HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1922-07-27, Page 2e
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nc
d
o
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e ore only
as as half dead
4550 of peepi m the world—the
re and the slave, Dave was a and established a seepence ef events.
el e, Ile had Inver knowei it before, An Mel man in the gallery read loudly
but the *maker made it quite ape from Victor Hugo while a speaker in
arent the ereheetra deciainital'fia i33ngle Tax,
/ "I3ut Pre not a slave," Baia Dave, Finally the old TOAV vrga zsileMed, and
. eidenly opringing to hie feet "1 ean Dave ofesaa to learn that all the eon -,
g On it WOUld -step altoge. my job to -rem -row aeul Ull my emla diseases to which Society ie heir
,
0 .ii .14 ,I :gold. silipUtinnet;h: alihr?ourrg; ow.h(r.:74nowparlie:tt;:i.wi4inticl r rregw° etrr°013helile: and cat-cafis, but. piniougnbdtedblyll'eHaleecinryb7aeoaele°•th)Ann:tchraar-
,t air and, a Anee eemeh ht lastethee ethen on the platform inade In the audience etarted to speek . of
0 on a ofeerl . In the quite a differegit le resell. P8ftett. the failure orthe established eyetern
0 IIIJ of Al,Wrig, and refuge !intim than that of the theatre •gir ''''
' "An4 what will you de, my friend•, a marriage, embelliehing hie egga-
thin ef the ieldert meth whore. of the night before. La mew stag?"
she Been d e n e„„= after you have quit your eole?" he extent with, mope than eine local mei-
-rx A,,,," il I e IT 3 it5e6411; °t R""- -e. asked, quite courteouely, dent of a salacious nature, hut lee was
, fevld and hie dim:delete father, way
4 k d e4ey aeoneige to meet Ai.ar.j. 4,avn'5 44r0aPea''''" W" 3"-1 "Get another ene," field Dave, with- at last gaquired bp give plaee to a
e
attire, After hie father'ff deep enough to know that any fine girl ,
out teem -aline. 'Ole trap, •"'lliere'e lots woman Who 33ad a more pereenal
a ti David epee to welt hie would remind hien of Beanie Barfly. of sobse, geeeneeneo to invsent
e o ern ana !new all his 1 Then ehe began to eing, anti he felt 3 got another (To ibe eontineed.
0 '
eel table. He epende an again that the geneltine wee playing "That is
zr
co
The
MI
co,
chekia
0 to death.
1*4
aber, and
d ntil he
there were two
f0 Y917 votil4
er. 4 as long ait
re • • e Aare'
An 3Y *2J and
vecineentin
After the mu there Wag a
'sort of freeaf 11. Half a elozaa
sprang to their feet, each :eieking to.
out-taBe• his neighbor, awl it Wag -with
diffeeulter the their/nen Obtained order
t Cenevard, his poolroom about hire, but Vale thee, Ite heard the
0,114 •t'VVO, setreesee and birds, too, and, 1i iyp10 of the dietant
for the first time, Next Water, and the etir of the, spruceiZ1 trefee,
, awakee from a drunken and he could see the lattice ef ;sunlight
b p re, Nod to amend, •through their dark leavert playing en
tile brown gnies, and there was a
`amen of dietarit wood Smoke, and the.
CHAk, •
P' of dying coals, fle wait swag-
; became aware of a bollLingink. gentlY in hie seat, 1104 in l'Av
t fsouTid bad faj eney on ,thrall of 'her voice, and f•sudxienly he
CSTISM.OUS110150$ bUt greelaally he Waa glad he baa put a dollar on the
e 0,,wgee „of it age one being 0,10,w. plat*. Be afield riot follow all •the
rocaga /rem elem. Then he, ee. worde but ft was gomething about
htred that it wag Sunday, and 'lend ;Where the elm would never go
down,. W11—no doubt the preacher
would tell them more about It,
Then there was a long prayer by the
preacher, He began by addressing
the Deity as all mighty and all know -
,4 then spent rriany redrillteg
drawfng Big attention to detaile Which
had evidently eseatied His notice and
in ,offering saggeetions fox the better
government of the univeree, He dwelt
on the humility and penitence of the
congregation, including himself, and
at thie pf./.int DONO'S 1111Orthodox eel
began to detect a falee note. He look-
ed about frompreaeher e.ongrega-
tion, and saw 114 evidence of penitence
or- humility, "If God is all-lcnowin',"
said Dave 'be himself, "that prea.cher
fgoini to get in wrong. Why, lie
toulfintt, pat OVe7: that humility bunk
on ma"
At length it seenied that -the eer-
mon was really going to commence,
but a welledressed roan came down the
aleic and read a long financial state -
as 4 I:JOIN:1i (bell, He lead ef.ten
'heart thein on Sundays. He wag aliout
ttieresiee tile matter when a etrange
lenenilite eAnie into hie mind; 'Why not
fee to eherch? Be hod never been in
eaureh and. he felt ,thaa the tam:ouzel:-
leige of the pool hall would be much
io ore eemgenial, He had little castanet:1s
for church. lit/hat if the reet of the
gang ehould lealei he had been at
eh feral
"I. believe you're afraid to go," he
eeld to 'hireoelf. That eettled it. In a
vier minutes he woe at the ehuroli, door,
?elle� an enlieh rnan, after surveying
Idea 1:e.iretewhat dibio y, geve him a
forma handshake and passed hem into
a‘so hatula of an ueher. The usher led
him down an •alide and erowtied him
into e email pew 'with several others-.
There were many unoectspied eiewis, so
reeve 'concluded it meet 'be a church
poly• to fill there full as far 43 they
went, He 'glee obaerved that the build-
ing Wag filling aj froin the rear, not-
ememtandeng eeic efforee of tbe uebers meat Dave gathered frorn it that
ca,fole the people farther down the the Dad was eirettyahard pressed for
elelee. Dave relleeted that the enatorn e'acl3r eaele "No wonder," thought he,
here -waft quite different from the the- "if they all give niekels and nothinle.
etre, espeelally the itrueee ga11ey, I Fref:ty well-dreetted 113-unch, to/
erhersi everyone scrambled for the 1 Finally the /Tree:cher toOk the meet -
front Stai'S Ing in hand Again, 'and announced hie
He was very coratelous -of being ob-
served, aeti, there wee an atneoephere
of 'formality and, OS It seemed to VIM,
of etrained ftettriese that made him
text, but 'Dave noon forgot it in try-
ing to :follow the sermon. It waa
'OrthOt1OX expealtion of the doctrine of
the atonement. Dave would not have
As the small fettits ripen, jelly and to 'Serve 'with meats. The jelly is flav-
When 1 Fruits Are In Season, Green grapes make an excellent jolly
jam making interrapt the canning ae, ered with mint. Wash three gents
tivitiee. Only perfect fruit etheuld be a grapes, fully grown, :but entirely
'canned; jelly making requires fruit, green, add five pints of boiling water
which ;is jest ripe or slightly unrer-i and 000k for fifteen minateise crushing
ripe, Slightly overripe or soft fruits the fir apes with a wooden •aPoon.
should be eonverted into jams or but -1 Drain through a jelly -bag, measure
tees. Janis of superier quality can the juke and place agaht over the fire.
be tnaile from the seedy email fruits, Add three *egg> of freehlahbrui0ed
such as raspberries and blackberries, taint, cook for -twenty Iniantes1 shin'
and if a srne,11 amount of apple pulp is and remove the mint and to eaeh cup -
added, a better consistency is ebteined, ful a juice add a fwant cupful of
sugar that has been heated. in the
oven. Stir until the liquid boils up,
feltire and pour into glasses. When set,
cover the jelly with paraffin and COV"Or
the prettied being lase seedy. Pulp
inay he added in the proportion ef one -
pulp as berry Pull?.
gamier to-one-thitd as mete& as apple
The eooking . of jams should' -be the tops of the glasees with paper,'
rapid, i.e., cook at the bollieg point. ----
The eugar ehould not be added The Greateitt Women.
the prodeet begins to thicken. Add Where shall we find our women
sugar equal to one-quarter the weight Worthy of greatest fame?
of the fruit used. Janes should 'have To wham shall we pay , the honer,
a tine, even texture with no free liquid With high illumined name?
separating from the solid portion. If
a spiced jam is desired, the spices may They are out on the hell, in the valley,
..
be added just before removing from Down in the tenement cellar—
On the mountain and in the plain;
the stove;.3`am made with a small pro-
portion of sager as directed above will Vaerever is toil and pain.
not keep so well in paraffin -sealed
glasses as when equal parts of sugar
are added, Pat these lese sweet jams
into hermetically eealed containers,
such as gloms fruit jars. •
Jelly can be made of overripe fruit,
or fruits lacking pectin (cherries for
meorefertab e. But preeently the known it by that name, and' there were instance), by. combining the juices
organ eointnenhed ariddiverted hia In- ulan. Y exPressleria wInch he could note with apples, iihubarh or concentrated
Lovett from himeelf. It was very won- understand, but out of a maze. with
pectin. The latter comes in hot-
(
view of thorganist, and Dave mar-
lerful. His position eennuanded a phrase* he foetid hirtiseli being slowly
shookee into an attitude of uneom, ties ready to combine with either
e
velled at tile planner iri which that promising hostility. There was no fresh fruit juices .or dried fruits. e
gentleinan'a feet honPed about, and doubt about it; the preacher wee de- How to tell"if the emit juice will
rho* his halide flourished up and flown claring that an innoeent One had been "jell" is a eornmon question among
034 0000eaonany Jumped from eaa key- murdered that the guilty might; go housewives. .A. opecialiert recommends
board alialeether to jerk out a piece free. This was bad, enough, but when this test assure. Add one-hele tea -
of the machine. the epeakcr went on. to Few that this e,„„,fee rie ee,„,,, e,e14.,, ea nee -lime
Then the choir ince an, 'nice wore wart God'* plan. that there had to be "e"-----" "- --s"---- "---- --- -----
teaspoonful of sugar to one teatmoon-
,.ill dressed alike, and the men had en a eacrifiefe, and 'that no• other eacreflee
n kind ot o,own. )ea.e.0 ,tbourebt that was sufficient to appease the wrath of 11-11- *4 hot fruit juice. if the juice eon -
wee very ray, Bm
By some ental freak ;Yehovah directed toward twee m tains pectin (the technical name for who
he fond einueef pieturine a man with He had treated,, Dave found himself jellying property) the solution will
A gown reping a eteer, mut it was boiling. with. indignation. If this was become jellylike.
only •e3, a moan tighioning. a hie Christianity he would have none of it .A. eombination of equal parte of
jewe that he prevented an explosion Ina 141°17'ln...1;1°n 1ln re1410011ad been of rhubarb and 'blueberries is highly re-
ef aniumeinent He wait still feeling the most meacere -nature, but lie had coinniended. Caneed rhubarb ean be
very' happy over thie when a tau man imbibed some eonception of a Father : ith leV the fresh berries• Cook to -
entered from a Ode door and ascended who Was love, and this doctrine *4the u8ed•
the etepe te the pulpit, He moved sacrifice of the innocent eras -tied gether, adding one eapful of sugar to
very golererely, and when be at down, through alt ale aender eraeneworis of each quart of fruit This may be
m Il
rcioete hona on hie band for a min_ belle. Had he been told of a love canoed and ifereved as a sauce or enok-
ute. Then he looked over the atelieece, which remained, steadfast to its idealed until as thick as marmalade,
and Dave thought that his expression
even at the eost of Calvary his man- Blaok eurrant jam is especially de -
was ono of approval. Than he looleed lineus woald have -responded ea to the &awe for the sick' 23' et . ,peetienjeejy
at the 'gelling,. " touch of a kindred anirit, but the at- benenel- 'al to ill° .mivaleacent' making
.
leo feels moo in hi* *math ithouelit tempt to fit that wiiiIng gam -Ince into
appeal to the palate which will in -
Dave. "No bueisin' in tide banal, a dogmatic creed left him adrift and 'au
euro its appreciatien. The proper-
rudtlerlees. auddenly from eomewhere
'The eligan had broken forth in: a 411041, baleceonli:ergY :rig° To.ns rigaol 8110(111;11PP'
',r'on't burst of emends andeveryeati was
•ebanding up; Dave did 00 too, belated,.
ly. Then eVerybody bang. They seem. -
ed to' kaeW jeet *hat to eine', It WAS
441 714,11N o Dave, hut- it sounded all
eight It Made him feel Pet like the
eurishine•,did after the etuffy room,
filen: they ont down, Dave Wag be-
eonting more alert, and watt not caught
nee/ping thie movement,
There was a short prayer, -whiela
J)vo did not underetand, and more
Waging' by everybody, an -d then -the
nshors arOntui ,For the ealleetion.
.Dave fild mit know how mud. to put
Ihe'plate, ,but be, eupposed a good
twat like it a theatre would abet
doihu do' he pet esti that enema
1111ei riotleed: that; his Keleher cto one
gide nuten a nickel, and on the other
efide nothing et- all, He began to, think
he must: have made a mietake, Alt
tide thee the organ was- e,laying bole-
tore:way, 'hut eaddenly it dropped to a
low, meditative theme, end Dave be -
Forgetting glamor and: glory,
They have made their beds with
pain;
Their years are spent in `service;
They have hayed no ,selfleh gain,
They have bartered all the battle,
In the age-old, werld-old -sttife;
Where the warriors all are :martyrs,
And lost to the records of life.
Onhearth shall they be nameless,
But on God's:roll of fame,
Methinks their names are written
In letters of blinding flame.
—Lena W. Brown.
Looking Into the Cedar Chest.
The red cedar chest as a defence
against elothes moths has been given
a scientifie test.
Meets of this wood are to -day
staple articles of furniture and are
much in demand, combining ornament-
al beauty with utility as receptacles
I
TIMMtla 1 g 1
fin
(mak ag s
ot igesti n
REVIVAL IN CANADIAN
NEWSPRINT iNDUSTRY,
.c ient Spruce and Poplar to
ly 2.00,000,000,Cords
of Pulpwood.
The output of elide= Canadian
raper melte for the Yeer 1921- was 8121,-1
F60 tons er •an average per mill of 50,,
805 tone, representing- a decrease Of
eight per cen,t. in e,omparison with ate
Previous year. After a year. of dial-
xgravO OLII:tY and, baededeip for the industry
fdisre has been since the opening
the new year a distinet revival in the
Canadian newsprint indsuary, conse.
(pent upon a resumption of demand,
vileich has enabled' the Canadian mills
to resume produetion at nearly ma,x1,-
Plaza capacity.
Prospects for the future are, in fact,
regarded, .as so bright by maarufactur-
e.rs that in the present summer a con-
siderable extension of existing pelp
and paper plants; is taking place and
the establishment et additional plants,
being undertaken. Depletion of station
baa resulted already this year in or-
ders of eensideralele volume from the
British Islesy United States and. Japan,
the delivery of which was featured by
extraordinary emPeclition on the part
of tnansportatian eatcpani.es, and Judg-
ing by this alone, the Canadian pulp
and paper in.dustry lest approaching
a natural state with a steady andecon-
tinuous, demand.
- Among the eireenslons and additions
to the Canadian pulp and paper indus-
try in the r,rosient year are:—A, neve
mill for the Luternational Paper Com-
pany.at Tim, Rivers, Quebec, which.
has already commenced to produce
and raised the plant's tot,al, capacity
tu a:n excess of 2000,tans per day. The
Belgian Industrial Company at Shaw-
inigan Falls, Quebec, is preparing to
extend its paper'nalIl at a met of from
one and a half to two million dollars,
exclusive of the cost of machinery.
Bathurst, New Brunewiek, l& to have
a paper mill. added to its other Indus.
tries, giving employment to an addi---
tional five diun,dred men. Th,e Great'
Lakes Pulp and Paper Company ia to
erect a large paper at Fort Wil-
liam, Ontario, with a capacity o.f 105
tons'per day and give employment to
six hundred men. At Port Arthur,.
Ont., work on the new paper mill of'
the Provincial Paper Mills, Ltd., is ia
HERE'S an ideal hot -weather
lunchecin
Two packages luscious Little Sun -
Maid Raisins -- one cool glass of
milk. Big men don't need more.
290 calories of energizing nutri-
ment in the little raisins. Pure fruit
sugar practically predigested so it
acts almost immediately, yet doesn't
tax digestion and thus heat the blood.
fr. There's fatigue -resisting food -iron
also in this lunch.
Vital men eat like this and resist
the weather. Don't work their diges-
tion because they want to work their,
brains.
Try it for a few days and you'll
*feel better.
Between- 1 Raisins
5c Everywhere
—in Little Red Packages
emend or so of naphthalene be scat-
tered inside of it. But the chest must
be well built.
Tested Recipes.
Good cookery- is passible for you and
for every housewife who will aVail
'herself of the opportunity found; in
tested recipes,
Salmon with macaroni—Cooked. ma-
caroni, salmon, buttered bread crumbs,
1 tablespoon flour, 1 tablespoon but-
ter, 1 cupful milk, 2/4 teaspoon salt.
Sprinkle buttered baking dish ,with
a layer of buttered crumbs, next a
layer of macaroni, a layer of flaked
for furs and ga,rmeets. An up-to-date salmon and alternate until <lisli. is
eloset lined with red cedar -Alga ial flour and salt and stir until blended.
Melt batter, add.
luxury in the most modern house is al three-fourtha full.
cellptphoinsegflhutongreinndeirt omr moth -proof Givr acidundaelloYokadildntiniptlhc,iesticerifeinag. Peoounrstoavnetr-
shelves. Its heartwood is red and salmon and macaroni, top with layer
strongly aromatic, the characteristic of buttered bread crumbs and bake
odor being due to a pale, -reddish- in a sioly °yea faf ,,half an hour.
Raked bran custard -1. eup prepared
brown volatile oil.
This odor is supposed, to he offen- bran, 21/2 *ups het milks 74 euP sugar,
sive to most insects, and particularly 1/4. teaspoon .salt, 1/2 tea,spoon vanilla,
3 slightly beaten eggs. iiifix all to-
gether and bake in a 'butfeted dish
It was IteelHardy who had asked of sugar to each. pound of f.ruit. Boil titiee of red cedar) is used to menu- cusuntil tard ee firm. The yolks of
thee question, And he reealled his slowly until thick. facture paper for lArro pping woolens, three eggs mii
may be used n pudeng, Forestalled!
ee
Ammer, "I don't know swathe ttbout A delicious Pim requires two quarts fiats arid other articles likely to be and the whites used for a meringue Pat had got hurt --not mach' more
the justice of Goa. Alt I'keow is the of blackberry Juice, six pounds of ap. attacked,
, to be browned slightly on hudding. than a scratch, it is true, but his, em-
crittur at can't ran ei,ets eaughe e_ Norwegian cheese—To each cup of player had visions of being pornpelled
he then in grripathy with thie doe -
Was pleg pared and sliced, and one pound To find out jurit how far the haus to keep him for life, and had adopted
o cruel a -unip sugar. 'eat e
1 ' h cl- 1 II th wife's faith in red cedar is warranted cottage ehese add one dessertspoon-- the wise Cour,se of sending him to the
trine of cruelty, without knowing it?
No. Not Mode Hardy had believed tut of finely chopped onion, sprinkle tiospitai,
in justice, and he would 'believe in the with celery seed and make into little After the house slirgon, had exam-.
halls. Serve on lettuce with salad
Kerne, IIe retie from his float and' inied hint carefully he said to the
. progress at a cost of $1,000,000. The
gravies, in cottaige cheese • and as a Donnacona Paper CemPanYi at Polit
regular drink. Increase his weight a Rogue, is to ereot a new -mod -pulp
few pounds and his disposition will mill The- plant of the Temaskirning
improve greatly.
What can be done when he gets
"worked up"? Be patient, don't lose
your own self-conteol, Try to antici-
pate any occasion for these spells and
ward them off. Begin now to teach
him that his spells will get nothing
for him, and that your "No" is abso-
lutely firma but let it also be kind, and
use the Mandate only when necessary.
I would have such a child sleep in a
well -ventilated room, or better still,'
on a eleeping-pomh, eat wen, drink
well, and have a morning cool bath
with a good rub afterward. Let him
live in the open but See that his play
is not overtaxing, and, hie playfellows
eaucation and that he alvvaye should
eehool age comes, remembet that his
hermon,i.eue. It is not well foe him to
have to contend with a large number
of healthy, noisy, normal children. As
health is, more important than his
he watched carefully to ,see that his
.
ambition does net outrun his capacity.
thine are no part of elexbagh -to one to clothesanoths. Waste of pencil
part of black eurtants, arid one pound factories (which consume great quan-
one Toronto t nd Mon-ts Rad 0on
Ores weepy' nig it, Just rim though yell
WOM In on -e et thetas :great either, wIth
our rearatell -Redietifietle (Medal 0),,
Watt 'tor felt 16mltt1ei Awl !micelle.
The AUTOMATIC ^reLEPHoNma nett
Tun mecortoons
o oNT 0, OA NA oA
blackberries, orush arid strain through by facts a series of interesting experi-
a bag le order to obtain the juice, then ments has been made,
combine with the apples. Or the jam These tests have proved that cedar
Oen, he made in the fall by tg ean- has no effect -upon moths in the adult
or 'winged stage, which can live in
Buell a chest :for a month or more and
lay eggs. The eggs laid in the chest
wihi'hatialt; bub -ea very impeirtent
point—the young eatercillore
earely die before they tan do any
mischief, `
Holf-geown caterpillars axe not
killed, and, in the cedar chest, may
do eensiderable damage, though ib is
likely that their activity feeding is
retarded . Well -dove] aped 'caterpillars ,
under such eireureseanees, aecoreplieh
as mueh elestreetion ae they would
under ordinary conditions. The cedar
does not seem to bother them at telt
15
walked down the aisle arid out of the - b. nurse: -.e.s subcutaneous abragon.
banding, •obliviettie to the eyes that Bran ceakies----1/2 eup suear, la CUP not -observable, I doenot thmik:there le
-
;followed him. '
Hie feet lea him teethe river, reeving
brown With the Mud of spring. He
tet on the grevel, In the warm sure
ehlee and tweed pthbles into :the
swift -flowing Water, He had. dee
teemined on -a new tend, but how was •
Inc to find the road? Bnvironment had
rover beim kind to him, and he -eves
jest beginning:to reeliee its power ,in
ahavialc his destiniee, • He WaS
satiefied, but he did. not know *have
to, iivid..(itttigtaaigoa;, he was hewtld'or-
cd, nowheee was a clear „pee bo -
lore hine, He Was lonely. He knew a
room Where a little ,gante wouid be in
peogresig aratgabreehed the gravel
fleet from hie ,Stintlay-filethee, and
wended wag down town; :
A eletwil Wattentoring the theatre
Which he =luidealitereled the eight
Pre. Tooted nt 11 woodotiatzb., 819
by. Stetete the theatrea were ,eloeint en
Sundayit. ...Stifle it, Wes evident Rome.
filthier was going on and he Wont In
with the tot -theta tickets Were
required,
and lie ober Showed- hite, te
4 good goat • - •
it. WO,O net long betel.° Thwii reaTized
thatlu Wa4 in a SO0141114 mootAytg., Ire
knew rather leeteof Socialiem thee; he
did ..of Chrietienity, het 'the 'ale.
MOSPhere of: the place appealed to
hien. They ever,* motley moo iti weeks
fag, clothes, with to:lute:ea er: beer en
their breathe, and In their lord whig4.
porituw he taught, famil4Ar proffm,
Miele hire fetet et home,
`When the speaker maid notagthint,
their lilting, idieg apptanded 'Mine when
he 'eremeed them they (Wheelie:ed. hint
Nayn)y. Interraptioag Nymqt tilmborit,
vleilott, but DeVe ade
iltni 'the imirlt oS fele, play
gafg vvors, .matt u elntinT to Spell(
ried blaeleberry juice. Cook juiee, ap-
ples and sugar until the apples nee
soft and the mixture reaches the con-
eisteney •of jam,
4417-140.',:!,1
Olt itifc
For
R iC
SUFFERERS
oatirnonlal1
Dear Si reaeaffer eufferent from
Sciatica tor 'ewer 15 estate 001
spentileg mow ort neetteine,'
bathe, eleterte bolts, ate, which!
did ate no geode 5 wate ourede by
slag one 'twine et yam' 11/41`111W
Years, firmly,
Weis (I Obey, •
Gnrar tt. Heat, Toronto;
One bottle'.fOr,'One 'Dollar;
Six bottles for rive Dollars.,
Mailed direct to Ccosiomeri5.
1
title .0: 0131111110 14*.t111 3e
Adelaide 8t, Toronto)
Ortneela
INIMPA.K,A1*
butter •ay butter substitute, 1 egg, 1
cu prepared bran, 3/2 teaspoon bak-
ing powder, ea teaspoon gait, M4 tea -
!Moon vanilla, 2 tablespoons -inilke vizzicallY, "What do you think,
riour to make stiff enough to handle pet?o
(about three-fourths cup). Cxemn "Sore," said Pat, " ye took the very
butter, add etugar gradually then egg words Out of my mouth.. Thaesejust
well beaten. Stir in bran and .all of what I wafiegodn' to say."
the milk and flour. Roll, shape and
'bake fifteen minutes itemoderate oven, 1 Only Human.
Make same. size ag 'gingersnaps. 1 During tile war some Austmulan
I tillers were quartered beside the Gor-
e,' den Highlanclere, and took greelt de.
Nervous Children Need 'S pecial Gar
'Ilea in chaffing ale Scotsmen tanner -
Only a mother who has had the may,
bringing up (y.r n ehild been to a new- eene of the Gordons, while passing
:ttIrsaidnisinPf°$ititi,ia°11nclkinto°wwsitlibulicliGMtrOGX7'ettanrtle 6follOt".A.MTiSple's'Ptirmitaldgratlitil:r4ljtaeM,:17fuorn121111146,
iss required than With average children.
A very riervons ilh lt'sete
eif3d he and , sh ted:
given the beteof ''''Y'se,c111.,sjilialilierith°ellSincoYfistiorioti"
aa,
llt "1 did ma.
Lion by a physiewn. Sometimes there bent ea jurnp ever it; bat, a
Heilan-
1* an irritation that ,cati be relieved ley mews, ()Day 'human, nae a leldigaron!"
eircurneision or lihe bteething they be '
half blacked by an excessive adenoid
growth. It happens soinetimes that
medieine may be given to advantage,
althou,gh it is not likely to bewail in-
disperwable fratute of tteitienent,
Proper eutietten ha one el the meet
hepertant things for ei itervette
The mother will have to limner his
fittwiee and. stedy .witime a greet
deal and do it without, his pereelveng
the fact. If 'titer° is 8 nourishing feed
that he particularly likes there is; na
trouble too 'eat Le get 11 for bine
ilo Aetna be fed milk in As many
ways ea pOga.ible--with cereals,hi me-
taede end welding, in lee creme, in
any reason to apprehend. togunien,tal
eicatrization et the wound,"
Then, turning to the patient,. he
From the experiments- tenet valu-
able edriclueione are detieen, one of
digit being that the tight eonstruc-
tion of the cedar chest ie largely ate
couittable for the virtue elearned ie ite
behal;f. Moths earesot get into it, if it
be kept eleeed---whieh is by no nanuns
the Cale with the 'average b•ox
trunk,
Care should be take1 to keep the
chest -tightly elesed, and to open it as
briefly as possible, in order that the
aroma. shell Poi; escape.
.Articles ...ter storage in' the eheet
abould be PAinstaltiaely brushed And
euntterleatiartefularly ell ereases,
Setlit93 and peeltefe. If thee treat,ed,
they will herbor no wellegrowri eater-
pillate. Any eggs mid young larvae
theft remit:hi will do noeherne, for the
hirettilY Mentiested.
A '01103 of Wee oe -Any other wood,
tightly toristreceed, is just ae good for
the purpose oe 5 red eeelrie cheet. ifA
Thai) and Paper Company, with forty
tons- eapacity,' is nearing completion.,
and within three ,,years the Great
Lakes Pulp and Paper Company is to.
erect a paper mill -et a cost of- two
million dollars st Fort 1,Villiarri, Ont.,
according to its, agreenaent with the
pnovinaal eovernin,ent.
Principal Manufacturing Centres.
The two principal pulp and paper
manufacturing provinces of Canada. -
are Ontario and Qttebee. Ontario in
1920 aCcounted for an output of news-
print tatalling 551,331. tons. The new-
er area of Northern Ontario was re-
sponsible for a substantial portion ef
this and is' coming yearly to inerease
•her nroloOrtion of the province's pro.
duction. The production is however
relatively insignificant in view of the
great resources of this, vast ,area, and
Northern Ontario could, withortit dif-
ficulty, absorb the activities of a con-
siderable extension to the pu.lp and
paper industry.
Northern Ontario's forests stretch,
in varying degrees' of de,naity, from
the main line of the, Cana,dian, Pacific
Railway right up' to James. BaY. Whilst
this area ,does not contain any extent
of timber of commercial proportions it
supplies the inultitudln:ous need,s
the mining and farming areas and con-
stitutes an asset of supreme value to. .
the territory. .There are estimated to
be, In Northern Ontario 200,000,000
cords of pulpwoed in the shape of
spruce and poplar, and this, has given
birth to a thriving pulp and paper in-
dustry.
Dotted -over the' vast ares of North-
ern Ontario there are eight prOducing
pulp and paper Companies at points
far apart,. from Sault Ste'. Marie, in the
sou* to Iroqueis , Falls in the north.
Those eight plants' are accounting for
a daily ,produetion of more than 1,100
tons of newsprint, more than 600 tons
of grounclWood pulp, and zaMlroxininta-
ly 700 tona of sulphite pulp.
The daily ,coneuiteption et pulpwood
hY these eight producing comeanieecIs
only about .2,000 'cords, which at the
present estiniated stend, net taking in,
to account regrowth and retoreefation„
would not be exhauated for nearly
theee hlindred years. 'It will therefore
be perfectly oltvious what opportande
tiee exist fox the tapansion. mid new
establishments in tee peep and, paper
indusery of Northern Ontario,
Hydro in Italy,
ltaly is betiding certain hydro-eloc-
trio teatimes that will give that country
1,811,330 horsepower, double the
amount existing five yeaes ' age.
°wet \Alines.
The wings 0± 1118 owl are lined with
soft dove that enables the bird to fip
without making the glelltbet 11(.4e. A
VetY' important inaiter to a nootetnal
bird of may.
The more tenth ea riror has in it ,
:the. Mare dangerons.' it IS.