HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-10-18, Page 6Rich Yet Delicate
Clean and Full of Aroma.
F4
Bum
Is blended from selected hill -grown
teas, famed for their fine flavoury
qualities. Imitated yet never 'equalled.
Between Cousins;
OR, A DECLARATION OF WAR,
DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME] ,s,
Thirteenth Lesson—Bread.
When making bread use a.thermo- thirty-five, to forty ..minutes. for med-
meter and scale for accuracy, so that tum -sized loaves,weighing abput,si-
you will have a positive ,knowledge of teen to eighteen ounces before baking;
how and what you are doing, Modern from forty to sixty minutes for loaves
inventors have made it possible for neighing from eighteen to twenty-six
the baker to manufacture bread of a ounces.
uniform quality. Shortening is used . to make the
The housewife's lack of knowledge bread render and to neutralize the acid
of this most important. part of the in the flour; it also furnishes fat to
home cooking has resulted in the nu- the food value of the bread.
merous large baking plants that are a Two methods are employed for the
feature of all large cities. Theory making of bread.
has caused many failures; few women First, the sponge method. This
really understand the underlying calls for a sponge of light batter,' The
principles of fermentation, rinixture is set to rise and then the re -
History tells us that the EgyptiAns rnainder of the flour, salt and shorten -
were probably the originators of bread. Mg is added. The dough is then work -
The following fable illustrates thealiss ed for fifteen midutes. After this it
covert' of the method of converting is allowed' to rise -for the second time,
=0 grain into bread. Now it is molded into loaves, given a
conviction born of recent re The story goes that a slave, while 'short proof and then baked.
CHAPTER VIII.—(Cont'd.) ! with agrinding the grain one day between Second, the straightdough method.
If to -day as he made his hasty pre- velations; '"but 1 do think 'ht must be two stones, a sudden shower wet the In using this method te salt, shorten -
Potations, he was smiling to himself, it fascinating. I )lave been hearing meal. The slave fled from the storm, mg, sugar and flour are mixed with
was because he thought he saw signs ;about it a good deal lately,"she ex- forgettingin his haste about the meal. the liquid and yeast into a stiff dough argued by gardeners than the life of
of a right path having been stx•uck.'plamed. One of our—one of ire When thstorm was over and the sun that can be worked without sticking seeds.
The goal was a mere air -castle as yet, quarrymen was injured by a blast, a had come out he returned to his grind- to the hands. This method is quicker, • Some people are prepared to swear
I have been visiting hum with• father. •n He found ghat the sodden mass because it is possible to have the bread that wheat and pea seeds taken from
of wich the foundations had been laid I am afraid he will remain blind." g' i
on the day of the visit to the Burial,anywhat was the grain`. before: the' Storni finished in about four and three-quar-, mummy cases thousands of years old
.Island and to which a few more layers' "That's hard luck. But ore."ay,; ad come was now a dry hard cake. ters 'hours. This method gives very' have germifiated. On the other hand,
he won't have to work anymore. This was the first roduetion of un- satisfactory results.
had been added on the occasion of his P • ' scientific' farmers will assure you that
last at This also was an afteithough ,and leavened bread. i Milk, part writer and part milk nrI the send of wheat loses its life within,
that occasion, too, that thet appoint-Louldnotsseriouslylaughig that enella1 Modern breadmakmg dates back all water may bedm elate' at most, ..ten years.
ment had been made, in obedience to help from the Romans, who derived the art bread. One medium-sizedP
Would that be a compensation ,to from their Greek and Egyptian si,ap-' may be added when the water is used, A good deal of evidence undoubted-
which he was quitting his work ora- you, i fives of .war. Historians state that' Milk increases the food value of they ly exists to supportthe theory that
maturely, for it was to -day that the Well, lie, really, I don't mean tht,"the Romans made unleavened bread hi bread. The milk must always be many seeds are exceedingly long-lived.
slate -quarries were to bewisited under )suss Fenella! But, you know, it must 200 B C scalded and cooled befoin using.
t is hard to break the
chains of. habit, - It took
one man six months)o stop
saying " Gee
Perhaps habit has kept you,
ordering "'the _same tea 'as before" when you
had intended to buy ged Rose. •
This will be . a y'eminder. So next time ,you
will order Red Rose.
Yolrwill be pleased, we
are sure.
tZept Goad by the
Sealed Package -
LONG-LIVED SEEDS
Some have Germinated After a
Century Ras Gone 13y
There are few questions more hotly
his personal guidance, supplemented be an awful business having to be. I ti the Old World
In many portions
a The Sponge Method.
heartedly he closed his bag, -rt was not and hammering and boring away at, this country unleavened bread is iriade� Sift the flour and then set it in a
of Fenella alone and her possible that confounded rock, and putting the into biscuits and crackers. sometimes! place where it will have a temperature mg spring the whole of the ground' •
chances that he was thinking, In his pieces on to the trucks, and all that' called beaten biscuit._ It depends, of 80 degrees. ,Now to prepare the was covered with ' most exquisite
constitutionallysanguine mind there sort of thing.How lad the fellowsq
was a second ir-castle building, g upon the amount of air that is beaten, sponge. Heat the utensil m which pansies! This lawn had not been din -
yet must be when Saturday comes! And or , doughw„ g turbed for fully a century, and no
more cloudy and far more undefined on Sunday morning I'd bet even odds' ft itsclightn ss, into the to giv- e' itrhehshotgwatero Let the waterl tan t
Flour lin the utensil until it is heated thor- pansy seed had been sownanywherepansies
I FEhthat.
by that of the manager. As light- here at eight o'clock every morning;' his style of bread is still made. In
Seine years ago a grass lawn at Culm-
stoek, in Devonshire, was broken up
and turned into a risery. The follow
than the first—so improbable, rn fact, that they he in bed till eleven o clock.
of aspect that even his supreme self- Just fancy having to be here by
confidence could not but smile at the eight!
fancy,without beingable to smile it It was evident that this Point in the for successful baking. There are two .dry the vessel, in anyneighboring garden.' --
quitdown. In flt defiance of his quarryman's day appealed most deep -i distinct kinds. One is known asE Then place in a bowl three cupfuls g g
reason it was with a fairy-tale sort of lyto his personal sympathy. !spring and the other as winter wheat.) of liquid, testing it with' a thermo- The only possible solution seems to
feeling that he emerged from his hum -'"Do yonever get up before eight. Spring wheat flour contains the larg-' meter to see if it is exactly 80 degrees be that the seed had lain buried in!
ble- quarters and, having given hie' o'clock?" i est percentage of gluten. This spring. Fahrenheit. ' Crumble in the yeast the ground, awaiting its chance to
orders to the shaggy foreman, step-! "Rather! I've known myself get up, wheat is ground into two distinct cake and add two tablespoonfuls of germinate.
ped into one of the half-dozen boats at six—once for a big shoot in Ire -varieties, known as soft spring wheat,' sugar and three cupful's of sifted flour.! The longest known survival of any
which at high tide rode close to the lalnd, for instance, or on hunting days and hard spring wheat. � Beat with a spoon for five minutes. seed is that pf a certain Egyptian lily.
' rocky shore. The loch -end smiled with a meet twenty miles off. But! Winter wheat is- divided into two; Cover and set in a place free from 5111 A dried seed -pot kept in the South
on him to -day as it had never done be- there was an inducement, you see. I, varieties similar to that of the spring, draft. for one and one-half hours.) Kensington Museum contained seed
fore. The rough track of the future don't think I could do it for the sake: wheat flour, namely, red winter flour, Then add six cupfuls of flour, one and! u hien was tested and found to grow
i_• of chipping slates. And even then"1 which is the hard winter wheat flour,, one-half tablespoonfuls of shortening
ou hl then empty out the water and near n any ease a
A knowledge of flour is necessary (nighty; have come up did not resemble those.;
roes, cne smoxrng r sal engine
brought hither in pieces, which had he added, with a pleasantly boyish and the soft winter wheat flour. The and two teaspoonfuls of sa-..
been fitted on the spot, the stone-, laugh, 'didn't I just take it out next last-named flour contains a large per-! Knead for fifteen+ minutes, then put
heaps, the primitive smithy, the cabinsday. You bet!" ! tentage of starch. It is used for the dough in a greased bowl; now turn
for the workmen, they were all, jn', Perhaps if your breakfast depend-1pastry and cakes, l 1t- over. This will grease the dough
truth, so many blots upon the lands- ed upon the chipping, and you were) To get successful results the flour! and prevent it forming a crust while
cape; but to Albert personally the only very hungry for it, that might he an must be blended. The fancy patent• rising. Cover and let rise for two
features worthy of attention—wea- inducement toe, mused Fenella. But flours that are on the market are es-? hours, '
pons as they were of that battle with then, of course, you don't know what it'pecially prepared for all-around family' Mold into loaves, place in . well
Nature, in which his bellicose soul is to be hungry.' 1 bakin,' purposes. greased pan, andsset away to .rise for
could not but delight. l "Don't I, though! I don't think any) Pastry flour, or soft winter wheat, one hour. At the end of this time
r a a ,: ., s fellow could feel hungrier than I have flour, will, not make good bread, ow -i bake the loaves in an oven registering
"If I weren't myself," remarked felt after a hard day on the moors,t ing to the low percentage of gluten,, 825 degrees Fahrenheit for forty-five
Mabel Atterton,r at about 4 p.m. on with an east wind in one's face, and The flour should be kept or stored in a • minutes
uall the sandwiches gone."I room that averages about 70 degrees} Use a scale when ready to mold the
that same day, I think I should like "Oh, yes; but that's different," said -Fahrenheit and in . a container that
to' be a slate-quarryman."loaves. Weigh twenty ounces to each
wasben a e remarkFacile, and for an instant contentmay be kept closed and taws from all loaf. Divide the balance of the dough
IttoAI ttistus ane a
was addressed, as together they plated propounding this difference, but foods that have a strong
emerged from the gates of the grey q g results the
amphitheatre whose inspection had out but slender prospects of mutual' must have:
just been concluded—but it was Mr. understanding, Good flour of a reliable brand.
Berrell who replied. They had crossed the road, and, be- Good, active fermentation.
"I don't think you'd like it for long, tween the rails of the miniature line,' Yeas food.
Miss Atterton; not unless you have a were making their way on to the The proper amount of salt.
set of young ladies like yourself for "bank," where the sheds stood in a The proper temperaturti.
fellow=workers. You wouldn't stand close row. Here the final shaping of I The proper manipulation. '.
• hakintr
odor, For oa '
uickly dropped the project, as holden ' successfulhome baker into rolls, weighing two ounces each.
a 'week of such rough company as the slates took place, and here also The mope+
these £chows are." 'they were stacked in neat, beautiful -1 When startingtomake bread select tablespoonfuls of shortening, one and
"Rough?" Albert promptly took up! ly-packed black piles, ready to be a reliable brand of flour. Store it in one-half teaspoonfuls of salt. Mix
the word. "Allow mo to protest' shstir
ipped.
Berrell self-consciously played itlrerright temperature. er container in a nSift the flour until disslace that has well. olved; now able in one dd sixeast cupfuls
the cicerone. s ,before using. The use of compressed of flour.Work to dough nd then
Each crew—of six .men, generally' yeast eliminates all doubt and uncer- knead well for fifteen minutes. It
te11s off two of its best workmen for, fainly of the"old style liquid and dry must now be smooth and elastic. Put
This recipe will make two 'loaves of
bread, weighing, after baking, about
seventeen and one-half".ounces apiece,
and ten rolls.
Straight Dough Method.
Two cupfuls of water, 80 degrees
Fahrenheit, one and one-half table-
spoonfuls -of sugar, one and one-half
against the adjective. Hard work
slate -quarrying may be, but not rough.
It's too full of surprises for that. Why,
every single bit asks for individual
treatment: the grain of the stuff, its the finishing work. It's as good as al yeast, in a greased bowl and set to rise in a
power of resistance, the thickness to play to see the court that's paid to an. For successful results it is necessary place free from all drafts, with a tem
which it will bear to be split one has extra good workman, in order to lure to supply the yeast with a food for
to judge of all that, and one has to be him into a crew. Why, the best hand's' active development. This food is not
ready for emergencies. Did you at the double -handed hammer are post found in the flour, therefore it must
notice that man with the single -hand- tively made love to." ba supplied. The food necessary for
ed hammer, how quickly and neatly he (To be continued,)
8 sugar. Sugar supplies the carbon
! the active development of the yeast is
chiselled a drain to carry off the rain-
water that was trickling into his bore- HOW TO WIN SUCCESS. i which is a necessary principle of the
'
holes? That's typical of what I I proeess of fermentation.
mean; and that's why I maintain that 1 Salt is added to the bread fair two
we've '
got no real boors here since Have Confidence in Yourself and Doi purposes—first, to flavor , the bread
perature of 80 degrees Fohr•enheit
for three hours, At the end of this
time mold into two loaves. Put in
greased pans and let rise again for
fifty minutes. Now, bake in an oven
of 325 degrees Fahrenheit for thirty -
live minutes.
This amount of dough makes two
.loaves of bread, that will average
about fourteen ounces apiece, or one
every slate -quarryman has gottouse Not Lean Upon Others. and make it palatable, and also to loaf and eight rolls, weighing two
his brains quite as much as his hands supply one of the mineral elements es- ounces each
almost from the cradle upwards." ' Power is the goal of every `worthy I aential to the human body. Second, Points to•
Remember.
Albert spoke eagerly, bent on the ambition, and only weakness comes , to control the process of fermentation,
persuasion of his hearers. That from imitation or dependence on oth-`If too little salt is used the bread will. Use good flour.
family crigin which would not be con- ens. Power is self developed, self gen-..lack flavor and be of a coarse, rough Sift he flour,
cealedd mI ht yet gain by being in erated. We cannot increase the texture,while ii too much is used the Scald and,cool all milk or water
vested with a certain intellectual strength o1 our muscles by sitting in action f the yeast will be retarded used in making bread.
glamour.
"I wonder you didn't go in for slate- a gymnasium and letting another exer• and the bre:.d will show a loss of be 7e 8 degreese r ccs s80 set
quarrying yourself, if you're so keen vise for us. . Temperature is the controlling foe- grees in winter; also the room must be
over it?" remarked Mr. Barrell, with Nothing else so destroys the power for in successful bread -making.. The free from all drafts.
a coarse-grained laugh. - to stand alone as the habit of leaning room in which the bread is made must Thorough manipulation.
The new manager was a more strik_ upon others, It you lean you will be free from all drafts. The pr oer Follow the recipe closely. kemem-
ing than attractive person, whose never be strong or original. Stand temperature is 78 degrees Fahrenheit ber that judgment must be used. It
physiognomy, perhaps owing to a pair alone or bury sour ambition to be in summer and 80 degrees in winter, is impossible to gauge the accurate
of broad and over -conspicuous lips, or somebody in ilio world, Uee a thermometer and eliminate the amount of _flour to any given amounts
possibly to an aggressive gleam in the The man who tries to give hie ehil-
whites of his small black eyes, vague-
ly suggested the negro—a suggestion dren a start in the world so that they
howevea, in which his complexion of will not have so hard a time as he
a somewhat unwholesome pallor, play- had 10 unknowingly bringing disaster
ed no part. Both in the rather Brat- upon them, What he calls giving them
ing voles, and in the lines about the, a start will probably give them a set -
broad, squat nose, there was an ele•
t f hhIt beside
back in the world. Young people need
meaoarsness was
Julia M`Donnell that he had been, all the motive power they can get. fifteen to twenty minutes and from five The yeast must be fresh'. By this
Walking during the in pectian just They are naturally )concis, imitaore, to ten minutes when using the mixer.)1s meant that it must have good color,
concluded, and where difficult places copiers, and it is easy fop them to de.
Baking. ° I a pleasant yeasty odor and be firm to
made assistance advisable it was echoes or imitations. They baking of the bread will require the touch, The compressed yeast is
care. It must not be placed in an the best kind to nee. •
oven of uncertain temperature, thenBrush the top of the loaves of bread,
the door closed and the bread left to' when taken from the oven, with melt -
luck. The oven should register 325 ed butter.
degrees Fahrenheit when the bread is Place a.pan of boiling' water on the
placed hi it. The bread should be floor of the gas oven while the bread
watched carefully:and if the heat of is baking -.a
the oven is not evenly distributed Use a thermometer first, last and al -
(that is,if one pact of the bteek bakes Ways. Don't guess at your' work,
faster tan the other), the bread must Know whet you are doing. This is
be moved or turned. the baker's greatest tool. He takes
Remember that while the oven re- no chances; he knows, and in knowing
gisters a high degree of heat, if you lies the secret of his suseses: Any
were to place a thermometer in the thermometer will do that will register
center of the loaf of bread you would from the freozing point to 100 degrees
find that it requires nearly fifteen min- Fahrenheit, When preparing .the bread,
guesswork. of liquor. Flours vary in the amount
By this is meant that the dough of moisture they absorb; for this res -
must be worked. sufficiently by rolling son it easily will be seen that one
and kneeling, if made by hand. If a brand of flour will require a little
breadmixer is used the bread must be rare or a little less moisture' than —
worked for the period of time as peri another. When the amount,of' liquid
inetruetions as supplied with th . ma- is known, it is a very easy matter to
chine. � withhold one or two tablespoonfuls of
Time for hand. manipulation is from flour or to add the same amount,
after a period of ninety-five years.
Melon seed has grown after being
kept for forty years. Turnips 'wilt
last eight or ten years. It is assert-
ed that haricot beans have germinated
after lying by fora century.
Mary: "Has your sweetheart been
ordered to camp?" Jane: "Yes; now
I must fall back on my reserves."
Our best friends may be those who
tell us of our' faults and show us how
to correct them; but we never quite
appreciate those friends.
IS -A SOLDIER
AFRAID IN BATTLE ?
DOES HE DREAD GOING; "oyF,R
THE TOP?"
_--
•
English Soldier Who Spent Nearly ?i
Two Years at the Front Describes
Sensatiohs,.of Individual.
Everybody wonders what are the r+''•
sensations and emotions of the MO{�
vidual soldier as he waits in the front., l' 4
;y 4;
line trench for -the order to elrargq and
as he rushee arose the death -swept . >
„zone towards the enemy. Does he
think of the chance of death ? :Is he
physically afraid ? Does he 'shriek
from the neceseity of facing and in-
flirting death ? Donald Hankey, the
Englishmpan who wrote so frankly aid
interestingly of the soldier's, experi-
prices at the front in "A Student hi
Forgetful
Arens," considers this matter in his
'Uncle Ezra—I hear your boy has hew volume, "A'. Student in Arms,
joined the aviation corps. Second Series." Mr. Hankey spent
Uncle Eben—Yes, and I'm afraid nearly the whole of two years at the
he won't make good.. front, in ilia trenches and in the sup -
Uncle Ezra—What makes you think, porting lines, and was. killed hi action
so? at the Battle of the Soiume. He says:
Uncle Eben—He's so forgetful that The fact is that at the moment of 'a
he's liable to take the machine up and charge men are in an absolutely as -
come down without it. ,normal-- condition, Their emotions
seam to be numbed. Noises, sights,
Those who take up the study of the and sensations which would ordiiiartly
bee have need to handle the subject'produce intense pity, horror,, or dread
gently. -
- ' have np effect upon them at all, and
yet never was the -mind clearer,-`ih.e
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The Great Body Builder
velop into
Julia who was favored by the support 'Will not walk alone while you furnish
of his large, flabby hand, Ronald crutches; they will lean upon you
Macgilvray rendered precisely the
same services to Fenella, while Albert,
successfully divided his attentions be-
tween Mabel Atherton and her mother,
onderterred by the fragmentery 1'ec-
tilros on mineralogy anti. geology, fox
which the quarries furnished fatally
convenient pretext). The arriviate
had uponris symppathy an especial,
claim wlilllr made $or pati a.
"Have you band lt interesting?"
salted Fenella 0!I her attentive aavalter.
with whom coeversation soniehow did
not seem to grow easier~ ad acquaint
lanae advanced
"0hlust awfully" he replied, with
rea.d'ines to acquiesce which would
A Ubtless have em}�raceaa mor) 011-
gromisit� thinglt thn slave-girarrfes.
Then, affer a ftso nenb�e reflection:
"But it mui bd,deuced'bard work,
all the Oland ,'
',Tee, it in }card Works" saki Pendia,
not as long as you will let them.
One of the greatest delusions that a
human being oovld ever have is that
he Is permanently benefited by con-
tinued assistance from others.
If your grain contains a large per-
centage of foreign material, clean it.
It keeps better. Feed low grades
and screenings on the farm,
Near the town of Tsingyuan, China,
a large irrigation project is being car-
ried out. Canals have been dug run-
ning for 25 or 80 miles into the nehah-
boring dlstldetta and a temporary dam
has been thrown aeroso'the Feil river,
which had been wholly diverted into
the irrigating ditches,
utas for the treat to reach the center
of the dough to heat it to the boiling
point or 212 degrees Fahrenheit. For
this, reason sufficient time mut be
given after the bread is well colored
for the interior of the bread to be
well baked, conveys to. you n peace of mind that
Tho time allowance should he from is above money value,
but do not arse this thermonieter, to
the overt.'A regular oven then/welter
can be purchased at a very reasonable
price. It will save its cost in three
months. The asaurncWe that the oven
temperature is of the right degree
as ..rias.; attars
PARKtR SERVICE
Known Everywhere Available Everywhere
just because there isnot a "Parker" Agency near
you is no reason why you should do withoat "Parker
Service."
The excellence of our work is so well known that
it need only be mentioned here.
But the convenience of our service by mail to distant
customers is not,, Articles of any sort can be sent us
either by parcels post or express, and returned in the -
same manner. We pay the carriage charges one
way. Every precaution is taken to ensure their
safety in transit. a
So many things can be "rescued" by cleaning or dye-
ing that the -value of this service will be apparent to
everyone.
When you think of cleaning or dyeiog,.thtnk of PARKER'S.
Send foa.a FktT'G copy 0/ our useful and inlerading
book on cleaning- and dyeing.
Be sure to address your parcel dearly to feceiving dept..
PARKER'S DYE WORKS, LIMITED
791 NONCE ST. - TORONTO so
"'k,.a•+WY]:3r:. °@'ssai';w$i' st13ass'.,..' .y.
senses more acute.- '
It is before tin attack that a man is
more liable to fear. Of all the hours
of dismay that come to a soldier there
are few more trying to the nerves
than when he is sitting in trench un-
der heavy fife from lrigb-explosive
shells or bombs front trench. mortars.
Yon can watch these bombs lobbed up
into the air. You see them slowly
' wobble down to earth, there to ex-
plode with a terrific detonation Abel
,sets every nerve in -your bodyearjang.
ling. You can do nothing. You oap-
lnot.retaiiate in -any way. You simply
have to sit tight and hope for the best:.
Some men joke and smile, but their ,,r.
mirth is forced. Some feign stoical
i indifference, and sit with a paper and
'a pipe; but, as a rule, their pipes aro
_lout and their' reading a pretence.
! There are few men, indeed,- whose
hearts are not beating faster and
whose nerves are not on edge. ,
' Fear Rarely Obtains Mastery.
But you can't call this the fear of
death. It is a purely physical reac-
tion of danger and detonation. Per-
sonally T believe that very few men,
Indeed, fear death, The vast majority
`experience a more or less violent
physicdl sbrinking from the 'pain ot,
death and wounds, especially when
they' are obliged to be physically iu-
active, and when they have nothing
else to think about.' But this is a
purely physical reaction which can be,
and nearly always Is, controlled by
the mind, Last of all there is the re-
pulsion and loathing tor the whole
business of war, with its bloody rutin
lessness, its fiendish ingenuity, and its
insensate cruelty that comes to a man
after a battle, when the tortured and
dismembered dead Ile strewn about
the trench and the 'Wounded groan
from No -Man's -Land. But neither Is
that the fear of death. It Is a repul-
sion which breeds hot anger more of-
ten than cold fear, reckless hatred of
life more often than abject clinging to
it. .The cases where any sort'of`fear,
even for a moment, obtains the mas-
tery of a man are very rare,
EX.PLQDING A MYTH. i. ' -
Revelatiolid at Petrograd Cheapen
Hindenburg's Vaunted Victories. -
The much -talked -of "Hindenburg's-_
strategy" has proven to be a myth. In
fact, the veriest nobide fn" military afs
fairs could have accomplished his
greatest victory, which up till now had „-
been referred to as the "miracle of the
Massarlen Lakes," in which 100,000
Russians were captured. This highly -
vaunted victory looks cheap in the
light of the astounding revelations;
from Petrograd, which show that Gary
man spies had obtained complete
copies of all the plans for the Russian
invasion of East Prussia. The testi-
mony at the trial of Gen. Soukhomlfn-
off also showed that the Minister's anst
officials of the old Russian Governs
meet were brought up in wholesale
fashion, and consequently no groat
military skill, far less genius, was re
quired to achieve a victory over aft
army fighting under such conditiollat
The wonder'is still that the old R r
Sia was able to put up as good a l
fence as it actually ,did, particular
so when it is. considered that the }
tire army hail been sold out by t1
Rurlsian Chief of Staff., 'The revel
tions at Petrograd ere only anothe
proof of Germany's favorite system •
warfare—that bf spies and secret)
placed bailie..
A "2 in 1 Shoo Polish' is made for every use For Black Shoes,
"2 in 1 Black" (paste) and "2 in 1 Black Combination', (paste and,
or White Shoes,"2
in 1
White
Cake' (cake) and
'2 in
1 'White Liquid" (liquid)for Tan Shoop, "2 in 1. Ten" (paste)"
and "2 in 1 Tan Combination i' (pueto and liquid).
100" Black—White—Tan 1000
F. F. DALLEY CO. OF CANADA LTD., ' . Bouillon, Can.
t
A. Wiseonsinfarmer is the inventor
of a simple brooder for keeping young
pigs warm, heat being supplied by ail
ordinary hard lateen.'
Aro you a railroad employee? The
'Forest Fire is doing its )teat to thin
out 10010 envelope, Deserts pia"
i g
traitor to freight and risenr a traf
fie, and Forest Fires ate the broedei
of deserts, Forests when kept ally
Produce 'timber Mille, pulp and pane
Taatoriae, busy towns, heavy tonin
traffic, job for everybody,
thousafld forest industries' look to
to keep their wood supplies fit for nit 1:
ti