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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-11-15, Page 6!" • Allra'"a" • qWlarriwrryirr T� Body Building Power indepers, may proved to be 10 to 20 times Me amount taken. 4444A et ween Cousins; OR, A DECLARATION OF WAR. DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT 110M111. Seventeenth Idesson.--Meate. Meat is a bundle of lean, muectilar butcher or gxocer will give you much fibers that are lield together by connective tissue, containing plbumen, or protein; gelatinolds, or gelatine, and extracti •ee or flavor:rig, „ Purchase meat and linable to make e better service. Many housewives feel very inex- perienced at buying. When about to : beak on, Or, "I really don't know h bered when cooking meat choice of. cuts she invariably Salle There are two faders to be remain-. "O, I guess steak or chops will -do." First. When making soups, broths! what to get; I'm tired of meat, any. and teas, the meat is placed in cold! way!' Many butchers, realizing this water and brought slowly to . boil and state of affairs, gladly take advantage then cooked a the simmering burner of it and play .pon it to the utmost at a temperature of 166 to 180 deeof their powers. -,.. the furthet side of the road when pass- method, a rich delicious broth is'ob-1 It will be found that kniswing the Know the Various Cuts CHAPTER IX.—(Cont'd.) 1 which caused most people to choose grees Fahrenheit. By usingthrs "is it that you would rather not be seen with me?" ing her hut—nor was her supposed tamed which contains all the natal - With a rush of eagerness she ails, , familiarity with the spirits of the dead meat of the meat. . 1 leeuytsa;pleamreaatte.:1w1dilinneigp,!11:ilet firsjtuadigi3 wered: "No—oh, nol Please do not calculated to lower her in her neigh- aecond. When searing the outer' . foremost the odor of the meat will believe that, Duncan!" , bors' esteem. She might be Frere surface of the meat quickly use a' give you a definite idea about its "Then let us get along," he said eochon with as many ghosts as she strong heat. This keeps the juices. condition. The odors of poultry and chose and no one think the worse of and nutriment in the meat. Then con- fish will help you ,M the same way, • shortly, and tramped on. i Accepting the inevitable, she kept her. But Ardloch's large -minded- tplue cooking, the desired length of meat should have a good appearance. by his side, not without a certain in-, ness in matters occult drew the line tit tinee. By using this method all the gehitinoide and extractives are kept in' red color shortly after cutting. The , Ber this I mean it sheuld have agood ee•-: ward trepidation, since a meeting , the arch -enemy of manhind, and it was e me th th!fat should be- creamy white and firm would undoubtedly be awkward. yet. with no less than intimacy with him - at. it is a knewn feet that albumen, in appearance, and should have a what choice had she in the matter? that Lame Liz was universally credit- . , e , • , Only the choice of offending him again; ed, TJnholy rites in lonely places, e gelatinoidsi and extractives or fl aVor- i mg in meat are soluble in coldawater.1 pleasant meaty odor. All this is ee by flatly refusing his escort; and she, assumed form a both four -footed and , absnlitely essential for good meat. was feeling far too glad of having feathered beasts, all this was pMarketing elt I About 26 per cent, of the beef ear - made her peace with this so unman- down to her account. Her very in- Many housewives try to eliminate cass is in the fine and fancy cuts of enable num—a gladness which at firmity had, according to popular be- this feature of the household regime meat and, therefore, accordingly high Sib, moment amounted to light -heart- lief, been caused by a stray shot fired as much as possible and so order by in price, because three. out of five wo- k, telephone or leave it until the last Men usually say "steak." edness—to court that clanger so soon on a certain fullemoort night on which • minute and then rush out to bu an Here are a few recipes for the again. , she was masquerading as a hate y y- • thinF, helter-skelter. The purchasingj cheaper cuts of meat, which are de - With the minutes the trepidation: whieh, hitting her—for the time being , , passed, perhaps diverted by the inter-, —furry hip, had ever since kept her g 1°°"' important duty of the housewife. Iw be heartily welcomed by the man of pplies should be the mostj licious and nutritious, and they will est a the subject started, for Duncan,' tied to that bed, so often abandoned; thke day of advancing prices it be -l the family: „ • fresh from a conflict with the mane. with evil intentions. o ves us to husband very carefully! Casserole of Shin Beef nor, had got. launched on a theme, Upon all these points Mabel had ° the 1. our resources. Ga full value for Prepare two pounds of Phis beef by been informed before entering i kl i t blei mon- 4111111111111111MINIMINNW • • •',!';?1-id,a''' Reducing Expenses The war has so increased the cost of living, the housewife must make her money -go further. By using Red Rose Tea, which strong, rich Assent tees, she can down. The rich Assam strength requires less tea in the pot—and there's only one tea with the rich Red Rose flavor! Kept Good by the Sealed Package chiefly consists of keep her. tea bills "•!!!'44.' t.*4i ("isE 640 4te lav,L414. 111111111111111111111=1111111W 14V ,splA„.,,e ped out to hearken if more shots were comin'—stabbed in the kook by the very man who had sat at his table for two weeks. And in thehuts the Eng- lish swords held fine harvett. Like bullocks our people were butchered— wherefore Wherefore?" aficed sitting up slowly in her bed, one big, gaunt hand clenching in mid-air, "Few the sake of those very bullocks which those fools ha not knoWn ho W to herd. Alt, it VMS a night that the INI`Muies had seen in their dreams for long—Vey long! And yet, by the mercy of God, they did not get all the blood they wanted. The old bull fell, but the bull -calves got away over the 'hills. It was the snow that helped the brave boys, the heavy snow and their own wits. For more titan a mile they walked as folk say the crabs, doa-backa wards—and so made fools o' the thick- skulled English murderers. Red wi' wi' plood—that's what- it rowning go c n two ei .1 (To be continueda ping itself more and more closely. !sibyl's hut, where, to her deep disap-' each penny spent. By this I do not mean perchasing fuls of fat in hot frying pan. Then was!" , round which his daily life was weep - "He thinks to frighten me out of pointment, she found nothing but a cheap foods, but that you must know, put in casserole dish or baking dish going to law, but he'll sooner frighten very ordinary old woman in a Mght-: just what you want and the time to and add four medium-sized more, a a., --a cap, and with surroundings which had, get it. Cook in an appetizing manner ' six potatoes, one pint of water. Put the deer off the hills and the seals out ; nothing whatever in common with a! and serve temptingly and you will! the cover on the dish and bake for of the loch." Fondle listened with the alarmed sibyl's cave—for the unwashed plates; feel well repaid by the hearty appre-' one hour in a moderate oven. Or use interest which the subject always and soiled linen, in Adam ISITonnell's, elation of your family. I a saucepan that can be covered tight- • aroused in her, yet to -day she was hut so conspicuous by their absence,: Do not order by telephone if yea , Iv and then -cook on the simmering listening with but one ear, as it were. flourished here unchecked. Whatever , can poesibly help it, Slip on your, burlier. Thicken the gravy with With the other she was hearkening other uses Liz might be supposed to; hat and coat and seeffor yourself mst, browned flour. Season with salt, to the voice of the leaping burns make of broomsticks, their normala what you are paying for. Under! pepper and finely chopped parsley. which, through the darkness, called domestic use was obviously much ne-, your own personal supervision your Then serve. on: "I come! I come!" to the impatient glected within these walls. e -se' river below. Their hurry and their' But when she began to talk,matters. in now and find ye all here, he'd guess tains rather than look upon that which shouts served but to make more pal- improved, i for the store ofincidents in .a moment what you've peen after;, be comin'a But our folks were deaf pable the cool, blossom -scented peace which, with a vigour of consonantisi; and he whiles rooms in at this very, and blind, as honest folks are, and of the glen. , highly diverting to Mabel's Engles hour," finished Liz, the frill of her they went on feedin' their murderers, Fenella was quite astonished when ears, she laboriously produced, was dingy nightcap visibly quivering in a ; and the chief himself lit the candles the bridge was reached, beyond which well calculated to further that rare' . crescendo of agitation. every evenin' on the card -table, to do protection became superfluous; and luxury; a genuine shiver. Already ' "She's a Roman Catholic," explain- r honor to the English captain who was the good -night she gave her escort the company had been regaled with! ed Albert, aside to Mabel; then aloud: quartered upon him. - I . was devoid of that condescension supernatural anecdotes, and had heard' "Father Grey isn't anywhere near, 1 "It was at the card -table they were which hitherto had marked her most expounded the meaning of the "corpse- , and we won't betray you. Come: Liz; sittin' when the signalashot was fired gracious mood, and all the warmer lights," whose mission, floatingf over , what was the truth of that nightly by the company from the Noeth, come for that consciousness of a reparation the Burial Island, was to, fore a . a, adventure thirty years ago,—or was in' down the glen. They'll show ye due. • death in one of the three chief families,. . the thornebuth where the gun went Mt !of the community. And now Albert' it thirty-five?" CHAPTER X. continued to shake her large head. : glen with the mark of the smoke still . . ward upon the stool that eves his seata a, a g„uj„ upon them and the brackens growin' "Red wi' plood, and plack WP smoke' and exchanging meanwhile a glance of The delight of nosing out o' them,—for it was at that shot —that's what it was— the most hell- ' amused understanding with Mabel,!"spaewife" evidently fought hard ! Grey, with that theinurclerin' and the firiee began. like night that th' Almighty ever sent made an approach to a more delicate against her dread of Father she; WV the chief it began. Upon his own to curse this mortal earth." whom, upon this very subject, i subject, door:4mi he fell, whither he had step - Thus spoke Lame Liz, propped "Will you not tell this lady, Liz, how stood in a chronic feud. For Father i against a mound of chintzecovered you came tolie confined to your bed?", Grey, despite his mild white hairs, had! eee,......,,,,,................ pillows, her large flat face—enlarged, At this, in the dim light of the re- declared war to the knife against beaj yet by the supplementary frill of a' cess, Liz might be seen to straighten liefs whiali he termed "heathenish." j perpetual nightcap --looming out of, —perhaps to stiffen herself upon the "He can't take it in, poor man, and! the shadows of the cupboard -bed in pillows, while her large, knotted how should he?" Liz would say, with i which she spent her days, !hands, folded on the top of the patche a pity which was real, "He's no o'1 This was the sort of thing she loved; ' work coverlet, unclasped uneasily, and our folk, and they Southerners have thus to hold her court in the midst of , then shakily refolded. no ima eenashun." a half-eircle of attentive listeners, thel "No, no, Mr. Albert! Ye know full B for all that she writhed under ' well that that'a forbidden talk, just the spiritual threats of the man of no calculated to bring Father Grey down' imagination, and submitted to the ex- ineen me with his penances. I'm tent of never positively confirming and they'll :low you the walls up the iM'Donnell, leaning insinuatingly for -1 But Lis, though visibly tempted, very doubt and half -repulsion of whose gaze flattered her secretly, tribute as it was to that uncanny reputation which it was the object of her life to eu wpleasea the legend concerning her own lame - live up to. For there were gruesome to have peen listenin' this last half- ness, though not to the point of ad - things said about Lame Liz, That she hour. He's just wild against any talk rnitting—as he would have her do— possessed the "seconci sight" no one of the `seein';!--suppersteeshun, he that nothing more occult than "the seriously doubted; but it was not this calls it. If by ill -luck he should coma rheumatic," forbade her putting her foot to the ground. At this humiliate MANUFACTURER'S OVERSTOCK ing confession she stopped short, to- day as always, while the darkness of the hints which she allowed to hover To be cleared out at around the subject, and which, issuing WHOLESALE PRICES from the depths of the cavernous bed, gained considerably in darkness, SCACD might be supposed to reconcile con- science and desire. From this point the company, per- haps gorged with the supernatural, had turned to more earthly matters. "Red wi' plood, and plack wi' fire," repeated Liz, obviously pleased with her own choice of epithets, and settl- ing herself in her pillows for the nar- eg. $50 t°atf° Oretta rative of the "Massacker," for which , she had been called upon. An exceptional opportunity to get a first- "Maybe ye've read in yen history Mass machine at a barivain. Equipped with books"—("No, I haven't," interpolate A.1 )lotor, universal Tone Arm that plays le all makes of records and Tone Control for 1-d Mabel,from mere force of habit)— fen oe modulated volume. Has, In fact, "how the usurrper called William putt all the features tound on the higher Ibis heel down on our folk, and how Priced machines. The case is in mahogany finish, 41 in. high. i the chiefs were held to make their Ono year guarantee with each machine. Isubmeeshun by a certain day, or else It not as represented retUrn within 10 Ito lose their heads. Well, our chief, days and get your money back. Alan Macdonald, held out to the caslast-- Priee whilorder or C,O.D. !God pless hine!—and when he did set e they last SS8&h With out heavy heart and his auld, G. D. ROBERTSON, weary feet, the road was ower bad, or zdannteeitarerie Aaeat, else he made a mistake about the place, and he missed the turn by quite 77 BAY ST., TORONTO a wee bit, an because of that wee bit the bloody order was given. They do say that the auld chief's subineeshun was kept from the English William by the M'Muires, of course, who stood in favor just then, and who for a 'hum dred years had been thirsting for our blood. And wherefore? Because of a few head o' cattle, forsooth, which the pair fools had been too feckless to guard, and which our folk had better use for than they.And it was done in cold blood too—in cold, Saxon blood; for the compete,' of red -coats that came from the South were too weaa to do it alone: For fourteen days they sat in our huts, eatin' our bread, warmiti' themsels at our hearthstone, kissin' our maids, and all the while waitin!, fax the other red -coats from the North that were to help them in the butchoin''Pearfu' must have bth een the -oaths that bound them to silence; for seine o' them had hearts the stone in the glen—We no fax off the monument—to which one o' the red -coats --one o' those that kissed the loses, I'm thinkin'—tried to speak the truth wi'out breakin' his word. 'Oh, in their bodies.. They'll show you stone,' he salci,and Stood before it, 'if X was you I'd, a myself out o' a place where such black deeds are gettin' ready, and I'd leap ewer the moan- Phollographs v, SALLEY CO'. tit CANADA LTD. 5514., Goo. Wright 8, Co., Props. It You Are Not Already Acquainted let me lilt -reduce you to the Walker . House (The House of Plenty), wherein home comfort is made the• paramount factor.,It is tire one hotel where the management lend - every effort to •make its patrons feel it is "just like horae." THE WALKER HOUSE The Howe ol - TORONTO, CANADA ASV BLANKETS CARPETS ,LACE CURTAffis FEATHERS FURS DRAPERIES GOWNS TABL COVERS QUILTS GENTS' CLOTHING lik, and Quick Service Excellent Work Send. for our Catalogue on Cleaning and Dyeing Moderate Charges We Pay Carriage Charges One Way. PARKER'S DYE WORKS, Limited Cleaners endepyers 791 Yonge Street - - Toronto s'ilimaam••.=•••31 0140AinlIIMIIIII/Bilib 5 Genuine Musical .Instrument -bears.. "His Master's Voice" trade nark— the The only Instrument that will meet all your musical require- ments and with Victor records will give you the best enter- tainment irf the world. The real thing costs no 'more. • See thdt -yours is genuine! it is when it bears "His Mater's Voice" Trade Mark Berliner Gram -o -phone Co. MONTREAL, LIMITED 4, Lenoir Street 1030.408 t000.kV 04111111111M10050 'GERAMJITEORY OF THE RED CROSS DIPPERS FROM THAT OP ALL CIVILIZED NATIONS. British Officer Scolds Foes Into "Fighting Fair" by Addressing SniPere 01 Red Crow. In the mud wi,lderoess where the armies now confront eaeh other there are ;natty German dead and wounded out in front of our lines'writes a war correspotident from the British "lead. quarters in France. German stretcher parties are continually at work re- trieving the latter. They dome close to our posts and are never by any chance molested, but when they come lose to our line our men have more than once seen them hit by German sheOluisr. stretcher parties also have been mewing abot, but so far from being ' respected, it is a fact that in some units the proportion of casualties among the stretcher bearers has been higher than among the infantry on the fighting line. Some of these casual- ties, of course, are _caused accidental-, ly by shell firet but a, much greater number are the result of deliberate sniping by the Germans who know well whom they are shooting, Two days ago a stretcher party was at work, when German snipers deli- berately shot three out of four mem- bers, killing each one at short range. A British officer in a shellhole jump- ed from the hole, seized a Red Cross flag, and -waving it conspicuously marched straight to where the snipers were hiding. He floundered in the mud till close to the Gerreall position, and the Germans, presumably out of curio- sity, held their fire. Our officer spoke German Well, and he lashed those Germans as they had rarely been talk- ed to before, pointing out that German stretcher parties were moving about unmolested. A•Lesson in Mercy. The Germans listened in silence, and when the officer had finished he floundered back, tossed away the flag aotresumed his place in the shell- hThat party of Germans stopped their sniping at stretcher bearers, I do not think the world in general 1 has ever understood how completely the German theory of the, Red Cross I differs from that of all civilized na- tions. All international Red Cross workers in neutral countries are aware that the' German Red Cross is not an organization of mercy, but>s much a part 'of the German military machine as the artillery. You have been told how the Ger- mans have been of purpose bombing hospitals and torpedoing hospital ships. It unquestionably shows a de- liberate policy, the Gerfhans arguing that 'm attacking our Red Cross they are striking at a legitimate military object. It is a mere truth that the German people and army authorities never had and have not now such a concepticm of the Red Cross as we and other people have. The saddest thing is thatsafter the war the Red Cross societies of other nations can never treat the German organization' again es an equal or admit its repre- sentatives to conventions as members of the same sisterhood •of mercy. COMMON COLD. COLD. One of the Greatest Enemies of Man- , kind, Say the Doctors. e!'Only a cold. Nothing in the least serious." How often does one hear that sort of remark. And yet, as any physician will testify, the common cold is one of the greatest enemies of mankind. Your friend Jones is very deaf. It is s bore to try to talk to him. What made him deaf? Colds. Nearly all cases of deafness are due solely to that cause. Old people are more apt to be deaf than young folks because they have lived longer and have had rave time to suffer from colds. The common cold is very danger - Smith, an acquaintance of yours, died week before last. What carried hint off? Pneumonia. Ah, yes. But it was a cold that did the mischief. The germs invaded his lungs, and now he is in the graveyard. Heart disorders, kidney troubles and rheumatism are liable to bo en- gendered by colds. Remember the case of your friend Brown? He died of an infection of the frontal sinus— sth:otcavity behind the brows. A cold t mr ediliotn colds (says the F Health Service) are very contaguli iobuec. Everybody has,noticed how they "ill run through a amily, They sWeep through a oity, through a whole pro- vince, httatking nearly everybody and carrying off the aged, the very young, the weak and the debilitated. Not until very recently has ft been realized that olds are invariably caused by germs. The latter are so tiny that a million of them could rot on the head of a pin, Their favorite breeding places are dusty, unventilat- ed rooms. Fresh air is their worst enemlit Tbeet wily to avoid colds is te keep the body in. 41" (meaning dis- ease-reeistant) condition; 'to loop away from dusty, ill -ventilated places, and to avoid chilling of the body by cold or wet, Such chilling lessens the resisting power g the bair, and Ito may conduce tie` etilds, tut, btkrritur ibis point, the <fon window 11 the best of novenae&