HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1918-07-04, Page 2CI'L\ P i.Iab '� e Tee (('cited,) He clunks 0555 a vivid scarlet,
You mean •,"• 11uJt he been elite t0 "eat them, site
He placed hs hand upon her am. ,.ould not have gone O1(,
'eed she ventured one more look into '"A women so eelflsh," she faltered
4431 a}es, He was frowning. She aheed, "that she pt'eferred a make -
Meet not allow that. She ,oust send heir"" husband to a reo1 husband, be-
• hiim away good rits: at was ca --
uee--he'ause a0
h
site tought s
the
he
least she �:ou,l cdTh
o So elle forced would be lett tree.
a smile. "Free for what.?" he (demanded.
A11 right," she pi'umised• "if it! "To live,"
will make. ,you more comfortable," I "When loge and marriage and chit-,
'"Jt would worry me It lot if I'
are all thele is to lite he ask -
o thought you weren't going to Lc { eedd.
p,
"l'll go out every fair day," Site ctcsee,t her did n, , ".I
"You sae, she dill not Item thaw
"That's fine." I,
Ile took a card from his oeket 1 ica11 he thought all those thinks
scribble banker's
and called for the :,acrifice of her free -
(1 his bankcl s address upon! dura,"
1t, I "What freedom?"' he demanded
• "If anything should come up where! again, "It's when we're alone that
--where I can be of any use, you can, we're slaves ----slaves to ourselves. A
alwaysreact
t me through this ad
dress."
She took the card. Even to the en,
he was good --good and four-square
He was so good that her throat ache
She could not endure this very muc
longer. "Slone, He extended his hand,
and good luck,"be said.
"I--.Ihoe o +
than you think."1(l golf will be bet. e
Then he said a peculiar thing. IT
seldom Swore, and seldom lost his
head as completely els he did that sec
once But, looking her full in th
Gree, he ejaculated below his breath:—
"Damn golf!"
The ohservatiun was utterly irrelev-
ant Turning, he clicked bis heels
together like a soldier and went Out,
The doo: closed behind. him For a
- woman alone, a 1000 alone, living to
himself alone—what is there for him?
1 He can only go around and around in
. a pitifully spall circle --a circle 'that
ache.
were! any Ivey but as he plead
would •have been to strike that u
turned face,
""I--111 try to stay," she faltered.
"111 make you " hm breathed, I'
hold you tiget, sort of mince Wot11
} u---iiould y'ar 111,5'; me Maes?"
Holding her breath, Marjory light.'
' •ushed ea('h of his eyes with her
1 pS,
"•It's like balm," he whispered. "I'v
,'reamed at night of this.
"'1rr vert .lay I'll. do it she :raid.
• Only- ter a little while—you'll not
ask for anything more, Peter?"
"Not until mini day they open -in
answer to that Mall," he ' il(ed.
"I didn't mean that, Peter," she
said hurriedly. "Only 1'nl so mixed
up myself,"
"Its so new to you." he nodded.
p i, Food Control Corner
111 The farmers of Canada will ',ay
cl shortly have to undortnke tri , ha e•
work with the help of leree 1 1 'o••
Y In this connection aim shoui ? re: .•
Ler that we arc at eras, They sl ;lid
e -• „r,rn rgltlugL(oul lir '.11'10
o (ea 1 the new eondlt1ons, 1':.1
should begin right in their own 55.:0035,
The first adjustment nece(0,.rt' (5
to change the point of flew from 10
of e1'itcism,teen r
d u ngernent, and
fault -fielding with labor conditions, t
plat ee the• Howler and wee worker
and realize that we are going throuel
u ci:isls, the most serious the wont
""To nee We like a day foreseen
dozen 3 earS, Lo110• before 1 sail' you
I knew I waS getting ready for you
Now' --what do a few weeks natter?'
"It May be menthe, .Peter, before
Im quite atea13,
"Even if it's years,"" he exclaimed,
"I've felt your lips,"
"Only on your eyes," she cried in
terror.
""I—I wouldn't dare to feel them ex -
Even
my eyes—for a little while,
Even there they take away lily
breath,"
(To be continued,)
employed men and girls who had never ( eamII(;Pd GATES
been inside a factory before, Chet W !Pd q`�
aceoml 'shed the Impassible! These � q Ger
inexperleneed helpers were speedily1
I
taught their parts and the: result is
(.hewn in the products of munitions
from Cltn: dian 'fnetorie:s nnu' known
all over the world—not excepting Ger-
nrany,
T,
he result of organizetiu1l ,tad tete'
willing wartime spirit in (Groat Britain
IS ('dually eo n•lne'ing, Great
Britain hast year, hugely with inee-
periemeed labor on the land, increase(i
her cereal produe ion by 800,000 tome;
it.s potato production by 5,000,000 tone,
' The cultivated ax•et( WWI 1101'ea604 a1 -
I together by 1,000,000 aeras. When in,
1917 820,045 men wore token from in-
dustrial organizations -and placed
the Army the War OR'iee replete
them with 801:,000 rwam011, and yet t
production of guns was 1111055.9
80 per cont„ air craft 250 per cen
while the shipping tonnage amount
a has ever witnessed without any eeligsgerati0n whatsoever.
• "!here used to be talk taming tarn.
ere derogatory to the eity man and
other inexperienced laborers who
sometimes sought employment tem-
porarily on the farm,- Stich talk is
out of place now, with the Germane
sixty miles from Paris and every
available man in Britain and France
fighting to save not only his own
country but this country es well,
Such Canadian farmers forget that
they themselves have been farmers
all their lives and in war 'time - they
can't expect to secure sten volunteer-
ing from the cities with an experience
in farm Toth equal to their own, That
is an impossibility. But it is not im-
possible that farm production of this
country he increased, despite the
shortage of experienced labor. That
this is true is proven by the experi-
ence of this country in the inanufac-
llne of munitions.
When the war started Canada was
absolutely inexperienced, unskilled in,
and ivithont the machinery for the
manufacture of munitions, Bee the
manufacturers got to work. They
studied the problem and they solved it.
To -day Canada is turning out mil-
lions of dollars worth of shells every
month from the largest to the small-
est, and the most minute mechanical
contrivance% in connection with fuses
and time charges. Canada's record
in the manufacture of munitions is one
of the surprises of the war. It was
not made by Canada saying "Canada
Can't" but by adopting the motto
'Canada Can". Canada slid not re-
fuse to try because of the scarcity of
labor but set to work to organize and
When 'Wars A.re Done,
i When wars are done and peace beams
• like the sun.
When belching cannon, shot and
shell's fierce cries
No longer lacerate refulgent skies,
Then shall the triumph over sin be
won,
Man's ghastly race with Death will be
outrun;
Ile shall go soaring as the eagle
flies,
Unwearied, and with strength re-
newed arise;
He shall obscure the sun—when wars
are done.
1 grows maller and smaller with every!
yr Between twenty and thirty al
'man (an exhaust all there le in life for
hnn..elf alone. He has eaten and;
r slept incl travelled and played until
I hi semis have become dull, Perhaps'
0, a rtontt,n taste a little longer, but nut
mach loner. Then they are locked
away in thentselvee until they die."
e "Peter!" 0he Med in terror.
"It's only• as re live in others that
we live forever," he ran on. "It is
only by toiling and sacrificing and suf-
feeing and loving that we become im-'
mortal. It le eo we acquire real •
freedom . "
second her lace was illumined US w'
11 ,great ((30. In a sort of (5(Ftas3', s
•repeat d '1r. w'orda,
"lie said " .ehe tvhisr ct l--_ "he set
"li: en golf,' Then she threw- hers(
into a .i •lie] elft' and begirt to
•0113'' site choked, "It --if--"
WE
Yes, Peter," eht• agreed, with a '
rte aa,se,
tome rat yeti make her under'4taud'
id, the i I
lf • -She 'doe; 011der5talhd, 'flint's the•1
lb•' pity- of it,'
And Cavuigten
"Its in hat to understand; only—
:'he lost the right. to matte him under-'
his stand, She ---she •debased herself: So'
t :the 11110t eacrifiee herself to get clean'
e
:maim She must matte even greater P
1 eci•iiices than any she cowed away
crone She must do this without any,
re of Mho compensations that conies tot
• CHAPTER, XXlI,.
1:[t Nice en the twentieth.
join --as Peter supposed::
Metiame Covington in Par,. lion
Il;nhrelf had been extremely ambr
g
oas about hiedestination, being sn
1•be lion and the ox in calm shall
dwell,
The little child shall lead thein with-
out harm,
he grey, parched desert's blooms its
joys shall tell,
he vineyal'cl's yield, the pressyes (Wererun,
When earth is swsyed by love's all -
potent charm,.
eaee shall eclipse the sun—when
wars are done!
01117 one fact: that. he should n
renin inside of a year, if he did tite
Peter had aked for his. a:luress, a:
Monte had given him the same a
ileess that ire gave Marjory,
'I want to keep in touch with you
Peter said.
Peter missed the man, 0:t the rid
with Marjory that he enjoyed the re,
day atter Montle's departure, he tall
ed a great; deal of flim,
"I'd like to have seen into his eyes,
e told her. "I kept feeling I'd tin
umetdling the'e more than l got hol
1 in his voice and the g.•ip of hi
anti."
"Ile has brae eyes," she told hint
and they are clean ae a child's."
"'they are a bit sad?"
"Monte's ee,•es sad??" she exclaimed
Whet made you think so?"
"Perhaps because, from what he le
sop n
tib_ other er ni h
7t1En't: altogether ghappywth withered til l
Ovington,'
"lie told you that?"
"Nu; no directly," he assured her
Heel too loyal. I may be utterly mis-
ken; only he was rather vague as
r why she was not here with him."
"She was not with hint," Marjory
Imam:0d stoney. "She was not with
m because she wasn't big enough to
eeerv0 him,"
"Then it's a fact there's a tragedy
his life?"
"Not in his -en hers," she answ'e50d.
esionately.
"How can that be?"
"Because she's the,01e who realizes
0 truth."
"But she's the one who event away,"
"Because of that, It's a miserable
ore-, Peter."
•"You knew her intimately?"
"A great many ycare."
"I think Covington said he had •
own ,you a long time,"
"Yes."
of thoe eho havebeen honest and un -1
vi afraid,"
of him ""
d i "He must never know. He'll go,
„ round and round his little circle, and s
' !the must watch him."
"Its terrible," he murmured, "It
e ii ill be terrible for 'ler co watch him;
13
11
d
to
f
it
11!
a
an
1'a
th
sl
en
him•
do
we
ries
go
and now --he's going to make it per-
manent."
"A. divorce?"
"Yes, Peter;," 1,1117 an. were!, with a
little shiver,
"I know all that he. main to her,"
ehe choked.
"She loves him?"
"With all her heart and soul,"
"And he doesn't know it?"
t do that. If you head told him how
. sho i'elt--
"God forbid!"
Ur if you had only told me. so that
1 could have told him—"
She seized Peter's atm,
"You wouldn't have dared!"
"I'd dare anything to save two p
pie from st1ch torment,"
"You—you don't think he
worry?"
I think he is worrying a gr
deal," •
"Only
for the moment," foment " she bre
in. "Rut soon—in a week or two
he will be quite himself again.
1has
a great many things to do.
has tennis and—and golf,"
She checked herself abrupt
("Damn golf!" Monte had said,)
"There's too much of a man in hi
now to be satisfied with such things
said Peter. "It's a pity—it's a pi
there are not two of you, Marjory,"
"Of me?"
"Ile thinks a great deal of you.
he had met yori before he stet th
other—"
"What are you saying, Peter?"
"That you're the sort of iwom8
who could have called out in him a
honest love."
There, beside Peter who could n
see. Marjory bent low and buried he
race in her hands.
'"You're. the sort of woman," h
d
d
e
I
iwent on, "who could have roused th
man in hien that has been waiting a
this time for some one like yeti."
How Peter was hurting her! Ho
he was pinching her with hed-ho
irons! It hurt so much that she wa
glad, Here, at last, she was begin
ning her sael'ifiee for Monte. 5
site made neither moan nor groan, no
covered her ears, but took her punish
meat lilt• a man.
"Some one else must do all that,'
she said.
Yes," he an wererl. Or is
will lit
will be wasted. He' needs to suffer
He needs to give up. This thing w
call a tragedy. may he the staking o
him."
"For some one else," the repeated
Peter was fumbling about for her
hand, Suddenly she straightened her-
self.
It must be for some one else," he
aid hoarsely—"because I want you
or'myself. In time—you must be
ine. With the experience of those
wo before us, we mustn't make the
mo mistake ourselves. I—I wasn't
oing to tell. you this until I lead my
yes back. But, heart o' mine I've
eld in so long, Isere in the 1355k one
eta so much alone. And being alone
what kills."
She was hiding her hand from him,
'"I can't find your hand," he whisper -
like a child` lost in the dark.
Summoning all her strength, she
aced her hand within his. "It lel
cold!" he cried.
SWEET OR CHURNING CREAM
INVADERS' FACS`
iv„ imply 00m", Pay ('x1(1055 eharg00 ^-^-
and remit dally.
alltti10(1 albs; uta 0511010057 00.
7Aa-s Icing 133, VPeat - 7Coroatq
from green but willing help from i'ew0n
'that will not only surprise themselves
but 'trill also be of tremendous berm -
fit to the Empire 1 y the inercaecti re.
sults of their harvest,
LIZARDS' SAVE 1 leGAlt CANIS.
eeas
Reptiles Used in Pla1ttatem, 10 Colra-
in 1 hat Iasecte.
ed ; In Trinidad lizards etre being item!
he � in large nuhnbers to combat
ed' loons of fh•n *ho
t„, froghoppers thaf• are now
ed infesting the sugar -cane fields, 'rlrese
to 1,105,000 tons, additional,
The best recent illustration of what I
can be done in all emergency when
only inexperienced When are available
is that of the battle of Picardy when
the fifth army tender General Gough
was overwhelmed and out -numbered,
It looked inevitable that the Buns
would break through and capture the
city of Amiens, zvhlch would have
meant the interruption . of railway
communication between Channel ports t
and Paris, cutting off the British from
one of their chief bases of supplies.
General' Carey, however, saved the
situation. He called upon all classes
of men behind the lines, whether they
were soldiers, cooks, camp followers,
railway 'construction men, Chinese
laborers, medical service mea, trans-
port men, or whatever they were and
organized them to fill the breach
\Pith these men the succeeded in doing
what the 5th Army failed to do—he
held the line! 'With no training in
trench warfare, and n0 fighting
organization before that time, Gen-
eral Carey gathered them together,
and this liondescript gathering of
troops kept the Huns back for six
days and nights until re -enforcements
arrived, General Carey did not say
1 can't use this untrained class of
men", but Ile set to work 101111out n.
nonment's hesitation to snake the
est of therm, and he succeeded in sav-
ng the British army and its allies
rom a desperate crisis.
jlnsects, which work cdeva.station by
sucking sap from the roots and
leaves, have been known in th o 111011(1
for some time, but of late they have
increased so rapidly that scientists
have undertaken to find r, means of
exterminating e
t 6 them. One planter has
established s. special breeding place
for lizards, which feed freely on the
froghoppers. Special precautions are
taken to prevent the destruction of
the reptiles by birds or other eree-
ures that might feed on then,.
•
DIFFERENT ID
The war is developing many idea
hitherto unknown to most Canadians
co- and the greatest of these is thrif
We hear it on every hand, from th
EAS OF THRIFT-
S program, And if the youngsters do
, not hear some of the old folks say
0. they dislike the barley, potato or
e oatmeal breads, they will eat them
t 'with a relish. Feed the children well,
will kitchen and linen closet, througl
every branch of home-making—at
eat in the streets it pursues us in th
form 0fplacardsbeseeching
us
to
ke
save for the different :funds which the
He;' war has made necessary.
Hel Food we must save, and we're do-
ry I mil it gladly and willingly. Linen we
can't buy anyway, and wool is al-
• most out of sight. And we are find-
'+ nig' that we can get along beautifully
iy I with the Japanese lunch cloths for our
tables, and that while shoddy isn't so
satisfactory as pure wool fa gar-
ments, we can wear it and be warm,
r0 if it is going to help win the war.
IMany women in some way miss just
n what the food board desires of them,
n' and undernourish their families. It
is not thrift, but the worst sort of
et, extravagance to rob the growing chil-
e' (Iren of the foods they need to promote
el the healthful growth of bone and mus-
e ole, Adults may get along for quite
1t, a while on diminished rations, but
children need certain footle to make
Hoe the cells which build up the organs
t and it is nothing short of criminal to
8' deprive them of these things. Milk,
-! which just now is plentiful in Ontario,
• though there are differences of opinion
Ir about its cheapness, is one of the best
,things for the growing boy and girl.
And we are not netted to save on that.
' On the other hand. we are urged to
e buy it and save on meat•. Few chil-
i ' dren dislike milk and they should be
• given it freely to drink, in custards
]d and don't neglect yourself. Only see
e that your food conforms to the pro
gram laid down
b
the food board, a
Yd in-
stead of to the program arranged by
the finicky notions of the family. This
is not a time to humor your stomach.
There is another form of thrift
which is misnamed. And that is the
mistaken notion which impels a wo-
man to get along without kitchen con-
veniences when she can afford to have
them. I am not speaking now of
power washing machines and vacuum
cleaners,- Wrangles and acetylene
ranges which every woman longs for
but which many cannot afford, but the
dozens of little things which every wo-
man could have and doesn't buy for
the sake of saving a cent. For in-
stance, a carpet sweeper can be
bought for $4.50 which will last for
years. Brooms are to -day $1.00
apiece and the carpet sweeper will
outwear twenty-five or thirty brooms,
Yet how many women go on without
this very handy article when they
might just as well have it. Charcoal
and gasoline irons cost no more than
a good set of the sort which must be
heated on the stove, But how many
women sweat through the beat of July
and August because they won't invest
in a different iron?
And the host of little things watch
help. Think of getting along without
a pancake turner, when you can buy
one for a nickle. Or without a ten
cent pawing knife, or an egg -beater or
whip, either of which costs a dime,
Strainers, spatulas, wire potato mash-
ers, knobs for covers, dippers, can fill-
ers, Ca11 openers, measuring Cups, soap
shakers, basins of all sizes, market
baskets, scoops—why,'what can't you
buy for ten cents? Turn a woman
ooze in a ten -cent store with two dol.
ars anti she could pick up enough to
ave herself hundreds of steps a day.
Yet how many women keep on saving
money and losing time and temper,
nder the mistaken impression that
they are thrifty,
Let us be thrifty, by all means. But
e sure that what we practice isn't
iggardliness.
'Then, kneeing her and knowing
wasn't there anything you could;
'I did what I could." elle answered
arety.
Perhaps that explains why he hue. 1
1 back to lief,”
He hasn't gone to her. He'll never
baclt to her. She deserted him
"Why, he wouldn't believe it—if
she told him. She can never tet him I
know it. She'd deny it if he asked I t
Tier, She loves him enough for sa
that." g
"Good Lord!" exclaimed Peter, I.g
"'There's a mistake there somewhere." I
"The mistake came first," site ran ; b
on. ""Oh, 1 don't know why Pm tell. rs
mg you these things, except that it is
a. relief to tell them to some one."
"Tell me all about it," he encourag-
ed her. "I knew there was something
on your mind.
"Peter," she said earnestly, "can
you imagine a 'woman so selfish that
she wanted to marry just to escape the
responsibilities of marriage?"
"It isn't possible," he declared.
%YIRE FE1V€FJ
3,000 Roils, froom. 32 cents per rod,
up. Shipped promptly from stoclk,
ed
pl
c
Yet the day was warm. They,
were speeding through a sunlighted l
country of olive teed and Blowers in I
bloom—n warm world and tender.
Ile drew her Anger's to hie lips and
kissed them passionately. She suffer-
ed it, closing her eyes against the
pain.
I've wantedyou so all these
monthsh' he cried. "I wouldn't
have let you go in the fleet place, I
shouldn't have let eters goal
ea, leiter," she answered.
'And now that I've found you again,
it'll stay?"
To was lifting his ince to hers—
stl'ainieg to see her. To have 8110 -
Write for Trite List. '
A. R. LUNDY 285 Ring St. West Yo
rorontet I
and puddings, milk gravy and vege-
table cream soups, In the soups, es-
pecially, it is an ideal dinner or lunch
dish. The milk furnishes the protein
necessary for growth, and the fat, if
the cream is not taken out, while the
vegetables give the mineral salts nee-
essarv. Any vegetable may be cook-
ed until soft, put through a ricer, and
the water in which it is cooked, with
the pulp, added to scalded milk, the
whole thickened with a little corn -
Istarch, and served piping hot.
Plenty of milk, eggs, vegetables,
fruit, and a certain amount of simple
sweets may be given the children b
without interfering with the thrift'n
s
u
Wash Boller as Canner.
,vorlt!.
The good old family wash boiler
makes a very good home Cannes. The
jars zest on a rack perforated at the
side to allow the boiling water to
thoioughiy circulate around the ,jars,
A home-made rack can be made, laity -
ever, of strips of wood or wire mesh,
To Go 111 the Wash Boiler,
.eco'moi'"•'^`•�-=g">i±?'+'"�"-•�;'"-"
This is a home-made Wooden rack
to be placed in the bottom of wash
boiler that is used for home eamting,
The jars rest on the rack,
Similarity, if the Canadian farmer
makes up his mind that these are war
times and war measures are neces-,
sary thele is absolutely no doubt he
can utilize to a tremendous advantage
the man power and the woman power ,
of the towns, where people are only
too willing to go to his assistance, if
they are organized to do so. HeI
must not expect them to be experi-
enced and to lotow as much about the
details of farm 'work' as he does. It
has taken him a life -time to acquire
his information. Townspeople have
spent their lives at different work,
but with his knowledge of farming and
his intimate acquaintance with his
farm and all its needs he should have
the ability to organize inexperienced
help
chow a -
and e ch1
he er his or her
P
particular job and bow best to ac-
complish it. A few ]tours' patient
teaching in any one particular line of
work will very soon enable a green-
horn to "Carry on", as they say in the
Army. • By patience and considera-
tion the farmers of Canada can, with-
out question, effect an organization
Milkweed Cream . 50c and $1.00
Yelreola Souveraine Face Powder 50c
Rouge (3 shades) . . 50c
Zodeata . r 25c
Milkweed Cream Soap . 25c
Borated Talcum 25e
Complexion Tablets . 25c
F1RED'IC F.INGERAM CO.
WINDSOR. CAN.
Stake up the roses and other plants
as needed. Cosmos, unless growing
along a fence, is likely to blow Over
and break unless staked up.
57.4, y.• �i=,r1 I
Nothingutter is ntade
ru7sYlir ��y if p;--
�--L"'---'�,
PER(
U'Itm rt,
Raking better c; L3 be rt
Aa,
}:•tie 7 ,f L(pOr:q.. 4 }.'tilos'
thkaES•NIEAe ill S t 11(0310
f2iminaks nit 1.01
m d,. Mater hula,
wholesome bread,
I1rolls, etc., without
trouble, Saves fou,
and helps cower,.
die Nations food
wooly.
Convenient, quirk
;and dean -bards
do not touch dough.
a.
Deli' met all charge
paid to your home, or
through your deale,-
raur loaf rise 02.75;
eight loaf 14e 53,25,
E.T. WRIGHT00,
(HAMILTON
CANADA
42.70
ADR
*3.35
HEROIC: DEED 01•' BRITISH CYs
CIdS'l'$ ()N ITALIAN FRONT.
Ran Into Austrian Force, Dismounted,
Nixed Bayonets and Engaged in
I1and-(o.fhtnd Fight.
.11ontello, the ottd-shaped rthaie of
hills which hinge the Austrian ofi"Or1-
sive, has been occupied for several
months by the l;rit h11, who came to•
hely under 1,1en, Violeta., A Britisla
die inion occupied the s"tat11-western.
ridges of the Mingo plateau, With the
/evenah on their right.
The British, after revenavnriing the,
advanced positio05, momentarily
abandoned on the 1nm'nieg of ,lune
15th, with a view of st] engtboning the
11110, 1101 only reshsted all Austrian at-
tempts, but gallantly counter-attaelted
in a fashion tilat caused an Italian
superior officer to remark: "They are
slamming the grates of Italy in the
face of the invader."
A detachment of British cyclists ac-
complished heroic deeds. They w'ere-
thanging position, and coving along
a sunken road parnlled to the front.
•Suddenly they ran into a vastly super-
ior Austrian contingent, barring the.
way. Instead of fleeing, they die -
mounted and advancers ti'ith. fixed
bayonets, Simultaneously the Austti-
,:ns wero ordered to charge, and the•
two waves ofbayonets (+ashed. A
terrific fight ensued, but the splendid
physique and undaunted cement: of
the British cyclists proved too much
for the Austrians, who fled, di.eearding•
their rifles, the British pnrhving awe
capturing many rifles and pies -mete,
Maudling Of Reserves.
,• One of the most successful featn•ee
of the °rgand::atima of the Italian
army consists in the wise distribution.
and rapid handling of reserves, which
10 il;ustreted by the brilliant feat On
the British eectore and it: further tee-
; tilled to by the splendid Anglo -Italie')
(,11111118''(t' ic, The 11: itieh defender'
of a e rtnin position Were ordered
rel t.e
retire, With 11 vietV i0 5 3aight en '1`•
the Salient, 1 small dc,r:nnlent
left Otl the erre of a hili 3,0110 Iree
high, to rove,' the withdrawal. The
Austideeq, who 171117 tamely persel', ' 1
the mai t!u11,team to' 17031,3101111site
dee.^ e l ra. et, bet the ;atter although
a,!mo t completely Sur r unded mid nue-
numtared tenfold, succeeded in hold-
ing the enemy at bay.
the commander of ate Alpiri t:[e-
i:,.hntent on the left of the Briti-h de-
tachment decided on his own i' .t 100
'to attempt to reo:'ue the Briti h ^'s.
The question was whether the Alplal
e auld be able to arrive in time to find
the defenders alive. The commander
cl' the Alpinf said: "We would be to*
Fate if any but the Briti,.11 bulldogs
trent- defending the pesitice, and if any
but then Alpini Chamois were rushing'
1 to their 1'c Arne." 'elle ltt.iian Alplitf
1
theret on
ap tashed..forw'at•d and were
received by the British with cheers for
1 Italy. The Austrians were so tatters
aback by this unexpected onslaught
that they wavered, whereupon the
commander of the British detachment
!leaped to the top of the trench mad
ordered a charge. The Austrians were
— — I forced to withdrew in face of the :1:-
glialgliMat tack both in the front and on 'ha
!flank.
Ingivifines
C. ouvcr t:,,RGSL. e
Face ` owder,
The daintiness of a complexion always
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sire ofeverywoman. Best ofall powders
is Ingram's Veiveola Souveraine Pace,
Powder. It keeps the skin smooth
and attractive. Hides minor blemishes,
the little winkles, and blends somar-
velously with the complexion that it is
scarcely visible. It adheres even Mho
the akin be warm and moist, and it has
a refined and gentle fragrance.
For the sake of youthful charm use In -
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enables you to retain the charm and
color of girlhood. It is curative end
healthful for the skin tissues. Your
druggist has a complete line of Ingram's
toilet products including Zodenta for
the teeth,
(96)
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I Although Belinda was dark herself,
she had been the bright spot in the
Boyle household in tbe Southern
States for more than ten years when
she announced# that she was "gwilits
1 to git married."
"D'you know," she confided to her
mistress, "if I could only have a long
, white dress, like Miss Bertha had
1 when she done got married, and some
of them yeller flowers in 018 hair,
1 like she had, would everlastingly
paralyze scene of them coons in our
church that says I ain't got enough
etyle to be marrying a nigger like
Wash Williams."
The conversation being repeated to
the master of the honse that; evening
et dinner, he did not regard it as en-
tirely a joke and told his wife 16 fit
out Belinda for the wedding accords
Ing to her cherished dream.
"The cost doesn't amount to one'
thing," lie remarked, "and she has
been with us a long time. Rig her
ionuate, haiundernd her to the <hard in the
This was accoedingly done, and the
bride departed for the church in the
family automobile. In about an hour
fraectleir, nod, a smile of triumph CD
"Good Lord, misses," she burst out,
"yoa just ought to seen me going up .
the aisle in that there church. The
niggers all turned around and theie
eyes ;Met bulged oaten their heads.
The minister he just stood there paras
lyzed, holding out both hands. He
knowel nothing like that never came
into hie church to be married before,"
"How lovely!" chimed in the mese
trews. "And what did yoer husband
think about it all?"
"Ma husband 7" murm need Belinda,
,•aressing a fold et her long white
train, "Inhy, that nigger nevot
thicken logs Can be scalded, skinned
and put into the soup pot.
The area aeeded in Conjuring Creek
dietriet, Alberta, shows an increase of
ten per cent. over last year, while in
cPr°019.easetbonetedelest;;01etenietl? 15 an In"