HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1921-07-21, Page 6Law of Tooth
By The Law
and Talon
NURSES
The Toronto Hospital for incur -
Oleg, in affiliation with nellovue and
Allied Horptaoaofrin
offers eyers' Cur Ta-.
ing to young women, leaving the r'e-
p.
ooired education,
Thidesirous
a sppital hiss
adoring
adapted the eight-hour sYstenl. The
pupils receive uniforms of the School,
a monthly allowance and travelling
expenses to and from New York. For
further information apply to the
What Interests Farm Women?
"What one subject is of the greatest
Superintendent.
I interest eo the farm women of your
anything Charlton munit ?" The writer recently ad-
snwent t report to this inquiry to a
was unable
y ivra ��L N 1'OQKi 1 i . r Lvl` I' nt wrong and community number of
�. ble to make a Proxnp P dressed
_ Chief Milton,, Prominent in•rzxrai affairs and
� "The day of the. big doings is set,,,' calculated to know the hind of • tee.
CHAPTER
--'"
(Copyrighted) -,ned it In trier ` "It is next doings
is set,"
> . ismess andey. I saxthe average' farm woman: inhells
=.- Cont d.)I laid it aside for you �bodays away me waYNeil- 1<We �1re interested chiefly ,
CHARTI';RR XVII. (In so
bailiffs busied business, and
t any -`Inner Council has learned that can have
and quietly, and the children in case I had to leave threeat wo
1i•ekly .. q room.not think then � � , and Lebrune got away with all its ing our husbands ordezath a good living
Rsirs out of theu• I till S1d cause son
the stunned prlsotx moiox'yo, death ever would �s and it has been decided to'stri is on the farm
de door of the,building thing beside= you.other money,I fund strength decided
once before more `oi the comforts and luxuries
At a side iter and hethem ties l to leave TheDoe in with all its
rs were in waitingspecial meyoucould get• p who have been• at reed large I more o now denied the farm luxuries
family."
ca'r xs were rushed to` a spec did not fix sor their part begin to demand instance, this
pxi..ane to a train that L dad not want you or cent sums forIn nearly every
ion
railroad coach take
attachedon• chi heartto have to spend a c i their money. If alt should go off ac' reply;tnour •iiiquary. While educmt ,
would take them to the Pres of n sit was tainted, as you say,f to schedule, which we know many other
h but one.s - andf it, for feared sorrows of wo-oordhng d do,Pili Council fig- recreation, health and
that
All of thenseparatedit is going thegreatest interest to
Neilson found himself' dexo a I and
thatearstof little children— it s not gettingo ll Coon in its
from his lelland one chairs. Andndept lien things which hands to pay off. If ghe Doe in its
in the.it was intended to lures president re-
as
,p leer d at all tunes is
hne hey to small room, bareth problem of helping
or a table and two chairs. his. he buy ---would be the lsorrows la and tears 11 through as the fat stun -
problem for T k d the Cour•ca
one of those chairs sat his wife. She of n Y I ether the I.W. N.
held` up a tear -stained, haggard _ t later the door
as the oor op he rushed 1Vlilton con .r their money. f ct
into
"Why?" Madge turned astonished
eyes upon her aunt. "Because they
aren't fair, I don't pretend to be tl
beauty, but I don't look disheveled' and
ridiculous all the time. hobedy'd
know, just seeing those snap'
Aunt Kate's steady eyes met the
girl's angry ones. it, dear.
"And now I'm going to and y it, and
Madge Fowler is big
plucky and can love unselfishly, but
she makes people uncomfortable be-
cause her mind is like Marie Henson's
Prints. She likes to tell jokes upon
people constantly; and to some people
the jokes seem no more fair than
n
Marie's snapshot of you coming
swung
fa ' _ •1 doesn't care
i children. n near e , leaders ever get
tear stains A monan t f opted r�
d shed then s en and Chief .
nd flung herself °P • , crossed the ro'oxn and upon "Whi,eh e'iziiple statemoxa xibiing' Placeto liver lrserved that
across the roam a He IT]l bet is a "oleic way
convicted Manu arms• Hio h h rI he slhoultlers of each of thein he laad an knows more about
the ead until she ha i what rrlust have been a riot when the We, have frequently o .
trokes a l h , nd, ed her, finned Charlton. the eaha wom ail is d Case
gently s r of leer aha „ e address uncil met; . gr , busili'es's th
exhausted file fouiz her ac. to his "Mrs. Neilson, li e heard every Co her hie b other oc-
rs and was chin to look up in er� first "I happen to us ken• From Steala laughed at the recollection e thew fe of a man in any
tea ac led her back to h , ust sPo that evoked. „ ns th wife
eyes. Then for the other word you tw° ve ie rned a lesson in „Riot 'Id word she replied. tion While tan `city
chair ands;
reaching edit t will stand, t I thought the fat lt' knows but litti
imself di'sccvered that they were Y;atriot sill wh h always - m le of "I''or a
for h , � 1 heti
d P t f me as a s1 ' ing eham P b rn broken by •a woman mem
The t the hall th tlzenslihp p `P
ed,� u o
Itetne>�r snr.l s-rleaM;
J� • ,u ire sola
cos of all types, Q0 miles,lor teei
dun tf aetiver1 a t4 S ou wish. ass f+
go of rams eteu a if d ukehaaI
fyocd Dilor as Purdhased, or p
' rtINCi i i ur own chOIOl
dedhantc Pf Yo
to too them over, .or ajk ur to
tae any car' to city reprerentative Roe
inspection. Very laa•ge stock always M
Breakey's Used Car YatitSSt
4 2 lore 6eeeate
made a better
top?es,,atre of gree a (foremast across the broo
•
e most absorbing Fora moment Madge stood i<n stun-
the faxni women, tfh , oke. It tun-
in minx I ned silence. .then she sp
be: hard to digest, but I've swallowed
her hush n s p a I your dose. You're a brick, Aunt
her l tb efid to make more a Kate."
that "i h e farm may be
The Debt of Honor.
Our nation's debts' are piling up, the
war debt is immense,
But one great debt we have to pay re-
gardless. of expense,
It is the debt we owe the men who
fought for us and ailed,
And who for healthy living limbs wear
wooden ones instead.
It is the debt we owe the xnen who
come with broken lives, their
To struggle once again to keep
children and their wives;
Among the darkened homes of these
the faminespectre stalks;
And daily in the streets and - squares
we pass them in our walks. t
is a nix , cepa
moment man usu e about her
•to swell up and burst. The.R`•d's stole or factory or office,
alone. • iris ou or
guards who had • oto the hall- , e worth of most of our foreign - born Neilsen had steppeded out into
out no
• e
k
have toabout
felto
b
,• whoa
1
Neilson •nor his I did not know how you
way and`closed the door behind them., , case..I knew of the
although neither our husbands I did`
But heard Y away, but
ax^ a Y
e I hidden invisible ad
had h
it� ea
h
knewelaid
n ,n
wife
kmoney
to YI
' t them did.
ledYou r
arr
cwhether t Y
worda� h
e
w
owthe
velkn
their e 'Ynot in
'nto-day adjoining' d
o go
adt Y
am ]him in
h
Chief lYl�iton, sitting - for you •and you be-
rooms clapped the receivers of . B neath trap so here when con-
'
to his ears. •Ben?'atlh hopes that if
had not told y
graphs hlittle fore, he w°rison•
ins table the sound -transmitting Itraileddyou, and I am
• its were skilfully concealed viliced'ethal he old not escape P' fact
instruments theright here to the fa
tto the wires which cfrom sig them Myd to testify
be- r -ed.
n the he flooring.
receivers hidden from sight that your loyalty is unquestioe turned
heath the. $tonn• laida trap to try "As for you, Neilson,
t
Chief Milton had mouth to the convicted man, "you, too, have in with her and so Neil on g
and learn from Neilson's own and a learned a lesson. Your own con- wrote out a cheque whiclh both he and
of the million you and 'punish you Lebrune signed, and Lebrune he ink
the biling place her Neilson tied
nded
natter dollars which the to hBolsh ore for what yohave done than h ' it on one pretext
B � even had confuted' and his care.line of the place to t f
er Council - .the discipline andpray
,..Innfar-see- . Y
f daP
But not athat astutegoing. Sonne y,
God it will not be long, you will have
jne man was prepared for the reveled you area measure, to
was goinghex
news• was b
of the council. Seems for like she had
five hundred
been given a cheque
dollars signed by Lebrune and Neilson
weeks ago and hadn't cashed it, or
, re
he
T
da .
until
e
Star Y
Y
tried to,
evenfunny about that, too,
inn
• et
was
something
'1
Th
e
Council
according to herstory.
give her the money and
ted to
hd
voted
1at
she had insisted- upon getting it
once. That was at. a meeting of the
Council. Neilson triedAo g t he offl
until the 'next day,
gd
ive her oash then, but Lebrune sided
•ave in,
A Rome Motto. I,
What better verse could we frame
and hang on our walls, as a motto of
our home, than this, by Max Ehe
mann:
Whoe'er thou art that entereth here,
Forget the struggling ,,world
bus fear.
the ;country wife knows and under- I And every trembling
stands all the ills and'out of the las ks Take from thy' heart each evil thought,
on the farm, not infrequently helping And all that selfishness
One ofhath wrought.
tasks.life
tae
Within
thesea h n
t thy,
withW.
her great id thou It find
the great compensations in farm a For once 'within this place
fear
t'sf
e
,, i
h servant's sows se
ell P r
f to
• found in this close No berth;
Is Canada so deaf and blind she can-
not hear and see
The mute appeal of proud, brave men •
and children at the knee,
And suffering womesl pinched and
starved in houses cold and bare,
While wealth and ease go.rolling by
without a thought or care?
it over to .or another
her ou _o•
before they parted and finally got her
to agree to bring icatoi his
os officethe
next day and get
at
night Neilson was arrested.
"Weil, Mrs. Peabody went down to
ue was
the bank en which the cheq
drawn yesterday, and I'l bet she raised
an •awful howl when
she was ac Dunt there there
in
never had been any ac account
tib re n
the name of the company hied
Neilson and Lebrune were supe
to be hiding. Mors. Peabody is no. fool
and she knew in what banks the fund
She
was supposed to'be deposited.ever. =.
round. of theme ,.and ,v Y ,
the
made
where she learned the leans thi?zig., .e
-was fairly boiling ove'r 1 Tstthe O t" 2i d
she could 'hardly wait together before she
il
to be gather ge
hopped to her feet and shot off her
mouth. Finally the fate ne of llow got
and
tired
of trying to stop her
he pulled out five bills from his pocket
and threw them at her. That stopped
her all right, as soon as she had•count-
ed the money and found it amounted
to five hundred dollars."
"That seems to be what they are all
after—money, remarked Graham,
dryly."Go ahead. I didn't mean to.
interrupt."
"The Council decided it would neves
do to ask the President's Council for
more money et this • time. Rand theon
and a quarter is big money, a the
tion which was to come.
"Don't worry, mother, dont worry,"
Neilson began, soothingly. I will be
all right and you and thaichildren
a ce in
provided for. Every u a cheque
trust eom,Pany will send you
ample to provide for alt your needs
while; I am—am away.
And n I
come out there will be more
rodayke
care of us all for the rest of
"That is lust what want to talk
e 4 out' dear," she replied.
t ::you•one
4money,
•" ' :never tou'bii 'a centro one`aor after
r:.. :. bile you are g
1c
w
source.
. e r
�. s
0
u
...,, it's n you rri"t11r1i. "`F'ux I ltlib'iv
The night that man Lebrune
eo aim in
e to
our home and you talked worn'
the libralry I overheard every
d.
I was not asleep, as you supposed. I.
heard his voice and I went downstairs
and `listened.. I did not trust fromhim.
You had - never remained him. ou
home at regret until you
bad never been worried or cross or
nervous before. I feared for you, my
dear; I did not know *h � awrong.
You would not admita mewere plot-
tingcould not learn that you which had
ting against the country
given us both sheltex arta a hone and
liberty and privileges we never .could I range a meeting place:
have had in
lieved that you loved this country as He and Stella had agreed that they
Had I known that you must put aside their personat.�feel-1
much bre dad your pledge to her .Il .
were breaking
you over to the l inn ecedence overs for a love and thathit would
have
i
n
Psee
would be
ou
nme to
• em
gin , h
from for t
• ink e f
law mysea]f • Don't shx love be most unwise deur. I love you. I will always together until after the Government
you,no. matter what you have donee, had struck with :all its migh�u at the
Butou are the father of my raise
th Bolshevists and rooted then
tri t -i meet openly might prove dangerous
But I cannot and 1 will not raise those. iftheyshould be watched,
children on money which is give gn f rtfor the girl
they ours, money which was gcountry.1'beoause Charlton feared that spies of
the will
purpose of harming our the Reds might have learned hisdeaswift
I h'ckl wait for you, ear, and I i.l tity and he felt sure
my lc mylr fingers y to the bone to givet! and sudden would be Steila's portion
m children and yourh children all the!
Y -which they wowed have. if the Inner Council once l�m suspected
had
ddanthe es ••"i that she was betraying
hotherw,se l ler l So a new method of meeting and
while
she'held his eyes, with - I talking without interruption was de-
ly
,
own, O, le- she waited for hendt to
tided upon. The girl he a dismissed
tat
lieand t
man'stown
theof
,_ edge
11.
,y Suddenly •d him and Chief M11 -he
t, When the driver had turned the
machine around and was on his way
car,
nil
a
touring 't big
city, ,
back
to
theY
drew up,
•ham
Gxa ,
Alfred drover by Along enough for the girl
u ed only
the opportunity, ni .
make up for this thing you have done.
When that day comes, I shall .visit
you in your cell and offer you a chance
to go on the witness stand for the
Government and assist iinn to have
down the monstrous mach' Y
helped to build. Will, yod take it?"',And
A
"I will," said Neilson,sto of my
that day will be, thehappiest
life, sir." " in his life,
Then, for the first time
Kaman
Chief Milton shook hands wit,.
ct.'
whom he had *helped. to conviet.
CHAPTER XVIII.
i
Sde-
Nor tend.
'• d unkind.
his ice
and voice r ars
t
• rineas
aM
ofor
sen
the N
between
'tsb1
axis_
pendable • helpmate. Because this fel Here all are kin of God above—
lowsimp' is not always found in thee) Thou, too, dear 'heart, and here
city home explains in many awes The The rule of refs is love.
o. -
ld country. I be -
steady grind of the divorce courts. the Poison Out of
proper relationship between man and Taking th
o � r
wife as
tinterested in The United States Btr eau of Stand-
the.wife is s only remotely ' ards has been helping the Public
band during life that holds her hued Health Service, by making analysis of.
during eachhealthy
dray. family,
co A managed
home,-` a healthy family, comfortable inks, to find out the cause of skin
condition these are trouble which printingnly and afflicts
the
the' clean laving workers in
the give helpithe husband sue- lents It affects those parts of the
maker 1y salve his own problem i parms and hands which are constantly
making the farm produce the maxi-
in contact with colored inks.
nni ,4reswlts. The trouble in some cases is a mere
i t•e — rash on the forearms and hands; in
Hot Weather Recipes• others the skin assumes locally a scal-
Le'monade—Ream 'out the juice he ly appearance,• followed' by blisters
dozen lemon's rand remove t with itching. and burning. Occasional
one-half do n pulp that
. Do not disturb -thee p • P ly ulcers develop• •
nd.has long
Seeds. It is a• serious mattei,,a
was rttrir
eed ont with fixe Buz, _i_, Turn
etcher and -a- puzzle. to ph ieians., The
,; m
b
sen.
4 'p r n tA,. a
iii, enc ere....
,th n
e•, e
Peen, 3
1 "h
v
.. ,.. ., Seta < , .
ter
-
a.
.., ,., Tin.. S � _
.0
b of ...)so
i.
ion
dory' ct
d �+�" iglu
a buts it to the• int
and then add three piYts of water,
-ice one-half totes for oil of turpentine. Persons'
one clip of finely crushed, , leaves skin suffer most;
cup,, of finely chopped"mint who have, a dry
i , ed' from _stems, • Stir welt and those whose 'skin is oily are least af-
str pP
- • The Day is. Set.
Stella was bubbling over with ex-
citement and news the next
time
±h
t
she met 'Charlton at their-rendezvous.upon
They no longer met in the park
the secluded bench. The place- held
too many unpleasant recollections as.
a result of the duel between Lebrune
and Vogel, 'recollections which not
even the fact that it was there that
they had told each other of theirve
could overcome. Instead,Charlton'
had asked her to write him when. she
wished to see hum and he would ar--
always possible
i ssible in the country
instances,
Printer's Ink.
while in the city, in
Across the sodden plains of death.
thess, men have charged and
fought,
• nd'
a
They bore the agony and strain
our salvation wrought;
They did not swerve, they did not
they
on
and
on
Wilde', but
pressed �n shells
' o
f splintering i
n
ter g
gain P
the
i
Till
i
n
came one that gave them. rest.
Shall we, then, now forget the past in -
•ass• and ease
hn
selfis
And say they have no claim on us,
such glorious men as these? coun-
try
on a nation's throne to -day our co
try takes her seat,
Itis the work of broken men that pass
use in the street.
Bestow not on the dead your praise,
they heed it not above,
The men that live and suffer- still 'are
they who need your love; loner
The very stones cry out to us, toog
have ws delayed,
The debt of honor faces us .and that
debt must be paid. Canon. Scott
Quebec, June '21, 1921.
atching a Bear Cub.
high moguls might think so?n
was milking thein if they were told'half pounds of cherries and remove
that the Council here was broke. Oh, the stones. Place in a saucepan and
I put up a beautiful speechd. toh they I
t Vie, I figured the le
faded.
is
sertye.
' • 'Six lemons, five oranges: A thorough experimental
that the
Pmo
Rim m out ;juice. and' then place in a has now led to the conclusion
and add two quarts of mischief is due to absorption1 to the
•ot the
large -bowl
cr%xshed: ice,- three quarts of water, oil and Pigments in the,
and one-half cups of powdered methods commonly adopted and aims
twtoSeg pine- ing the ink from the
sugar, one small can of crushed p'
with a wooden spoon to A dry skin is comparable .tto01ablot-
blend
ioil -
blend: Stir
tblend and then . add one small bottle t�re, which and readily absorbs the
carried
ofn
maraschino cherries, cut in tiny with the oil. On the other hand, the
bits. —This recipe pigments are less easily removed from
Cherry Ice Cream
—This
• h one and one- a dry skin than from a' skin that e: of
Makes one Salton. Wasal-
ready oily. Therefore, in the
a dry skin more scrubbing is required,
add one and one-half pounds of sugar• whReenboval of the ink from tlfe skin is d.
hands and
until the cherries _ f the work period is
k vel
slowly the end a
Coe 'Y sat
rm
a
1
usually accomplished in rather brute
fashion, washing with mineral oil b
ing followed with soap and hot water
—perhaps sandsoaP or pumice soap
helped with a stiff brush• liquid green
Sawdust mixed with q
soap will be found much more effec-
tive for the purpose, used with warm
water; and, if lanolin (wool -fat) be
rubbed over the arms. and hands be -
tore beginning' work it will make much
easier the subsequent removal of the
ink.
The upshot of the experiments is a
recommendation that a mixture of
be
half,
if
and
' half oil
and olive ,
lanolin
kept in the washroom where printers
change their street clothes for work.
os-
the
r
s
entering iu press-
rooms
n
clotihes'. Before
rooms each worker should be required
to rub the stuff well into the pores of
hands and awns, At the end of each
shift he should remove the ink v
a mixture, of soap and sawdust, which
will accomplish the object readily and
without injury to the skin.
You. Ever See a Deal
n�a
Tree?
Canadians whose country owes so
much to wood, • should pride them-
selves on knowing+ what the different
timber terms mean, Sometimes per -
sone speak of a certaiz>-article as made
of deal. When they are asked what
kind of tree deal is they are at a loss.
As a matter of fact deal is not a kind
of tree but a piece of wood. Aboard
is one inch thick;' a plank, two inches
thick; and a deal, three inches thick.
The word is not used in the lumber
trade in the States, and in 'Canada it
is cbieflY used in connection. with the
shipment of timber to Great Britain. floatingcontaining 7U,400 housest
city,
Reis shipped in this frim because it .
a convenient size for Oertain British each of which floats on a raft of bar.
woodworking industries. Since deals boo.
,AUTO USED PARTS _
arts
Sonie,time';ago a surveyii"r"'tn'west-
ub
Pennsylvania"`captured, a bear ,c.,
ernIle
after a. lively and amusing chase. he
was walking quietly along when.
saw the little bear not a dozen yards
away. It seemed not the least afraid,
started toward it, expecting an
and he
'easy capture, but when he was within
a few feet of it the cub turned tail and
scrambled up a chestnut tree-,
m
the crotch of whieh it gazed down up-
on the man as if challenging him to
continue the pursuit. -
The surveyor threw off his coat and -
shinned the tree. The bear waited
until he was close upon it, then walk-
ed out upon a limb. The pian: crawled
cautiously after it, again thinking of
an easy capture. But he was im l-
taken, for tete cub, seeing
o
near, doubled itself into a ball and
got
man
groped to the ground. The
to the ground iz1 slower fashion. Mean•
while the baby bear had climbed an-
other tree.
The surveyor, then assuming that
the cub would repeat its tactics, took
his Pocket tape line, made a slip noose
in one end, and placed it beneath the
limb from which, as nearly as he could'
calculate, the. bear would drop, if it.
tumbled from the second tree as from
the first. Keeping the box end of the
climbed ,
line in his hand the surveyor
tree.
the
The cub waited until its pursuer was
almost upon: it an& then walked our
on •a limb, as it had before. ,�rlie man
beat
the;
olid
cautiously followed,
Walked. nearly to the end then dropped
to the ground. As luck would have it,
noose
the cub dropped outside
the et
but when ho turned stepped inside
with This fore feet. The mall instant
ly drew the line, and there was b 5
bear caught by its fore. lags. It strug'
gled and snarled, but only drew the
slipknot tighter.
The man desceinled •to the ground
e
holding the line taut. Ile bad quite
fight with the cub, but finally con
quered, and the little fellow submitted
to be led hurtle, where it soon;became
tame:
Friends:,
along tna
money they had the less they could
do; So we Bolshevists," sarcastically, le
"are planning to give you
it
oft the hot plate on 'a bobtail flush. In
other words,. the Council is going
bluff along without the money.
(To be continued.)
"Beyond the Pale."
The expressos `Beyond the vie"—
meaning
le "
meaning "outside the law" or "beyond'
jurisdiction"—owes : its oigin to thrr
j
fact that the word,"pale" is used in,
limit
history to denote a circumscribed
of authority,_ a definition which date ''I
back to the time of King John. Y
d►
part
that
monarch divided
This mina
Ireland which was subject to. Engle.. h
rule' into twelve counties., and the en-
tire was known as the "Palr'.y:
tiro
Inside the "Pule" English lawwthile the
knowl:edged. and obeyed,
land outside was in an almost con-
stant state of uproar and dissension.
For this ,reasoon there sprang upha
reference to matters being "within t
e
ale" -or managed according to law
P to those which
and order--as� contrary
were "beyond the pale,"'or in a dasox-
dered condition.
rd's Linim for Dandruff-
Mina
Porter -House" Steaks.
to the table beside
ton's ears told him that great sobs
hisframe.
ante.
wracking g
were again
sad
' h g
•, raised
his Then Neilson
and faced her. felting pa s
"My wife," he said, her face, to step on board and was off again
between his hands and 'kissing �meer f to- like a shot, to prowl along sloy upon "youhave taught travelled roads, while
�slightly tr
h1
,Y
had
the pforget. g
onthey never
When e
,.
daya
a lesson that I canand. and CharltonC�lirltom talks! .
ou lave siiotvtu me as courts; �nI fixh' I Graham would drive them to
b
juries, and judges, and non ars
never Shaw, just what I have done. I
go to prison joyrfully to pay the debt
owe, to expatiate in hard labors and
I I have
remorse the wroxugs thatand give to
sore& Take the money,
e Government. Let rt be used for
scheme
the les
a little town upon an interurban rai -
road. On its edge, the girl would
alight and walk to the station where
she would take a train Graham k to Tee
city. Charlton and x
motor. The latter part of the
its enemies, Charlton explained as soon as
balking and blasting . duped me intoe she was seated by his side in the car.
who d P f u h on you, et -
are soft: Cool and then rub through
a coarse sieve.
Place three pints of milk in a sauce-
pan and add one-half cup of corn-
starch. Dissolve the starch and bring
`to -a boil. Add yolks of three eggs
one-half cup of sugar. Beat to blend
and then beat in very slowly the pre-
pared cherry pulp. Turn into the
freezing can and place in the freezer.
When frozen to a soft mush, add stff-
ly beaten whites of eggs and one cup
of. whipped cream. Give a few turns
dasher
remove
the
d�a�
to blend and then
and pack. Allow to stand for two
h• to ripen. . Ilse three parte of
x
s p
0
u
for freezing.
..
salt
g
of
• t
e
ar
on
ice
to p
men and women
believing that they and I could make
a better country than this already is.
ill give you a lint of the banks in
I isited and I will write
out,it ns deposited turn every
out the orders which will with what
cent of it over to you to
you say is best. which the
"But.the monthly cheque
trust company will, turn over to you
•
"It's rather rough ewe
>, ( he whispered the last word
heart," ( overheard), "but it's best
lest Graham
that we take no chances. Now go
ahead and tell me all
do now."
the en-
gine
had thio
•gine until it was barely audible, ofar
it was thought best that
hear the entire conversation 'in ease
Iti •''Cott
1t bit�atloia of u
,q � ,i
awl ec
s tltade Ma�,,c Baldtt
.ntyg
Powder the Standard..
x � d of Canada.
ing powderw
« no
s
11t
con_ w
in of other ir ttiot
bites.
p�tstgSe de e
Rin ore to
o1'diaiy kii
,Y�f
Made iti Canada,
i; C 4l mixer"' d,4 1► p' i� trbtrittED
voNsto td worm 04OAt4 MbNW >r> ►t . '
Many People have attempted to
The Reason.
Madge rushed upstairs as if she
were storming an enemy upstairs,
across the hall and straight into Aunt
Kate's roont. "Aunt Kate? she cried.
"Yes, .child?" ; �i I've
"Why don't people like ria? I
come to yo'l because I know you'll tel
me the truth. Don't try to let me down
easy', It's bound to hurt, and -I want
it over. They don't like mew and
you and I both know it. There,m
be some•reason." r that',
"Perhaps it isn't Madge Fowls
they don't like—" +. tore:
Madge made an impatient gee
"Don't!" she cried. "I've been left
out of three things in two weeks.
That's a proof.. I vivant tine reason."
"I was going to say that it wasn't
Fowler•, but one lit: e trait of
Madge ,
ad.
de
that they
Fowler's
iV,adge h'ow
Madge lifted her head.
"Weill" she said sharply. ,lis
"1?o you renzellber the photographs
that Marie Menson took of you last
summer?"
"The ate with my' hair tumbling
down and. my -stockings tot ix by
aro
' s I
F` 1
ter
'her o
ne w
of
brier anal, the
jumping the brook and loo : all feet?
I'm not likely to forget them. Marie
gave Me the films after I went tip in
the alt over them, but she wouldn't
give roe her own prints. So there they
are in her hook, shown to anybody she
takes a notion to show thein tc: It
Makes ^me boil to think of thein even
now."
trace the origin of the term porter
house" steak to a man have medted r Porter,
who i$ supposed to
res-
taurant in New York.
The real reason Ear the'term wasb
e.
cause, in the early part of the last can.
tury, there existed in New York a
number of public•houses where ale and
porter were the favorite beverages or-
dered. These taverns or saloons came
to be known as porterhouses.
The proprietor <of one of these es-
tablishments, on being asked for a
particularly tendei and appetizing
n
-tti g
of eating
the
steak, made
the top oft a joint which had beenSent
for hie personal use. Tho custom
was so pleased that he called'a day
or two later and demanded anotllei' of
flame steaks..
The fame of the tavern aid its
steak soon spread, and it was not long
before 'epicures throughout the city
were asking for potter=house steaks,
acid butchers, Ieariiiilg the secret cf
the cut, adopted the term themselves.
((Why V'
h'rlends, in every' human heart •
That beats beneath a breast,
There is still a secret part rest,
'Where truth and goodness
re ,
Jewels of surpassing r
Lie waiting you to bring
Their to the light of men and earth
It you but touch the spring.
Bandkole, the capital of Sian', is s
am
fir, pine, and sometimes hemlock, a
secondary nee of the word In England
is to:indicate some kind of "soft" wood
or wood from a cone-bearieg tree In
Canada, however, the word is not used
in tidesense and "deal" always means
a piece et wood of a , c rtaill t11iOk•
tees.
Minaret's Liniment for Urns, etc.
We carry a full line of used p aerie,
pol Makes of cots, tclesnedgnndo'freet rani
grease and din oto«
springs, complete englate. tires, satin,
El exist prices pat'1 , or old
Write.wire, o
r plum*
1.030 TrutClWas
t,
koro]
t
O11.14COAQ'd27Gk1 11033 i'i'rT CO.
3ab1e
;�•ak%ci�lc 41SS. .._,..-.
IS'SUE ROW 20--,V1