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The Clinton News Record, 1916-06-22, Page 7vw, %et:: i•,eo is packed by automatic machin. cry . in strong white cotton bags and cartons at the refinery. This is far safer and more sanitary than sugar packed by hand in a weak paper hag which breaks at a touch. No band touches LAIVTIC SUGAR until you open it your- self. Just out off the corner of the carton and pour out the sugar as you need it. 2 and 5 -lb Cartons 10 and 20 -lb Bags " The AllPurpose Sugar" tiffeirneaWeanaliersieleeteeiteste i..:Ku. ,.'l..M`."a...,'';. •ra.ILv3{:If]4yN.: C4vUt `lX: Niiit 9 A Tenderfoot ,i Wooing By CLIVE PHiLLIPPS WOLLEY , (Author of, "Gold, Gold In Cariboo," Etc.) a� +y '''.1q:72.- 38.1 CHAPTER XIX.—{Cont'd.) "We'll tie the horses here, and wait a bit. When we can pretty nigh see our sightswe'll begin our sneak. blanked sight nearer than I thought they was." As he spoke his words were just - fled. The black belt of gloom which sur- rounded the hollow in which they lay, was suddenly starred in a dozen places by quick red jets of flame, and the silence shattered by the ringing 're- ports of as many rifles, after which the` darkness came back again and the silence, but for the screaming of a wounded horse. "Guess they beat us on the sneak," muttered old 'Al coolly. "Get into cover, boys, quick." Probably no white man but Al could have led the ranch posse through those woods at night as silently as he had done. They had stirred no heavy beast to precede them and carry a warning to their foec. There had At last on the extreme edge of th been no fluttering of disturbed wingsg in front of their advance, except: that pine belt, Al paused. Beyond the rim once; but a warning need not be ler the open country rolled down to printed in large type for an Indian to wards the Fraser and the dawn h see it. come. "It's our only chance and a allEyer since Dan "broke that tree" the suspecting been stalked without j one. ant's got to being that ut t cherry terr,thpatch, p i "There ain't' another place in sighten When the, volley was fired Dick I would give us a show" and he set o Reit had had his eye on the exact spot'rnniiing again at in which one of the red stars of light' g top speed for a littl had burst. He had heard the bullet four -corned patch of wild chert sing past him, and for a fraction of a :bush, about a thousand yards from second had seen the prone figure of the timber. the man who fired the shot. But he hold looked about as bail a place t had not replied to it. o d against an enemy as you coni l The brilliance of the momentary g , mg as it did in a hellos flash had accentuated the darkness for him, and taken away from him all idea of locality, so that to have replied would only have been to waste a shot and betray his own hiding -place. favor. He was lying now behind the dead For seven or eight hundred yards a horse waiting to snap at the next star least on one side, and for seven •o which should appear or to meet the eight miles on every other side, there rush which might have followed had was no cover of any ]rind larger than the :thin bushes of sage brush and the patches of bunch grass. A coyote When 'men are working .foe that* lives it is marvellous 'how with cat\ be done in a fniriute, am these nen, knowing' how .much( ':depended upon: their speed, had their. shelters fin" fished when a low "hist" from Al sent them all into their holes like rabbits into their borrows, There was no sign of Indians that' Ralt could see, but as Al lay motion- less he limitated him, and for a fall fifteen minutes almost held, his breath in his burrow. At the end of that time he heard a voice behind him, and turning, saw Al lying at full length in the scrub,' calmly whittling a pipeful of tobacco. 'They can't see me here," he said. "I'm too far back in the scrub. 1S's,,e you got=your bury good and deep. Keep a whittling of it out so as you can lie low at d the bullets'll go over you. Savvy?' I'm agoin' out now to take a passoar and see if them forti- flications look natural" "Don't be such a fool," command- ecl the Boss. "I ain't no fool, Boss. No Injun ever 'hit a man at a thousand yards, and I've got to know how our little show will strike the 'gallery. Like- wise I'm anxious to know if we have e full house," and. so saying, he stanch a match and wandered out into the open, In the most unconcerned way in the world the old fellow strolled along straight towards the timber; smoking as he wont,'end looking back °ooca ne sionally at his hanchweek; and for about three hundred' yards he went h unmolest d pine timber. There they threw then selves on the ground, soaked to the bone and panting heavily. "What now?" Are we going to fight them Here?" asked Rolt at last, stand- ing up to let some of the water drain out of him. "Fight Injuns in timber? Not much. We're another five minutes before they'll miss us, but the light's coming. They're getting impatient. Hear that?" "That" was another volley poured into the hollow. "Hain't missed us yet ,anyways. Are you good for another burst, Boss?" "If it's not toe far." Roll's running days were over, and he was a heavy man, used to riding. "No, it ain't far," and the old man began to run again as if he had bee five and twenty, Tome and the othe Indian loping along as easily a wolves, whilst Dan the big -footed, sob bed wearily far behind. e. Then a shot was fired, the dry earth was kickgd up a hundred yards front of him, and his hat fell on the ground whilst his "rifle went to his shoulder, and his own shot was echoed by two more from the cherry patch, under the cover of which tiny volley he trashed back to his lair. "All right," he said, as he crawled under his mound,, "the seats is all took and the curtain's up. It's just three hundred yards to where - I drop- ped my cap, and. now I'm goin' to put in ,time diggin'. If I was you I'd do the seine. It's gobs' to be safer und- ergrourd than up a tree by and by," and after that for a long time the Boss saw no more of Al. CHAPTER X.X. The Chinook wind which had been blowing before midnight had drop- • ped, and in the Last hours of dark- • ness had been succeeded by a crisp - clear air with more than a suspicion aid of frost in it, so that when the dawn came, it spread through skies of such In rare lucidity as are never seek except " in high northern lands. • Along. the 'horizon the light grew s gradually, until in the east the heav- ff ens were of a pale lemon color, so e clear, so utterly fine and transparent, Y that the gloom of the rigid barrier of m pines hurt the eye with its contrast of stiff solidity. o I Even the pine belt itself was not c quite -proof against the dawn. The v.tops of it were touched with a pale! glory and, though, the gloom of the and containing no timber big enougl to serve as a shield against rifle bol lets; but there was nothing bettor in sight, and it had just one thing in it black boughs swallowed up the light that struck them, a bole here and $ , there was caught by it and brightened with a wash h of tenderest golden grey I t But the prairie welcomed the dawn,l r whichflooded its frost -touched sage Mush, so that it rolled in sheets of sparkling silver, from the pines to the ' cherry patch and away beyond as far as the eye could ace towards the still , shadowy bed of the Fraser. The dawn had made all theses plain, had emphasized every outline; the !peace of it called atten'ion to every least sound which might break the holy -stillness of the witk'ng day, and yet Reit, listening in his burrow,' could not hear so much as tha break- ing of a twig, or- see a sign of life in the direction from which lie had fled. l (To be continued,) MACHINE GUN "DESERTED." Italian Lard Decornted as Result of Unique Adventure. • t the attacking party consisted of white men,' Ho had no notion how close his fel- might have crawled through that un - lows were. He could not hear them, seen. It seemed impossible that any - nor sec the outline,eveh of the nearest thing else should. bush. It was still pitch dark on the. Realizing that at any moment their ground. Suddenly a hand closed sound his timber. Rolt and his companions, ankles and a voice whispered. raced over the space intervcnin be - "We've got to wriggle out of this. tween the pines anti the cherry bush Don't lift your. head, but just slew at headlong speed. When nett crash - round on your bellyand snake it after ed into the edge of the cherry patch me. There's no hurry. I'll go slow," he had not another yard of running "But the horses? asked Rolt. power left in him. With a reeling "Yours is dead, ain't it? If they that he had not knovm since he had want to shoot the others we can't stop won the quarter at Rugby, ho. dropped where he was and lay still. "Euchred them to far," panted Al, cheerfully, "and now I guess we'll take some. killing. Out with your jack ' enemies might reach the edge of the cm, blank them. Come," and Rolt who by this' term' had Iris, head near old -Al's heels, saw these .draw ,quietly away from him. Imitating his companion, Rolt squir- knives, boys, and I'll show you a ace on his belly through the bush trick as I learned of the Cress," and which closed over him, so that it was he began to hack down the boughs only with the utmost +iil'icnity and and young trees all round him, build- half by instinct that, he managed to Mg with theme a kind of wacky up," follow Al, of whose tortuous pro- or small circular bothy, such as In- gress he could see but little, even diens use for bath houses. Over the when ho was within arm's length of top of this he threw his blanket, which him. he had carried strapped to his back Tie knew diet he was going clown until then, and over that again ho hill, and that the ground under him ed loose soil and soda, keeping a. nerv- an ,growing soft^r and.softer, until ous eye all the time on the edge of the at last he might almost as well have timber. leen swimming, but t g, 1 u, he could set no- Chuck"your coat over your sticks if. thin,. • you haven't got a blanket," he said "'h'e're all right now," Al stepped.to to Rolt, "and then fix it this way;' whisper just when molt was beginning and he went down on his knees and is wonder wit„ thea' lie ;wield net rah- began to scratch with his knife Ilk'. er be shot titan go on any farther, a dog who is going to bury a bone. "We're in the ails bottom," All the earth he took out he pili I could have guessed that." upon the blanket, throwing with it Al gave eta low chuckl.e: moss and leaves and .mall boughs, un - "Pretty blanked cold, eh ? Well til wlhen he had finished with it it Look - eel cure that. We've got to move ed like 'a great ant heap just suffi- lite 'taro -year -0104 Are you eiently within the cover of the brush emily?," and he rose' to a crouching to save it from detection. poiitien. Then he lent Rolt a hand with his +'I ee your head -low till we're in mound, ordering the boys to do the the 'hillier. Now come ,and we'll beat same at their respective corners, and them yet," and stooping as he ran the "Shove boys; shove like hell, if you old frontiersman ltd his companion ever want to eat bull beef any more. al—re the creek bottom under the They ain't here yet, but they can't be Owner of its bank:, into the heavy 10115 now." • . ..-.7;• as.;;.,,.w.e.cava;r�::,>u+na.rnA•r.+iue,.zeaa�,a..�. ,m.. ,>am.�.,,aamu, o hr Tells How To Strengthen ., ,d)es hf 50 -per cent In On Week's Time .In `any Fast!. nces r. d Free Prescription you (kin Rave F llled and Flee at %Ionto. S'hltadctpl,in Pa. lie you wear glasses? Aro you a vlocha of eye strain or ether eye Weaknesses? it so, you will be glad to now L t t ov hitt according dt c n ng o Dr. Lewis there is toot ho,}IR•far You. Mani whose eyes wets failing say they have bed their eyes re- hUornd through the pets iple of this won- dcrPn] (roe prescription, Ono man says; after tpyleg it 'I was utmost blind; oou]ii act neo to rend at all. NOW I eon recti everything without any glasses and m.y oyes do not. oyster any mere, At eight they would pain drendfolivs new they feel fins oil the tuna It was Iilid a miracle t tae;' A Indy who used It saver The et- ii isphore seamed hazy' with or without glassc.i, but after using this prescription for .Arleen days eveeytioing seems: clear. ,t 'ban even :need line print without glasses,' 3 is believed that tlaoasands who wear s e can now discard 66}gy o t them in a reason- Ute time nue n lttt rrl• tt idl 1 cit more will be table it is said la Toronto, to etrengtben their ayes so as to be spared the trouble and expanse of ever getting glasses. Bye troubles of many doucr;�d, Lions may be wo'ederfully benefited- by fel. lowing the simple rides, Bare to the r . serlptton:. Co to any Active d'iug st'flll ants get a bottle of Boh-Oppto tablets. DAG' D0yyXe S$o4n.Opte tablet in a fourth, of a ale fignict f WAtebaene t coo to disflolefe,` With phi Bald. eyed wo to four tail,. y. You, should ti eo yells e yes, of e op perceptibly right rum the droit cold �"d Ilamruataten will aidelly'disappear' If,y bilk eyes are bothering you, even a Iibtl.,iA'� stops to save them now before If f.$ fog, atesavedy hopelessly blind mlf'fiyat he'f0 been it they had cared for their eytS iNole, Mahe, p,emMeut -pi,y 1ra, to wham t e 0",01,, k'as sumhisd, card ' f/ n,,edr., II,wn,u M a s°"'Op�' ds.. to rar,u,i69'►°, i. eperiea§a,dad n tt0a ,,r,tt yya 5pOwn` emin aret seerceo, it tac`i't dMaM, , noto r,y yerPR COS a 6Wp rie}i R W iRQ ..6fa1 "i -...... s. re n 0 TY h I cod e d,u n d I n as prc Ong I np p?*a f01 that ' dd ' t �. d r' yyW e' q. Q al or Wally.. ' Y• wb �' Y �'atmaM Drug' Co . Icq Croam comes out of rho froezer With a velvety smoothhilas^and a now dollefouanwfs—When it is made with HFsNSON S. And it IS pretty hard took for any- thing, more delicious than a Chodoiate. Blanc Mango or cream Custard with F'tutt;' made of aenson's Corn Starch. P, Our neer Racine Book "Desserts and Candles" tells horn and boy/much to FL,yq Use, Write for a copy to' our Montreal ,w `office -and. basun) totof our grocer to send B'rNSOM'a, his your i , Canada foruiore"than half acentury. • VIE CANADA 3TAD0D CD. llAtiTEfl MONTREAL, CARDINAL, ;' tlrIAMTPORD 2l' . e PDRT WCLLIACJ,. PREPARE FOR ANOTHER 9 GERMAN NEWSPAPERS TELL OF THE SCHEME. To Ttrain. Boys_inthe Arts of Mili. tarism Almost From 'Very Birth. "After •we win this- war it will not behoove us to become inactive and indifferent. In fact, Germany will still continue to have powerful and bitter enemies, and it will be our ditty, as the Japanese say, when a victory is won 'to set our helmets tighter on our heads.' " These remarks, made by the lets Field Marshal Von der Goltz in a speech in Constantinople some months ago have found a ready eesponse throughout all Germany, And the Ger- man newspapers and periodicals that reach in England, tell of the scheme that is now being discussed in the empire of preparing for another war after the present conflict is over. Develop Militarism. According to the scheme outlined, militarism will be snore deeply rooted than even at this time, and a boy will be trained to be a soldier from al- most his very birth. As soon tis a boy enters school at six years of age instruction in military matters will begin,, and will form an important part of his studies, Drills will be held in the open cit•, and Spartan sim- plicity and discipline will prevail in his bringing up, He will be put through a severe course of athletics will be exposed to all kinds of wea- ther and ltcired ip, alai physically his body will be hardened in order that the may be p h -:nred to meet all the vicissitudes of n campaign. ' When the boy reaches his twelfth year the drilling twill become still niece strenuous, end several bonze daily will be devotee to military treni- ing in camlps especially selected by the Government, This will continue until hie eighteenth etas, when lir will be conoirer•ed fit to enter the re gular army Army of Do During the school term from the twlfth to the eighteenth year- the ]nye will constitute n big army by thema elves They will haus their army corps, brigades and regiments, and they will be commanded by gen- erals, colonels, lteutenan'•s, and cap- tains selected from the eve whom he big general staff of Germany will consider host fitted to fill such posi- ions. There will ha regular inan- euvres and sham battles, and noth- ng will ho overlooked or left undone o train these boys to be the best 'soldiers the world has yet seen." For girls there will he training along the same lines. Athletics will form art important part of it, and partan endurance and indifference o Pain and uifering will be their raining also. In addition, they will eceive special instruction in nursing; ho wounded, and will be trained to ^env up long an hearty women; liI• in every way to be the wives of (defers. The military spirit in (termer: 5i, of subsiding after this war, 'ill be more and more encoei•aged, ncl pautnhlet: advocating, the'e mea- sures .re being widely distributed iroughout•:the empire. How a machine gun was forced to desert the German army is recounted in the story of the heroism of a 10- year-old fi ° year-old Italian volunteer in the Rus -1 Sian army—Constantine Zepolli—: , whose part as the leading figure in the episode earned one of the two St. , George crosses he has w•on, Overhearing his commander ex- S pressing a wish that some ono "would silence or capture" a gun which was t stationed at troublesome proximity i, to the Russian trenches, Zapolli, on t his own initiative, crawled on his stomach for a hundred yards, located the ppsition of the gun, returned from the danger zone and conferred 's his trench fellows, and crept forth if once more, this time dragging a coil of stout rope. Reaching the gun, he' a tied one end around it without being, discovered, and again reached his own le lines, with the free end of the rope in his clutch. Presently the Germans were Aston-! irheel to observe the gun disappearing toward the Russiati trenches It was hi successfully dragged :From their pc,,- session, a number of Germans being killed in an effort to prevent its de- ft parture. .Daps Exporting Umbrellas. The export trade in Japanese not 'ellas is rapidly increasing. Iii re- mit year the exports omountad in alue to $8,500,000, and thisyear she acres are expected to be exceeded, Monufactnrers in Japan are now over elfin^d with orders from China, India tri other countries in the South Pac- • because of the falling off of im oits from England and Europe gen- ally. h All in life worth having hes its , ar price. It const• be paint for in effort ifi and in teens, and can be had on no p cheaper terms. or NO. 2 CANADIAN STATIONARY HOSPITAL AT ElOUi The picture iv View OHNE. os a vov of the Main i g na n l uiidin which t g w i ! war. fortnerl a Y (,bis school, naw'being useQ under• an efficient Canadian staff of doctors Eta military hospital. It has been in operation almost since the beginning of the war and has rendered invaluable service. The hospital Is under the Conunand of Lt. -col. J. T. C.lorke, formerly of Toronto. Dainty Dishes. Red Kidney Bean Saled.--One can beans; one finely cut onion, six sliced `cucumber pickles, salt as desired. Pour . over salad dressing of oil, 10 - mon juice end paprika, toes and serve on lettuce leaves. Tomato and Bean Salad.—Peel medi- um-sized; ripe, firm tomatoes; scoop out seeds and part of pulp, salt and invert: To one cup batted beans add one-half cup tomato pulp, one onion chopped fine, avid two stalks of celery. chopped very fine. Mix with French, dressing', fill tomato cups and chill. Roast Fillet of Veal—Remove bone: from inlet which' :s thick piece from. upper part of log, and fill cavity with highly seasoned and very moist stuff- ing. Tie or skewer into round shape: Dredge with salt, pepper 'and flour. Put strips of pork over top and ,bake. Allow one-half hour to pound. Cover, with buttered paper to keep meat from, burning. Ade water whet flour ha ro b wu ed and baste citta.• Cherry Bread.=Fill deep earthen 'pudding dish'tWoethir•ds full of cher- ries, blackberries or green apples. Add a little sugar, but not enough to make very sweet, and put in just enough Water to keep fruit from sack- ing and grating or two of nutmeg. Pat and pull into shape piece of bread -dough just ready to knead into loaf for cover for fruit. It should be one-half inch thick. Lay over fruit and cover with soup plate or another pudding dish that fits tightly. Bake or steam pudding with fire that is not too quick for at least one hour. When done, turn out on large, round Wetter, fruit on top. Servo hot, with sugar and cream. Delicious. Baked Cherry Dumplings.—Sift to- gether one pint flour, one-half tea- spoon salt and one teaspoon baking powder. Rub in one tablespoon short ening. Add sweet milk enough to make soft dough. Roll out one-half inch thick and cut into four -inch quar- ters. Fill each square with as many s cherries as it will contain and sprinkle generously with sugar. Fold edges of dumplings over anti place them in floured pan. Bake one-half hour and serve with hard sauce, or cream and sugar. Margaret's Cake.—One cup sugar; 2 eggs; 1-3 cup butter; rls-cup milk; 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder; pinch of salt; lee teaspoonful powdered cinna- mon; enough flour to roll. Cream the butter and sugar and then acid the well Neaten eggs with milk and the other .ingredients, mixing in the flour gradually until there is enough to en- able you to roll the mixture out about 14 -inch thick. Dave the oven very hot, and sprinkle the cookies with sugar just as you are putting them in. Scotch Shortbread.— Half -pound flour; '4 pound butter; 2 ounces su- gar; rind of M lemon; 1 tablespoon rice flour; a few strips of angelica. Take exit one tablespoonful of the flour and put in the rice flour instead, then add the butter and the grated le- mon rind, and work into a smooth solid dough. Roll out thin and cut into triangular pieces. Pinch the edges into a little up and down wave prick all over the top with a fork end put a small stripof angelica in the' centre of each. Bake very gently for 20 or 30 minutes, and let them cool in the baking tin. Berry Sandwich. --Close white bread; butter; posseiet'ed sugar; berries; le- mon juice. To about 12 large berries take a ta.blespoonfu;i of butter and an equal quantity of the sugar; cream thebutter and sugar well together and•' put on ice to harden. Mash the straw- berries and a tablespoonful of lemon juice together and rub through a sieve. Blend the fruit into the creamed but- ter and sugar and pelt back on the ice. Cot the bread into very thin slices and cut oft' the crusts. Spread even- ly with the Mixture, and either pot an- other slice an top and cut into sand- wiches or roll up.and tie tvi'ai a white ribbon. Braised Deed and Carrots.—l'Iave butcher cut 'nice piece of brisket or 'shoulder into suitable pieces for serv- ing, rejecting superfluous fat. Heat a little bacon fat or drippings in' kettle, toss meat in fat and seat it quickly on all sides, then let it simmer until pukes that have been liberated , are absorbed again, Let the meat' brown, but do not lot it scorch. Sea- son with grated onion, salt an deeper; r then pots,: on enough hot water to' snake nice brown gravy, almost cov-! ening meat. Cover and let simmer ; about two hours, then add scraped cgu'rote, sliced lengthwise, laying them tl on top, In about an hour everything should be tender, However, this des p penile on age of beef. When serving heap carrots in center of dish, thicken fi gravy with a little dissolved flour, boil smooth and pour arousal carrots, Seine ny I a 1 .Iys of Saving. By tlite time we are all of us more} r less familiar with advice on the t Most of the moisture may he res moved' by shaking the currants in a clean dry cloth kept for the purpose, and afterward they can be spread out on a large dish to dry. It is more economical to add pepper to such dishes as stews at the last minute.' If you season them at first much of the aroma is lost in the pro. ease of cooking, and therefore more is required. It is not always economy to cook slowly, especially.in the case of hari- cots or lentils. These take so long to cook that if you are cooking on a gas stove a groat deal of gee is used Haricots lentils and split peas should always be left to soak over night in cold water anti a small lump of drip- ping added- to the salted water in which they are boiled. This helps to soften them and cook in almost half the tine. If you want to economize in plate s and knife powder try rubbing knives forks and spoons with a soft rag d ped be potato water. This relator all stains ,and warm soapy water a chamois leather, are sufficient keep silver as bright as need be. Paraffin is an excellent substitute for metal polish; people who have once used it generally think it much better. Things to Remember. The secret of a light omelet ' is froth the eggs. One egg well beaten is worth two not well beaten. When a pudding is boiled In' basin, it should fill the basin. Roasting meat cannot be basted t much or too often. The part which is to be topmost in the dish should, when boiling be dow most in the pan. Salted and smoked meat should put into cold water, brought slow1 to the boil, then simmered, Water boils when it gallops; when it still. Puddings made with suet should tifly mixed. When ketchup is used, be spates with the salt. Green vegetables should be boil ast, with the saucepan lid off. To leave bread or vegetables i stock or soup turns these eatabl sour. Root vegetables should be boile gently, with the lid on the pan. All vegetables,, excepting old pota toes, should be put into plentyf fast -boiling salted water. The liquor used in boiling meat or roots should never be thrown away. Soups and sauces may be made of it. ," ::- Has beenCanada's favorite' yeast for more than forty veers. Enough for 5c, to produce 50 large loaeee of fine, MADE IN CANADA " wiivles0me aler- isiting home made breed, Do not experiment, there is nothing just as good. EW..GILLETT CO. LTD TorioNTt>, oNY: WINNIPEG MONTREAL Fromthe Middle West BETWEEN ONTARIO AND BILI'' TISH COLUMBIA. Items From Provinces Where Maayj. Ontario Boys and Girls Are ip-' Living. es and Calgary has adopted the daylight to saving plan. Farmers' Elevator Company are Potting more contracts in Calgary. Lake of the Woods Milling Co. con. template establishing a mill in Moose Jaw. John Booth and little daughter were disowned in the Assiniboine River at to Little Souris. Pte. Herbert Maybank, of Winnipeg, reported missing after battle of St. a Eloi, was killed in action. Three hundred delegates attended 00 the final banquet of the Retailers' Convention iii Regina recently.. W. J. Mason, Winnipeg, who aaci. n- dentally shot and killed a fellow re- turned soldier, was exonerated by a be coroner's jury. y WInnipeg is no longer the head- quarters for musketry training school fat in the west. The- final classes hence. be forth will be held in Ottawa. The girl students of Mount Royal College, Calgary, presented "The g Wonderful Rose" and "The Man in the Moon" for the benefit of soldiers' corn- ed forts. Winnipeg has secured a nurse who a will instruct the district nurses of ea Manitoba in child hygiene and rural health principles for use in the nurses' d campaign for "a gormless Manitoba." Francis C. Locke, who recently cut - the cable wires and damaged tele. o graph instruments in the local relay office of the British Government's all. red cable routs running from Austra- lia to London, Eng., was sentenced at Calgary to a year's imprisonment for the act, Mrs. Nellie McClung, in an address a before the people of Vegreville, Alta., recently, said she was proud to live d in a province where women were handed the vote without fuss or e trouble. ng Some Vancouver woman, whose name is not known to the local ° authorities, will be the possessor of if10,000 if she corresponds with the Off- * solicitor of her brother, Michael Clif- ford, who died in New York recently at the age of 87 years, The following is a list of those who recently successfully completed an officer's training course in Winnipeg: A. H. Ritchiem, P. R.'Bearek, H. M. McGibbon, R. V. Rounding, E. D. Cox- wot'th, C. H. Gordon, F. H. Sidney, H. Bowen, Rev. Geo. Kierstead. Brrn'led meat must be turned often put the cut side to the fire. A handful of salt vein often clear fire from smoke for broiling. " When baking powder has been use there must be no delay in baking. The bars of a gridiron should b greased and made hot before bei used. Meat from which soup or gravy is t be meed should be put into coldwater If a pie or cake browns too quicic7 while baking, a sheet of paper shoal bo laid on the top, Puddings should be plunged into plenty of fast.boiling water, and kept boiling hard till done. MUNICIPAL SANITATION. Proper Facilities for Destruction of Refuse Should be Provided. A garbage "dump" is a disgrace to any city or town. Of what advantage is it do remove the numerous private rubbish -heaps to build up a gigantic communal rubbish -heap? Is the un- sightliness or the dangerous filthiness in any wise reduced by piling ail the refuse into one vast, festering, dis- ease -breeding mass? It may be some advantage to those parts of the town remote from the dump, but only at the expense of some other portion of the city and it is grouchy unfair. No true citizen from a high-class residen- tial district could feel satisfied if the cleanliness of his particular+ portion of the town were achieved by the utter spoiling of some other portion. Any man who is.proud of his city would eel as much shame that there should he tl filthy. civic backyard as that his own backyard should be dirty, The my satisfactory method of removing infuse is to burn it in an in.einerator or, failing that, to have it buried. Impressive Sight, • rtBliggins ahweye has an air of in- ustry about hum." "Yes. But he is one of those peso le who can get credit for making a garden when they are only digging shing worms," The first cottage hospital in Can da supported by- a municipality was penal .Inst week in Beverley, Alta. to hospital is supported by means of 0 subject of economy and do not need reminding to use up odds and ends of bread in puddings and to save vege- table peelings for stock. But th-re are many little ways of saving not generally known or apt to lie gegardcd as too trivial to Matter, However, nothing is too unimportant to corm. in these days, and even frac- tions if cents soon aid up into dollars. It is sus prisirg what a lot of waste goes on if you try to hinny your cook- ing. ' Milk puddings, for instance, should always be cooked slowly, because if milk is cooked quickly it wastes by evaporation The same rule applies to soups, which should always be. sim- mered in a covered vessel. On the other hand, if you are boiling bones for stock they should be boiled fast to extract the goodness, After washing currants for cakes or puddings they should not be dried too 4uic tl Y or they will lose some n ftheir goodness. The best plan is to wash a quantity at a time instead of wash- ing just the number you require for a particular dish. • own assessment. ones. Mere Appetizers. Dr. Wilfred Grenfell, the Labrador physician, tells the following amus- ,iug story about one of his trips on a komatik, or dog sled. It ought to be said first of all that Doctor Grenfell often has sampler - of con - pressed eatables and nonfre.:zable foods sent to him. He and his guide were on the way to a distant village where -a small boy was reported to have "found him- self in his stomach," which means in the semi-Chaacerian dialect of Labra- ' dor that he was afflicted with !iiilges- ' lion. The guide "cleft the split" (split the wood), and prepared the luncheon of steaming tea and pork buns, one of the few nattn'al foods that really does not freeze. "Whore," inquired Doctor (3t• of Il. 0 !"are the compressed -food tablets? I I gave you a month's supply this morn- ing." PP Y rt ing.' "Oh," answered the guide impas- sively, "I ate thein after breakerie;" and he hungrily bit into his pork bun. If They Don't Disagree. "It takes two to snake a quarrel," "Yes, and very often it takes a jury to settle it." _— The truly charitable man thinks the hest he can of all. men. He looks for their good points, and not their bad N \ , a te\\tom s Contain no acid and thus keep the leather soft, protecting it against cracking. They combine liquid and paste he a paste 0orniand rtuiro only half the effort for a brilliant lasting shine.' Easy to use for \� ail the family-chiislran and adults. Shine your shoos at home 'and\ keep then) neat, F, F, DALLEY CO OF CaliADA, LTD HAMa4rs5 • GheAsA \� nd nnE'PVIR SflOE PEAT BLACK WiliTEMM