HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1917-12-13, Page 6ralz...ffam.mrp======g
Many
People
Make a
B -Line
v
1 ,csly
a--- a
Toronto's
Faraens Ilel*i
fqr the Walker Hose (The Souse
ofPlenty) aa soon as they arrive in
Toronto. The meals, the service
and the home -like appointments
constitute the magnet that draws
them there,
/Toe pruner 60e.
Evening inner 75e.
THE WALKER HOUSE
rerenak }"arrow Hotel
!l *OIWTO, CANADA
Rotes Reasonable
Geo. Wright Sr Co., Props,
ssor�
ti
Hotel Del Coronado
Coronado Beach, California
Near ,`ran Diego
POLO, MOTORING, TENNIS,
BAY .AND SURF ' BATHING,
FISHING AND BOATING.
18 -Hale Goli 'Course
Hotel is equipped throughout with Automatic
Sprinkler System.
AMERICAN PLAN
JOHN J, HERS/AN, Manager
e
Be twee 2 Cousins;
OR, A DECLARATION OF WAR.
CHAPTER XIII.—(Cont'd,)
And then, as Fenella, rigid with
astonishment, did nothing 'but stare
at him, wide-eyed, he went on in a
hurry, as though in answer to himself;
"Of course you cannot know. How
should you? I've kept my secret too
well for that. I had meant to keep
it to the end, but it will out. It has
been over long at work within me,
not for weeks, as maybe you are
thinking, and not for months either,
but for years, and many of them too.
I'm not sure that I remember the
time clearly when it was not at work.
Lang before I had beard on my face,
and when you were no higher that
this, Miss Fenella," and with a hand
visibly unsteady, he indicated a height
somewhere on a level with his waist,
"and when you wore your hair down
your back, blowing free in the wind,
I would hide behind the palings to
see you pass; and when you had pass-
ed, it was to me as though the sun had'
come and gone again. And on the
day when you came into our cottage
beside the minister it was just the
same to me a though the sky had open
ed and one of the angels come down
to visit us. Do you think the cottage
has even been the same place to me
again?—and the hearthstone you have
sat at, and the cups and saucers you.
have touched? If you do, then you
don't know what it is to have your
heart set in one place."
"And all this summer, Miss Fenella,
it has been a bit of heaven; I've got
to tell you this, even though by telling
it you I am putting myself out of the
heaven. It was more than I ever
hoped for. For I have hoped for no-
thing, Miss Fenella, though at times,
quite lately, the foolish dreams would
come. It's foolishness, I know, but
I want you to tell me ,that it's foolish-
ness. That's why I had to .speak.
To hear the word from your own lips
will make the wild thoughts lie still,
maybe. Tell me that I am mad, Miss
Fenella," he pleaded, with a new and
urgent agony in his voice; "tell me
that nothing can ever come of my lik-
ing for you,—that it's an impossible
thing—"
"Of course fit's impossible—quite
impossible!" declared Fenella, her
tongue suddenly loosened, and instinc-
tively shrinking back a little against
the cottage wall, for Duncan, in his
urgency, had come a step nearer. "Of
course you are mad, Duncan, to think
of such a thing—quite, quite mad!'
Why, you see it yourself."
At her chinking movement he stop-
ped short,as though only now aware
of his forward 'one. The incision of
her words—for she had spoken with
the vehemence of extreme agitation,
and with a sharpness that was a lit-
tle too like disdain—seemed to have
produced their effect.
"Yes; I thought it would be so. I
did not hope for anything. That is
one question answered, but I want
another. It's impossible, I allow
you; but I want to be told that what
makes it impossible for you hi just
that I'm not the right man. I'm too
big, and to clumsy, and too unlearned
FIELD CASHIERS
Alia
,PAYMASTERS
IN FRANCE
CASA
DOMINION EXPRESS
FOREIGN CHEQUES
UR
Q
THE WEST WAY TO SEND MONEY
'ro THE BOYS 1N THE TRENCHES
7
t r ;'
'
DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME "
Twenty -First Lesson—Milk and Its Derivatives. .
M'ilJc may be culled n perfeot food, the location, curing and manner Of
containing as it does the five necessary storing, give many verietlttes Cheese
Poucl el lnents reyuirecl by the body to is a valuable Paod, Conti ping a large
mainta', life, It is the Brat food amount of protein in the form of
for infants; it forms also a perfect easein. It is a concentrate(' "food,
food for small children, the protein and when properly combined with oth-
being in the form of casein, which is. er foods furnishes an economica: nutri-
readily.digested. The adult requires tive diet.
additional food, owing to the activities,
The by-product of butter is'butter-
Milk will not supply all the needed mils, which is greatly esteemed in
elements. The carbohydrates are in Europe. Many of the foreign race
tl.. form of milk sugar and fat; the contend thrat the use of buttermilk
fat is suspended in the mac in then onten s Jie_ b . ,use o ins the ba •
form i tiny globules, thus giving e en's of the intestines. II:ha es. Bnttemr
the milk its clear, white color. The is also strained, th( curd salted ane
proportions of fat in the milk vary beaten with a wooden spoon, then
from 2,8 to 8 per cont. Thi variation worked into a smooth mass. This is
called buttermilk cheese and was
greatly esteemed by our grandmoth-
qay.-14:14Ma.D<
Old Tea 4, All Right
Old `tea aiad Fresh tea, poor tea and good
tea, all look aline. tt o wonder a woman
often gets a bulk tea she ddesn't like.
Red Rose Tea in.
the sealed package is
always fresh, always
good, always worth
the price on the label.
Kept Good by the
Sealed; Package
,f g p g y l
is due to age, condition :.r,d feeding
of the cows,
Cream. ers.
Whei mills taken directly free. the To Make Butter at Horne.
cow is placed in suitable containers. Collect left -over Portions of cream
in a clean bowl, Permit it to stand'
er than the
for throe or four days toi turn, Now
is cream
and permitted to ftand for a period of
tame, the fat globules, which are light -
water of: the milk, 11;!11 rise place one cupful of thi m nn a
and form a coatili over the
o your eptly_ surface of the milk, This is cupful of warm water, testing the
? Tell me
for you evert turnthoughts my -- surf g one -q
way,—that s rt, 1s rt not
that, Miss Fenella; don't tell me that
it's because I gain my bread with my
hands, and because I don't wear Lon-
don coats that you find it impossible.
It will hurt me to hear that I am not
utart Mason fruit jar. Add one
called cream. Cream is a wholesome, cream and water •-"'th a thermometer.
palatable form of fat, Modern methods It should be sixty-five degrees Fah -
now use a machine for separating lenheit. Plato rubber'lid on jar.
cream by gravity from the milk; this Shake continuously for a few mom -
eliminates the period of time for ents, and you will feel the contents of
standing to permit cream to rise to'the jar become lumpy,
the top of the vessel. The derivations! Drain off th_ buttermilk and place
or by-products of milk are butter and'the butter in a howl of clear, cold wa-
cheeae.
the water un
the right man, but it would hurt me
more to have to think badly of you."
"I have told you that it is impos-
sible; that is enough!" flashed out
Fenella,
Butter. tel•. Add one-fourth teaspoonful of
with a return of that Cream is permitted to stand a ter salt and work, changing
haughtiness which had been for so tain length of time to developan acid til it shows no trace of milk, For
long out of sight. "I don't see what ferment. The object of this to give thei'ibutter in pats and place in re -
right you have to questionani ma be too.the butter "e desirable flavor and cool. Care must be
taken not toerator o scald the cream by using
"Maybe you don't, Y aroma,or this ferment may be added
tion in
lnk speakthat ing as I m forgetting
otin But Per_ to the ream in the form of lactic acid.; of carrot water at is too hot. juice may be a daea` drops
haps, Miss Fenella, it's you who are The cream is then churned, the but -'the butter a color, Grate a small car-
ter -milk that our stations are not ter -milk drained off and the butter rot and place in cheese cloth and
forgetting worked with pure, cold water. Salt
so far apart as it would seems from the is added to the butter to preserve and wring to obtain the juice, This but-;
each otheor our blodon't liker remem- e to improve the flavor. Butter contains tero invands given to small children -or
aabout 88 per cent. f rand is a valut{brei be
bering, perhaps, that our grandfathers Let the buttermilk stand a few
have worked at the same ate • risen to the top. Then place a piece
• food for energy.
• hers h a•(id drain off the water that has
were brothers and that our fat
_ Sweet butter is made from fresh'
hole Bao cream andis usually sold unsalted. It of cheese cloth in -strainer, turn in the
ours .
bit of s1
yes, and bored at the same ill t k length
1 tri nJ w no cep any ens o time, buttermilk and let drain for two hours.
many a nay. liut what s a t a
—and with a sweep of his arm he
seemed to be putting some trifle aside
—"what's the station got to say to a Cheese is made from milk by special Work well with wooden spoon to a
real fondness? I've not read many process of fermenting milk with a smooth mass.
books in my life, and I've not lived lactic acid ferment and then coajulat- One-half green or red pepper, chop-
too many years in the world, and yet ed with rennet. This cheese when used ped very line.
I've learnt enough to know that when fresh is called cream and cottage -Mold into balls,.,and place a piece
the heart is in it neither station nor cheese, of nut on the top and serve on lettuce.
usually turning cheesy.
Cheese.
Now place the curd n. a bowl and add:
One-fourth teaspoonful of salt.
money can be in it too. Do you think
it would make any difference to me if
you were a gipsy in the woods, instead
of the minister's daughter : In one
of the books on the shelf in there,
there is the story of the king who
Many other varieties are made by Sour milk may be used in place of
special processes which, together with buttermilk.
USING THE CHEAPER CUTS OF MEAT.
Cheap cuts of meat—that is to say, and cover. Bake until tender. This
is a very economical dish and there
is no waste.
Baked Meat flasl,
the tougher or less choice cuts—can
wedded the beggar maid. I've always be made acceptable to fastidious
wished you 'more good than to myself, palates by thorough and careful cook=
Miss Fenella, and yet I've caught my- in tic are suggestions that lend
self wishing that I could sae you in varietyto the ways in which beef, ham
rags, and myself in a king's mantle,
just for the sake of being able to lift and chicken may be served at the
you on my horse. That's my way of
looking' at the thing, Miss Fenella;—
to me it is the holiest thing in the
world;—and that's why it would al-
most kill the soul within me to believe
that you have it in you to sell your
(me meal a day to which we have
patriotically reduced our meat -eating.
Broiled Flank Steak
1 flank steak, salt, pepper, 1 tea-
spoonful butter. Buy a flank steals
own heart for a fine income and a the size required for your family
grand country house,—or to let your needs. Ask the butcher to score it
family sell it for you. It's not Ion each side or, if you do this your -
much I'm asking for, surely—onlyself, use a sharp knife and score
that you should tell me that in saying diagonally across the meat, in lines
no to me, and in saying yes to—to,
one int: apart; turn meat and score
some other man, as no doubt you will .
in opposite direction, making small
do some day, you are acting after your
own warm heart, and not after any
diamonds. Score both sides. The
cold calculation." scoring cuts across the tough fibres
With the last words there had come and makes the meat tender like sirloin,
into his voice a note of entreaty which Heat a frying pan red hot, drop in the
could not beat down Fenella's indigna- steak, turn quickly back and forth to
tion of a minute ago. In ill-conveal- sear the whole surface and then re-
ed agitation she looked at the man duce the heat and cook more slowly.
who was begging her to tell him that Turn steals frequently to cook evenly,
she felt nothing for him, casting about A flank steak will cools in ten to
notthe white for somewchwhich hadwnotuld twelve minutes. Season with salt
not hurt him overmuch. She not
found it yet when Duncan turned im- and pepper, remove to a hot platter,
patiently, for the garden gate had spread with butter and serve.
clicked. A dark, delicate -looking Round Steak in. Casserole
young woman with a baby in her cu
�ez inc
arms, and followed by a stalwart man 1 round steaktlhes thick, teen minutes. Who the celery is
in smart but professional -looking 1 cupful flour, 11 teaspoonfuls salt, tender, turn all on a platter, surround
pepper, 1 tablespoonful butter. I with a border of rice and serve.
Pound the flour, a little at a time,
into both sides of the steak, using a
meat hammer for the purpose or a
potato masher or even a large heavy
Medium white sauce, hot mashed
potato, left overs of meat. Put meat
through a food chop! er, first remov-
ing all gristle and bone. Season high-
ly with salt and pepper. Butter an
earthenware baking disl.. Add en-
ough medium 'white' sauce to the
ground meat to moisten and bind it to-
gether. Turn into the baking dish,
spread over in a layer, the hot well -
seasoned, mashed potato.. Bake in a
hot oven until brown.
Curried Brisket with Rice Border
2 Pounds brisket, 2 cupfuls onions
cut fine 2 teaspoonfuls 'salt, 2 table-
spoonfuls flour 2 teaspoonfuls curry
powder, 1 tablespoonful chopped cel-
ery. Wipe the meat and cut into nar-
row strips. - Sear both -sides in a hot
frying pan, then pot the meat into a
large stew kettle and cover with boil-
ing water. Brown the onions in the
pan where the meat was seared, add
them to the meat. Season and sim-
mer three hours or until tender. Mix
flour and curry powder with a little
cold water, add to the meat, add also
the celery out fine. Boil ten to fif-
gaiters, was entering.
"It's Bessie," said Duncan, below
his breath, in tones that were neither
franternal nor hospitable.
With a feeling of .deliverance Fen-
ella rose quickly, and escaped in a spoon. Heat a frying pan and brown
hurry which made her forget to take te meat on both sides, then pint into
leave of Adam, and even to fetch her
gloves, which she had left lying upon a baking pall. Rinse the frying pan
the deal table beside the scattered with boiling water so as to save all
flowers which greeted Duncan the browned meat juice and pour this
when he re-entered the cottage; dis- water over the steak, vsing enough
ordered and already fading, they lay to come up halfway, Add seasoning
beside the empty tea -cup. With a
pang at his heart he gathered them
together. Was this all that was to
remain to him of this summer's bliss?
Ile could not be sorry for the im-
pulse on which he had to -day betrayed
his secret. Without betraying it, it
would be impossible to get the as-
surance which he wanted, and of
which Bessie's inopportune advent
had deprived him. It was not the
Fenella's indifference, of Fe but
that of her possible egotism, which
pursued him, and which he wanted set
at rest. His vanity was scarcely
mortified by his rebuff. Of course
he was not good enough for her; but
that was only because no man in the
world was good enough for her; not
because a man with a name and a
fortune was any worthier of her in his
eyes than he was himself, Though
there was too much natural chivalry
in him to let him naive his rival, he
knew that rival well, and in his heart
despised him, undazzled by the halo
of worthy glory, and proudly awate
of being the better man of the two.
CHAPTER XIV,
"In short, if I was to talk till to-
morrow, I should never get you to
rstend howt.bsolutel dunning
and_ y n g
she ie. That sort of brownie -green
eyes, don't you know, that make you
think of trout pools, and precious deep
ones too, And the color of her hairl
How em I to give you any idea of
�yz
Sf 4
-a
i
44
Music .A Profession For The Blind. hundred blind organists 11 Britai ,
Ir the animal kingdom it is observed many of whom are choir plasters as
that no creatures are favorites, but a well. It is expected that these num-
certain compensation balances every hers will be materially increased owing
gift, and every defect. That is al to the fact that v, greater amount of
truth expounded in his Essay on Com- attention is now being given to music
pensation in which Emerson puts it
down for a fact that for everything
one has missed he has gained some-
thing else. When Nature deprives a
person of the sense of sight, it is an
immeasurable loss, yet that same Na-
ture, once thought cruel, now benefic-
ent, makes up the deficiency by an ex
traordinary endowment along some
other line.
So often it is that finest of compen-
sations, the talent for music. There is
no doubt that music is one of the most
suitable professions for the blind. In
a Government report recently issued in
$ritain on the welfare of the blind it is
stated that there are almost 1000-
947 to be exact -persons in the United
Kingdom thus afflicted who are fol-
lowing the professions of music, mak-
ing of musical instruments, piano
tuning, etc, There' are at least one
The quality of mercy is not strain'd;
It droppeth as the gentle rain from
heaven
Upon the place beneath: it is twice
blest;
It blesseth him, that gives and him
that takes;
'Tis mightiest in the mightiest.
—Shakespeare.
that? The likest thing I can think of
is a bank of bracken in November,
like that pheasant cover here beyond
the shrubbery, after it has hacl a
touch of frost, all reddish and goldish,
—but on a wet day mind, when it
looks as though it {lad been newly
varnished. When I think that in two
days' time I shall be looking on it
again, and into those enchanting eyes,
I feel quite, hot, and then again quite'
Shivery. Don't laugh at me Jack,—I1
couldn't stand that; and whatever you
do,don't tell me I'm throwing myself
away. 'What's the use of having a
lot of money and one's place in the
world all ready-made, if one can't
marry the woman one wants to? I'm 1
going to put my fate to the touch
first chance I have. I'm pretty hope-
ful, for she's been awfully nice to me,
,'tack; but there are moments again
when it seems almost too good to be,
true."e
The above extract of one of Donald
Maegilvray's very rare epistolary of -i
forts, addressed to an intime.te, was j
serving the purpose of a safety -valve,.
a letting off of a little of that so
tightly bottled •p sentiment ent which
m
nsumin
e hitt- all summer.
Thad been o g
having penned the phrases in the
comfortable sanctuary of the Pock-
; shier snloking.rootn, the unusual labor
solaced by ;ails -tem a very superior
, brand Of cigar, the stricken youth,
leaning back in his well -padded chair,
actually breathed more freely.
It was a quite unusual alacrity
that he made his preparations for de-
parture, and gave the final orders. He
was going hopefully, as he had told his
confident, Jack, and yet in trepidation.
And over there, at Ardloch, he was
being expected hopefully too, but like-
wise in trepidation.
The few days which elapsed between
the explanation with Duncan and Mr.
Macgilvray's return to Balladrochit
had been employed by Fenella in a
sort of general tidying up of her
thoughts ami sensations. The dis-
covery that for years past she had
been the beacon -star of a man's life
could not but impress her, despite the
humble station of that man, or per-
haps because of it. And yet—flat-
tared vanity notwithstanding—the
dominating impression remained a
disagreeable one. For that fliu'gent
appeal of. Duncan's, that vehement
condemnation of a course of action
which had hitherto appeared to her
both harmless and natural, had startl-
ed into life some new consciouanese.
Was it then really so ignoble, so (le-
' basin a thing tc bestow the gift of
gt r
sons' h and withoutthe cresol nn '
s p ymg
gift ol•thi heart? without being what
F people called "in love"? Apparently
it was, since even an uncultured mann
like Dement seemed to judge 11,
1 (To be continued,)
in the institutions -for the blind.
The aforesaid report shows from an
investigation among several hundred
persons that 86 per cent. of the men
and 81 per cent. of the women are
known to have been successful in their
musical occupations. This report sug-
gests the desirability for a blind per-
son to combine the . position of
organist, or music teacher, or profes-
sional singer as the case may be with
that oe pianoforte tuning, so that in
the event of a falling off in his profes-
sional work he can resort to the more
practical occupation, or the other way
around, as circumstances dictate.
Fertilizing the soil increases farm
labor efficiency and adds greatly to
the farmer's net income. The extra
yield, less than the cost of the fertili-
zer, is largely pure profit.
The business of being a man
has its advantages these days as
we11 as its responsibilities—especi-
ally' 0 someone thinks enough
about him, his needs and his wishes,
to choose for his Christmas gift
ilkklie Safet7
or
Most men are practical. The welcome gift
is the useful gift—the Gillette—that fits right into
a man's intimate personal life, makes things
easier for him, and proves its quality by the way
it shaves. -'
At any good Hardware, Drug or Jewelry
Store you can pick out a Gillette Set that will be
sure to give him lasting pleasure. If you hays
any trouble getting what you want, write us and
we will see that you are supplied.
GILLETTE SAFETY
RAZOR R CO.
OF CANADA, LIMITED, -.
-Office and Factory GilletteBuilding, Montreal.
281
MADE"rtI N ADwrm—T,,�J.q
iN roANAN
!0 1,4 01 i1: ti
0 oyea:..11lllllllllllll •
HOLIDAY BULLETIN
FRENCH RECLAIM
DEBTS OF BATTLE
EACH ARMY EQUIPPED WITH A
RECUPERATION DEPOT.
Salvage Labor Saves Millions of Dol.
hu's Yearly to the
Nation.
The Arabian Nights wizard who
turned old lamps into new was ..the
veriest amateur compared with the
modern French woman through whose
hands passes the debris of the battle-
field. Af the beginning of the tvar,
Partly owing to the rapid movements
of the ermies, waste was prevalent
everywhere. The correspondent of
the Associated Press, while marching
with the soldiers, then saw thousands
of garments and articles of equipment
strewn over the fields and along the
roadsides where the troops had fought,
maneuvered, advanced or retreated.'
Nobody thought of saving the tens
of thousands of dollars' worth of dis-
carded clothing and arms thrown
aside when rapid m' d
iment was ne-
eessary, Overcoats, tunics, shoes,
sweaters, scarfs, cartridge pouches,
haversacks, belts, caps and waterproof
sheets lay about the ground in thou-
sands,
The Spirit of Economy.
Since that time the spirit of econ-
omy—generally present with the
French people—has reasserted its au-
thority, and now everything that can
be salved is picked up and made use-
ful. Each of the armies has been pro-
vided with what is known as a recu-
peration depot, whose duty it is. to ex-
amine and retrieve all that �is-possible
from the debris found on the fleld of
battle.
The correspondent visited one of
these depots at Orleans and there
found in operation a scheme of sal-
vage which saves the French nation
many millions of dollars a year. Itis
,run under the superintendence of offi-
cers of the army reserve, mobilized at
the opening of hostilities and chosen
for their experience in commercial af-
fairs. Among them are bankers, man-
ufacturers and men drawn from ninny
trades. They have at their .disposal
machines of the latest model, mostly
of American origin, while the workers
are drawn from among the wives,
widows and children of soldiers, Ger-
man prisoners and men of the oldest
classes of the French army,
Some idea of the extent of the work
done in this centre alone may be ga-
thered from the wages paid to the wo-
men and girls employed, which
amounted in the month of August to
approximately $100,000. There are at
all times stored in the depot articles
of military equipment to the value of
$10,000,000. Every day in summer an
average of thirty- motor wagons full
of debris from the battlefields a'rtve
and in winter this number is increas-
ed to an average of forty -live wagons:
New Shoes From Old.
Thousands of odd shoes, worn and
muddy and torn, are sorted out into
pairs and then cleaned, repaired and.
made ready to be issued again. Some-,
times they are in such a condition that
they cannot be used as soldiers!
marching boots and then the uppers
are detached and refitted to wooden
soles, forming clogs which are much
appreciated by the soldiers during
their service in wet and muddy
trenches. Odd pieces of leather are
stamped out into buttons fmithe pris-
oners' uniforms.
More than 0,000 women are em-
ployed in. this depot alone.
A few figures as to the resultsbb-
tained in this depot will demonstrate
the economic value of the system
adopted. Two thousand cartridge
pouches are repaired on an average;
every day at a cost of about one cent
each, whereas new ones would cost
eighty cents each. By the repair of
soiled and torn sheepskin jackets a
profit of $1,500 daily ie made. The
mending of overcoats saves the Gov-
ernment about $8.000 daily. With
pieces of cloth cut from old uniforms
the women make 8,000 pairs of cloth
slippers daily, each pair worthforty
cents, while by piecing together old.
shoes 500 pairs of new ones are made'
every day.
ALL TRADES OPEN TO IIEROES.
M.II.C. Perfects Plans Which Will
Make Factories Training Centres.
There are now 80 different voca-
TFIE SEASON'S BEST FICTION tions being taught in the vocational
1,as
LONG LIVE THE RING 21,60
Ey Mary Soberta Rinehart.
"Will prove the greatest of bias. Rine -
hart's eueeoesea,"—New York Times,
THE INDIAN DRINK - - $1 .85
Ey William MoHe.rg and Edwin Balmer
A mystery of the Great Laltes. as
good 1f not better, than "The Blind
Man's Eyes."
MTBE NEXT OP HIV, or Those Who
Wait afld Wonder - - $1,25
Hy Nellie L, MOOlttng.
This hook reflects nubble feeling in
t proal towns And county dlatrieta
throughotit Cunads and down with
tonin effect how ban dta man and
g
l SY. the war,
women w t,, doing 1 istront t t
The Rhone hook in strong and fearless,
but always oomforttng and healing,
TUE ROAD TO VIQDItESTANDI TG•lo
- Ey Eleanor B. Porter.
A delightful 1 vn glory, by the Author
of "Jost David"
BEINNEE'0 BABY - - 2 training centres of the Military Hos-
Ey Roney Irving Dodge, itals Commission linked across Can -
Liven more amening than 'Skinner's p ,
Dross Suit." ads•
A REVERSIBLE BANTA exams This number will be increased in
$1'00
By Meredith Nicholson. definitely to embrace the whole cate-
A Christmas story of mysterious sur- gory of industries in Canada if neces-
prises and a jotyful holiday f spirit, by sary when the present plass of the
the author f 'rhe •louse o a Thou-
sand Candles." Commission to place men needing to
OLLY AND TIrE DuzNOEBB, $1.,35 learn new 'trades by reason of their
Hy Emma (8 Dowd. injuries, in the 'factories have been
All lovorn of "Polly of the Wounitgql,.••put into operation.
start" and "Polly of Lady ('fay tot- ,
tage" will want to read thin new story The co-nlicrlat.iell of the Canadian
by the same author, 'Manufacturers Association has made
TRE el'itlrX,Ens$1.40 not it poaalble for the Commission to of -
335 Prederiok Orin inarl.tattlot. the men.this inestimable advent-
llow a charming heiress atlampts In
00e.50 t herds 0f $Muir. by a mar- ngn of we'lsing under actual lnclustrial
maga o� eonvanlonee, conditions in learning their new
trifles.
TWO BIG WAR STORIES
tiNVMk9 The Plata Tale of e, Canadian ILMOCI 11NDR'B mon - - 7de
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Immediately trftel' a cold le`takoii a
very hot of bntl is often very
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,
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bathe are less useful than cold ones.
People with a tendency to take told
may "harden" themselves by daily cold
be.ths.
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