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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1928-12-13, Page 9ay"Recipes School 'Children's Sandwiches Mix teoroughly,"together; I can salmonea hound of cottage cheese and' 1 small can : pimento peppers: Season with salt afid pepper and add enough thick cream or any good salad dreesiug tot, make -a smooth paste, thin enough to spread" Butter 1 thln slice el brown or bran bread, ' spread flIliees on thin slice of white broad, and pet together. Porto Rican Roast - 2 pounds round of beef, 1 small, bot- tle stuffed otvies, 1% pound salt pork, 1 onion, 2 teaspoons salt, 1 pint can- ned tomatoes, lee pint boiling water. Make small slits or holes in the meat with a sharp knife on each side of the roast. Cut the salt pork in 'small strips an inch long and stuff 'the boles alternately with these and Iwith stuffed olives. - Fry out the salt pork in a heavy kettle,' slice the eninn, fry it in this, then remove all 'bits sof onion and salt pork, brown the roast on all sides and add one- half' pint boiling water and the to- matoes. Season when half done. Simmer for ,'three hours. Cardinal. Punch 1 pint cranberries,.1 pint water, 3 t cup orange .juice, -'lei tablespoons lemon jeice; 1 cup sugar, syrup, 1 pint soda water or Apollinaris. Cook cranberries and water until fruit is very soft; then strain through a double ttickness of Cheese- cloth. When pool, add fruit juices, syrup and charged water;` pour .over - a block of ice, or a mold of frozen orange or lemon ice. Makes 51a glasses; 16 punch glasses. Quirled, Potatoes Boil potatoes until tender, drain and mash. Add enough milk ,and a pinch of baking powder' to make' 1 fluff and then for each cuplul'.of mashed potato allow one tablespodn- iul butter,1 teaspoonful honey and 1 teaspoonful lemon. juice.. Mix thor oeghly,'spread in fiat rectangular tin, brush top with butter and oven' toast. Cut in two inch squares and serve at, once. Orange Bails Soak orange peels throe days in cold water changing the water daily: then put in hot"'water,and boll until soft. Drain, wipe dry "'With cheese- cloth, chop fine, and measure. Take an equal .amount of sugar, and for each one-third of a cup of sugar eedd two tablespoons each of water and butter, and boil until it will spin a t thread, then add the chopped peel, boil about five minutes: cool; Put •on a board, sprinkle with granulated sugar and shape into small balls. These may be rolled. In coarse sugar, and allowed to dry, or they may be dippedin ' fondant, flavgred with vanilla, They are delicious dipped in chocolate with at few grains'' of orange sugar sprinkled on the top of each chocolate before it hardens. Griddle Caked 2 cups flour, 1 tablespoon baking. powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 3 table- spoons . sugar, fere cups miler, 1 egg, 3 tablespoons melted butter, orange marmalade. Mix and sift dry ingredients;. add beaten egg and milk;; beatthorough- • ly, and add butter, Drop, by large spoonfuls, on a hot griddle that has been rubbed over with a piece of raw turnlp, which will prevent cakes from sticking without the use of but- ter or grease. When griddle%cake is puffed, full of bubbles, and cooked on edges, turn,. and cook on other side. Spread cakes with orange marmal- aade; roll up like jelly -rolls; sprinkle with sugar, and serve at once. Fairy Fluff 4 egg yolks, 4 tablespoons sugar, le cup, orange juice, grated rind 1 or- enge„ grated rind 3. lemon, juice 1 lemon, 2 tablespoons hot water, 4 egg whites, 2 tablespoons sugar, lady-iingers. Beat eggyolks with four table- spoons sugar; add orange juice and grated rind, lemon juice and grated rind, and hot water, and coon hi double boiler until mixture thickens, stirring constantly. Beat egg'whites until stiff, add two tablespoons ste gar,'and fold into first mixture, Chill; line sherbet' glasses with lady -fingers; fill with orange mixture and serve. Tenderloin of Beef Stuffed with Oysters Large tenderloin, one pint oysters, one teacup cracker crumbs, salt, pep- per, celery salt. Split the tenderloin. Season with salt and popper. .Make a dressing with the oyster, crackers, and season with salt, pepper, • and celery salt. Spread part of the one tenderloin with dressing. -put the other one- half tenderloin on. top. Spread with more dressing. Tie together with string and bake,' Baste often. Honey Creme • 2 tablespoons ;granulated tapioca, 1Mi caps boiling water, -1/s. cup strain- ed honey, 1 thin slice lemon, rind in- cluded, 14 teaspoon salt, 2 cups neer eluded, Ye teaspoon Salt, 2 eggs, 1 cup nectars raisins, 2 cups cake cubes. Plump raisins, drain and coal. Add tapioca to boiling water and add Dem - en, salt and honey. -- Cook in top of double boiler until tapioca is , clear. Remove : -from fire and'beat in beaten egg • yolks . and -raisins. Beat egg whites until stilt send add to above mixture. Place calve cubes' in a but - tercel baking dish and pour custard • over them... Bake 20 minutes' in a moderate oven, (360 degrees h.) Serve warm_ or cold, Raspberry Surprise "Put• a layer of best 'raspberry preserves: into a sherbet -glass, then e tablespoonful of trench vanilla ice- cream, then another of the preserve's. Top with sweetened whipped cream, Colored green and' flavored with pep- permint. Mint Punch Melt 2 cupfuls of gran;:{ f ,d sug- ar in the strained juice of )l) lemons then add 0 peeled and slic2g lemon,` (slive very thin). Leave all in a big bowl set in ice until just before serv- ing as it cannot be to, cold. Then transfer it to the punch -bowl and add. to it 2 quarts of finely pounded ice. Stir and pour into it, from a height, 6 bottles of pale dry ginger ale. Last- ly add 2 dozen sprays of fresh green mint, washed and slightly bruised be- tween the Angers. Christmas Cheer Wassail and Plum Pudding Why not have a real old-fashioned Christmas with a Yulelog, flowing brew, plum pudding and all? It can be done easily with these two recipes for plum pudding and the wessall brow. Here: is the recipe just as my Eng- lish friend gave it to mo: • Christmas, Plum Pudding Two boxes of seedless raisins, 2 lbs; of brown sugar (we English call it foot' sugar—it ie very dark), 1 'Ib. of blanched almonds, : sliced 'thin, grated nutmeg,, l' lb, of bread crumbs (white),' 1 large carrot (grated), 1 teaspoonful of salt, 1• large apple (peeled and grated), 1; lemon (juice and rind). One box of seeded raisins, Ib. of mixed peel (mostly citron shredded fine), 1 tablespoonful of mixed spices (powdered), 114 lbs. of kidney beef suet (chopped very fine). Put 1 lb of flour with it to keep it from sticking. Chop very Eine like flour (this Is the secret of good plum pudding—do not grind the'suet).• -Mix fruit juices' and bread crumbs sad letstand over night. Beat 8 eggs well.-Add,1 cupful of molasses. Add to dry ingredients. Let stand 1 or 2 days. Pour into greased basins, put greased paper over top, cover with a saucer, and boil,' without water com- ing. over, the top, for 12 hours. • Boil again 6 hours; and when re -heating: for serving, another hour. Put a sprig of holly in the centre. Serve in slices when hot. -It would be delicious funto have a wassail bowl around your own Christ- mas eve, Just' heat year :cider, plump hissing apples into it and start it on One gallon, of sweet cider, 11/ lbs. of brown sugar, 6 2 -inch pieces of stick cinnamon, 1 tablespoonful of whole cloves, 1 tablespoonful of whole all- spice, 2 large pieces` of mace, ell tea- spoonful of salt, tew grains of cay- enne. Tie spices in cheesecloth. Bring to the boiling point slowly. Boil 15 min- utes. .,FASHIONS FROM FILMS Early fall coat, showing the new Circular collar, princess cut and bell sleeves. Gray silk matches gray fox fur cuffs. Worn by Raquel Tor- res at Los Angeles. Mr. Meighen Changes His Tune Quebec Soleil (Lib.) : (At the con- ference of steel magnates_ at Bolevia, Miss., Arthur Meighen said that no other nation could hope to profit by the destruction of another.' This, says Le Soleil, is a Liberal sentiment.) Who would have said that in three years time the Hon. Mr. Meighen would wake up one morning almost a Liberal? Te adorn what formerly he used to condemn, to condemn the idols which he used to adore, to leave his old arguments and to state others which contradict them, tothrow in the waste paper basket 'doctrines which once upon' a time were dear, to him and to oppose otheree of them, this is what often happens to men who have had the time to reflect and mediate. Thus we were not greatly surprised to, learn that the' former Conservative leader had practically denied his gods to approach the prin- ciples rinciples of his adversaries which not so long ago he used to tight. Also et Popular Member of Royal Family Good Advice for Opening Careers CURLC HEADED PRINCESS TAKING IN THE HUNT Princess Elizabeth, daughter` of the Duke and Duchess bf Y'ork,with her mother and her nurse, at a meeting in Yorkshire, her first appearance in the hunting field. r. Honey Treats Thoughtful cooks keep on their supply shelves certain products which aren't usually classed as staples. Dates, raisins, maple syrup, honey, nuts, package cheese aU of these and more, too, serveimportantlyin mak- ing good cooks better. Most of them come in containers of convenient size for storage on kitchen shelves. Those foods which aren't in airtight pack- ages had best be turned into preserv- ing jars.. Strained honey is available in either metal or glass jars, easy to use and easy to keep clean. Honey as a food is important in, any family of children. Its ease of digestion and its nutritive value re- commend it, especially for children's sandwich spreads. A good dessert for yonsters of three and four years is toast spread with honey. Any simple pudding recipe can be varied with good results bf occasionally using honey or maybe maple syrup instead of sugar. - Nowhere in the world is honey so well produced and so carefully mark- eted as in Ontario. Another case where a home product can be' enjoyed to the advantage of health and plea- sure with due regard to economy. A particularly- good honey fruit pudding for winter dinners is made of dried fruits and tapioca. Honey Fruit Pudding . rounds. Brushing over the tops of the cookies with slightly beaten white of egg and sprinkle with finely chop- ped almonds and sugar. Bake in a moderate oven -350 degrees. Honey Walnut Brittle Perfectly, delicious and easy to make: One and one-half cups honey, 1 cup ground black walnuts. I Cook together in a rather heavy brown and the mixture gives a brittle test in cold water -270 degrees P. Stir occasionally ,to make sure that the walnuts don't fall to the bottom of the pan and burn. Turn. out into a bettered pan and, when almost cool, cut into squares. The whole process `takes less than thirty minutes—L. G. Honey Taffy Half pound dessicated cocoanut, 1 Ib. strained honey, afi pup washed cur- rants, milk. Cover the -cocoanut with fresh milk and let it stand for a few minutes. Strain before using. Cook the honey until' it boils, add the 'cocoanut and continue cooking until it is -very thick. Then stir in the out -rants and pour into an oiled tin. When cold cut into inch squares. One Ib. dates, 1k cup raisins, 1,t• cup honey, IA teaspoon salt, 112 cup .wal* nuts,_ 11,ca cups water, 14 cup instant tapioca, 11/e cups pared and sliced apples. Stone dates and cut them up with raisins and nuts. Add honey, salt and half cup of water. Eleat for five minutes, stirring constantly so that. the mixture is warmed through even- ly. Cook the tapioca in one 01113 water until clear (about ten minutes) and add with the sliced apple to the first ' miture. Turn into a buttered, baking dish and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for thirty minutes, or until the apple is tender. Serve cold with cream.. An Eggless Honey Cake An unusually good soft cake—and an inexpensive one te, make: Half cup shortening, 1 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons honey, 2 cups flour, 1,a teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1/4 teaspoon cloves, $'.1 cup water. Mix the ingredients in the order given, creaming the sugar and butter well together before adding the honey. Mix spices' and soda with flour and sift into eugat' and butter. Add water lest, stir well and pour into a flat buttered pan. • Bake in. a clow oven (325 degrees) for one hour. Honey Cookies Half cup butter, 14 cup sugar, 2 eggs,'1F. cup strained honey, grated rind -of 1 lemon, 3 cups flour, 4 tea- spoons baking powder. Cream together the butter and sugar, add 1 whole egg and 1 egg yolk beaten together, the honey, grated lemon rind and flour sifted. with baking powdery The dough is quite stiff and must be kneaded to make it smooth. Roll out thin and cut in Spain's King Talks to Kin in New York New Telephone Link Cuts Columbus's Message Time From. Months to Minutes New York, -Columbus was more than two months crossing the Atlantic for the Queen of Castile, and his let- ters and gifts to her from the islands of the Caribbean were almost as long in reaching her. That was more than 400 years ago. There is a new dynasty in Spain t and—not least of other changes—a telephone that has reached of from the New World and penetrated even to the seat of the kingdom that was Isabella's, and the King of Spain has used it to talk to one of his own Bourbon lineage, 3,000 miles away in `New York City. The conversation at the New York end was from the office of Hernand Behn, executive vice-president of the International Telephone & Telegraph Corporation,: where Infante Senor Don Alfonso de Orleans, first 'cousin to the Xing, and Infanta Seltora Dona Beatriz talked with Ring Alfonso and the 'Queen lVlother,-Queen Cristina, in the royalpalace in •Madrid. It required only a few • moments to link the nervi world and the old world. While the 'Infante and Infanta were in the office of Col. SosthenesBehn, president of the corporation, receiv- ing a few of the higher officials, the ocean spanning connection was made. Ring Alfonso and the Infante spoke for 32 minutes, while the latter told about his reception in this country apd his delight in finding such great interest in the United Statesin things pertaining to Spain.' London' Librarian Puts in Timely Word About Books; to Leaving Pupils London. ---The following letter is sent by J. E. Walker, chief 'librarian, of the' Borough of Fulham (London), to each 'of the pupils leaving school, as part of a plan to increase` the sort- vice er•.vice which` the public libraries can perform for the schools. • "If you are wise you will not let your education finish on the day you leave school, but will continue it in one way or another so thatyou caii get the best, out of life. Whatever your .plans' for the future may be, whether you go into the office or the factory, and whether. you intend to carry on your education at the day continuation school; the trade school, or the evening institute, you will find that the libraries are able to help you if you' give the man opportunity: Their many resources aro always at your service. "The person who knows how to use books and get from them the valu- able information`1;hey contain, is more likely to do his work efficiently, and to use his leisure profitably, than one who does not, ,'Remember that I,,. or. any member of the staff, will be glad to assist you in your search for information, or choice of books, if you will make you rrequirements known:" Railway 'Agent ' . ' Lauds- Loyalty of 'Indian Help Bengal Official Seeks td Keep Personal Touch of Em- ployer and' Em- ployed Calcutta.—The appointment of "per- sonal officers" whose sole duty is to deal with the grievances of *alters, was commended by N. Pearce, who urged that this system should be uni- versally niversally adopted. Mr. -Pearce, who is agent of the Eastern Bengal Railway, was speaking at the twenty-fifth ses- sion of the Indian Railway Conference Association. The problem of tackling labor troubles occupied the greater portion of the presidential address. Get back as quickly as possible, Mr. Pearce urged, to that personal touch between the employer and the em ployee that used to characterize rail- way working. It was most essential that they should not lose sight of the important fact that India was still a ma hap (patrlarchial country) and they must avoid the danger of sub- stituting for the 'old direct personal touchbetween the District Officer and hili- staff a system whereby the per- sonal ersonal interest of'hlre staff was handled by those who had no personal ac- quaintance with his needs. The officer must be imbued with tremendous enthusiasm for his work. He must get out of his office and move about all over his section of the railway,,,so that not olily would he know practically every man indi- vidually, but. what was quite as im- portant, he might be known by the Oen'. Thie might sound Utopian, but` he was convinced that it was worth- while trying, so that there might be an end to the suspicion that often expressed itself•In labor unrest. Disarmament London Times (Ind.): Disarma• !hent, for us particularly naval 'ids- aramament, is among the - major is- sues of policy, and our part in it can- not be left to be determined incidental- ly by the exigencies even .nf such an fadmirable institution as the Prepare - [tory Commission. at Geneya. The time will come for the resumption, in some form, of important naval discus - a with sion h the United States. We Can await that time with greater con- fidence for the unanimous determinr ation of all parties in thie>•country that, as Mr. Baldwin hasplainly said, "We do not intend . to build in com- petition with America." Sales Talk.:. An elderly lady entered a shop and asked to be shown some tablodloths. The salesman brought a pile and showed them to her, .but she said she; had seen thein' elsewhere—ne' thing suited her: 'Haven't you something new?" she asked. The cleric then brought another pile and showed them to her. "These are the latest patterns," he said. "You will notice that the bor- der • rung arorfnd the edge and the center is in the middle." "Isn't . that lovely," she said. "'I'11 take three of them:', Better Housing for Old London Claude M. Leigh of London Believes That Private Enterprise Can Cure Evils_ of the Slums New York. -A new attack uppn the London slums is being made, this time under the ,direction of private enterprise, Reconditioning old houses which still admit of repair,, very low rents, and the co-operation of tenants are the features 'of*the scheme Claude M. Leigh, said to be the largest' own- er of homes for workingmen in -Lon don, is- sponsor of the plan. He al- ready controls the housing of 30,000 families.: With Mrs. Leigh; who was formerly r Miss Myrtle Johnson of Chicago, he is now studying housing conditions in this country. Since the, war London has suffered from a severe: housing shortage.. Va- rious schemes .have boon put for- ward to meet this condition and to diminish the slums. The London County Council has: erected 10,000 houses and flats during the last year. A large number of voluntary housing associations Have, done their part in repairing, old houses, providing new dwellings at low rents, and in 'miti- gating overcrowding by skilled mareagement. Mr. Leigh's plan differs from -most of the others, chiefly in that it. is con- ducted as a business for profit. 'He believes that private enterprise,' if sldllful, can do . most . toward improv- ing the conditions, and that sub- sidies and limited -dividend corpora- tions do not rest on such a sound economic basis. Where a building is' strong, and where the number of houses to be. reconditioned .is suffici- ently large to admit of the overhead charges' being kept low, according Po M. Leigh, the business can be made renfunerative even though the rents chrg aed 'are from, $3.26 to $4.60 a week for a flee -room flat. One of Mr. Leigh's first steps after . buying a large estate is to establish a settlement where welfare' work for the tenants can be centred. Mrs. Leigh aids with this work, and has charge of children's classes in hygiene sewing and music. Other matrons will do similar "house mother" -Work' on other projects. About two years ago Mr. Leigh •brought. to London from America the idea of "baby -carriage garages," and has built many for iris own tenants. Playgrounds are also furnished. Good sanitation is a requirement in these blocks of flats, and Mr. Leigh has adopted the plan of lower- ing rents where `the proper disposal of refuse by the tenants has cut his overhead cost. by lessening the num- ber of janitors needed. The co- operation of tenants in making small repairs and keeping the houses clean is a fundamental part of his scheme - and one which, he says, pays both him and his tenants.. Pride in their homes also makes better citizens and better workers, 'according to Dlr. Leigh. There are 100,000 children in Mr. Leigh's .various housing projects, and new ideas in regard to playgrounds, club rooms, health and welfare prop- aganda aro being studied especially on the Leighs' visit here. The vari- ous city housing corporation projects as well as other properties, will be 1 visited. A Tent Within a Tent Keeps The Oldest w , Bird Watcher. II rf Ed e 'y E c War WTI, who for nearly forty,years kept watch and ward over the birds of Hermaness, In Shetland was probably the oldest bird; watcher in the kingdom, in the teclee nical sense in which protection of rare Species by definite wardens is under stood: among conservation societies of the present day. He had been an aufhorized and, in a .sense, profes- sional watcher since 1891, anti a lover and protectorof birds long before that year, while following the occupation of shepherd, an occupation kindred in many ways and attractive to mna: of much the same -temper of mind. I -Te loved his birds as the shepherd— typified by W. II Hudson's Caleb Bawcombe—loves his sheep, intimate- ly and individually. Unst, the most northerly of the ninety -odd fragments of Silurian and Laurentian rock which stand up to the winds and waves to form tbe Shet- land Isles,, rises at its northern ex- tremity into twp headlands, I3ernia Noss and Saxaford, the latter with a height of three hundred and twelve feet, the former six hundred and flfty-, seven feet. Beyond Hernia Noss is a further stack or island, considerably lower and often white with kittiwakes, on which stands, Muckle Flugga Light- house, the northernmost inhabited Minding hi Great'?lritaln. - On the hill itself is- the watcher's summer home, consisting of two rooms, and made to resist the -tempests rather than to please the tourist lover c` the pictur- esque; it was put up as recently as 1922, in succession to a sentry -box shelter which had previously serve but which was so small that ceokin had to bedone outside _'and. a .full sized bed.wasdmpossible, The -rough ness of the long track across the pea moor and shaggy heather to Burrafr and the "town" of Haroldswick is in (Boated by the fact that each portio of the cabin had to be brought up b hand, owing to the impracticability o transport by van or pony. Here Ed wardson lived day and night dune the months of May, June, July ab August. Once a week or so his foo supplies, his letters and his pape were brought to him. His companlo were the screaming, miawling, barkin sea birds, the fierce A ntic wave .for ever beating against the deflan rocks, and the rude winds, often thic with sea mist, or rising in an squalls whose rtar mingled with th clamorous cries of the birds in on hurricane of sound. Here he wan a home and happy. A pleasant picture of the Sanctua is given by Mr. T. A. Coward in h chapter on "Bonne Hill" (Bird Lir at Home and Abroad): . Beside us, not many fe awre, eolsmn puiilns stood at'laze the mouths of their burrows in cliff turf. They had nothing to lea they seemed to 'clew, for Edward • ) their friend and protector, was the Below, on iteadlancd, and stack, we countless thousands of birds—gra gannets, wagglug wise heads at o another, shr.gs standing in sole rows on jagged reefs, or sitting weed -built nests, guillemots on ay ledge or standing in denre crow oef the pinnacles, and scattered eve whore the snowy kittiwakes. .'W easy glides the fulmars swung up ward their patient sitting mates, a I swung out to sea tgain when ' were satisfied that all was well. T ledges were congested, districts, t air was filled with graceful flee fowl, swimmers dotted tete waves. was a wonderful, refreshing sight the bird lover, for here neither shoo nor egg collector' can, legally, exp the birds." -Linda Gardiner, in Nineteenth Century. You Warm "Several winters ago I became ac- quainted with a method of winter camping which I believe was, and is, just about as ingenious as one would expect to meet with in many a moon," writes Robert Page Lincoln in the December issue of "Forest and Stream". "A trapper showed me the trick. It involved the use of two wall tents. The one tent as I remember it, was nine by eleven while the other was twelve by four- teen. The smaller tent was erected inside . of the larger tent. A good job had been done of pegging down and stretching both of these tents. The result was that the outer tent was a windbreak par excellence and that even in the coldest winter weather tbe inside was well protect- ed, the camp stove, a box affair, keeping an even temperature within." Waiting to be Asked Saskatoon Star-Plioenix (Lib.): Ultimately, it seems certain, New- foundland will become a partner in the Canadian Union. This was tha intention when Confederation was negotiated and the fact that New- foundland is not a province is ctua merely to a failure in diplomacy. The matter has dropped out of -pub- 1ic vie N for ,about a generation but union is once again a live issue since Newfoundland's acquisition of Labra- dor.,., Bonfire abra-do•.,- MUTT AND JEFF. -Bud Fisher. OUR ATTIC' Seo-Roor-C'\ 18 t-Il,E, AN leg- Boa. So to oTTA LOAF. Helie • UtJT1L we Gcr 5Nouerl colt To S Y some OIL Fors ewe oil wove'. NELLQ+MV Tr;, •LGT's. Go UP - -re owe Roo& Arab PLAY Pee ocHLel ANb> CATcl1 coat, IAi THAT cI4ILLY Room Nix' Wt. GoTTA . GCT •scMe OIL Flaw{ OUR OIL WoreroES Alae: Al AN CND: `Old' -60T TdN GALLOIO s ov'slbe: HU's You 1 RAWNGD TN,G t,51TPUG-m„� Bonfire Dry scent of burning wood 7 smouldering leaves, .A. haze of blue shot through tongues of fire; Aad over all the peaceful Auto sky, A canopy above my, blazing pyr A funeral pyre of faded ru: leaves, 'And little dream that Hutt forth to die; Some laughing hopes that ended this smoke That drifts in pungent air tow the sky. And from these ashes other dre shall rise, And other hewers be born to the Spring; I warm my fingers at the fragi blaze, And look towards the next sv • flowering. • —Lily Dean in the Royal Magaz One of the most important th in life is the illusion of the imp -mace of the things that are not portant.—Robert, Lewd. Mutt Can R ise to Any Emergency. LIDPI 'TAMERS' C We. 0111111111E • g Is 2-e