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The Clinton News Record, 1919-2-20, Page 6, The ilacomparabie Tea.„,,p-St revmits, always obtainable Yrom an infusiOa. has given it a prestige° possessed by nO other tea on sale. • Out •-eira,virs and otitoolesse all( other teas. "This' is no idle clahn"..... ,e, . . . . • M•ischievous idle Hands.,• tivo joi.nted, oxtails.. and two .slieed It es a hoe that thee, are &wee-, onions M iriot fat; Pot into a Iteette etho have no chance to .grow .e0 int edd six anedium-Sind (magas slteed : duarteeens, belpfel, traefel. :They te-rpo%ntleilee;veeelr1,e atr'e0enhed'r-enilfolletteeg..- htiere been pelitea,.pampored, candled, • waited water. eeek 'ele.svlY fej1:1-t*o. hours not taught to woolc; no Ogle tasks are Or unlit Meat is tender, • Thicken: the -, set for 'alit:dish hands; tio incentivee gravy with two tablespoone broweed 0 industry ane had laden little eyes; fimm If Peta'teee rare de''''ired' 'Ilcic 'racy:simple errands wait Cor :thildren's the -milt-tired amount half an hour bee feels :1, • ' fere-the stew is done. It. by no means folitiwe that the patr-. :Clabbage Stniffleg-Out it medium- ents of seth childreneve well-to-do. sized cabbage in qUartere and nut on . Often they are people, who toil hard ,M cold water to boil. When it hes . ,froOganorning until night -good, nits- befied hiteen minutes dram on: the ' taken peat& who do not fem. hard- Wailer, cover with hot water, arid .' ielripe for-therneebres hettelto 1 ' ong to boil .agaiin.until it is -tender. 'Drain ,have their ,olifichren Ineye an eitsy time, a 'soft' jctb,: 4114 :sal.ary. . 6 .cheneeizoiworkeancl a ch.atee • to ' Pray should be the lot :of every child. Light taelts oven for the smaller chil- dren :era only -Sieve Fortunate the. paved cabbage, Max well, and put Into -,...eltildeen who early acquire the habit a •geeased 'baking (Bele ' Sprinkle tete t of thatiedry. Dern sate elf gene top with bread crumbs, and rather 1, helps.: she will be sure to break some Corned -Beef Has -Remove skin • ef the liehes,Which is of the 'racist and gristle -from noked coned beef ; value, Sestet -or a 'fifteen ced dial? Mop the, Meat and do net use too : :Give the childi.en respoaeibte tasks much fat. Add on ocatial quantity of , es•they grow older end do not eband chopped cold boiled •potatoes, season . . veer them every moment -give there with -salt and peppere put tato a hot • ' a Mir chance, Except them to streeci, greased pan, aneiden with milk or , net fail, Do not say, "1 aan efraid you cream, and stir ep well, Then .spread • -.cannot do that!" ettenegf must, you i t Out evenly and leave it where it will ; eau 'do it!" alel then welk ieway as if brown slowly underneath. Teen Tire as dry aa possible, chop fine, season. With salt, pepper, and better or but- ter subsbitute. P,eat together onti light two eggs, and add four tea- spoons cream. Add this .to the pre - were all finally settlea. fold on a hot 'platter. Cold roast . How c boy eV make ihe drit fly Beef may be used M the luiph with ea•hen we have confidence in hint; Wheat the corned beef, and finely chopped we-eay,• "Yee, that 15 - a hard tee, eooked beets may be added. F:Inierie, 'hut you can dolt if anybody Bean Bale and Macaroni -Mash 'ear." Corificlenn does wonders for baked beans to a pulp, odd one beaten a by. Too 'rainy permits: groan that egg, one-haLf teaspeon minced onion - "dahnnie is: ening' to tho dogs." Weil, igen shindcl he net ge, to the dogs? Is ret that . what they are experthig? His he any encourageinent to choose Min othertgoal? Possibly ef they had , drew his chair nearer, His face was a little confitence in that any and they cheese, , zi t , oe one who hike never 1(nown rebuff. I - — Way o. 8°CnrnIng n on the Somme and on the Lys, saw are friendly to the verge of ene-,1,1tor. L._ ' cculd get it across to the hey -and Potato Piet -To one guert hot boil 1 al.ight with the confident happine4s Canada is On the Wa t there an .uneeen angels alweiye wait- el 'potat003 odd enougit hot nitec AD „., 7;011 are surprisecto.:01e1 ex, WaS I, Singing Nation. .. the undefeated British Armies advan. • Tutenyisellev-te\s, rcyl,t.netnt; 111,;),.; sfli.,:.\.u,-111.,,..111,1.,:.1 i. ing. to c.arry such mesenges to a boy moisten. Season wit11 butter and ealt I they should ba• 'ectel tind ice.:•val; -the boy would resPonO nobly, leavenOlieth in kettle in which they t!are aaminute ago. You eee, it came to me Pack in 1914, when we wore working rang from victory to . victory, driving . they thrett :their Nen, of hemiedity 1 141‘1 Al i.1, _fil.19'.11-----Wl!at it Would be to peacefully along -without thought of their erstwhile triumphant enemy back the italics of the goodeformothinen andt b.olled, ani] beat with •-tt foek anti i to and far beyond the line from which : ' _make geed in life. . , light. Stir M• one-balf eup minced! te.nd;7"?1111.1e1 cSn". ' 1-ot wit stet- end 112-11,i .1 -Mee grew v.-ar, we sang the ordinary ballads of forT1 s. .... • ,t . • forwardisN1v1hept•tea,112,(morealis,z.,i,:,:ils: ecdf. ot;;11!olo111-.0o,:l 1 EtTrino,i111,:c.‘,..T,t,,r,..L,1,1-1iic,./.111izo,:,,-det?fc-itillit:ialt . A boy will .always find something to' ham • Have read:, ' four ha - • • • - the day-roe:antic, sacred and humor. he started, and finally forcing him to ous. Then the .storm bunt upon the acknowledge unconditional defeat. elementary feelings of manly dignity 1 bcrt" d,wn Ypre, wn:,,- V7LIS NallY ban - rd -boiled I bo my wife?" ' 3 .do, If Ivo set no tasks for him, Satan eggs enti one-half cup stock or gra-0y.! et•Ola, no, no --I mustn't, I canto will have cig•arettes to be smoked, Arrange potatoes .and sliced eggs in 'Why, of course I can't, Mg. Dollish world. Men were the first need. There Germans Oungeneralled. chneelferespect ehoeig, like a celd I tired as Reel:mid 01 ----- ald itiMere- potatoes 1 fiettered ,the girl, in a nanie of starbl- clime into existence several good re- A fact that coines out very clearly 1 d %lilt Stokes conjured up titnughts of p:leri. , melon patches to be raided and disli in •alittranate layers, with naughty stories to be heard and told. forming top and bottom levees.' ad embeirressment. "•'.m sire you- eruitiug song,s that proved peat aids i on a 1 1 The rarest of cceitimee ol, the blinks' me; "reg..," tli•at might have helpee lc t n tbat the 13ietiegh victo‘riog's tvetelnot vikl, Even on farms, boys and girls are• Moisten With ei gravy. Bruth ovpr ime the telindites. wenriel tin the field tortes von b numbers If we cm - 1 • 1 01 . ' St a 1111 11 ense awny the loee e eine da•-• i 1 of the Rhine to -day C • the- daily Work -girls who grow up in hot oven. .children Its ha, reached out tind took treach warfare people were singing 1 • • • •• of seeleng (teemed. the sez•rile load:, qarW! reigned oupreme, ,‘, i 1 u • e. 0. ....s- en. t; anew an- the t ) y . , Anglinillebe When '111 Fre,•lisimmii 19F 'f (.11 • - - t• I 1- • : . "B t 1 1 T 1 t I" IT • • -found who flrb riot allowed to share I the top with milk or egg, and broten. other quick glance at the absorbed and settled - down to the •routine of .s one. so strong to his rev, itiraa Out theee the morale r en: Imre the figures engaged on stlicliee ' meets . . ' . .1 ' ' ' ' '1---' '' ''' %. L "'" sn'Th ". I the leek- Ptssessien o . ier . . si eame patriotic songs and netv songs ot army i 1 the Germen offene- " spring and in the British otTensives of in • cf the v st 1, • ot • •S C • • • Tho latest draft had been etenene.' inefficient because their mothers do _Thie dish ran he arranged In three , - • f 1 hand "It 11 . • ' ' not want them "fussing" in kitelmn layers with the middlo layer some • CHAPTER 1,--(0,ont'd.) titmice Denby look the hays for a drive aimed every day" after that He die:covered that 115.1es Bernet greatly enJoYed driving. 'Men were pienice, too in the cook green Of the woods, on two or three fine days. Miss Bernet ale° liked plenlos. --Still pursuant of DellbY s face, ardent, pleading, tonfi- 14•4 plan to g•ive the ;forlorn tittle dent, And he exgected-, Before she nursemaid' "oate good ttime in lier ..sotv him ogesiti she _met be reenly,• fife," ' Burin/ Dentor centrived to be knew, with het answer. But how with her not a little :in between drives coued she answer? and picnics, Osteoeibty he Was put- Helen Barnet wee lorzeig, heaneick Cue up swinge, bitiOding toy houses, and frightened -ea eouthinettion that preying ball with llfasters Paul Ana ectiold hardly, aid in tho making of a Percy Allen; but to reality ha. wee,: volsOr mlnrojectieed decielon, osPeolollY frying M pat a •little "Intertens1", tindoe NHvIetimonnovnine •iriv:tekvneorlyv. 01210111121,‘ovaviria.u•Allitd. Miss Helen Barnet's ,delly was so sorry for herl It was (molt Less than two yean before, Helen a shame that tra glartously beautiful Barnet had been the petted daughter O girl should be doomed to elave,ry of a village eterekeeper in a email bike that! He wee eto glad thee for Vermont town. Then, like the pim- a time lie anight bring eoine bright- vothial thunder.bolle had come death nos into bar afel and fluencier dile:tater, throning her "Alid do you see how perfectly de- on her 01311 tee:ernes. And riot entil voted Butit•e is to Peul Peray?" she had atberapted tea utifin (hoe re- criectMes. Altera one day, to he ,bro- ther. "I had no Idea the dere. boy WAS 90 :fond of childeenl" • "Ifni -me Ls he orally, indeed," M11T- mured John Denby. "No, iind npt •pwlitole; and H on Oho only child) noticed." bad been ahnost. as greatly everoin- john Denby spoke vaRsely, yet with &Agee ,$ teas Beene eteeey inteenf. a shade of irritation.. Pond ail he Wa'S Being a very pretty. giel, 911t0 had be- ef his ststee ana hie small nephews,. „in.14 tn„tifave enle neeer„ne 40„. he wee finding it (Meat to :enlist:cm himself to the revolutionery lied. long drosses. Having been 'Ohilehl- in bis daily routine 'that, their pree-1 °lIstges ed tram' work and responsibility, and gun nrade neeessairy. He was rearrit 1t taillivhlasys carefully guarded. *me every unpleasant, she was . poorly ing to abeentglehneel.1 1110r0 and Trion from the house, For a weelgthereforer unchallenged, fingere was evidozate bet not 'Until. the suMmening bell from the de/wing-- remit givve Iter.- it tow Minutes' •reepite :from *inky dici she •have opportera. .it3r to • think, Even then she .coutd. not. thitels lueldly coneeeted y. Alwnyti ,befere, her eyes Wes Btie re sources for her support, eitd ehe foultd how fraily_they were, , Though the Bafnete lied not been 'wealthy, the e store had been equities:1 foe a struggle .of any sort, even aside from the fact that there and cheer:telly intent on lus benevol- WAS, apparentlye notheig that she could do well enoug.h to be paid for ent mission, Burke Denny continued his drivea mid picnics and batotty. .doing it. In the past twenty anonths :she nett obtained six poeittons-and iiig with Masters Paul and Percy .Al- had abandoned five of thein: two be - len; then, very suddenly, foe:- lettlo WA 1'0 oe incompetency, two because of woeds from the lips of Helen Baenet leek of necedary strength, one be - nun her beauty was plainly making the situation- intolerable. For three months reitreshe had 'been nurse to Mestere Patel ancl Perey Allen. -She liked Mrs. Allen, and she liked the children. But the mine:the confine- inent, the never-encling task of dealer ing attendance upon the whines and tenmers of two active little boys, Nvas changed for hint the eaeth and -the ektr above. "When I go EVWD;)..-" she iragen. "When yon-go-nway!" be inter- rupted. "Yes. Why, Denby, what inakes YOU i•ook so queer?" .' ' "Nothieg. I was -thinking -that is, I bed forgotten -Ig--" He rose to his BY A ORIT1$1-1 COMMANDER -- HAIG'S VICTORY DESPATCH, Historio Telling of 1 -we Greatest Triumph Ever Won 13Y Brlish Arm°. He would be a poor 19nglislunun tvbe could road without a thrill' the long despatch in whioli Sir Douglas Hale tells the story of ting Mug monthe of the War, Hayti the Westminster Gazette, Mite deep:Act itselli is writteu with severity cractluelaity, as such (tome meets should be, but hero end there flashee out e Phrase or eentence that strikes the note of einotioe mid elide in the achievement( .of our andez Nylech the most reticent of nieu ma1. indulge. leor (hl ti story is the greatest. °Pio of our race. All •the battles emblazoued on the banners of our olcleet regiments aro small things 111 comparison with Ude etruggle, Meting over three .months, in tynieh Arty -ulna British divielons en- gaged einetymine German atvietons -anti heat them in such rashion thot "thereafter," A9 the deseatcli Ints it, "the enemy was capable noithey ete- oeptieg nor refusing battle." s Contrast With Waterloo. The forces which Wellington cone mantled .at Waferlob would scarcely have served to bold twentieth part at the front that was covered in this fight. Waterloo wee decided between immerse and supsete and, :great as wile its achievement in 'days in which the measure of national effort was less exacting, it did not call for a tithe of the endurance fienn the soldier, the WITH THE AMY OF'aCCUPATION IT IS NOT EASY TO STRIKE A Ilritish sunee$, end. ou the rare 00. caalone 1111011 they did, tiontriVe(1 to represent it lie due eolelY to the Brit- ish superierity•in 'munitions of War. For the rest, tbe Gorman- people only had •Its 0W11 fatoeus and arrogant ignorance to thank.. People ave only just beginning to realize that this .11ettel WHEN HE'S DOWN great people, which prided itself so highly on Ito kultur end ita onuileai- 1010, ha in. retellty the goad Menhir 0 matter weet Sort of Mae E., nee and 1111/110AV Illillthlt1 Of 1141 POI)C911 I10 0. rx3„.41,4 a. 1,... .t.1._ r, e . , ., . pies, 10 two sphere% totably tin ;mull ;,(;:iici,:ro 1,,noi:Iterioivai :,,,Ity.,i Cerra:me . 1 eg•arded them:rale ee as facile plincipee--in war and ie When the history of the Great War science. Accordingly, they achnitted comes to 'bo wiettea, one of its most atts,otoolit3le;hing elerpters will undoubtedly imhere. Even their Gera! Genet%) province of Prussie by- the Beitieli pai•1 but scant attention. to Mir "Bi- te the occupetiou of part of the Rhine sulir, so thoteugh in all It undertook, tie were," Whieli were not withonf sOldielL .111198 /0-47 :lite 011:1o0oerethsta tititnhdc .15111.116usin3 eiltaliPee.gr taelliirin' .2.,,.'8,t1eb.,181111411%1 who 2,1,,le113 11 bili'di; no rival to themselves in eithee -glory he! By that Mese that world at Ypres. nolthea• by. terapsentment nor upbrIng- ing,ie he fitted for beinging home to And se the fine sokrePly appear - 11 beeoten foe ale tegeonees of &seat :armee ef the Meath Army marobing -that is to :sate by suet), erceemeefar through the Ardennes i•nto Rhine:rand; inahais a frightfulness ' have and aoross thre bridges -0 the vine - fevered the name of German tvith die- yards on the farther bank has &Ile' IMMO 1.101: OH time, Writ08 British tome onetime German illaziom °Meer. Yet Levould venture to pre - diet that, newerthelese, the noble dig - ley of the Brithilt soldier (and I use 11E -ENTER tVILLIAM SMITH thie phrase 'without any etriving att& meledrangitic effect) it; teringinglieree Tonirny Atkins, a So101er of England( to the German, tepee:4y the stay - Sheds Ms Number. at-home •eivitian, the 9131190 of the moral supertority of •the Allies even I lieve jest been christenea de more eireetively than if we had bor- end time. Twenty-one of us -all rowed a loaf •from the Huns' book pivetal men returned from France fat watchfulness and plannine, from the agghed the German methods of. commanders, or the national. effort be- frightfelness to our beaten eneinie1. hind the atmiee that this occasioe brought out. 01 the men Sir Douglas II9141 proud. ly says: "Their courage and 1050111 - Hon. rose superior to every test, their cheerfulness uever falling, however terribie the conOitions 111 Wil1011 they ' The Filendle Itoe. Wo Britons have a proverb, "The. EnglIshinelea home is his castle." There is hardly another salting in the. English language Which better hits off one of the Most prominent traits m our nationel character, and that is livea and fought , , . Tho work the Briton's. respect fee private 3110 - begun and persevered in $o steodfast- perty. The occupation' of enemy terra- ly by those brave men has been cone tory, of mine, is in liagrtant centre - Meted with a thoroughnese to which diction of this 0111 adage.. Frankly, it is a state of -things whicb requires tho eeent bears witnese, and with a getting used 10. Even the most ele- feet abruptly, and crossed the t.00m, Protutg to be not a little irksome to gallantry W111011-. Win 11V0 for all time At the window, for a. toll minute, he yoeng blood umandtto the restraints izi the history of enr countiY," mcntary of tin, yethts of theic•otihiquier- , , . or, 1101311117, 12111 billy•tiag of troope in e l • • 'een I wantcd a 11W tunic No. falling rabn When be turned back there had come the visit to the Denby those fine words. stood motionless, looking out at the of self-elerifice ' Thep suddenly The countryr.erslll Ithheititsrttil)se,eenzultortrIts, distadeful to our Bogie ideas ene 214 GO signed for it; the letters from mime hou gs, 011111411113 I home arrived by a khaki Neiman 'wig into the room there was a new expres- homestead; •and the advent into her said of us as a people that we ill'e bed miuse, as I have pointed out, Otis in- sion en hie facie.. With a quick glance life of Burke Denby; and nOW here, aavertisors, - R ever in our history we l vastion of the righte of others goes' called "2Litill, two for Poe to -des at ,the -children playing on the rug quite withie her Teach, if she could : had a right to pride in the achieve. against one of Abe llt013t cherished intadi" And wher. our pals went Vrri,s. before , the •flreplaem he croesed believe her eyes and ears, was this . strag•ht to. the nhonly surprised dadlinge unbelievable thinge-Butece iseents of ouir race and1 to. the, expres- ...7.:rtogatives of our cherter a laterty. thnt eame eternal-Luz:thee WA:, dule young woman and (hopped himself MI Denby m 'Imre cmftry cmfwy mf fw ion of that vide it is novidtd by the The Cei'Man5 All Da 111.211te tiliMM inscribed on Ong little croeras mg; er y ce a Li et L. i icy w ele • ,nelr gra‘es. b th ••• t"t . 1, I' tl • . • tilir - - - story that Sii. Donglas Bag •bas to gto-• Now I are Mr. Smith tranin, To :het is the ;grandee: thing of a ' !. Nt ono loalmes the ceneurt a good o1. which, three months after the tro- ably, But their iLtituae ot •subjection I . . .. . kngloh name io until you h eve beer,: mendous bleivs showered upon them towards the Britioh is, ebjeet. TheY the ron-call teken er * German work Mg- petty. After the Bet of "serails' mei "Ivalegs" ties i1( 1211 narnea ,1 241 • e pet 1:1 1,) more veluotiti then gals- - ---geo reteele addeo,: ,ed 113 teeth:my eiti• il faimY, ijo, 40 hear N z,t.i r mon- demobilization-have made oar lase rerade, received the conteil "tielzett" and heard the sergeant address one of our Maniber es "Mr, Smith." . "The "Smith" gave me as great 1, shoek as the "Mister." I 11111 lottaly unfamiliar with either. It was nearly four years ago that I lost my name and address, and bacants O mere unti in an Amy numbered be m011ioes. Ever since that clay the number had 'dusk to me. "Williem Smith" iv.ixs no more, and No. 2558! reigned over the fortunes of 11 certala little :family in his stead. ,andea seneoeing of sett anal peppm: a chap: at her side. Denhy s love. Foam into balite dip in 12012(00 04115 and I "Helen 13araet, ti.111 yeti-manyI (To be continued.) bread crumbs, and eet in oven for five., mete he tinted „nay. raining:. Serve, en Boiled inacaron i "Mr. Denby!" that lute been , (livered with mite( 1 With a boyieli latigh Burke Denby WAR'S INFLUENCE ON MUSIC, only uncompromisingly rad and hos- 11. tlele-as the French end Delginne The annals of war hold record of no crassee towards the Nun invadeige more wonderful recovery than that it would Om -1'f 1 • •• ,•:. • ,,te to irti back there at the nindoe-the dreariness, the emptiness of -every- llfe, navy lire and of flying in the ale thing, withted you, And I saw then A. s battle followed battle, as the arm - ghat you've been to me every day les advanced ben and retreated there, there ar000 the need of kegIng up the e s Met bellied the this past ;week. How I've welehod for 7611 mid Waited for you, zind how home morale lest th I everything I did and said .and had waR lines would waver and break. But just-semething for you. And I again the songs of sticking to it, of know then that I -I lOraci you. , You lyorld freedom beyond the hOriZOn, of see, I -I never loved amy ono before," proving worthy of our men at the -the boyleh red &wept to his tore- front and their influence on the nation head os lie laughed whimsically, - "and so I -'--I dada% recognize the helped us to stick it out. During this the summer and late autumn, we find in the oecepied tervitory, thet les feel 3 . . that such successes as the Germans • Ince •thaking hands with him. gained -and even at their highest I It Can't Be Done.. valuation it as clear that they paved 1 •• the -way to the subsequent Gorman de. Then aro people at home, I know, feat -were won by overwheliniug i who melanin that the Army of Oc- suPeriority in numbers, and that the . eupation ShoUld "tench the Huns a Britten successes were gained in spite ' reason." In -their righteous and wholly of an inferiority in numbers, commendable indignation at the Heil What the Germans failed to do with atrocities, these eriticr would like the a numerical superiority W9 0 000114111911, Amy of Occupation to visit upon the clvillans living within the different bridgehead& the appalling crimes committed by the Boches during their occupation of Belgium and Northern France. 'or dairy. Evee the three-year-01cl kind 01 meat besh bound together With up and christened befo-0 he had tim.- 1..) SO) 1%11/(11 Itil8 the :,!4141 N trench, and the name 'bee lowed on hin: --be it "Smiley," oe -Thu Duke"-, Work Vgliter than a brotkr ea filo varying fortunes the cline a • the days rolled by. . The man Who •giave as baek cat namee must trove then. 1161111 - for he tem:irked. "Mr. Wirtara Smith, •that's the stuiT to give Om.. eh ?" as he lef t. "feeling rat.he r - Ward in lounge suits wog mote, ce2. sltk; the demobilization camp, would be better and happier if he had hie weo errands to run that were nal errands -his pan in tbe home. Economy in Fats. • Now that the demand tItt;ne. Stop Saving Food!" greets us wherever we tun, it behooves us to school oue- drew against reverting to the care- less ways of pre --war cleys. The Peed Board tells us that :fats are seam, so of couese we must continue to economize in the use of butter. We can do a great deal in this ding. tion by ubitizing vegetable and meat fats. Many of us have been prejudiced against the use of oleomargarine, es- pecially when'we have been one:stem- atto plenty d:E good butter to nee at • all times, but a g-ood cmaity of oleo:" margarinekis much euare economical for many uses than butter. We 'Mint not lose sight of the f.act that oleomayg.arine made front vegetable fats can he 'very and.wholesorne indeed, .and for cake -making, frying, sh.cirtetting, vegetable' setisemne, etc., It answere every purpese at a ',sub- stantiel-Stiving: The' &Ailed .fet from ebtolcene, tulkeysnand gem makes the littnerdo•verit Engleind pelmet -11y for meet delicious of cooky slim:killing the purpose oE determining whether and the flavor et the fowl, cannot be there wen enceigh inexperieneed men detected in the finished food. All desinotte. of taking up egriculture to drippings from meat should be care- judify the establishment or agnicul- egg. er thickened grimy, Easy Home -Made Soap. • A soap .is exeellent for laun- dry purposes Can be inaele frora of rancid fat, The process is elingle: Dissolve two anti one-half tablespoons lye in eight tablespoons water. Add to ono •eup melted fat. Beat with an egg. bastes' for: about ten minutes. Pour eut end let harden. It p hest not to use it for a month or •two, This soap can be made in entail quantities, and it also lute the advantage of not requiring cooking. • FARM IF THEy tuvE 110 Large Number.of Soldiers 1tYill Prefer • Their Former Occupation. That there will, not; be anything like 100,000 former soldier:: take pee:farm- ing in. Oanacia• is the .opinion of , -(1. F. 13..aileg; Assistaft -Depute vf Agriculture, who has eetureed aftee having spent. some weeke in work among the eoldiets in •connection with the aterioeltura volley of the Federal Government. Ire, :with Mader 3. E. Ashton, DA:De:of the Liva Settlement ,ettraptoinsi" 'With the lightness of his words he was Plainly :frying to hide the shake in hie vein. "Helen you -- will?" "Oh, hut I -I---!" Her eyes were frightened tied pleading, "Dont you eave at Lill?" She tua•aecl her heed away. "If you don't then won't you let rile make you mire?" he begged. "You said yee had no one new to eime-at all; and I care 190 muds! Won't you Sornewhee a door :shut. Witth. a low cry Helen Barnet pulled irwey her hand and epearig to her fed She eves clown on the eng -with the childiran, very ftusbed of :taco, when Mes. Allen appeared ill the library deoreetiv. • "Oh, 'here you firer Mrs. Allen ;frowaed •and spoke a bit impatiently. "I've been hunting everywhere :foe Thunkfidness. , you. I supposed you were in the Imes- ory. 1Vonti; you put the boys into' The old ship, the bold ship, _Posh suite? 1 hen :friends calling The Clipper of the Sea, soon, end 1 want le 6111.1drell- 1M-°ufilit Beneath WhOtie prow the waters zlip to the denteing room when 1,ring, and - , ., roam -wage and wen(Prously- leln till I mill you tiettin," The vessel' taut has ceme to port, "Yoo ma'am" te The voyage, thank God! is done; The -frezlght,how deaelg was it bought, Aed yet how bravely won! From island and from 'highland They went, the strong, the 'brave - Mimi some bleach upon the sand, Some rot beneath the wave! been tratethited lete "You en 'what Thank aoci for these on heeded- knees We have to endure-ao tiresome!" tee wee, ene, tee eentvese drives, she, too, dittappeored. Through rage of :waters, . tumbling Beek() Denby did uot -smile. He did frown, however, no bolt vaguely seot I._ irritated aud abused. He wished his Come safety With Crate lives, aunt tvould not be $0 "boesy" end dig, , . ' ,1. . The, white ship, the tight ship 1 agrceithle, He wished Helen would Teee herhorgivise, heaved to; 11' net act 00 cringingly submissive. A.s die, Drop down the sale, the Anchor eeip, it she-- llet thera it would he feerad eight away, arum:so, as soon Pay off her vallaneeraw. as rim had made known the fart 'that The an:CiOan brOSSL in nOW sit 1.est, elm was, to be hie wife. Everything The edventuren or the foam would be 1114101621 t. Not only wean sihe hold ilea, head elect and bake her proper place, bet elle Woad mots -welt there wove vaxicals two ways end ex- pew:stone which she wotild deep, of course. And how beautiful :she Wee! Hew sweet! HOW duel Arid how alto had suffiered in her loneliness, How ho would love to melte for her a futtree alt gloriously hoppy and teeter With his etrong, encircling AVMs! It WA5 It pleatiaut picture, Burke Denby's heart quite stvelled within him as he terned to Inn the room, period the national songs of our allies ed with a numeral inferiority. It is cemented those ties in the minds of not, of course, denied that at certain the masses that were so necessary. critical polots tho British attack had The end mune. And with it went a superiority In numbers: but it is the songs of home coming,and songs of praise. Yet the need of singlets and inclination to sing is greater than ever, Everyone feels like singing. Interest in the songs that were forgotten for the time bang mite back. So that tho whole field of general songs Is reopen- ed. The war gave IraglIsh soup; a new mennire Canadians who have been in Eligland or whose friends haVe been, take readily to the songs of Sus- sex. Somerset raid Deyon. Thus our ivhole attitude togards Musie is -alter- ed and Canada is -on her 13117 (0 becom- ing it singing natio». 1- With a still more painful flush on fully Oaverl, clarified by •being heated tural <leases in England and Frame, heraface Helen Benet swept tba with sliced raw potato, and strained, "We found that eohlle there were hl•oeks into her apron, rose to her fed, The clrippings teem bed and pork will a large number of aneri--relativell and :hurried the children from the go yeey nicely together, but the hard spealciag-taking egricultuval training room. She dicl net mice glance at the tat of lamb or mutton hos 110t beon Ung•land, only about two per eent. ltoung man standing by the, window, in favor in the family household tor were men -without, experience," seta ,Mre. Mimi tossed her traphow a the reason that its tallow flavor and Mr. Bailey, "ao we considered it un- smile and e •shrug winch Might have coneisteney wore not relished., but war- necessary to incur the expense of Cane =ensures have tought taus that eetabillething ciente." we Can USO rallt1011 fat to good pur- In France, it was itnipossible to pose by taking a little freebie. esteblish classes., but meeti»ge: of the Take equal parts of, hard or mutton officers contrattedling ell milts wen fat and Iloft fat, earth as boef suet addreseed, Elea 100,000 handbooks ex- iled pork. Cut into :email plot:0E4, and peareng the saii,.mcmi, tau, were dis- melt togethee in the double boiler, trIbuted, as well as geestionaires Foe every te'e, pounde slice in ati seeking definite inforroatioe as to oniou, an 'apple, ft potato, and put in thee:0 likely to take up tem.:dug. three or flier elOVOS, a bay leaf, and gage ie nee et wort On , a teaspoonful tie sett. Cook until (eget etneengee, 'fair wages and tee- the, fat thoroughit1 extrtteteol ot.d ing cods not too high, a ratinber DOW thinking of farmIng will stay in the eitke all& tate up their old occupa- tion," said Mr. Bailey. "T3ut if we have ;noel timee, high eente, high liv- ing coste and kick of emptoyment Oa inovomene to the tants. wil.1 he :fairly larg•e," , Coal oil Is recommended as dn ex- leellent eleanieg egent. Ono wenian lusts A rag moistened v,11lib coal oil to olden her steined flooril, glean tnotl-, Work, poneleie Falttrib and etand and elso te: polish the well behind the ltItohen range. tlio potato and apple nand,. Strain the melted fat into n bowl through muslin., Set aside to cool. Keep watch of it, however, and just -when Um edges :begin 1:0 harden heat brislely with tin egg beater until ajamet cold, 1L'his hosting' ffrovents the hard and Bolt fats :front aeparatieg land melees the "savory slearteralig" 'Hight and fluffy, 'flits is especiellY deft:whirs for 1,1S'e ceolting, twee in fastry Waking, Lees oeion may be ilgvd (10911191. Hot Olthee for Cold bays. 0 tall 'Mid Cle21to1; Slow,aroWn Ape ot their sarlor-gear divest, Mid eaoh one seeks his hoine, 21 'Ihe old Ship, tho bold elde, The eltip that we have :manned - The eneig.n at the inaethead dip To 13410 tvieely platmed, . And :Ora' she titles upon Bra tidea That Emcee hi from the main, Vint shall wo be, if God cleeidee We must to El00 (141113 TO refrenhell Wei+ clone repetsgeo, the girt the 'huge ec and dry eerfectly, Olean vent 511, 111411Tied With p.alp,itating nervons- blush epply white eliellee, being came- ness thecargh the task oil clothing two f111 not to lel) tdroltes. no 1 rattive hociiee in fresh goarments. Amigo the coley; will bile -hien its ger, Thai, her thollielSto wore 1101 with her ejee and dry dn one hour. .the supreme test of generalship to be in numerical superiority as the point Well, it can't be done -not inith the that matters with'foree inferior in its Awed avalles, aeyway. From the far - total numbers. The business of War, ' oil clays of the Retreat from Mons right Up to the ,hretelcing of the Hin- deeburg Line, the etrength of the British Army hes been its discipline --a _discipline founded not upon fear, but upon* self-respect; and patriotisin, It was possible to order Germans, to commit u cold blood the horrors of Louvain, 1910201211e, raid Aersehot without destroying discipline; Initsi British Army Which perpetrated deli barbarities -elf such a thing wore inn aginable, which, happily, it is not-- woeld be anuntlietiptilled beetle. And the lesion which ttles, British Army ot Oecup-ation has alltearitg taught the Hun le a Tenon of clasciplin,e, a lesson whieli is 'doubly effective because all statements to the ccettaretry,1disciplind has °or months past beim almost uno known in the G•erman Army. It is doubtless exasperating to those who have passed theough the desert of ravaged- Belginen and France to beer the church bells rieging oat for divine aerviee, to find themselves sun, rounded by theiving cities and bloom- ing eiliegesr to know that Melina Cathedra is a :smoking ruin, and to see the twin 'bowel% of the Cologne Dont reeling their great height un- damaged to the sky; to rementhee that Yeves and -A11115 and Albert are deed, and to see the Opera House at Cologne packed from stalk; to 4114:11ee71 Yet waiit! There is ft divine justice Whith equals evaeyeli,ing out, end Ger- many is learning her lesson. Our "Shock Ttercips." In other words, IS to convert a gross, infer10r101 into a net superiority. Viet it was done so successfully must be put down in part to theendividual su- periority of the British soldier, but in part, too, to the better Staff work and generalship on the British side. The Germans, in faet, were out-generalled. Halg's Greatness. What is shiningly manifest is that the Field -Marshal ranks tho peer of the greatest among British Generals, and as ter the Briticah Armies, in Sir Douglas tHaig's words, they have (treated el`ew traditione which are a ehalleege to the highest records or the padancl will be an inspfration to the generations *he come after me" To N99111011 brief and eloquent outogy wo 'would add the Field-Marshat's testi- mony to the infantryman, • who "re - mane the backbone of defence and the speai.head of attack. At no time has the reputation of the British in- fantryman been higher, or his 0101121990- 81001 21.10111 worthy of his renown." Death No Interruption. Wg talked until his train was gone, I thought ninth since of what he said About tho neW Ume soon to Staten - And now they tell mo -he is demi! And so 1 think lune Browning sada As night nromul Pompilla lowers: No work begun shall pause for death- , Surely a balm for times like ones. TheeMet rato of thBrit•ish 0120u ' - 13a12111( elesed life book and dried his paten is that the Geemas heve "ells - pen, covIerd the British Army- I may b Cutained 1120 5930111102' ofthe sun:nila:.a ttiteobsowetionwlien!Old Custom saye: "Ile diec,and the1i sav4ialip4etlxiyover We 'wool to think him work is don41 whelmect with amazement at tho ex - No, 'Ile not done -that tamed hes wont Was able to lio:oeliginle this other. tent to Which the Goiraten 00110911' No, people. I believe it to be a tact that the Gorinen people reg.arded the Bela*. .Amny as, More or less tn't undisdiplinecl rabble of AOkliere, 1311000 8010 strength lay in their very nmple supply el guns arid annettrotme and °thee apparatut of trit; relirond from Madoid to eenneet Wily. After all, the Gowen commute. with the French lince 1111 tho frontima (gime practically :levee admitted ti I heed not what dark sorrow settle In_ God's great lehmeltormo We'll see No work begne hall paused for are th. -.Alexander Louie raper. r • ,,,, Spain is plat:Meg to laullci an olio. POISON m..LT11:ti: 1,v t:•41; SiOry of Germany's "Peaceful Pen.: tratioe" in Italy. - The sublety -end skill with Width the commercial penetration and eon. trot or neighborigg" count -rice wee accomplished by the do-ritet the thirty years before the War inal,:es it .the traria remarkable that their leaders were willing to joonartilee :those gains by plunging-4nm Will!. Manseyears ago two Cam:ans. pine perting 10 lie residents of 14u 12:4:1. land, started en attvertieing ugeney By dogreee they furniebed a et:NO:kw able number of advertinniente to thy lent:Beg 1111linn newspepoilla Thel.t bustled. grow tintil length thee, nets 111111117 n :smail town into they had not penetrated. As ne•vs- Omen liye by their advertieements. so those Italian papers welcomed tht. German agente, who added hundred( of' thoottands. or. (raiment or advatie. ing metier every yettr. But those agents had 11 doublij oor. pose. As trusty servants of the Kale or, they saw to .it thet German pro. ducts, to the exclusion of Feeneh 01 English e21 even of Italian, elhould be lavishly advertised in the Itallite press, This meant, of mese, the promotion of 'Getman industries. Next the 'German agents carne to frame thine contraets -(vith the Italian news - papas so, that in return for 'ravioli newspaper adveetising they ehou1t1 •eontroI the editorial- page otoenyli Paper. In °Cher words, they arrtazged thet the Itallen peepto should get from -their papers whatever views oli home and foreign affairs the reptilian inspirers at Bettin these to, furaish them, The same piano 211111141t11911.10111.1 into Frame in 1912, and Ives evenhre ginning to anponr on tide side or the Atlantic :when tho -war iteoke oat. 1 The actual 12(151 01! horsomowee or the fairie as eleewhero• ht affected by the fellewieg teener: Weight, sound - nod Mel quality; dieteibution -of labor .nvel. the year; eoralition mut viit'..ityt intelligerate .0111:efel ;handling r cost of feed; lidior, ilizerttit on inemoso ment 04112 ,,, ,------,,,,,, A IN ''' rokattOr II, Porter Hengliton Nifein co, U }Eiders PlIVISI 0 l'InOilti 'avre:ilguell't'ulth [awing Thoe, Allem, 'Parente ' gegemteet-e—regge-_-1----aegeseessemeeentemramage---o-rgetereeteggeseeteea,e_geggeteeetnew CHAPTER 1,--(0,ont'd.) titmice Denby look the hays for a drive aimed every day" after that He die:covered that 115.1es Bernet greatly enJoYed driving. 'Men were pienice, too in the cook green Of the woods, on two or three fine days. Miss Bernet ale° liked plenlos. --Still pursuant of DellbY s face, ardent, pleading, tonfi- 14•4 plan to g•ive the ;forlorn tittle dent, And he exgected-, Before she nursemaid' "oate good ttime in lier ..sotv him ogesiti she _met be reenly,• fife," ' Burin/ Dentor centrived to be knew, with het answer. But how with her not a little :in between drives coued she answer? and picnics, Osteoeibty he Was put- Helen Barnet wee lorzeig, heaneick Cue up swinge, bitiOding toy houses, and frightened -ea eouthinettion that preying ball with llfasters Paul Ana ectiold hardly, aid in tho making of a Percy Allen; but to reality ha. wee,: volsOr mlnrojectieed decielon, osPeolollY frying M pat a •little "Intertens1", tindoe NHvIetimonnovnine •iriv:tekvneorlyv. 01210111121,‘ovaviria.u•Allitd. Miss Helen Barnet's ,delly was so sorry for herl It was (molt Less than two yean before, Helen a shame that tra glartously beautiful Barnet had been the petted daughter O girl should be doomed to elave,ry of a village eterekeeper in a email bike that! He wee eto glad thee for Vermont town. Then, like the pim- a time lie anight bring eoine bright- vothial thunder.bolle had come death nos into bar afel and fluencier dile:tater, throning her "Alid do you see how perfectly de- on her 01311 tee:ernes. And riot entil voted Butit•e is to Peul Peray?" she had atberapted tea utifin (hoe re- criectMes. Altera one day, to he ,bro- ther. "I had no Idea the dere. boy WAS 90 :fond of childeenl" • "Ifni -me Ls he orally, indeed," M11T- mured John Denby. "No, iind npt •pwlitole; and H on Oho only child) noticed." bad been ahnost. as greatly everoin- john Denby spoke vaRsely, yet with &Agee ,$ teas Beene eteeey inteenf. a shade of irritation.. Pond ail he Wa'S Being a very pretty. giel, 911t0 had be- ef his ststee ana hie small nephews,. „in.14 tn„tifave enle neeer„ne 40„. he wee finding it (Meat to :enlist:cm himself to the revolutionery lied. long drosses. Having been 'Ohilehl- in bis daily routine 'that, their pree-1 °lIstges ed tram' work and responsibility, and gun nrade neeessairy. He was rearrit 1t taillivhlasys carefully guarded. *me every unpleasant, she was . poorly ing to abeentglehneel.1 1110r0 and Trion from the house, For a weelgthereforer unchallenged, fingere was evidozate bet not 'Until. the suMmening bell from the de/wing-- remit givve Iter.- it tow Minutes' •reepite :from *inky dici she •have opportera. .it3r to • think, Even then she .coutd. not. thitels lueldly coneeeted y. Alwnyti ,befere, her eyes Wes Btie re sources for her support, eitd ehe foultd how fraily_they were, , Though the Bafnete lied not been 'wealthy, the e store had been equities:1 foe a struggle .of any sort, even aside from the fact that there and cheer:telly intent on lus benevol- WAS, apparentlye notheig that she could do well enoug.h to be paid for ent mission, Burke Denny continued his drivea mid picnics and batotty. .doing it. In the past twenty anonths :she nett obtained six poeittons-and iiig with Masters Paul and Percy .Al- had abandoned five of thein: two be - len; then, very suddenly, foe:- lettlo WA 1'0 oe incompetency, two because of woeds from the lips of Helen Baenet leek of necedary strength, one be - nun her beauty was plainly making the situation- intolerable. For three months reitreshe had 'been nurse to Mestere Patel ancl Perey Allen. -She liked Mrs. Allen, and she liked the children. But the mine:the confine- inent, the never-encling task of dealer ing attendance upon the whines and tenmers of two active little boys, Nvas changed for hint the eaeth and -the ektr above. "When I go EVWD;)..-" she iragen. "When yon-go-nway!" be inter- rupted. "Yes. Why, Denby, what inakes YOU i•ook so queer?" .' ' "Nothieg. I was -thinking -that is, I bed forgotten -Ig--" He rose to his BY A ORIT1$1-1 COMMANDER -- HAIG'S VICTORY DESPATCH, Historio Telling of 1 -we Greatest Triumph Ever Won 13Y Brlish Arm°. He would be a poor 19nglislunun tvbe could road without a thrill' the long despatch in whioli Sir Douglas Hale tells the story of ting Mug monthe of the War, Hayti the Westminster Gazette, Mite deep:Act itselli is writteu with severity cractluelaity, as such (tome meets should be, but hero end there flashee out e Phrase or eentence that strikes the note of einotioe mid elide in the achievement( .of our andez Nylech the most reticent of nieu ma1. indulge. leor (hl ti story is the greatest. °Pio of our race. All •the battles emblazoued on the banners of our olcleet regiments aro small things 111 comparison with Ude etruggle, Meting over three .months, in tynieh Arty -ulna British divielons en- gaged einetymine German atvietons -anti heat them in such rashion thot "thereafter," A9 the deseatcli Ints it, "the enemy was capable noithey ete- oeptieg nor refusing battle." s Contrast With Waterloo. The forces which Wellington cone mantled .at Waferlob would scarcely have served to bold twentieth part at the front that was covered in this fight. Waterloo wee decided between immerse and supsete and, :great as wile its achievement in 'days in which the measure of national effort was less exacting, it did not call for a tithe of the endurance fienn the soldier, the WITH THE AMY OF'aCCUPATION IT IS NOT EASY TO STRIKE A Ilritish sunee$, end. ou the rare 00. caalone 1111011 they did, tiontriVe(1 to represent it lie due eolelY to the Brit- ish superierity•in 'munitions of War. For the rest, tbe Gorman- people only had •Its 0W11 fatoeus and arrogant ignorance to thank.. People ave only just beginning to realize that this .11ettel WHEN HE'S DOWN great people, which prided itself so highly on Ito kultur end ita onuileai- 1010, ha in. retellty the goad Menhir 0 matter weet Sort of Mae E., nee and 1111/110AV Illillthlt1 Of 1141 POI)C911 I10 0. rx3„.41,4 a. 1,... .t.1._ r, e . , ., . pies, 10 two sphere% totably tin ;mull ;,(;:iici,:ro 1,,noi:Iterioivai :,,,Ity.,i Cerra:me . 1 eg•arded them:rale ee as facile plincipee--in war and ie When the history of the Great War science. Accordingly, they achnitted comes to 'bo wiettea, one of its most atts,otoolit3le;hing elerpters will undoubtedly imhere. Even their Gera! Genet%) province of Prussie by- the Beitieli pai•1 but scant attention. to Mir "Bi- te the occupetiou of part of the Rhine sulir, so thoteugh in all It undertook, tie were," Whieli were not withonf sOldielL .111198 /0-47 :lite 011:1o0oerethsta tititnhdc .15111.116usin3 eiltaliPee.gr taelliirin' .2.,,.'8,t1eb.,181111411%1 who 2,1,,le113 11 bili'di; no rival to themselves in eithee -glory he! By that Mese that world at Ypres. nolthea• by. terapsentment nor upbrIng- ing,ie he fitted for beinging home to And se the fine sokrePly appear - 11 beeoten foe ale tegeonees of &seat :armee ef the Meath Army marobing -that is to :sate by suet), erceemeefar through the Ardennes i•nto Rhine:rand; inahais a frightfulness ' have and aoross thre bridges -0 the vine - fevered the name of German tvith die- yards on the farther bank has &Ile' IMMO 1.101: OH time, Writ08 British tome onetime German illaziom °Meer. Yet Levould venture to pre - diet that, newerthelese, the noble dig - ley of the Brithilt soldier (and I use 11E -ENTER tVILLIAM SMITH thie phrase 'without any etriving att& meledrangitic effect) it; teringinglieree Tonirny Atkins, a So101er of England( to the German, tepee:4y the stay - Sheds Ms Number. at-home •eivitian, the 9131190 of the moral supertority of •the Allies even I lieve jest been christenea de more eireetively than if we had bor- end time. Twenty-one of us -all rowed a loaf •from the Huns' book pivetal men returned from France fat watchfulness and plannine, from the agghed the German methods of. commanders, or the national. effort be- frightfelness to our beaten eneinie1. hind the atmiee that this occasioe brought out. 01 the men Sir Douglas II9141 proud. ly says: "Their courage and 1050111 - Hon. rose superior to every test, their cheerfulness uever falling, however terribie the conOitions 111 Wil1011 they ' The Filendle Itoe. Wo Britons have a proverb, "The. EnglIshinelea home is his castle." There is hardly another salting in the. English language Which better hits off one of the Most prominent traits m our nationel character, and that is livea and fought , , . Tho work the Briton's. respect fee private 3110 - begun and persevered in $o steodfast- perty. The occupation' of enemy terra- ly by those brave men has been cone tory, of mine, is in liagrtant centre - Meted with a thoroughnese to which diction of this 0111 adage.. Frankly, it is a state of -things whicb requires tho eeent bears witnese, and with a getting used 10. Even the most ele- feet abruptly, and crossed the t.00m, Protutg to be not a little irksome to gallantry W111011-. Win 11V0 for all time At the window, for a. toll minute, he yoeng blood umandtto the restraints izi the history of enr countiY," mcntary of tin, yethts of theic•otihiquier- , , . or, 1101311117, 12111 billy•tiag of troope in e l • • 'een I wantcd a 11W tunic No. falling rabn When be turned back there had come the visit to the Denby those fine words. stood motionless, looking out at the of self-elerifice ' Thep suddenly The countryr.erslll Ithheititsrttil)se,eenzultortrIts, distadeful to our Bogie ideas ene 214 GO signed for it; the letters from mime hou gs, 011111411113 I home arrived by a khaki Neiman 'wig into the room there was a new expres- homestead; •and the advent into her said of us as a people that we ill'e bed miuse, as I have pointed out, Otis in- sion en hie facie.. With a quick glance life of Burke Denby; and nOW here, aavertisors, - R ever in our history we l vastion of the righte of others goes' called "2Litill, two for Poe to -des at ,the -children playing on the rug quite withie her Teach, if she could : had a right to pride in the achieve. against one of Abe llt013t cherished intadi" And wher. our pals went Vrri,s. before , the •flreplaem he croesed believe her eyes and ears, was this . strag•ht to. the nhonly surprised dadlinge unbelievable thinge-Butece iseents of ouir race and1 to. the, expres- ...7.:rtogatives of our cherter a laterty. thnt eame eternal-Luz:thee WA:, dule young woman and (hopped himself MI Denby m 'Imre cmftry cmfwy mf fw ion of that vide it is novidtd by the The Cei'Man5 All Da 111.211te tiliMM inscribed on Ong little croeras mg; er y ce a Li et L. i icy w ele • ,nelr gra‘es. b th ••• t"t . 1, I' tl • . • tilir - - - story that Sii. Donglas Bag •bas to gto-• Now I are Mr. Smith tranin, To :het is the ;grandee: thing of a ' !. Nt ono loalmes the ceneurt a good o1. which, three months after the tro- ably, But their iLtituae ot •subjection I . . .. . kngloh name io until you h eve beer,: mendous bleivs showered upon them towards the Britioh is, ebjeet. TheY the ron-call teken er * German work Mg- petty. After the Bet of "serails' mei "Ivalegs" ties i1( 1211 narnea ,1 241 • e pet 1:1 1,) more veluotiti then gals- - ---geo reteele addeo,: ,ed 113 teeth:my eiti• il faimY, ijo, 40 hear N z,t.i r mon- demobilization-have made oar lase rerade, received the conteil "tielzett" and heard the sergeant address one of our Maniber es "Mr, Smith." . "The "Smith" gave me as great 1, shoek as the "Mister." I 11111 lottaly unfamiliar with either. It was nearly four years ago that I lost my name and address, and bacants O mere unti in an Amy numbered be m011ioes. Ever since that clay the number had 'dusk to me. "Williem Smith" iv.ixs no more, and No. 2558! reigned over the fortunes of 11 certala little :family in his stead. ,andea seneoeing of sett anal peppm: a chap: at her side. Denhy s love. Foam into balite dip in 12012(00 04115 and I "Helen 13araet, ti.111 yeti-manyI (To be continued.) bread crumbs, and eet in oven for five., mete he tinted „nay. raining:. Serve, en Boiled inacaron i "Mr. Denby!" that lute been , (livered with mite( 1 With a boyieli latigh Burke Denby WAR'S INFLUENCE ON MUSIC, only uncompromisingly rad and hos- 11. tlele-as the French end Delginne The annals of war hold record of no crassee towards the Nun invadeige more wonderful recovery than that it would Om -1'f 1 • •• ,•:. • ,,te to irti back there at the nindoe-the dreariness, the emptiness of -every- llfe, navy lire and of flying in the ale thing, withted you, And I saw then A. s battle followed battle, as the arm - ghat you've been to me every day les advanced ben and retreated there, there ar000 the need of kegIng up the e s Met bellied the this past ;week. How I've welehod for 7611 mid Waited for you, zind how home morale lest th I everything I did and said .and had waR lines would waver and break. But just-semething for you. And I again the songs of sticking to it, of know then that I -I lOraci you. , You lyorld freedom beyond the hOriZOn, of see, I -I never loved amy ono before," proving worthy of our men at the -the boyleh red &wept to his tore- front and their influence on the nation head os lie laughed whimsically, - "and so I -'--I dada% recognize the helped us to stick it out. During this the summer and late autumn, we find in the oecepied tervitory, thet les feel 3 . . that such successes as the Germans • Ince •thaking hands with him. gained -and even at their highest I It Can't Be Done.. valuation it as clear that they paved 1 •• the -way to the subsequent Gorman de. Then aro people at home, I know, feat -were won by overwheliniug i who melanin that the Army of Oc- suPeriority in numbers, and that the . eupation ShoUld "tench the Huns a Britten successes were gained in spite ' reason." In -their righteous and wholly of an inferiority in numbers, commendable indignation at the Heil What the Germans failed to do with atrocities, these eriticr would like the a numerical superiority W9 0 000114111911, Amy of Occupation to visit upon the clvillans living within the different bridgehead& the appalling crimes committed by the Boches during their occupation of Belgium and Northern France. 'or dairy. Evee the three-year-01cl kind 01 meat besh bound together With up and christened befo-0 he had tim.- 1..) SO) 1%11/(11 Itil8 the :,!4141 N trench, and the name 'bee lowed on hin: --be it "Smiley," oe -Thu Duke"-, Work Vgliter than a brotkr ea filo varying fortunes the cline a • the days rolled by. . The man Who •giave as baek cat namee must trove then. 1161111 - for he tem:irked. "Mr. Wirtara Smith, •that's the stuiT to give Om.. eh ?" as he lef t. "feeling rat.he r - Ward in lounge suits wog mote, ce2. sltk; the demobilization camp, would be better and happier if he had hie weo errands to run that were nal errands -his pan in tbe home. Economy in Fats. • Now that the demand tItt;ne. Stop Saving Food!" greets us wherever we tun, it behooves us to school oue- drew against reverting to the care- less ways of pre --war cleys. The Peed Board tells us that :fats are seam, so of couese we must continue to economize in the use of butter. We can do a great deal in this ding. tion by ubitizing vegetable and meat fats. Many of us have been prejudiced against the use of oleomargarine, es- pecially when'we have been one:stem- atto plenty d:E good butter to nee at • all times, but a g-ood cmaity of oleo:" margarinekis much euare economical for many uses than butter. We 'Mint not lose sight of the f.act that oleomayg.arine made front vegetable fats can he 'very and.wholesorne indeed, .and for cake -making, frying, sh.cirtetting, vegetable' setisemne, etc., It answere every purpese at a ',sub- stantiel-Stiving: The' &Ailed .fet from ebtolcene, tulkeysnand gem makes the littnerdo•verit Engleind pelmet -11y for meet delicious of cooky slim:killing the purpose oE determining whether and the flavor et the fowl, cannot be there wen enceigh inexperieneed men detected in the finished food. All desinotte. of taking up egriculture to drippings from meat should be care- judify the establishment or agnicul- egg. er thickened grimy, Easy Home -Made Soap. • A soap .is exeellent for laun- dry purposes Can be inaele frora of rancid fat, The process is elingle: Dissolve two anti one-half tablespoons lye in eight tablespoons water. Add to ono •eup melted fat. Beat with an egg. bastes' for: about ten minutes. Pour eut end let harden. It p hest not to use it for a month or •two, This soap can be made in entail quantities, and it also lute the advantage of not requiring cooking. • FARM IF THEy tuvE 110 Large Number.of Soldiers 1tYill Prefer • Their Former Occupation. That there will, not; be anything like 100,000 former soldier:: take pee:farm- ing in. Oanacia• is the .opinion of , -(1. F. 13..aileg; Assistaft -Depute vf Agriculture, who has eetureed aftee having spent. some weeke in work among the eoldiets in •connection with the aterioeltura volley of the Federal Government. Ire, :with Mader 3. E. Ashton, DA:De:of the Liva Settlement ,ettraptoinsi" 'With the lightness of his words he was Plainly :frying to hide the shake in hie vein. "Helen you -- will?" "Oh, hut I -I---!" Her eyes were frightened tied pleading, "Dont you eave at Lill?" She tua•aecl her heed away. "If you don't then won't you let rile make you mire?" he begged. "You said yee had no one new to eime-at all; and I care 190 muds! Won't you Sornewhee a door :shut. Witth. a low cry Helen Barnet pulled irwey her hand and epearig to her fed She eves clown on the eng -with the childiran, very ftusbed of :taco, when Mes. Allen appeared ill the library deoreetiv. • "Oh, 'here you firer Mrs. Allen ;frowaed •and spoke a bit impatiently. "I've been hunting everywhere :foe Thunkfidness. , you. I supposed you were in the Imes- ory. 1Vonti; you put the boys into' The old ship, the bold ship, _Posh suite? 1 hen :friends calling The Clipper of the Sea, soon, end 1 want le 6111.1drell- 1M-°ufilit Beneath WhOtie prow the waters zlip to the denteing room when 1,ring, and - , ., roam -wage and wen(Prously- leln till I mill you tiettin," The vessel' taut has ceme to port, "Yoo ma'am" te The voyage, thank God! is done; The -frezlght,how deaelg was it bought, Aed yet how bravely won! From island and from 'highland They went, the strong, the 'brave - Mimi some bleach upon the sand, Some rot beneath the wave! been tratethited lete "You en 'what Thank aoci for these on heeded- knees We have to endure-ao tiresome!" tee wee, ene, tee eentvese drives, she, too, dittappeored. Through rage of :waters, . tumbling Beek() Denby did uot -smile. He did frown, however, no bolt vaguely seot I._ irritated aud abused. He wished his Come safety With Crate lives, aunt tvould not be $0 "boesy" end dig, , . ' ,1. . The, white ship, the tight ship 1 agrceithle, He wished Helen would Teee herhorgivise, heaved to; 11' net act 00 cringingly submissive. A.s die, Drop down the sale, the Anchor eeip, it she-- llet thera it would he feerad eight away, arum:so, as soon Pay off her vallaneeraw. as rim had made known the fart 'that The an:CiOan brOSSL in nOW sit 1.est, elm was, to be hie wife. Everything The edventuren or the foam would be 1114101621 t. Not only wean sihe hold ilea, head elect and bake her proper place, bet elle Woad mots -welt there wove vaxicals two ways end ex- pew:stone which she wotild deep, of course. And how beautiful :she Wee! Hew sweet! HOW duel Arid how alto had suffiered in her loneliness, How ho would love to melte for her a futtree alt gloriously hoppy and teeter With his etrong, encircling AVMs! It WA5 It pleatiaut picture, Burke Denby's heart quite stvelled within him as he terned to Inn the room, period the national songs of our allies ed with a numeral inferiority. It is cemented those ties in the minds of not, of course, denied that at certain the masses that were so necessary. critical polots tho British attack had The end mune. And with it went a superiority In numbers: but it is the songs of home coming,and songs of praise. Yet the need of singlets and inclination to sing is greater than ever, Everyone feels like singing. Interest in the songs that were forgotten for the time bang mite back. So that tho whole field of general songs Is reopen- ed. The war gave IraglIsh soup; a new mennire Canadians who have been in Eligland or whose friends haVe been, take readily to the songs of Sus- sex. Somerset raid Deyon. Thus our ivhole attitude togards Musie is -alter- ed and Canada is -on her 13117 (0 becom- ing it singing natio». 1- With a still more painful flush on fully Oaverl, clarified by •being heated tural <leases in England and Frame, heraface Helen Benet swept tba with sliced raw potato, and strained, "We found that eohlle there were hl•oeks into her apron, rose to her fed, The clrippings teem bed and pork will a large number of aneri--relativell and :hurried the children from the go yeey nicely together, but the hard spealciag-taking egricultuval training room. She dicl net mice glance at the tat of lamb or mutton hos 110t beon Ung•land, only about two per eent. ltoung man standing by the, window, in favor in the family household tor were men -without, experience," seta ,Mre. Mimi tossed her traphow a the reason that its tallow flavor and Mr. Bailey, "ao we considered it un- smile and e •shrug winch Might have coneisteney wore not relished., but war- necessary to incur the expense of Cane =ensures have tought taus that eetabillething ciente." we Can USO rallt1011 fat to good pur- In France, it was itnipossible to pose by taking a little freebie. esteblish classes., but meeti»ge: of the Take equal parts of, hard or mutton officers contrattedling ell milts wen fat and Iloft fat, earth as boef suet addreseed, Elea 100,000 handbooks ex- iled pork. Cut into :email plot:0E4, and peareng the saii,.mcmi, tau, were dis- melt togethee in the double boiler, trIbuted, as well as geestionaires Foe every te'e, pounde slice in ati seeking definite inforroatioe as to oniou, an 'apple, ft potato, and put in thee:0 likely to take up tem.:dug. three or flier elOVOS, a bay leaf, and gage ie nee et wort On , a teaspoonful tie sett. Cook until (eget etneengee, 'fair wages and tee- the, fat thoroughit1 extrtteteol ot.d ing cods not too high, a ratinber DOW thinking of farmIng will stay in the eitke all& tate up their old occupa- tion," said Mr. Bailey. "T3ut if we have ;noel timee, high eente, high liv- ing coste and kick of emptoyment Oa inovomene to the tants. wil.1 he :fairly larg•e," , Coal oil Is recommended as dn ex- leellent eleanieg egent. Ono wenian lusts A rag moistened v,11lib coal oil to olden her steined flooril, glean tnotl-, Work, poneleie Falttrib and etand and elso te: polish the well behind the ltItohen range. tlio potato and apple nand,. Strain the melted fat into n bowl through muslin., Set aside to cool. Keep watch of it, however, and just -when Um edges :begin 1:0 harden heat brislely with tin egg beater until ajamet cold, 1L'his hosting' ffrovents the hard and Bolt fats :front aeparatieg land melees the "savory slearteralig" 'Hight and fluffy, 'flits is especiellY deft:whirs for 1,1S'e ceolting, twee in fastry Waking, Lees oeion may be ilgvd (10911191. Hot Olthee for Cold bays. 0 tall 'Mid Cle21to1; Slow,aroWn Ape ot their sarlor-gear divest, Mid eaoh one seeks his hoine, 21 'Ihe old Ship, tho bold elde, The eltip that we have :manned - The eneig.n at the inaethead dip To 13410 tvieely platmed, . And :Ora' she titles upon Bra tidea That Emcee hi from the main, Vint shall wo be, if God cleeidee We must to El00 (141113 TO refrenhell Wei+ clone repetsgeo, the girt the 'huge ec and dry eerfectly, Olean vent 511, 111411Tied With p.alp,itating nervons- blush epply white eliellee, being came- ness thecargh the task oil clothing two f111 not to lel) tdroltes. no 1 rattive hociiee in fresh goarments. Amigo the coley; will bile -hien its ger, Thai, her thollielSto wore 1101 with her ejee and dry dn one hour. .the supreme test of generalship to be in numerical superiority as the point Well, it can't be done -not inith the that matters with'foree inferior in its Awed avalles, aeyway. From the far - total numbers. The business of War, ' oil clays of the Retreat from Mons right Up to the ,hretelcing of the Hin- deeburg Line, the etrength of the British Army hes been its discipline --a _discipline founded not upon fear, but upon* self-respect; and patriotisin, It was possible to order Germans, to commit u cold blood the horrors of Louvain, 1910201211e, raid Aersehot without destroying discipline; Initsi British Army Which perpetrated deli barbarities -elf such a thing wore inn aginable, which, happily, it is not-- woeld be anuntlietiptilled beetle. And the lesion which ttles, British Army ot Oecup-ation has alltearitg taught the Hun le a Tenon of clasciplin,e, a lesson whieli is 'doubly effective because all statements to the ccettaretry,1disciplind has °or months past beim almost uno known in the G•erman Army. It is doubtless exasperating to those who have passed theough the desert of ravaged- Belginen and France to beer the church bells rieging oat for divine aerviee, to find themselves sun, rounded by theiving cities and bloom- ing eiliegesr to know that Melina Cathedra is a :smoking ruin, and to see the twin 'bowel% of the Cologne Dont reeling their great height un- damaged to the sky; to rementhee that Yeves and -A11115 and Albert are deed, and to see the Opera House at Cologne packed from stalk; to 4114:11ee71 Yet waiit! There is ft divine justice Whith equals evaeyeli,ing out, end Ger- many is learning her lesson. Our "Shock Ttercips." In other words, IS to convert a gross, infer10r101 into a net superiority. Viet it was done so successfully must be put down in part to theendividual su- periority of the British soldier, but in part, too, to the better Staff work and generalship on the British side. The Germans, in faet, were out-generalled. Halg's Greatness. What is shiningly manifest is that the Field -Marshal ranks tho peer of the greatest among British Generals, and as ter the Briticah Armies, in Sir Douglas tHaig's words, they have (treated el`ew traditione which are a ehalleege to the highest records or the padancl will be an inspfration to the generations *he come after me" To N99111011 brief and eloquent outogy wo 'would add the Field-Marshat's testi- mony to the infantryman, • who "re - mane the backbone of defence and the speai.head of attack. At no time has the reputation of the British in- fantryman been higher, or his 0101121990- 81001 21.10111 worthy of his renown." Death No Interruption. Wg talked until his train was gone, I thought ninth since of what he said About tho neW Ume soon to Staten - And now they tell mo -he is demi! And so 1 think lune Browning sada As night nromul Pompilla lowers: No work begun shall pause for death- , Surely a balm for times like ones. TheeMet rato of thBrit•ish 0120u ' - 13a12111( elesed life book and dried his paten is that the Geemas heve "ells - pen, covIerd the British Army- I may b Cutained 1120 5930111102' ofthe sun:nila:.a ttiteobsowetionwlien!Old Custom saye: "Ile diec,and the1i sav4ialip4etlxiyover We 'wool to think him work is don41 whelmect with amazement at tho ex - No, 'Ile not done -that tamed hes wont Was able to lio:oeliginle this other. tent to Which the Goiraten 00110911' No, people. I believe it to be a tact that the Gorinen people reg.arded the Bela*. .Amny as, More or less tn't undisdiplinecl rabble of AOkliere, 1311000 8010 strength lay in their very nmple supply el guns arid annettrotme and °thee apparatut of trit; relirond from Madoid to eenneet Wily. After all, the Gowen commute. with the French lince 1111 tho frontima (gime practically :levee admitted ti I heed not what dark sorrow settle In_ God's great lehmeltormo We'll see No work begne hall paused for are th. -.Alexander Louie raper. r • ,,,, Spain is plat:Meg to laullci an olio. POISON m..LT11:ti: 1,v t:•41; SiOry of Germany's "Peaceful Pen.: tratioe" in Italy. - The sublety -end skill with Width the commercial penetration and eon. trot or neighborigg" count -rice wee accomplished by the do-ritet the thirty years before the War inal,:es it .the traria remarkable that their leaders were willing to joonartilee :those gains by plunging-4nm Will!. Manseyears ago two Cam:ans. pine perting 10 lie residents of 14u 12:4:1. land, started en attvertieing ugeney By dogreee they furniebed a et:NO:kw able number of advertinniente to thy lent:Beg 1111linn newspepoilla Thel.t bustled. grow tintil length thee, nets 111111117 n :smail town into they had not penetrated. As ne•vs- Omen liye by their advertieements. so those Italian papers welcomed tht. German agente, who added hundred( of' thoottands. or. (raiment or advatie. ing metier every yettr. But those agents had 11 doublij oor. pose. As trusty servants of the Kale or, they saw to .it thet German pro. ducts, to the exclusion of Feeneh 01 English e21 even of Italian, elhould be lavishly advertised in the Itallite press, This meant, of mese, the promotion of 'Getman industries. Next the 'German agents carne to frame thine contraets -(vith the Italian news - papas so, that in return for 'ravioli newspaper adveetising they ehou1t1 •eontroI the editorial- page otoenyli Paper. In °Cher words, they arrtazged thet the Itallen peepto should get from -their papers whatever views oli home and foreign affairs the reptilian inspirers at Bettin these to, furaish them, The same piano 211111141t11911.10111.1 into Frame in 1912, and Ives evenhre ginning to anponr on tide side or the Atlantic :when tho -war iteoke oat. 1 The actual 12(151 01! horsomowee or the fairie as eleewhero• ht affected by the fellewieg teener: Weight, sound - nod Mel quality; dieteibution -of labor .nvel. the year; eoralition mut viit'..ityt intelligerate .0111:efel ;handling r cost of feed; lidior, ilizerttit on inemoso ment 04112