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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-6-29, Page 6Yotge Aga T'od`ay The Cow Puncher That uscious oasS j NEIW, delicious" hrfakfast bread. , lord!.fiv[ired raisin toast! A new delight for the entire family. Made with big,' plump, terlder, seeded raisins—Sun-Maid brand. 'rhe raisin flavor permeates each slice. You can get such bread from any grocer or bake shop if you .insist. No nerd to bake at dome, Once try it and you'll always have this kind:; You'll serve it at least twice a week. Fine food for business men and children due to the energizing nutriment and the iron of this famous, healthful , fruit. Make' dainty bread pudding with left -over slices. No need to waste a crumb. Order now for tomorrow's breakfast.. But be sure to say you want "one of those full fruited raisin loaves." Blite Package' Su ® Ekid a • Seeded oa i sa }y [, &lake delicious bread, pies, puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send for free book of tested recipes. Sun -Maid Raisin- Growers Membership 13,000 Dept. 1..43 •El Fresno, Calif, The Earth's Satellite. There is visible in the night sk t g Yun- der favorable': circumstances, a" faint light rounded in outline and situated always exactly opposite to the place of the sun; Jt is called • the "gegen-. schein,'.and is ` one of the'most inex- pllDable objects known to astronomers. It ,was Plcicorinb who suggested thee explanation• of - the getenschein. ` `It may-be.a "sort of cemetery or meteor- ic siateilitte" attending the earth. , It 1s supposed to be composed ofa' cloud af'meteonss,-situated about 1,000,-, 000 miles from the earth and revolving, around. it -in a period of jusstone, year,. s:o'that the sun and the meteors ars always, on opeles'ite sides of Use earth. It is estimated that the size of this ghostly se.tell.ite may be nearly., the sante as that of the planet Jupiter,; viz.,, about 56,000 miles`in diameter. Bee S�.5 flies Beekeepers Will fios, py looking. up our catalog,,evarything need- ed for the production of honey, Ruddy Mfg. Co. Ltd. -'Brantford, episode Successors to Ham Bros. Co. Ltd. Send for a copy. Week -End. Neat walks' and lawns and wit'e'bound flowen•beds Betray my friend's -determined .q est for beauty; Iris. trees are trimmed and taught to do their'duty As teachers train conceits of oliildish About the house in sltudted carelese- Clean -palated `arbors : g0are 'throne cllmbtn6 -winter, And clematis; : around the . perch t tw]nea In ,disciplined,' obedient duress. My own hfl'lside ist wild- a ad overgrown; A' tangled path twists to the shnck (Copyright The eelueso i Book Co.) Synopsis of Preceding,,, Chanters. ler. Hardy, famous specialist, and his daughter -bane, meet with an acci- tient while on -a motoring trip in the foothills of Alberta add find e refuge in the cabin of the Eldon raneh where, dwell David and his dissolute father. Dr; Iiardy's broken. leg is mendln and title is David and Treece+ huts evening together. CHAPTER III.-(Cont'd,), - And Beauty is not bound upon a throne, But is the vagabond that free lreart5- This, perfect order subtly lets me know I nsust be circumspect a day or so, Devere Allen, Quaint Chinese Oratory in Prince's Welcome. -'Quaintly worded was' the address o Welcome to the Prince' of „Wakes from the Chinese' community of Hongkong during his visit there. It spoke of him as drawing• nigh in princely array, and said: "Long have .we looked up t your Royal Highness and now we wel come you as plants the rain; with on accord we show forth. our.feeldngs o gladness ..and ,fashion our hymn o praise." Referring to. the fact .the the heir' apparent of the British: throne was on his first visit to the Hest, the adci•ese stated:. "'Tis tweet that the streets and the lanes resound with ,sets;; high and low, the people dance with gladness; tate willows that droop their heads ':along the banks joyfully brush the royail banner; the flowers that fill the earth with flying blossom join in welcome to the princely. palati —=a--_. Asa leader, .truth .;is sbronger tha friction. f D E z n They reached an open pace, Some- thing- , blaclt-.or was it red?—lay on needed no serond giteeS; the. ereving the ground. Dave bent over it a'mc-i had become irresistible, and his father - t _then l 1 d tohoz' white had ridden to town for the means to` l rat than t at � Y pa El Y, introduce thein resulted in a `sort of estrangement more dangerous than the old open' hostility. Phe tension steadily inereased, and both` looked forward to tits moment when sumo-• Elling must giive way. For several, weeks the old num ro- malnod entirely hobos, but the call of the appetite in him grew more and more iasis nt us the days went by, and et Iasi came the morning, when Dave awoke to find him gone Ile and mhipping centres in al parts ',et the men , ten oo ke up �l ies t, Tho rain • da s did not dear face, whiter andc ea = abrin his return, •Ms ocoaelonsed rear. g ever rice witnessing the st . these "Ilea your latae calf Brow ie," he said, as calmly as hi could, "Half he emild, ` Ilxlf et up. Wolvee, I geese," He saw her eyes grew slowly larger in -•the moonlight Without a word she sank to her knees. Ile saw her fingers shout her head, burrowing in her: ,hair, ,_Then she lgoked up, over the Mack trees, to the slcy with its white eon end ib few great stars. "The poor, poor thing," she breath- ed. -°`The poor, innocent thing. Why did it have to. die?" "It's always the innocent things 'at suffers," he answered, "Always the' innocent things," she repeated mechanically. "Always—" She prang to her feet and faced him. "Then what ',about the justice of God?" she demanded. "I don't know- nathin' about the justice of God," he answered, bitterly. "All I know is the critter 'at can't run gets caught:" There was,a long pause. , "It doesn't seem: right," she said at length. "It ain'teright," he agreed. "But I guess it's'life. 'I see it here on the Prairies with every' ]iviri' thing. Everything is a •victim, sumo way OT other. Even' the wolves 'at tore this little beast 'll go `flown to sante ranch IN STOCK for immediate shipment— Quantity of Stroxnberg--Carlson 2A Head Sets, No. 147 • Jacks and No. 60. Plugs. We are distributors. CLEAR SIGNALS Complete Radio Receiving Sets ready for shipment Marconi Model C :Amrad- De Forest Satisfaction - Guaranteed or Money . Refunded AUTOMATIC TELEPHONES AND TIME RECORDERS, LTD. 140 Victoria' St., Toronto Representatives Wanted EEEL_.: a !•actor (E,0,13. 'ForQ , to), 1L' Q a ,y �^A 6a. main eon dq murk Yjiolti frith wheel rowing, •P . a'be : 'dt o` 1 I nal Peet*._ a.TROCT ;ONTO' ?it ' lwt Si1.1 itnxlety 'to' gave; In the course; of a carouse lila lather frequently" re meined away way elks at a ettretch, and at such _times it was Dave's; cus- tom to vis -t` the=='bpy,s, on a ranch a dozen miles over toe foothllis to the southvlard..`These boys had a•eieter, and what wits more natural thin .that Dave' should drown his loneliness in such company? Brit this time he did not ride'south- ward aver' the hills, Il:e moped around the ranch tbu'Idings,sat moodily by the little stream, casting pebbles in the water, er rode -over the 'old trails on which she had so. often been his companion,' The season was bright with all the glory. of the fobtlill Sep- tember; the silver donee of heaven, clondless `fanning and norm, ripened with the dying dayinto seas of gold on which floated cloud -islands of pur- ple and cmethy t -and through the im- measurable -silence of the night moon and stars bathed the deep valleys in celestial effulgence. But in. the heart of the boy was neither sun nor moon nor stars, - but only the black gulfs of loneliness from which his light had gone. out. Then the ofd mn's horse -ca me home, Dave saw conkng rip the trail, not running wildly, but with HUNTING 10EBEK. S IN TUE ATLANTIC or's'q']fle, Maybe, although they were nervous gallop and many sidelong only dein' what nature said.. . I. turnusgs of the head. As the boy guess it's the same way in tlie.cities;, watched he ' found a strange emptiness the innocent bent' hunted, an the in- noeenter they are the easier they're caught. An' then the wolves beggitt' off, an' sayin' it wad only nature. The girl, had no answer. No one had ever talked to her like this. What did this country boy know? And yet it pus ess hien; his body seemed a phan- tom an which his head hung ever - heave. He spoke to the ha2se, which pulled up, snorting, before him; noted the wet neck and flank's, and'• at Last the broken stirrup Then, slowly and. methodically,, and still v ith that was plain he did know. He had lived strange sensation of emptiness, he "I guess I was like. that, some," he went on. "I've been 'caught. I guess• a' baby, ain't responsible for anything, is: it? I didn't. pick my father or my. mother, did I? But I, got, to bear it," There was something • near a.; break, in his aures on the: last words. She felt she must speak is a wonderful "I think your father t old man," she said, "and your mother must have been wonderful,'to•o You should be proud of them both." docan that?" he de- "Reenie, you an Mended. His eyes were .looking straight into nhers: Once before she d faced her'with that question, he ha e and she had not forgotten, "Absolutely," she answered. "Ab- solutely, 'I mean it." "Then. I'm gain' to say sonic more things to you,":he went on, rapidly. "Things 'at I didn't know whether to say or not, but now they've got to be said, whatever happens. Reenie, I haven't ever been to school, or learn- ed lots of things I should 'a' learned, but I ain't a' fool, neither. I know 'at when you're home you live thousands of miles from me, but I know 'at in your mind' you live: further away; than that., I know, it's like all the prairies an' all the, oceans' were between us. .But. I ,know,' too; that people cross prairies- an' oceans, an I'm .wnntin to cross. I know it takes; time, an', I'll get out. You to eerie, see?" Rio sold be a slow, traveller, but I'm a mighty •]terse and saddle for sixty doz ars ;id ersfstenit, ciittur when I start out, took a robin at a cheap hotel< until he p should find' work and still ^-]reaper I didn't learn to break all 'those bot- tles in .a day. Well, I can learn other • I.rwill if onlyi will In the evening he walked through things, tooren, v take me aaioss. I'm ruin' to leave the streets of the little cow town: • It this old' ranch, someway, jus'. as soon lu'as not altogether new to rami he as. it can be'arlwmged; I'm goin' to had frequently visited it for business town, an' work. I'm :strong; I can get pretty good wages., I've been, thinkin' it all over, an' was -;stadia', •some questions in town to -day. I can: work days an' go 'to' school nights An' I'll do it if—if it'll get me across. You: know ?what I mean. I ain't Askind. no, pledges, Reenie, but what's the chance? I know :I don't talk right, ail' I don't eat right -you tried not to notice, but you couldn't help—but; Reenie, I think right, en' I guess with a girl like you that counts more than. eah]n' and talkie'." She had thought she could say yes or no to any question he could ask, but as he poured forth these plain passionate words',she found herself enveloped hi a flame that found no expression in speech; She had no words. She was glad when he went ane,,,' the fimdamentals. isatddledhis own horse and set. out TRIS IS TII bANC ROUS SEASON. International Ice Patrol 07e41' ganized Atter the Titanic Went,Do�vri in 1912. Teee 1s' the iceberg eIeason: It to at this' time of tllo Year that theca fereo-it frozee'mountainie come down from the Polar regions and are such a terrible 4aneee to -ships Crossing' bhe .Atkanfee Oesian, `f'Ite icebergs, which may be a lane (trod yeas,se old before they roach the 'waridun trade.routos, are the offsprings of great Polar giaciere ., which -have been farmed by eempnullated snows. " The glaciers of Norway and SWltzee`- •hand cannot be the parentsof icebergs because 'they ,begiar.to melt long be• fore theyreacl1 the sea. Tito''ice river' becomes a'water river when it rbaelhlee After the last rites had been` paid to the old rancher Dave set about at once t5 °weld up his naiTairse and ''it was not until then that he diecovered how deeply: his father had been `in solved, The selling of the cattle and the various effects realized only enough to discharge the liabilit es, and when this had been done Dave found himselfwith. a 'considerable area of unmarketable land, a con- siderable number of paid bills, and his horse, saddle, and revolver. IIe rode his horse, •Se 'town, ,carrying a few arl.-cles Of. weirwith him. ; I, was only efter'a stiff riga, he e,iild'bring himself to part with his one coinpan- ion. The last two miles Into town were ridden very`s'_awly, with the !my frequently leaning. forward and steei:- irg the horses noel: and ears. 'Tough dotn''s,; al' Slop -eye," he would.. say. "Tough doin's. 13ut it's got to be done. I can't keep you in town; 't ain't 'like out on the old ranch. An' I got a bigger jai: now tb-sfn ever you an' Ill0 stood in on, an' we`•.e stood in cm some big -ones, too, ain't we? But that's gone an' done; tial old life's all busted a1, of a sudden, like a bo':•lie. Buste.i'en' run cat. I gota big job on now, an' you can t take' no Net You jos' got t'o "I know I'm only a boy, air' ,you're only a girl. That's why I cion' ask no 'pledge. I' leave you free, enly_l watt you to stay, free until I have my chance. Will you promise that?" She tried to pull .Herself together, "Yott,knowl've had a good time with you, Dave," she said, "and I've gone with -you everywhere,;l'ike I would not Have gone with any other boy I ever know, and I've talked and let you taut about things I never' talked about be- fore, and I believe you're true and clean, and—and-:--L-" "Yes," he said. "What•'e your anenve t?" "I know ,you're true and clean," she itpeated., " pene-•to me—like` that - whop I'm a woman and 're a man, and than ---then we'll "know.you" Ile was tall arid straight, and his shadow fell across her face, as though even the° moan must not see. "Reenie;" he said, "kiss men" Por one moment she' thought of her mother. She knew she stood at the parting of the ways; that all life for hor was being moulded in that mo - mine. Than eh* put both her arms about his neck and drew his•lps to hereCHAPTER IV, Dae'x' ppiwx;ttniity Zane- than-he i III sooneil. than - oxjsorted. After the depart- nee of the Hardes things et the old raneh -wore,- ns .. both father and • son tad:. predicted;: very different. Thor found themselves on a sort of good beemqetoue—a' hehavioui• which, un leiteptly, eacitiod in each Miele grrlve ski iei ` sp fans ass. a fir orb. Between these two men to courtesies or eon. sideratione of any -!dad lied boon so long forgotten that attempts to re. 1 ' ,1 3J.ttA.x1Pt! or pleasure; but he had never .fent the sense" of strangeness which• op- pressed him this night. In the past he had always been in the town as a visitor;'his ,rants• were still in' the: ranch; he could afford to .notice the ways o5 the town, and smile te. hint self a whimsical smile, and go on, But now he was throwing in his lot with the town; he was going to be one of it, and it stretched no arms to welcome to him. ' It snubbed him with its indifference, ', '• Ha became aware that the gathering twilight in the great hills had never seemed so vague and empty as the cluslc.o:f this strange; town, He `realized that he had but one friend in the world; but one, and of her he knew ' nob so much as iter• address. IIe,. began to wonder whether hereelly hall a friend, at all; whether the girl' would not discard' hien when lie was of no ,.f.urthea. use. just .as ie had •discarded his'faithful old horse. Tears of Ioncliness and 'remorse gathered' in his eyes, and a mist not of the twilight blurred the street lamp now glimmering :from their les, He felt that lie bed poles, the horse very shabbily in- deed, He 'wanted old •Slop -eye back again. He suddenly wanted here with a terrific longing—wanted hint more than anything else in the world- For a moment he forgot the girl, and .all his •hanoesiclkness centred' about the beast ,'whish had been so long has companionand servant and friend. (To be gontin ued.)' A Sermon In Littler Tilel`e are clays wliien you, are tempt- ed to throw up your. Job, days when yen Melt elt at heart you ort see at s others doing such wonderful things in other directions, and you aro sorely tempted to Sole. thein. Set such temp- tatlono aside, Just „say to yourself: "This is my job at present, this is my tut ,•-•vz i.ta sT cant e tv8, it.- 0 a l s o m level best to-ikby, leli00 Who. k,.� kiibws what tomorrow will bring? I shall fur my task 'of ,to -tiny its fully and 0-0 completely as peeeiblo.'' Hein tomer {i Tho long-suffering family 'ma gazed thoughtfully at pilo- wife's short skirt. 'W`oll, what do yom, think of it?" ,she lequieed, • At lend," he replied, "wo won't have to cut it down ivb.on oar daughter is old enough to go to school." Proteetlnp,Our ship: ' in Oreoulsnd,-Spitzbergon, Nova` Zombie, and other Arctic 'liamdrr, Elie spowliue and the sea level are rho same, and so the mighty glaelers not only reach; fee seashore, but 110 many. cases push out to s;ea, The great maxi of ruo,'1oreed into the water; and held up by thebuoyan.oy of the waver,, be- comes _detached from the parent elttea'm,, sift dnlfts .off on Its lonely voiuture, Alany icebergs ;are comparatively s'inail, but some: reach `a height of -200' feet. *Thepart that can be seen eepres!egts only one-eighth .04 its bulls, the re- maining 'seven -eighths being tee ,water'. - The dealers bf hundreds of people when, on 'April 14511, 1912, the Titanic crashed into an iceberg, was the start- ing of the International lee Patrol, It Was decided theta each year, during Kay and June, an ice Patrol should be maintained to locate icebergs Bind warn. strips. - The burgs iwfese an area ranging from Iongitudte 41 to 55, and north from latitude, 41 degrees, Generally this area of 2,000 square miles 1'0 en- veloped in fog. Through this fcg the patroliing ships must steam conttnu onsly, searching f'05 bergs and ice - fields. They are constantly in danger of striking the former before Ocisy are sighted,' Observations are put down on maps, which are sent to the Coastguard Ser- vice officials at Washhigton. This in- formation 10 thensent to Government and shipping eemtrest in all parts of the worl:d. When Bergs. Turn Turtle. In the late spring end early summer the bergs- beanie very unsutable, and huge masses of lee fall troth them: Sonet fines entire bergs ron over and ever. Patrol vestsels have. tried fining that twelve -pounder guns at'th.em, but nsuahry tire. shots are es "ineffective as they world be against tlh'o Rock of Gibraltar. It 1s impossible to judge the stability of an iceberg by its appearance.-; The towering cliff- of: apparently solid ice. may be as delicately balanced and as sensitive ae the spring of a watch. The wtle' f a sa' steamnia brhiseak offoblocksilargeseingenough er to snit a'boati There Nave been cases• in which Newfoundland'fleshermen, Who wanted ice wleh which to peek their fish', have been sent to Lite Bottom tlhrough a berg turning, turtle . when the, small heat, hit its side. Such':a scene was witnessed by a trawler which had. sent out a boat to load ice, 'The instr'detions'to the men were to cut elhuniks off the: berg and return quickly to the ,slurp; but, to the horror of the remainder of the crew, the huge mass of ice heeled rover • and buried the boat and its occupants - in awhirlpool. The-anua:ls of the sea abound with stories of fights With ice, and many crews have owed their livers to their agility in leaping from their sinking, strips on the bergs which bet them. A Sunny Shower for the Bride -To -Be.. The invitations are on yellow paper or cardboard, cut :round to represent the sun..' The guests should -The in- strueted to bring something yellow for this.,ntizcell•atneous sunny shower. When -the- pauses arrive, the 'gifts are all concealed, and the. party di- vided into tWo sides for charades, Ater a couple of words have been acted, the 'bride's side chooses the word Yellow, and announces to the opposing side'that it rhymes with "mellow." The other side, of course, hos been 'previously, informed of all th]s, They first:aet out "bellow" and "fellow" and then come in. laden with all the "yellow"; packages and lay 'them before the bride, There are any. number of yellow gitbs which would appeal town engag- ed girl: yellow bowls for the kitchen, yellow toweling, a centrepiece done in yellow, a guest -towel or bath -bowels with yellow birder; a yellow, cretonne luncheon' set, a yellow apron, yellow bon -bon dish, yellow pitcher and sugar bowl, seeds of yellow Gowers for the garden, lingerie in yellow crepe -de - Chine, even dainty yellow handker- chiefs. The-centrepiecefor the table might be,either a bowl 'of yellow' blossoms, or a large ball- matte of yellow crepe paper to represent the surf, For place cards, ,regular shower cards in the shape of 'parasols and umbrellas come Sib different colors. These should be procured in yellow if possible. If theso`eanmot be found, get plate caress with old-afashaoned: girds in yellow dirt seer 01. a small yellow flower in rte s00d00, f us� 1' ht refresh me It re to ,, t s a be serve, diose must also carry out the yellow teles ;ci Mm Careless Feet. sr• .. Mother•-' 1 ai llii f, yeti s•o Bever' quiet, a moment. Why do you race in- doore and out and up and down stales - so?„ t CMCMS Flvo-yesa old --"i just don't 'Know, mamma, 'loss It's 'cause my feet feel so light Hearted," Weise Woman's Work at the 'National Exhibition, The interior of the Women's Build- ing at the Canadian National Exhibi- tion will have quite a new aspect to visitors to the fair of 1922, just as ee times the old tough peas yellow, there- by making them easy to piek out: A enoall :amount of bicarbonate of sada —one—fourth 'of a teaspoonful to a ten -quart ]kettle of water:when blanch • - ingswirl aid' in retaining the :teen the interior of the Educational Prize color: Listiwill offer, many surprises to the Plunging the container or blanched' needlewoman who hassufficient fore- peas `intaoold'wale 'for a tow seconds sight to send -to the offices in the makes the peas firmer and more easily, Lumsden Building for u copy of it bandied Sometimes one tablespoon'' before planning her contributions to of salt is added to each;guart of Neater, .' the various competitions. for -cold dtipping. With a view to presenting every Pack peas firmly in the jars to aspect of the work of Canadian wo- within once -half' inch of the top. I1 men, the upstair room, formerly de- too £uli so -me -of the peas will burst voted to the amateur art of both men and make the liquor cloudy. 'Sterilize and women' has been'iven over 50 byany method ,for .the length :of,tirte; 8 the work of Canadian women in the indicated. Count thne after' the water;, artistic professions. Its walls will be starts boiling, if waterebath is usede hung with the portraits of our mus- "Cloudy peas," that is, a cloudy ap icians and composers and paintings pcarance of the liquid, does not uou.ai by .our artists, while the bookshelves ly mean that the peas are spoiled, but will be lined, with books by our own is -a result of the precinct having been wornen writers, and the show -cases 'roughly handled in blanching and cold piled with handicrafts and the like. dipping, or ---of split 'er broken -peas With the same object, needlework, not- being removed before packing,, which 'has. for years ' occupied the, Blanching, of peas that are -too old I. centre of the stage on the main floor,1may spirt "them and MUSIC a `cloudy, '^ . has had to'give' a turn to ether phases • liquid. Frequently "cloudy peas" are of -women's activity fornterlyneglect- caused by the use, oe'very'herd watere • ed, In many new wall -cases space "Flat sour" peas is a product hav- has been found for the linens' and em- ing a disagreeable odor and" sour: broideries that formerly occupied two taste, although showing no s1gee of large cases in the middle of the can- spoiling. This is 'due to standing too' teal room. These cases have been long before canning or cooling; offtoo removed and in their places a series slowly. Too much salt may develop' of demonstration booths arranged a sour taste, also, where practical - demonstrations will Green pens (and beans) are superior' -be in progress throughout the Exhi- an nutritive value to other green were=, bition fortnight, showing what Gan- tables due be large nitrogen content,' adian women are accomplishing along which "builds up bodily tissue and lines of household science, home in- furnishes energy. They also contains dustry, business, handicraft, needle- much mineral,. chiefly lime and potns- craft and philanthropy,' sium salts, • - Within the covers of the 'Education- al Prize List, now obtainable from the' The Tired Housewife. "You have nothing to do but house- work. I don't see why you should al ways be so' fagged at night," -her hus-' sential to all exhibitors of women's' band complained. work. 013 exhibitors will be in clan- Her overtaxed .patience snapped. er of findingtheir work disqualified "I'll show you. how many steps h if they fail to study the changes, and I'takel" she cried', "I'll prove to you" how hard nothing but the housevyork, new ones will find new; opportunities their needlecraft, can be." to test the skill of e That was haw the Tired Ilousevrife Prizes for new ideas in ralmost every offices of the Canadian National Ex- hibition in the Lumsden Building, will. be -found many other, innovations, knowledge of which will be mast es - class offer scope forthe inventive and the artistic. Several entirely new classes have been added, too, including one for the civilian blind, one for Ukrainian we - 'men and children to encourage their continuance in this country of the artistic handicrafts, examples ^ of which have bean shown in the 'Wo - came to 'buy her pedometer, A, pedometer is `a little -watch -like machine that measures lthe distance you walk just as a speedometer Shows:•: the distance an automobile goes.' You:• adjust it to the length of your stride,' hook it to yotir belt and it registers the jolt of each step. The Tired Housewifo found that in' assn's Building from year to year; one one average day's work about her f for tbrides nazi one girls .house she, had: taken 23,840 stops, inco6keoy had walked nearly eight utiles} Tltis,r of 16 to 20 years. Formerly these of course did not count the hours of younger cooks hadll to enter into corn - standing er the labor done with her petition with seasoned ' housewives, g Now the pleases for the practiced cook hands-. At that rate_ she •could' have hi ardor togivegone around the world in lessthan have been reduced e ,. the bride and the young girl a'chance. Calming Peas. Peas for canning should be young, tender, well groevn and picked evhen in best condition for table use. Pick This pedometer test' 001103 the Tired' Housewife's attention to the fact that She wars taking is great many seeps l unmeeessaril Y A great proportion of these steps were' taken in a large, badly arranged in the early morning or on a ;clotidy kitchen. day; never after the sun has shone And so, when her husband'butilt the on them for several hours. if the long -planned addition to the liouee,'he peas can not be canned immediately, d. the old kitchen into .a' linin place them n a cool, `.damp place room and built his wife a brand-new where tliey will keep criste. Shell from model kitchen', arranged to save steps.; the pods and can immediately,--en-----,� Blanch from five to ten minutes in 'bailing water -(five minutes if tender, Safeguard. ten minutes if old). Cold dip, then By night•and day I weave for thee peck in jars, add boiling water (use A golidort-gleaming net oe prayer, the water in which peas were blanch- The shirting mesh Shoat mayst net see, ed) and ono. level teaspoonful of salt But it e,leeo ,ride thee evergwlisre; to each quart (from one to two tea- Gott guard thy peaceful sleep by night, spoonfuls of sugar may be added, if Keep faith .wehhin thy heart alight desired), Adjust the rubber and top Throu it joy, and sorrow+^ -+thus 1 and parley seal. Sterilize from two to three hours in the hot-water bath, or one and ones'Half hours ue�r watec seat outfit or under ten petards of team, for forty-five Minutes in pres- lliaayy Colon Cam ingtan. 11 ..,,«+• v„e ¢�' air .,. .mr One Cause of a Ps est Plfps. did C�:.r,.ri:�er sure PO a1Ce,�', ,I'e1500VC tivii ,jars, tighten Practical eiJ?er hence i5 wTnat counts t coypi•s ;4ltd 1')LGi' ti 6h1, l iCa iisuo l't111jy;lilts „ltf aid lothdngis:more' �, 1$2 do .SQL 4 4.= . >i.Jaa; far jcgl;s. ppre 1A ;dark, •seal bane, true w"ilh regard to flre prevention. "A1 IllnkehinW'is bblonne by placing the burnt "child dreads the fire" is as true 'lbens in iy Thee:yvf!re bas o,t,celander, a 5c`ggiq 10 cheese-cI(ltfi4 or a cloth bag, tired dipping in belling water.ter 'from five to tarn ,minutes. Thie partly cooks the peas, thus shrinking thern, re- moves some of the gluey substance which 'coats thele, arta if properly done prevento cloudy liquor, .It sit♦o to -day as it was. oldott times, but the average citizen has not been bztfht' and it is to make jrhn iodine his re-; i spons'lb'Iltty not drily to himself, but : to his 00)10117, his melglibor, • and the eominunity at large that our efforts should be ildrodted.•-Dopirty Firs :'xaau, . sihial, 00, 1”. ,Locvls, Ontario, .