The Clinton News Record, 1917-06-07, Page 6Ardficia.1 Colori
Prohibited by the
OR many years the C milia a
Artificially Colored
t
Sugars.
uperW, c•has gar.ntoent
bc,ii eating
show that sone reiaeries.have igaT1YY4arnearjt I'epBoytsto make tiergranulated sugar look better than
it
actually is. Otl}ers made use of Aniline anti. Vegetable Dygs to
give a brilliant a
,ppearance to their soft or yelloW slxgars.
The use of dyes or coloring matter hg the coloring of sugar, mallows
of any kind is unnecessary hi refining where it is rind 4os •
, � � t;G'ilt�bir pro -
Cane Sugar. This is emphasized h ceed}}'ngs be. entered under the
a notification sent to ail refiners by Adulteration of f oods Act.
the Dominion Government prohibit»
We Wish the Public to Know that we Have Never Used
Coloring Matter in La .tic Pure Cane Sugar andNever Will
Lantic Pure Cane Sugar was first put: on• During the last two years we were told
the market about two years ago. Since that We could i;nerease our btlsliiess an ear -
that time oyer 20Q 000,0410 lbs. have been tairr sections of Canada, if we would Cohn.
consumed by the Canadian Public,
and we are new turningout 760,000 lbs, L, ii ti; t our yellow soft sugars, as the public
1" t were accustomed to nd More brilliant
of Puro Cane Sugar each day, ,a, s•�, b { ,•Color, We refused and are glad we di
The reason for thie enormous buai sq ; , itt, i�si a d
ness is not b • & ti. "` , so. Tho es recent action a file ni ern.
ardtoex lain. It ea � , p ,. ,: •.� � ,v
P Means r
,, x
fi K
menthes Lias
since covin vindicated to
• t ca o
the the d ur
ti sr' d,
d c iml t' - _ •n U
1 t
na
n co
nsumer i
g
has � g
' ' i
�1 nen
t.
.s
learned by actual use that Lantic '
Pure Cane Sugar i0 superior to all
others.
Ilrfvingerected the mostmodern
sugar refinery be the world, costing
over 40
o Oo 000
$ we steadfastly
adhered
Bred to our original
policy of
making only absolutely Pure Cane
Sugars of highest quality, in which
NO BEETS ARE USED
NO ULTRA MARINL ELM IS Z7SED
NO ANILINE DYES ARE USED
.NO VEGETABLE DYES ARE USED
Look for the Red hale
Trade -mark
To be absolutely certain of get-
ting Lantic Pure Cane Sugar, see
that the Red .Bail Trade -mark is
on every bag or carton. It it our
guaranty to yon el Canada's Purest
Sugar.
Your grocer has Lantio Sugar in stock
' or will get it for you if you insist.
Montreal, Que.. Atlantic Sugar Refineries, Limited (SG John, N.B.
l26
6-'!‘'zie?
?i)Ls
& U1 ¢ice (*I/k .3
Novelized from Me Motion
Picture Play of the Same
Name by the Universal Film
Mfg. Co.
n,.rwi•,, rat {ref kap.
NM IMMO
THIRD EPISODE
The Capture.
Sphinx +atel1y halted abruptly at
14Irs, Van Nuys' table, still toying with
the •Handcuffs. Pat sat breathless
for..an instant, looking Kelly square in
the eye.
"Very, dramatic. Mr. Kelly," Pat
finally said, 'with a sarcastic smile.
"You seem to want everyone in the
place to know that you are a detec-
tive, or somebody trying to show off."
Kelly's tam flushed hotly. Ile was
on the lioint of•meking a sharp retort,
but his better judgment mastered his
impulse to rudeness. Without a word
he returned the handcuffs to his pock-
et, stood looking for a second, straight
into the defiant eyes of the beautiful
girl and then walked away.
Hastening to the main entrance,
Kelly posted ono of his assistants at
the door and demanded:
"See that no one leaves the place un-
til everybody has been searched."
Then the Sphinx returned to Ja-
kobski's table.
The old money shark had only been
stunned by the blow that suddenly
fell upon his head as the lights in the
Cafe Chic were snapped off at the
switchboard.
"Do'you•know if it was a man or a
woman nanostruck you," Kelly asked •
the still befuddled Snkobski,
"OIi, it was a man—and a strong
'
man, too," was Jakobskl's retort, as he
rubbed the lamp. that had been raised
upon the back of his head where the
blow had fallen. •
Kelly instructed the waiters and at-
tendants in: the Cafe Chic that every
guest in the room must be searched,
and under direction of the Sphinx, the
work of investigation rapidly proceed-
ed. While Pat and Mrs. Van Nay's
were waiting in the ladies' retiring
room to be marched by the girl at-
tendants, Kelly stood near the por-
tieres that formed a protecting screen
separating the main cafe from the en-
trance to the ladies' room.
So intent wa ,
s Kell in
Kelly supervising
pervasm
g
the search that he failed to notice
small, white hand, as it projected frm
behind the portieres. There was an
instantaneous Hash of gleaming
pearls set with diamonds, as they re-
flected the brilliant light, then the
dainty hand quickly deposited its prec-
ioueu
b +den in the outside breast pock-
et of Kelly's coat.
Soon Mrs. Van Nuys and Pat
emerged from the retiring room. and
resumed their seat at the table. And
when every -body had been searched,
the disquieting report came to Kelly,
from his assistants, that the Jakobski
pearls were still missing.
The baffled detective was the object
of derisive jeers and much mocking
laughter from the merry throng his
actions had so unceremoniouslyincon-
venienced,
Kelly :stood the taunting and com-
plaint for some time, and then, he
again approached Mrs. Van Nuy's ta-
ble and said:
"If you will take my advice, Iadies,
(you will soon leave this place. In my
insistence upon doing my duty, I have
angered the crowd and they are apt to
start a general disturbance at any mo-
ment. If you will allow me to escort
you home, my cab is ivaiting outside,
and I will feel honored if you will per-
mit me to serve you."
The Sphinx was looking steadily at
Pat during the time he was speaking,
never 'glancing at Mrs. Van Nuys, The
girl seemed conscious of a gentle glow
overspreading her cheeks. She, seemed
to note in (Kelly's eyes a gleam she
had never seen there before.
"We haa better accept Mr. Kelly's
offer, auntie dear;" said Pat, when the
Sphinx had finished speaking. 'We
have had excitement enough for one
evening, I'm thinking.".
Mrs. Van Nuys agreed, and the trio
moved to the door and made their exit
amid an uproar of jeers and cat -calls
directed, of course, at the baffled and
humiliated sleuth.
When Kelly seated hinnself'between
Patricia and Mrs. Van Nuys, the girl
was careful to place herself on the side
next to the sleuth's outside breast
pocket. She knew What treasures the
pocket contained and was determined
to regain possession of the pearls.
Pat insisted upon conversing; with
spirit, as the cab rolled along. Mrs.
Van Nuys was not so talkative, and
her silence was noticed by the Sphinx
who frequently addressed himself par-
ticularly to the woman, in order to
seem politely interested in her,
Once Wheat the Sphinx turned hie
head to speak directly to Mrs. Van
Nuys, the girl, Watching catlike for
her opportunity, slipped her slender
hand intd Kelly's pocket and deftly
is Summer
keep your
thick kin Slices
0
Raid
E
A king W MA ' ptkr Wl t .itub
Po$ aalejfi,liictllre
i{,+hLte gtit3(b' , f+
� 1
ieiR4�i S
TRY A IIOTTLE ttAiY! `ijdl
thatatil Cele: car
ew forth the Jakobski pearls. In
another instant she had safely secret-
e!. them upon her person, and Kelly,
the great detective, was once more foil-
ed e b
'
Y hie frail and beautifule
n meal
s.
Safely home at Iast, Pat securely
locked the pearls in her jewel case
and retired.
The next day Mrs. Van Nuys re-
ceived word from Jakobski that he
would be compelled to foreclose, when
it
soon came
due,a
mortgage he held
upon an orphan asylum Pat and her
aunt were greatly interested in. Mrs.
Van Nuys and Pat discussed the mat-
ter, and more than ever Mrs. Van
"Pat'°
Emerged Froni the Retiring
Room.
Nuys bemoaned the fact that her •
re-
sources had been limited.
"Never mind, auntie dear," was
Pat's consoling remark, when the dis-
cussion finally terminated. "I have
promised that I ivil1 get money to
carry on our charities—and 111 do it
by hook or crook."
"But you must not let your tender
heart impel you to do reckless and
foolish things, my child," said Mrs,
Van Nuyswpioteatang*. .*
For several weeks after Pat's ad-
venture at the Cafe Chic, the news-
papers were filled with reports of val-
our: robberies that were baffling the
authorities. The disappearance of
the Jakobski pearls had been the that;
of along -series of unsolved mysteries.
Sphinx Belly had discussed the af-
fair at Cafe Chic with his assistants,
and reluctantly admitted that the
erime had uonipleteiy baffled him.
, (To be continued,)
A NOVEL SYSTEM.
Method of Heating Houses in Severe
Climate of Korea.
A novel heating syatem called oridol
has been devised by the Japanese liv-
ing in Korea so that they may with.
stand the rigorous winter climeto of
that peninsula, In this avrangernont
the whole floor serves no a stove. The
floor is first made with a layer of mud,
which is intersected by three or four'
alma which radiate from the fire -place
and converge into the chimney on the
other side of the room, Largo slabs
of stone are laid over the roue floor,
the joints hehig made air -tight with
clay. A layer of clay is then added
oar top of the stone, and finally the
whole Is covered with Dade oiled
Paper. .
The firepleco it outside of the 'Wall,
athe hawk() opal heat pass tli000ugh
010 nem in the floor to the opposito
a do of, the Neuse, In this way the
whole room is effectively warmed.
It is said that no stave fa needed in
ANADA'S SHARE
IN EUROPE'S WAR
AVE HAVE LESS THAN 0,000,00
PEOPLE,
����' stn ,..,.....
0
Spent $600,000,000, Loaned $300,000,'
a. 000 More, Employed 300,000 for
Munitions, Enlisted 400;000
This article is part of a speech
made by the Hon. N. W. Rowell,
K.C„ before the American News-
paper Publishers' Aseodation at .its
recent annual meeting in New York.
I have been asked to say something
to you about the part that Canada has
taken in this war, On the fourth of
August, 1914, Canada Round herself at
war with the great military power of
Iruropo• Our. Parliament and our.peo-
ple alone could decide the extent and
nature of our participation in the
struggle,
• Our decision was taken without heli-
tation and without delay, Our Par-
llament truly voiced the sentiment an?
eonviotion of a united Canada when it
declared that Canada wee in this
struggle to the limit of her ability for
the preservation of democracy and
human liberty, which we believed were
put in jeopardy by the action of Ger-
many.
The
course then en decided upon we
have pursued without faltering and
without regret, Tho German atro-
cities of the last twit and a'half years,
some of the service and suffering of
our men at the.front and the more pa-
tient and more heroic suffering of
the familieso
four gallant men who.
remained' at home have only strength-
ened our resolution that, to the meas-
ure of our ability, Canada is in the
struggle until flnai"victory is achiev-
ed.
Canada's Contribution. .
We are a small people, less than
eight millions, inhabiting a territory
somewhat larger than your groat
country. At the ontbreak of the war
we were budily engrossed in problems
of development of settlement, of ex-
pansion—I trust not neglecting the
higher moral and spiritual ideals that
have so much to do with a nation's
life, loving peace and hating war. And
yet in the righteous cause in which we
are engaged
we have enlisted in our
expeditionary
forces for overseas e seas ser-
vice more than 400,000 men. More
than 800,000 have left the shores of
Canada .for service in Flanders and he
France. -
Up to this time Canada has expend-
ed in the actual r
a work of the war and
for actual war purposes more than
$600,000,000, and our war expenditure
to -day is more than $1,000,000 per day.
But in addition we have assisted the
mother country by Ioans to the ex-
tent of $200,000,000 to assist her in
purchasing munitions produced in
Canada, and our Government has ar-
ranged with the banks for advances to
the Imperial Munitions Board of
$100,000,000 more.
We have in Canada at the present
time more than 600 plants producing
munitions for the Imperial Govern-
ment, and in these plants about 300,-
000 are employed.
Canada's Problem.
We have already shipped front Can-
ada munitions of a value between
$400,000,000 and $600,000,000. That
whole industry has been developed
since the Iver broke out and at the
very time that we were withdrawing
thousands of men from our industrial
ranks to fill our forces for oversee ser-
vice.
We have, in addition to this, recog-
nized the great need for food produc-
tion, We realize that under condi-
tions existing to -day the world faces
the possibility of a food famine, and
we are putting forth every effort with-
in our power to increase the agricul-
tural production this year. But the
enlistment of our men, the employ-
ment in our munition industries. and
the demands of agric'ultnre have made
serious drafts on our available man-
power, and I want to say to the credit
of the. women of Canada that they
have come forward voluntarily and
cheerfully and have replaced the men
in order that they may be released for
service.
To increase the agricultural produc-
tion this year we are now, in my pro-
vince, releasing all our high school
boys, so that they may go upon the
farm and do their share to increase
the food supply this coming summer,
The men in our cities and towns who
have been raised on the farm, who
know what farm work is, are volun-•
teeving all over .the country to leave
their ealihig or their business for a
stated period.this summer and go back
to the farm, there to work to increa50
oar food supplies for the coming year.
Canada's Thanks,
In order to increase the national ef-
ficiency and promote national thrift
during the period of the war in all our
provinces save two, we have closed our
bars and public houses and prohibited
the sale of, liquor.
The remits have been such that I
am well within the mark when I say
that the majority of those in. my
country who were opposed to the
adoption of those measures are now
warm supf,orters of them, Your pa-
pas or press have been most appre-
ciative of the part (uaiada has taken
in this war and of the mange and
valoraof our troops et the front, and
I want, as a Canadian, to tha111 you
for the` words of appreciation your
press has expressed for Canadaandher part from one endofthe United
States to' the other.
Canada's glory'.
I have had the opportunity of asso-
ciating with our Canadian 00101)s at
the front, and I knowv 10 is their pride
and their glory that they stood in the
gap at St, Julien, in the second battle,
and barred the way of Germany's
march to the sea and saved the day,
as the llritisli eolneaanader-in-chief
sdfd. It is their glory that they fought
that battle) it is their glory that they
held an impera00 sorter of the salient•
1(. rs their glory to have taken part in
mush a room even on exceedingly cold the groat battle of the Somme, land it
Aye,
la now their glory filet they ate given
'J<'o Keep Ithubileb For Winter,
with
XZanenew rub11aer the farea'inpergs, foctiyWasahir-thorntight
bathokinroughlygthornandfor athorii( i,n ilieo byhour, boningCut oe
the(111 thrhuobarjars b napsas faeull 1faforsposeabstewle, ing thanend
fill to overflowing with Bold water
which has been, previousy boiled for
half an hour and 'cooled, EMI a fork
or spoon down, to break up any air
spaces. After being sure that no air
is left in the jar, while the jar is over-
flowing seal down tightly. Pitt away
in a cool dark place to keep. Tiandle
or move the jars as little as possible.
r -
rigs,
We
ed carrenthave nq and veryfreshblue-
berries will keep if prepared in the
same Way.
The success of these fruits depends
on having the fruit very fresh and the
tars air -tight and properly sterilized,
To Dry Cherries.
Stone the eherries and spread them
out in shallow dishes or platters (the
dishes must be crockery, not tin), let}
ting the juice remain in the dish with
the cherries. .
Allowh
t em to stand
for a week or longer in the sun, cov-
ering with a netting to keep off flies,
mita they are thoronlghly dried. Pack
away in cotton, bags er' pasteboard
bozos. When wanted for use they
may be stewed or made into tarts. If
the cherries ie
r s are intended
o'e
b used
as raisins for •
calces or puddings pre-
pare in the same way but sprinkle
over them a large handful of sugar
and allow them to dry,
Dried Apples.
Windfalls and apples that will not
keep may be dried for winter use.
Pare, gore, and cut in slices, and
spread out on clean new boards or
home-made racks to dry, covering
with a netting to keep off the flies.
About a week will make them brown
and dry enough to keep. If there is
an empty upper room in the house
with plenty of sunlight the cherries.
and apples could be dried in it.
Of course, neither cherries nor ap-
ples must ever be left out in the rain
if
ai
ledu
0
of doors.
s.
Beane Preserved For Winter Use In
Salt.
String green beans and cut up as
if preparing for the table. Have them
perfectly dry. Never pick on a wet
da
Spread p cad the beans out on plat-
ters and give a good covering of salt.
Let them stand •overnight. The
next morning pack in glass jars, or in
a covered crock putting a weight on
teaofthe beans. When required for
use take from the crock as manly as
are needed and soak them overnight
in water and then boil as fresh beans,
They require a little longer cooking
than fresh green beans.
Corn Preserved For Winter Use.
Cut the corn from the cob and pre-
pare it in the sante way as the beans.
Fresh Cucumbers in Salt.
Peel and slice the cucumbers thin,
put a Layer of sliced cucumbers and
a layer .et malt in A Blase jar, Re-
peat until the ,lar is full, and mesa
down as tightly as pbssible, Seal
tightly and when regania'ei for use
take out the quantity needed and soak
oyer night, Pour a little vinegar
over them and sprinkle with pepper,.
They will he juot like freshly sliced
cucumbers, not Having ehangod polar
at all,
'Waging War on Pest
Every housekeeper becomes very
much concerned at titin time of the
year about the invasion of the home
with such pests as roaches, bedbggo,
ants, fleas, moths, flies, mosquitoes
and other annoying and destructive in..
soots. Followinf measures for the ex-
terminatien of vermin and insects
found in the hoarse are recommended:
Roaches—Coal oil is one of the beet
agents for the destruction of roaches
and their eggs. It should be spray,
ed freely into the cracks and crevices
of the floors and other woodwork
where they breed. Povidered "borax
mixed with a little sugar Is also a
good r y
erred � . Cracks r ks -and crevices
which are their hiding places should
be closed up with putty or paint. All
foodstuffs should be.kept -under cover
and crumbs carefully swept from the
floor. The kitchen sink should be
kept scrupulously clean, while the
kitchen closets should be thoroughly
eCrnbbe
d.
Ants—These can easily be destroy-
ed by tracing them to their nests and
pouring into them gasoline, benzine
or coal oil. -
)ileas—The larvae of fleas live in
the interstices of carpets, mattings
and in the corners and cracks of
floors. Cats and dogs should be kept
thoroughly clean. Hot water, soap
and the scrub brush are very effective
in destroying the pests, which hide in
the crevices of the floors. Gasoline
is one of the best destructive agents,
Bedbugs—Spray their hiding places
with a solyyion of corrosive sublimate
(one ounce to a pint of alcohol). This
substance is poisonous and should be
so marked. Gasoline should be
spray-
ed fee1 in crack
sand crevices.
Moths—Thoroughly ghly brush and
clean clothing before it is put away
for the summer. rack - it in large
paper bags or boxes, which should
be made airtight by sealing the edges
with -strips of paper. Wardrobes
should be free of dust and,thoroughly
cleaned. Naphthalene or tar balls
should be freely distributed in trunks,
closets and in the pockets of clothes.(
Flies—Keep the garbage pail cov-
ered tightly. Fly paper freely dis-
tributed will be a great help in des-
troying them. A solution of potas-
sium bichromate (one teaspoonful to
two ounces of sugared water) or a few
drops of formalin in sweetened water
will kill flies, when placed where they
can drink.
Mosquitoes — Burning pyrethrum
powder or sulphur will stupefy thein.
Thorfall to the floor and can be burn-
ed with the sweepings. Do not allow
any water to accumulate.
the privilege of being engaged in that
long battle and defense upon the Ger-
man defense at Vimy Ridge.
Our men at the front need no sym-
pathy. They ask for none—all they
ask is this, that when in fighting they
fall there shall be other' hands to
grasp the flag that falls from their
hands, and carry it on to victory, so
that the cause of liberty and humanity
may finally triumph.
The gallant man, the best young
men of Canada, the young men from
eighteen to forty, have gone to the
front by thousands. They have laid
down their lives; the young men of
France and Britain, Belgium and Italy
have clone the same. They have made
a glorious sacrifice.
If you have worked till your back
aches, lie face down to rest, with your
feet higher than your head,
Breaking the News.
Little Mariestoodin the doorway,
one hand on the doorknob. For a. mo-
ment she gazed at her mother, who
was preparing to go out.
"Mother," she said, "do you know
what I am going to give you for your
birthday when it coaxes?"
"No, dear," answered the mother.
"Please tell me."
"A nice hairpin tray with gold flow-
ers on it all around," said the little
girl:
"But, my dear," exclaimed the moth-
er, "I have a nice one like that al-
ready."
"No you haven't, mother," Marie
answered, "I have just dropped it on
♦i.,..O ...... „
Teacher in physiology class: "What
is the office of the salivary glands?"
Pupil: "The mouth."
ENGLISH COLLEGES
DRAINED BY WAR
ONLY ARTS NOW STUDIED AIUTh
THOSE OF DESTRUCTION.
Desolating Loneliness Characterizes
Universities at Oxford and
Cambridge,
The war seems more intensely real
at England's university centers than)
anywhere else in the country, says al
London writer. This was not so ap.i
Parent in the early days of the con.
f3 c
i t, The ta f i
r ns carnation isespecial...
ly pronounced at Oxford and Cam -f
bridge, where there is a desolating!
loneliness of the college buildings, of!
the river and the playing fields.
Not only the undergraduate has
gone from these seats of learning, butt
also the younger Don. Every one of ` aa'a
military age, except the invalid and
the crippled, has vanished. ed Wh t
x
of life there is in the colleges is alien
to the place.
Hospital and Cadet School.
The examination -schools at Oxford
have been transferred into a hospital:
Part of the other buildings have been:
given up to training buildings for the'
army. Terms begin 'and end unheed•+
ed. The only students left are stu-�
dents of war; the only arts cultivated
are those of destruction.
A. C. Benson, the widely known au-
thor and master of Cambridge, dis-I
cussing recently the gradual trans -1
formation at the English seats of
learning, said: "It was a question of
instinct anti feeling from the start.1
The high-spirited ed a
nd adventurousenturous
went firsts then the sedater sort; then'
the men of an altogether quieter type,
and then those who were naturally
averse to the fighting life." •
Manufacture Weapons.
All the natural population of the
universities and colleges has gone.
What stairs are left aro turning out
death -dealing weapons. The staffs at
nearly all the various departments at
Leeds University are now doing war:
work of a most specialized kind. Tho'
coal, gas and fuel industries depart i
ment is testing high explosives prow
duced in Yorleshire and analyzing coali
tar for toluene and benzine. The en-
gineering department, besides othera
more elaborate duties, is teaching e1e-i
mentary machine work to intending
munition workers. The textile Indus-
tries department, the color chemistry
department the agricultural �
g cultural depart-
ment are engaged by the Government
to deal with army cloths, with dyes'
and with foodstuffs.
Outlining before Parliament the
other day the work now being done at
the universities, Herbert A. L. Fisher,,
hoad of the educational department of;
the country, said: "The professor and
lecturer, th0-research assistant and
the research student have suddenly bel
come powerful assets to the nation.
Whatever university you may choose
to visit you will find it to be the scene
of delicate and recondite investigation,''
resulting here in a more deadly ex,';
plosive, there in a stronger army.
boot, or, again, in some improvement
to the fast -advancing technique of
aerial navigation."
When washing spinach put a Hand-
ful of salt in the second water, whichl
.
will cause the sand to sink to the bot,'
tont of the pan. Thus only threat
waters will be needed.
era.y n
3r4 as r
y
a
ed..lam =°;t nd
It is your guarantee that the sugar is all
pure cane of the.highest quality,—that the
weight is exact, that the grains are either
coarse, medium or fine,—as you niay have
chosen— (your dealer can meet your choice).._
ED MANI ND
£;.fll``d10E G R AUNTED SU' ..
for every pui'ppsee, but especially for those which exact the best.
FOR JAM S AND JELLIES
St. Lawrence sugars have stood the test of time and,haVo tioyeo caused preserves tofer'8Beht,
or prevented jellies from setting, because S •Lawl'ence Red Diamond Granulated is free
from the organic impurities which cause these teaubles,
Malt/a 1001b, tad rf5t, Lawrence oil Piamonfl Crenctictcdnog,
pnd liaise a sopp jp of he boa saga' at leoi}(( .fir over/ purpose.
Sold also to naaud, oiltei' sixes and tijjlc9 ofpankagal.
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