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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-04-13, Page 6, teen_ Delightful Garden Fresh ess-- characterizes the Flavor of 3131411. DOS Qualliy Unchallenged by Turentrrthree Year% rEe woe eaver ;El rfuet, r hclerfoot9 W s vv ootrior By CLIVE PHILLIPPS. WOLLEY (Author of "Gold, Gold in Cariboo'," Etc.) - • •• CHAPTER IX,— (Corded). their he beolce his lie* Q ,not itt When Rent loterled out to hien with the cattridge case and the flask, four men were trying to hold roi perfect a demon os ever wore hide. The wind shrieked around'them, the tote waste places through wheel he loose litter of the yard rattled about the ,frightened borseie feet, 'and the lrode ilinnieesed• itself upon him. rain lashed hie blood red flanks. I The homelessness of the pantie was Withia a railiite of twenty •02 thirty revealed to him end almost frightened feet of hie flying heels it wee unsafe him'. Ho bactlthown the prairies all •Cor any liviigthlete to 0001e, net the his life, but this aspect of them had men held on to the ropes, hoping that 'lever struck him before. in time he might quiet down a little. 1 He had committed suicide, and he Cinch the bag on for me good and know it, not an unjustifiable coward - tight, Boss.' It might get shook off," 'le act, but the voluntary killing none Rolt obeyed, and Jim !shook hintself the nese of Jim Combo. tit try the nasteninga,re Henceforth the world ag he now •2 Now, saw it would be practical of his own. "aTothing loose is the ba as the pace end distance began to tell upon the horse; the heastie teenier mood began to communicate itself to the man, 110 that instead of the glory of the stelfe, the migery of those:hi& bbeese Dishes.' • I they appear. If dirt and grethe aro eteedy, you devil," he went to the, grey and barren . life. without rest, Chenee ittell.—Take an ordinary long allowed to amid on woodwork it horse's head, wench battx1 its teeth, without warmth, without the light of French roll: and cut into sliees remove mimes that eevere measures must be laid its ears dome, and bathed my-leer:hope. But he had taken the plunge, ing the crust so as to leave round taken to remove the dirt, and usually from bis acres the corral, dragginng, and since it woe too late to reconsider pieeest of eruinb. Butter each slice where extreme methods are used the the four men with it. . I it, he made up his mind at any rate end cover very thickly with wetted finieh it removed with th dirt.' 1 For a qUarter of an hour Jim tried the would not be robbed of his reward. American cheese; then Pile the slices! Stains should be removed from un- ,in vain to approach near enough to 1 $he would be happy eveo if her one on top of the other, Boil a hate. finiehed wood before washing. Grease 1 mount the roan, but by striking, bit- happiness was bound up in theta pint of milk with pepper; salt and a stains are 'the most common. The I ing and kickieg, the savage brute another man, and therefore at last little grated nutmeg, and evhen it is grease should tiret- be wet with cold frustrated every effort. he took a pull at his horse and begun "Gems wen neve ee, threw in It was then that he felt how. much boiling pour over the bread and cheese, water to prevent spreading and then' pad. Place in a well -buttered deep or -lye. eolution. thing out of him that wily," and .eher, day he had so far eaten nothing. He had clone work enough to kill an ordio- pan and bake for 15 minutes in a t to bleach ao unfinished surface suddenly Jim% voice came from a moderate oven, basting. fete or gee which has been darkened, exilic acid, higher level. pity to take enym_ hie 0e71 strength had waned. That making sure to have it soak into ever' scrubbed with strong iv:telling soda nfter ail, but it's a nee man, arid unless he was muchenis- . •made in a solution of one teaspoon- e taken the boot on his left leg was • comes • Gee -whiz I Let him go." ' it. When cooked the top should Intve ful , to one cup of hot wamay ter, . be ' Ihe ebance had come whilst he was slowly filling with his own blood. a golden brown crust. I applied to the entire surface with a speaking, and with a tiger -like spring , Ho could ride the roan with ono Boston Roast ----Plash up tbe con,' • This - is " . allowed to dry and the nowboY had taken it, dodging the hand now. With the other he contriv- i brush. • • then the: surface is scrubbed as usual. flying -heels like ti mb•acle. ed to extract the sandwichee and flask Teem the cartridge bag, which still Foe ti mementeheneenighe or to teem, but Men do not hail (leggy, paeseeney on the imaiviet and I1A changed bin miiulIfcealti not Want, anything oC theme' et) he lay stile' Menet thee, without, a pause or tmet of the head, rode silently pant him and elisimpeared in the "Indittne, of coulee," ne Muttered, "they meet have seen the botne."•- And then he fell to Wondering why they had melee no Clem and why t mohey were riding .at that hour in the rnitne to- wards the Rieky Ranch., Iii the ordinerg couree things though they would have peesed by in silence, and near enough' to ea elsfy their own neriosity, • To be, Continued. Foi the wathing, the surface should adding half pound of grated eheeee e It was done so quickly that 110 one rode securely on Ins back, and is gone over with a wet cloth, thep mixture etiff enough to handle. Knead fine scrithbed with- a brush and soap or a had timo to see how. Jim scrambltd into the saddle,. and after that there drank as he rode. •• and enough bread crumbs to ineke the diming his pace to ailope he ate and sand soap. Le scrubbing, the and make into a roll. Prepare the - • th the gram roasting tie by heating and .putting the wood, never acroes the grain butter and water in the dripping Pan; • • •• • la • motion fate, being then wher the bu • • was not enough time for the epee ators to seek shelter in the first ((001'- ha' He supposed that the night most thave cominenced, though there were none of the ordinary signs of time to regiment during the same thee. The my line of vision or far over my FRENcet SAY GERMANS "Fin." Comparison of Lists Heveat Wide ens. erepancien It is considered In France thin the serious Inaccuracy of the German cas- eate lists it definitely established, Sitye kr. Warner Allen, writing from the -Brinell headquarters. It seems, however, if otie may Judge from 50Me articles recently published in the Loin' don Prees, that in England the Accur- acy or.inaccurany orthese Bets is BUIL a matter a doubt and discuinalon, In- deed, in some easet It appears to be. euggested that. they are as accurate as the English listen ou which uo doubt bas ever been thrown, "I have," he continues, "received ore unqueetiopolle authority figures regand with theg rave$t suallictml an to thousands of wasted; which make It at least legitimate to have raised my bat in solemn homage to hie losses. The Germans pew, wounded "Ponmelese each of whom, Wet worn, intermation peogided by the enemy as themeelve$ on the frank ane open having done a man's full share in fashion in which they announce their the 'Great Adventure,' is returning losses to the world, and compere it confident that those wile follow afthe with considerable self -satiefaction him will wrest final victory from the with tbo silence of the Frenth in these foe, matters. Britain and 'France United. "The French, however, despite these • 1 Protestations, have been patiently en- gaged in putting the German stalls- while nee issep of the great battle at "My journey to the front was made tics to a practicel test They have often noticed that the total German -Verdun -was in the balanee—it may losses in killed, wounded, missing, and still be—and Mihell all the thoughts prthonere announced for a given regi of Britain's army were with, and its ment during a given' period is conflict, Mayers for, the succees of General evenly lees than the number of pre, Soffre's gallant French, and my thrills IS A MARVEL OF ORGANIZATION AN AMERICAN'S' OPINION: Ole THE RR NISH ARMY: Correspoildent nays It is Becoming Mightier ,Hourle 110 the "Great Push." The New Yrerk Herald coereepond- ent Lointim (eines to that paper . ol lows t "I have just rettineed from a 11 days' trip to the British :Crone in I France' and Mandel's, during which I ' was omitted through the courtesy , • of the British Governinent, to mese , through and- along the battle lines from a village near Naive Chapelle to a point oveelooking 'the trenches, where the gallant Canadiane are ce- menting the Union of: the Empire evith the blood of their heroets. "I heve heaed the eheiele over my bead in places where Britain's gun- ners are retuning two 'tits' for each German 'tab'; nave glowed with re- flected enthusittem as gezed upon Britain's soldiers manehing on the roads and Over the fields of France, high' epirited and hopeful, toward battlefields upon which the destinies of the world are to be decided, and I A ODUNDIIE IMMEMSti leninfinsiteet anuagrano, .EWSILLETT COMPANY LIMITED WINIANDINA 1000100, °" MCMANIINAt weer that offered. setters' alone taken from the same over a few shells that burst within or in . . teer le quite melted But it was a magnificent sight fo(r: and the pan ha put in the roll. Bake thoroughly, scrubbed the surface 1 1 guide hir11, and he mal,Velled at the en- result has been that gm department head seem ludicrous when I have had specially charged with this task hat about: 15 minutes, beating with the elf safe from the ma I durance of his horse. gene to read and 'digest the news of butter and water, and serve with watera Lenten wiped as dry a& pa-, should be timed' off with clean, warm , those, who were I least's heels. Fodunately the savage wind lead, been able again ana again to convict. • the fateful happenings near the gate - for' t e , • In spite of Jim, the horse had get' tomato sauce. Chopped onions may pts head down. Its back WIIS ached the lists or flagrant and deliberate y , i Verlustlie ten (official Gernuut me- • sible with a cloth wrung out o . warm 1 , . not suffered the sleet to lie sufficient- way of Lorraine that leads to Paris. 1.8 is 1 if dewed or a ' 1 It t th • • d tie' . ' f . t ly upon the plateau over which he rode _ • omissmes by merely comparing ehem "B t th le th it ' ' u oug at b ame conflict be added to the d' I ' ' water. so ne ete sceme no mg in. ton ground rang hard as iron and as the" egee with the French list or prisoners following statistics concern grated upon my untrained ears, I feel oversbadews the sounds or war that 1 e ev should li used If a great' of the saddle except senice, and even to seriously deteriorate the going. The ( _ in ot the onions can be• i As little. water as will do the work . lelicate flay • • - given bei ,thopping them and cookine e • - that receded as soon as the brute thee in the Inde e • • 1 • th . e deal of water is used the wood be- down again fever of excitement died out Jim rea- I four regiments whiehh eve been eon- certain tbat readers will be inter - t and auter at is used 1 up into the air, coming . comes ,wateinsoaked and darkens. , . , e • , heed that the night had turned bit- I ttnuously engaged on the German ested in the news that I bring as the Pm the nutting. 1 Thorough rinsing is also essential as • iff legged and suddea al every prom telly cold. Vandervalle'e Cheese Souffle—Take - • 'ray 'a the compass in tune But this was - •f . I -front: result of my observations. two goe.1 eoupspoonfuls of flour arm , otherwese the sue acebecomes g For half of that night Combe -hardly; "Tho 108th Regiment of the Twelfth e In washing a !not good enough to shake off Jim German Army Corps lost Chniing a cer- First—That France and Great mix it with half a teacupful of milk; and muddy looking -knew that he was Ailing. A man sat' 13ritain are indissolubly united as a wood floor care must be taken not to Combe. tain period 408 prisoners, according to , , melt a 1iimp of Metter -the size of a I f their " t • irer ies lash water 00 the haeehOard. ill ! "Them's baby thinks, he muttered, filbert 1, theta a quarter ounce) and splash shin a table, the edge and under I and as if the roan heard him, it reared add that; then enough grated cheese washing edge must be carefully washed. i until those at the windoev saw nothing to yotti eiete and the yoke- af four This ugnder surface becomes greasy! in the driving rain but the vast figure egge. -,, Id at the last the whites of simply f om the touch of the hands. I of a bogie rampant, like the supporter the foe. eggs beaten stiffly, pepper r I of an heraldic shield. ' and 5011 Butter a mold, put in your e. -- Useful Hints. in ' the iitneepan, eurrounded with boiling ,ether and the lid on. When cooking beef in a fil e Then •ele s - turn ma the souffle and serve with a cooker do not put salt on until die in the saddle in the heart of a great darkness, swaying in time to his horse's stride, and at. the peeper time lending such assistance as the rider can to the ridden, but that wtIK not French returns. There is, thererore, a Jim Combe. ebortage a 144 men, or 35.7 per cent. Jim himeelf was away, . sometimes of the tenet . in one place, somethnes in another. "The 112th Regiment or the Four- teenth German. Army Corps lost 234 Now he Yeas holding a yellow -haired . prisoners, according to the French, but child up on his shoulder so that she the German lists acknowledge only 48, could see over the corral and watcb a eithom 34 do not figure in the old Al lassoing a wild cow; now he French records. There is an omission Unties to glow, move fern -tied and was back in ngland in Paces of of 186, or 79.4 per eent„ in this case. fight, is an amaeingly scientific or - purely imaginary magnificence, where "The 144th Regiment of the Sin- ganization, developed in less than e young camen with that child's fea- teente army gorps lost 94 prisoners, twenty menthe, whish provides the tures vas holdie i court tenonest in- of whom onlY five flgme in the Ger- best of foodstuffs for the inner num the French official records. The Ger. • ing the same period 259 prisonere, and lerdach and British armies; from the soldiers oft the man casualty lists acknowledged dun "Second—That the or these 28 ere not included ia the .generaliseintoe down to 'Tommy' and the Tone," ere, s,worn Mende. For the "Final Puele" liThird—That the .British army to- day is a mightier machine, becoming mightier hourly, a marvel of effi- ciency, and that behind in ett it con- rnixtur • end hit it cook for one hour muslin:le sauce The sauce is a beef is done. good Mine- 0011C0 10 Whieh you have White velevt can be freshened by • added eireadencooked mushrooms. applying ehlorofam to it after free- his teeth, the next he was again astride of the rising beast. Clean thee, first i -f" ail, chop them and ing the velvet of dust. Then he vanished from the corral cook them till -gimler in butter and A teaspoonful of turpentine to a 111011 Bets, aml the other 89 men, or their owe nticee then throw them in Pail of water will brighten faded care with et crash. • numerable Anstruthers who moved and warm clobblog and all other es - the sauce iind pour it tWer your souf- pets better than ammonia. As the roan rose again on its hind emcee slowly and spoke in Book -English with 94•6 posed by their misguided cOuntrymen per cetit, of the total are sup- :mantis for the outer man, the while ele. Combe drove the long . . Cotton crepe table napkins are a lege, Emetic Joues' Cheese Souffle.— convenience in the pummer catage. home -- Tho man was invisible until the great beast, jerked backwards by its rider, crashed heavily to earth. Then, for a moment, they saw Sim on his feet, his eigarette, one only sign of leis horseman's vanity, still between NEW rosTmASTER-GENERAL. Two Pease in the British Post Oitle4/ Department. The fact that M. A, J, Pease hak been appointed British Poatmiteter-I General In suceesmon to Mr, Herbert, Samuel, where he will be assisted by, his nimbi, Mr. H. Pike Pease, who is assistant P,M.G. has led to the an- nouncement that there 0111 11511' "Tvvo! Pease m bhe P.O.D." (Poet Offiee De- Pairttalisaaat)curious fact that the two' cousins sit on oppoeite sides of the House of Commons, for while Mr. Li, A. Pease is the Liberal M.P. for; Rotherham, his, cousin is Unionist, member for Darlington. ' 11 the 1 10000that low-pitched drawl. or again he was Grace a half pound. of Gruyere Cheese. They require no ironing. thete was in him and the panic blindly from the Mix in a eup ef milk a 'dessertspoon- If you are short of baking powder stricken beast rushed ful of fleet.; heat rellr 101010 eggs and sift together one part of bicarbonate; corral. • ,t cream of There was a fence at the fae end of add tir•,t the cheeee and thon the flour and milk raleture. Season with pep- per. mei ealt. awl pet 011 into a mold. Let it cook in a saucepan of boiling save an p water for an hour and a half. Then which oilcloth or linoleum is washed. horse to rise at a fence. Certainly it at the end of this time put it in the It will keep them new and bright. never occurred to that maddened roan. even for hall' an hour. Gelantine pudding can be made With a rending crash he went through Sbeese up a pint of more nourishing by mixing it with the young pine poles, shattering them milk and pour it on to on0 tablespoon- milk instead of water; but be sure like match stalks, and so was gone, 11(1 of rice flour, which bee been mix- that the milk is not 'too hot or it will the rain -lashed ocean of dim- prairie ed with little cold milk put back curdle. - swallowing up horse and man. into the pail and stir wee) the tnix- In making ices in which you me In winter upon the northern ranches ture thickene. Remove the pan from fresh fruit, la the fruit soak in good evening comes early, and on this day the fire and add four ounces of finely- ' sherry wine for eight or ten hours heels of midday, so that as Jim Combe grated cheese, 0 pinch of salt and Freezing will not harden fruit treat- dash out of the corral it was al - cayenne, tWO 0111leee of butter and the ed in this way. ready dark. Yolks Of two eggs. Mix all well to- For the first half hour of his ride he had no time to think. Nature provid- ed him with that panacea of man's pain, action 05 SULILL 5411* 51313 tartar. . it, luckily only of light poles set up If any boiled starch is left over, to keep in young calves. • ' • h t with It never seems to Occur to a prairie gether ond then add the beaten whites ter the egge. Butter a pie dish and pour the mixture into it and bake in a moderate over foe 20 Minutest Sprinkle grated cheeee over the top before serving. NEW m AP OF EUROPE. Royal Geographical Society lias Much Savory Cheese Pudding.—One-half Work To Do. t at le seeme. o w g • Pound theese gratecl, one ounce of but -1 The Royal Geographical Society in Yet he had no time to feel the misern Then he lay down on the frozen which has placed some thousalle s of ter oil.- pepper, salt, one teaspoonful London is a hive of industry these f itall H. d . ground to rest. Unless the roan could girls on farms, says : The storm swallowed him up; so -- he had dug, replaced the soil he had drove against him that he sat bowed taken out and stamped it in firm and low in his sadclle, so drenched him hard with his heel. 1 h it is ever forwarding I roope, guns, munitions and other accessories back in the sick -room looking illt1 certainly in Frond; hands. the heart of the girl be had loved "The 1.58ed Regiment of. the Fourth against that great hour when the since she had grown grass high and Cern= Army Carps lost 196 prison- final 'great push' comes thab will reading in it the name of another, Twice the roan "pecked" badly, and the third time so nearly came (101511 on his head that Combe came back from his mental wanderings pulled up and dismounted, If he would ride far- ther he realized that he must give the horse reet even if he needed 11. himself. The fence of the pasture had long since been left behind; it Wee too dark to look for a stake; there was nothing bigger than a clump of Women in hundreds of thousands sage brush to tie to, and tired as the; in Britain aee asked to enrol for. im- roan was, he dared not leave him' mediate work on the land. Very soon loose, as he would have done with any each -will be given art armlet. The ordinary cow pony. I scheme is under the control of the Taking out his jack knife, lie dug a ,Board of Agriculture, whith has au - deep hole in the hard Guth, tied al thorized the use or a special uniform, knot in the loose end of his tie roped to consist of a short skirt, leather put the knot at the bottom of the hole leggings, strong boots, washable linen coat. Miss 'Farquharson, secretary of the National Politicae Land League, as, but the Geemans officially acknow- end the win. ledged only 58 et' these, of whom six are not. named in the French returns. Therefore, 138, or 70.4 per sent., of the 153rd Regiment have been omitted from the German VerlustItsten." -- MANY WOMEN ENROL. English Women Will Dave Uniform For Work on Land. of Armin mixed mustard, an. egg. Mix all and Mike it in e buttered dish 911 Minutes till see Serve it very not. Meese CorkseeMelee.a thick White saute end when it has gotten cold add the yoke of -one egg and a law drops .of lemon juke. - Sprinkle ie a slice of Office tend the Adiniiialty wan geo, grated state bread and enough grated thees to. fleVal! it very strongly. Then leave for two hears to get quite cold. Shape Mei small pieces like eorke, dip days, not in the adinary way as one 0 was el mg seeme great void, out of which from time rill the world with him, Jim had no "I could deal with 5,000 applica- of the conservative old British insti- a to time tinge beasts loomed uncertain- ear of losing Ms horse so fastened, teens from 'WM 011 anxious to work tains for ecientific research, but as on farms. We insist that a woman part of the war machine—making 13'. He knew them for the Herefords Mape et the rapidly shifting geo- graphy which moved lumberingly and unwill- . CHAPTR X• ' man's wages. If the fanner refuses , who replaces a man should be paid the ingly out of his way, and alongside For over an hour Combo lay where to pay equal wages for equal work of Barone, supplying the War ' him, though he could barely see it as he was watching the horse and think- we do not supply him with labor. he raced past it, eamthree and twenty ing, whilst the blackness of the night "The Government is anxious to get • miles of the fencing oe the winter pas- paled and grew even more weird and women living in the country to li graphical data and maps worked out with scientific minuteness on land and water routes, topography, moun- tain pongee and ti the details which there into the beaten white of egg and the military strategists must have. then into very line breadeeumbs. Have ready some 1101 fat in a deep pan fry your corks until they arc e golden brown. From the eame source comes the directions for making cheese halls. Cheese Balle.—Take two dessert- spoonfeis of flour and blend with little milk; add the yolks of three eggs. Grate two ounces of Gruyere chmee and two ounces of Parmesan end add to the flous and eggs. The (levee should be grated as finely as, peentile. Heat the mixture, stirring wee so as to keep the flow feinn linninng, and cook for five minutes, th, n anti the juice of one-half 0 lemon end e liege Mast of cayenne pepper. net tithl . v, get cold.. Then make into small leen, and roll 1 0 egg and breed- called "new map of Eueope," , The ermine then, in 'boiling' fat mitif they areas of occupation weee indefinite are gentlen nrown, drain and serve at ane conitantly shifting, end it we - once on a bat clish, maine be be nen whether recognized The scientific geographers are thinking ahead to the time for "fram- ing end dictating teems of peace," When the map of Europe will be made over again and new boundariee laid down—a stupendous 1501.10 con- sidering bhp vast areas of 'territory which has shifted through military occupation, and which ultimately will have to be settled as temporary or permanent at a peace congress—the fropts in Russia, Feance, Italy, Aus- nee, the Balkans, Central and Beet Africa, Persia min the Pacific islands and ports. De. Kettle, secretary of the Royal Soetety and the administrative direc- tor of the institution, said it evai quite too soon yet to outline the so - OW to 11Iean Walls tied Ceilings. In the extxe of all woodwork there is one caution neeee to be fagot -toe —to clean off Beets just ae 5000 155 end established political bouedaelee a the past are to be changed per- manently, 00 it eequiree something moee t1411 military occupation to change titern. ^ SHIPPING'ITTER g a,nd all others. no frte,13,312. havink emit' of. these olsoio, ratA Oor.AP0IJITD: 5055, One t tit thing for broocl gUtree, .; 111, ' grifti eY gni gene ele igen .gitti tttrers. Agents I1tttrt'411, ' , 0?0,32EN 34Z,DICAL 0Q„ 013.9.1.11atlh81,..13_,BIA*A4-37: tui -s. ghastly from the grey that had inept the farmers, but they fix 2o a day Twice he grazed it, so dark had the tete it, foe such work. That is net adequate. day become, and each .time he left a Then it. seemed to him that some- Half a crown should be the minimum. fragment of his clothing behindhim thing 'heavier than a coyote moved Next month we are eending 100 wo- to meek his course. On the second among the sage brush on the ridge to men into Worcestershire, who will be occasion be struck barn against a his left. He listened, but the noise paid an average of 4s. a day for projecting bar, and, his left leg seem- wae not repeated. Jim was too good down and rode as steadily as ever. He his ears had nlayed him false because fruit farming. 0(i to lose consciousness. But be sat i a plainsman to perseede himself that "We are very particular to find that decent housing will be provided for could not afford to worry about -trifles, he could not understand their ma- every OA we send on the land, and and as it geow darker every minute, sage, and beside, the red roan had this in going to be one of the prob- he realieed that there were no precau- heard it too. The horse was standing lems in the new campaign." thins that lie copld take to minimize with bis ears pricke'd, watching as he his rielc. He bad to stop m• ehanee would never have watched for coyotes. everything. !In epite of the cowboys' constant at - He Odd not sae where he was go- tention those vagabond thieves were ing, perhaps the roan could, and even far toe nurnerous on the home ranch if he could net, jiin WS 1114 going to for the roan to pay much attention to take a pull at him yet. As long as them. Still watching the ridge, which the horse stood up and lcept going, was as yet but a vague line in the fog. the miles were eeten tinder his feet. jim saw at last what be took to be lave ..1:het was all that mattered. Time 15115 of the essence of Jim's contract. His partner Fate was playing his hand eow for him, ancl he refused to interfere in the game. Ae long as it lasted it was excellent to fly through the dank stinging sleet, and es to the end he eared nothing. Whea the roan ilea bolted, the wildnose of the gam, alt the splenclin energy oS the crazy beaa beteyeen big knee§ got Into jinine bwlgod,alicirt In, ezileolen.to.xicated with 0-' nannopen inp Adllan% bl one etelf01,gee mitlebnite, &all: peen etiffefitlin'tthittgloerti, JAM that kt i'ottliOallaav,:.tit.te helvd,. ttlei 114 en Aflentreliaggered and though he had nee Were ''''neee'en-,• of web sage brush; end etunously ten - i i .>$o u e y imrneteria w ee eugh his horse had net whinnied, 4 coyotes moving slowly along it. A. longei• scrutiny showed him four, no, five indistinct objects passing just above the line, and at last he knew tnero for the heads of riderp, paseinge ap they believed, unseen on the further side on nhe ridge. He could pee how the heads rose and fell wine the move. mente on the bores beneath them, and then eon A Momentethe Indere came Ianly inteeetelight ,Wherd SHP eel euered let the elite, In the mist end ddiknees releht nener linve antioen :them ten:the fiance at Which they' aesede*. gagne and so silent were eee ee` igd not warned him ge e a they eaw him, cf. ha in egfelfetelei, le s lair STOP MARCH FOR DEVOTIONS. Soldiers tight ('audios at Wuyside Shrine bt Montenegro. War is not all horror and death, as the following little story illustrates. On Christman eve as a division of Hungarian Honveds marching through the Tara district in Monte- negro were descending the serpentine road leading down eteeply from the mountable the first regiment passed by a litele wayside shrme et the Vir- gin and Child, Two men stepped sud- denly out of the ranks, lighted two small candles and placed Client berere theimagest Many ohera followed theie ex- amples and theenumber grew to prob- ably a thousand entegether. It was dusk sad the speetacle of the tiny flames flickering clear in the still win- try air W01.1 dramatie spectacle to behold. So numerous were the field gray worshippers bhat as the (pace innnediately around the shrine gave out hendreee of Honveds dug their tepees into the ground around R. The Whole snow covered meadow on which the Shrine steed had been converted Into a mass oi flickering Mimes, ni-• lenbly the men stood, sending their Christmas payees to the "Cheist- kiaAd.ip'rivate turned- to his Lietitenant and said softly, "Perhaps the dear God has noticed this fire signal after all." Then the snew and the dark and the slush of the road once more swal- lowed up the long column of the 131 h.: 1110 mtain's invaders 3. A. Pone, at.P. As it sporthinan and athlete, Mt'. 5. A. Pease won Many honors, He'play- ed football and polo for Cambridge, where he won his rugger "blue," was master of the 'Varsity staghounds, and has (deo captained the Durham County cricket eleven. His polibical career began when be was 32. He en- tored parliament for the Tyneside Division in 1802, and represented that coestituency until 1900, when he was defeated. In 1901 he re-entered the House as member for SatTron Walden, where he was defeated in Januery, 1910, and three months later nem re- turned for the Rotherham teiviehte of Yorkshire. Commonly known bo his fellow leL P.'$ as "Jack,". though his name is Joseph, Mr. Pease retired from the Cabinet on the formation of the Coal- ition Government, hexing held the post of pestilent of the Board of Education from 1011-15. Ile wns for yeare one of the. Liberal ivhipe, and as such was popular on both sidee of the House. III connection nith his duties as a whip, Mr. Pettey tells a good story. At en all-night sitting he theught that rertain M.P. was absent", He was really present in over; xlhi- 1,115, but at other times lie was asleep m one of the receesee. Mt. 1 mete miei- ed him and sent a. Iniegroen io hie house at sevet in the morning: "Come down at thee bo relieve gelled." The member tunnel tip at his own 'house at eight o'clock, fully expecting to reeeiVe a 1510)11 welcome from his wife end ineeh sympathy ror having been in the House all »ighe But she said, "Where have you been?" He . . replied. in log in 1 -louse." She retorted, "Now, it's 110 Utie you telling me moth it thing," and tberenpon produced Hee telegram signed "Pease." This Pease nearly caused s eplit in that Nappy home, but (n asbftec);.oiex,eplainations "peace" ei I've made ib a practice to put all my worries" down at the bottom of my heart, then sit on the lid and smile.— Alice 11. Rice. "Mother Says We Couldn't Run The Farm Without 1 Mayewe sendy.ou a oopy o tee gi b6,01$4, 'Pest, er is and Candica'!V. - ;t1r1cdca1—he1p1ul,--and free. Write for it fo our Montreal 221 paa. I'T'S -downright scandalous the number of 20 pound tins I 1Buii as Mother says, we use it for 'most everything. "Nothing ego tastes qu te po good origin kinds of Hot reed, Johnny Cake end Griddle Cakes, "Mother uses Iteor Mileertmooldng—for Cooktesegeneg• dingerbroad and Flee' • "And I ara,,el-nost estrameclirfnieetton the quantity 91 Grown 'Brand' and bread that met' youngsters consume, trhle.oeni.M. eeettenlyele ,n itivertte In my 1)0r1101 he 90 pound 111111 oonvelliont ped oconrIcaltor home' ge, although you. can got 01551113rand In 2, 3 and 10 ound (Ina taxi' 3 pound glass jam AgIc your dealer, TH g CANADA STARCH CO. LIMITED sseirracsi, CANDINAI, glIANTIORD, ICIAT WII.1.1M11; Aighenv Nin'ic" Cool SY,0,6-BensolesSo04 45,arch-,,stiver_GrustLLaw nary Starch