesn't, site?" ' TO n et.0 t a, lust c t y r 1, y _. i , tai e? an area nt 110,000 .square, foot and ' . "yes, indeed. Why, that woman Ihlrlo[y with powdered alum and sin= .ta ,t fns 1�. ,, ,. at sane Sixrrc doclts';;00- , b' ave n lcti.er of re,nnt- '�'n. natrnlati slam' bailing vvaterr, G.iu.ut th^ ect.t uv '<s' neat, wralit-' :1. ttr.tri +,utrt.iritcsi makes iaoucy', new a•lteds y r t ,a•arild "oil tilt i. 'i'r:•,• to induce the children to eat teen but meet/ neverrnultes 41111,111.' 000 square feet, are nearly fhtislted, lnendation." Mint will grow in \rater, lilt, ninny titirlil;o, representative, { When dried, these pieces of m'tnnn to accommodate 60,000 hales of wool 'there is now t.mlofarily shedding ) WAR POSTMAN FI12111 ALLIES British and French Clerks in Pat•is Bureau on Best of Terms. The Anglo-French war post office is now located at the corner of the Boulevard Iiatissmann and the Rue Gluck, opposite the. Opera, Paris, and is one of the most complete in exist- ence. The Figaro calls it a Paris - latticed corner of I'iccatdilly and com- ments on the friendly relations of the khaki clad British postal employees with their French associates, All of the British are men, but in the'Prenth stall are many weans wird already have won fame for the alertnessand efficiency. Although the bulls or the business of this office concerns the war in one way or another and is therefore of comparatively recent ori- gin, all is Thandledwith the 51110 promptness and precision a>1in the long established hareem. Parcel p e atmattleant-mail ti a.r as . wall a. is handled throttglt title btuauu, w•ttiab is rattler direct control of the British War Office. '