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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1918-07-18, Page 6{•". • ,179. .040011 Iream Wanted! MI= OR CHURNING CREAM eaDviia cans. pity muesli douses and remit *say. Our price now Is forty** cents *ate** asairr_aad, Orearearra,00. _ Mai =tar $t' wits *SW WWI yeenitily you will not detect this Imitation until Oka teeevot reveals it. Demand always the genuine "SaIsia" la the twilled aluminum packets AM.Itel hat et it, if you want that unique flavour of clean, leave* properly preparedend packeds 0arv4-.--0.m0004.00.4400.410,..4.40•404_,4•4:17 eJ Runaway Jglietta By Axthur Reny Gooden CRAFTER, XI.---(Cont'd.) Slowly she took her Way toward the veranda again, and once more Mrs.! Wurrell greeted. her 'with quo:ulnas! complaint. "Didn't find Jima, eh? You been gone a ,hing while. Didn't eee any. o' Jake?" - 'Tessa" returned. Juliette absently. "He said die was leaving." Mr. Wurrell stirred uneesily. "I'm *Alin' slueer--all *hook up. Across' the horizon, and looking much nearer than it realy could be, red glare of light hung against the clouds. From a tiny incredible swift - mess bespeaking Berne highly inflam- mable material. "Haystacks," eaid Clay briefly, °Mil Must be,Burt's place!" „ "Burt's 7" echoed ' Juliette- Araly Burt?" Yes, one of his ranches, the one d th R bb' nch NEWS FROM ENGIAND •••••41.••• NEWS BY MAUL ABOUT JoRN BULL AND HIS ,PROPLB Occurrence* in'ethe, Laid That Reigns Supreme iu the C,,enoreer. • tie: Wold. • .14 correepondent writes that 'West. moreland bids fair to be one ,wavipg cornfield, this. year. The King and Queen will attend one, vice in St. Paul's in July, to commie rnorate their silver wedding. The new Red Cross hoapital in Manor Road, Tottenham, has been for. ir,aally opened by Priacess Christian. I The men 0; the ,British Solezekt fierce have eubscribed through their • War Saseingseasitociationsli-a=„ot 1-Z1,91,478 in War Savings C rtificates. I • A memorial window has been dedi- s • icated in Lower Beetling church by the Reiter in Lizz el" That's it, beyond. a doubt. Well, Bishop oe„Chicheeter to the late Capt. h t let her burn. Burt won't And. many Robert Egerton Leder. 0 len y, Juliette helped er o the house. Mrs. Wurrell sank Puf- fing into tier big Chair; her hands were moist, and a dull fear looked out of her eyee. ° "Stay with me, Lizzie," she half moaned. "I'm tooshook to be left, alone." t was quitepa M W few words •related what information A Roman. oven hits been discovered tell not only was , 'shook," but feared she had gleaned from him and the ac. in a moued, in a meadow at Chalfont men in this valley who'll get out to I Pending negotiation's between the save his crepe." [Transport Workers' Federation and TQ Juliette's mind came the mem- the company the Bristol tramway ory'ef Jake Robbins. as he had parted strikers have: returned to work. from ber. tliat Morning—eaman brood- i ki I An American soldier, Ede feet seven vengeance .with a mild thirst. She inches in height, was aecideatly killed hastily sketched him to Clay, and in a at Ruiellp. the worst. • 0••••••••••••,••••• CHAPTER XII, She Starts A Ball To Rolling. That same afternoon found Juliette at the County courthouse. Searching thedusty old records of twenty years gone wat a tedious task. She made no explenation to the recorder, nor did she give him her name; but titer an hour of labor :she verified the tale which she had heard that morning. There was no title company in La Vina, but the recorder proved an able assistant. . The ranch had 'belonged to Larry Dare, and no one else. This fact set- tled, Juliette Made careful notes of the facts as recorded, smiled her thanks to the official', and left him rather mystified. After which juli- lass betook herself homeward and kept her own counsel. • Andy Burt drove out to the 'Wirral ranch that evening in his car. Juli- ette and the Wurrells were sitting on the veranda. The euteluid dropped behind the purple peaks, and in the softenettlight the girl made a pleas - Ing picture. • The picture impremed Burt; A 'ew, stirring, enttaucing idea 'fasten- ed upon him as he strode up the stsais —and idea which; by; the time he had taken the girrehand in greeting, had ripened into firm resolve. - Nor was his thought difficultfor Itilietta to divine, even before he spoke. He was another Parkis, the "important out-of-town customer" of the Truitt Shoe Company; ;she re- cognized the same cokissalaself-con- colt, the eame complacent, appraising glance's, and it angered her into sil- ence. - "Thought I'ddrop up and pay my ton takert thereon. St. Giles, Bucks. The Northampton Tramways "You're right," right," isail Clay gloom- ily, starting the car forward again. "I've no doubt that those steam were set afire by Sake, and it's high time i for us ranchers to get together. Arson is bad enough; next thing we know it may be murder, unless vire can. find some legitimate course of ac- tion. And that fool Burt can't see that he's. playing With dynamite." i "Look here, Clay!" exclaimed the girl quickly. ,"Let's start this thing , here and now—to-night! Let's visit ithe nearest ranch and start the word ;around for a mass ineetitig to -morrow r• evening; telephone everyone interest- ed; get them all there." 1 "Good! What thea?" "I don't know yet, • Will you do it?" - • • • _ I"You bet I wall" He give the wheel a spin and sent, the car sliding into a side road. _ He was fired with enthusiasm, yet jullettia eould see that it was not al- together enthusiasm to crush , Andy Burt, but it was also . an eagerness after restraint. The sight of that flame againstktlae sky had actedas a brake; it had brought home suddenly to him the danger of loosing the pos. sions of men, and it had sobered him into eaten. She decided that she liked this- trait, in Clay; it -hespolce Tooting the car's horn vigorously, Clay drew. up before Dean's house, and the door opened to show - old Deep standing in the zone of lamplight. Clay told hira of her idea. "Just what we'll do at the meeting I don't blow," he cencluded,•"but we can hold It at the schoolhouse, and probably some of us will have ideas to present." "We great!" said Dean with em - FRESH GARDEN FOODS, Scientists inform ua Quit by our i fifte per cent., with thirty per cent. cooking methods we have been welts,' Air eabbage in boiling and fifteen per 1 ing much of lqature's handiwork. cent. for =rota. Steamed carrots Take the case of.the Jrish potato. showed a gain of anti three per cent. When you pare it end, being a 'cleanly I but the waste involved in lieraping the person, slip it into a pan of water for fresh carrots 1,Vaa twenty Per cent. O. while before putting It sin the Are, and that in peeling after boiling but do you know that you pare off and ten .per cent, of the weight as pur- eoalt out of.it a nice round percentage) chased. - of it e food value? Likewlee, When ' Each group abbWed at very Much yoa pour away the first boiling watexe larger loss of gal% from boiling than from your voat and gteeri eregetables, from ateaming. Thie also was true of do you know that you eend down the the dissolved sugar, starches and the 'kitchen sink not a little of' the. food like, In this latter clam it wee prove you have worked hard .to grow? ed that steamed carrots showed e, lose The body's need of mineral toode of some six per cent. of the amount long have been known,`and.here tyey found in the raw substance, while are in iegetables ready /or the using. those which were boiled whole showed The beating of the heart; the building a lose Of'seventeen per dent, and those t 1.000. of the, tissues, elneforming of the red blood cells, all depend in part on the mineral matteretalteneintsethe-body from the food. Calcium, sodium, po- tassinne sulphur, phosphorus, all these and 'more, are needed or the work of thebodYewill not go on aatis- factorily. Whether or tot vegetable substance is being wasted in cooking, is not merely a•queation of economy, reckon- ed from the standi3oint of dollars and cents; it is also one of nutrition, of h'ow much we are cheating our bodies. re- cently at one okour Agricultural Col- leges to determine the exact losses in ox anaiyses was n boiling such. vegetables as potatoes, mittee have decided to cease running carrots' and cabbage* LF on Sunday and a hair-hOUr The common Irish pots.% was pared earlier on week days. and soaked, in water fez. a short time ' Elizabeth Mary Ann being p over the fire. Then °mimed a beforeput etreet car conductress, lost her Me by other' lietatees were washed' irk their falling off her car an the cure at Ken- jacketa, plunged into, boiling, water ningtoe Ova and Cooked, Tepidly. This results The Italians of London are coming Showed a gain of at least' fifteen per forward. avell fortserviea under' the Anglo -Italian Conventien. • Mrs; Leiper, 14,1),S., has • been, 0,p4 pointed as woman, dentist by: the Es - !sex Bducatiozt•Goairaitteis. One hundred and. fifty more men be- longitig to the ttrmingliara Bolide force have joined the army. • ., . Nathan Birchen, a Cherley -taimer. was 111104 t10 for failing to put four acres a lend; midet cultivation. , xespectp, Aims Dare, he begat%„in- , grata tgly,m ,, "Ass I said this orn- ing, e / , two ought to. be real :good frien 0.” He sighed, and fanned himself. with his panama. "Fact is, I've never been much of a lady's men. The girls around here—," His voice trailed away as a flash- of light trout the road traversed the ver- anda. • He stared forward with a /town. ' . . "Huh! If there ain't . a flivver • turning in here," exelitimed. Wurrell. • "Yoe," mid Juliette "demurely. ' "Clay Thorpe promised to take me for a little drive this evening:" She Juliette turned astonished and de - rose and held out her hand to Burt,lighted eyes upon him. She had been ' „upon whose face black gloom' had thinking of. him de a big, strong, un- , descended. • - • trained boy. andashe had found him a She gave a. relieved sigh as she keen. forceful nialeof ettion. . 'Batik back against the cushions beside "I'll draw up the .petition Myself. ' Clay, who, sensing her mood, gave We'lldo it to-raglit," he went on with • silent attention to the "flivver," growing fire. "Aad you Can help me, Finally she spoke, slowly, as musing Dare. By George; we'll run right up to my house and do it now!" The old petty rebellion against' meekly eithmitting to another's will Seized upOn Juliette.. She felt eon - ahem, ."rai be.there, and I'll phone the other boys." . As they turned into the main road again, Salietta -frowned thoughtfully."Pm- afraid," she said, "that the meeting will prove a lot of talk and nothing definite. Isn't there anyone who has a legal enough mind to put things into concrete fornat" • . "By George!" Clay jumped at the suggestion. , "Say, we'll have a peti- tion ready—a formal demand that Burt recognize our water rights! Then vre'll take it straight ,to Burt and demand his signature." ' aloud. • "There's lie sense In it—not a hit." His look was ,a, question, juliebta confirm . • 111w,as, thinking about the water fused, carried away by the force of his proposition.". She Straightened up. will. and resented .it. "Pin ht -earnest. 14;ven in tile Men "But r don't care to , go 'to your . time I've been back here, what I've house, Clay," elle flared.indignaetly. eeen awl tiArArd makes no wild to he Be only gave a greet, eager,boyish sdoing.eomething. - Hainil the Gain- laugh, . merce Commission jurlediction over "It's all right, Dare—my mint public Utilities?" • Mary's there. And you're going. "Sive But in this case Caton- You'vetstarted this ball to rolling, and weed Creek isn't one of them, as wee. now yon can tfinish it." a • • • tern can easily be had by puraping. The "Oh," said julietta, and leaned Government doesn't take Into donsid, back, "oh, very *ell, cliate." belled aftereeutting up, a lose of twenty-six per cent. _In. boiling, _ spinael gave up more ilit/T-fiffy Per cent. of its salts and cabbage more than forty per cent. of all melte. pre- sent in the fresh sehetance, while the carrots which were diced before boil- ing lost eleven and one-half per cent of the total salts and twenty-three per cent, of phoaphorus a,ddition to the twenty-six per cent. soluble „car- bohydrates. , • long cooking of leveret Mire** Food contr comer dried beans and Pe**. Consider *low the water in wbirb yegstsibles, *re boiled. If boiled they • 0 -.1,£1110 must be, do not pour off the first we. That Caroula,, is at war hie been ter. The French investigation slum- brought home to every man, woman ed Oise the water over which carrot* sucl. now that all bread made six_ from standard wheat flour must be had been steamed centained but material 44 compared with three mid of the total' labeled 'EVietottr Bread" and mixed Vehundredties per cant. with a percentage of substitutes for • seventy -Ave hundredths per cent. wheat flour. Thl* ;the effeeb of an found iu the water in which they had Order issued by the CanadaFood Board in a vigorous effort to gave the been belled. - existing wheat aupplieti so es tO make them last out until the wheat f the coming harvest reaches the flour mine and the new flour is dis- tributed for eensumption. Ther new Order defined substitute* for wheat as corn, oats, barley, rice„ rye, buclesvileat, tapioca and any mix- ture same; potato flour, bran shorts, oatmeal, rolled oats, corn meal, corn starch, liominy,.corn grits& • rice wee! and Wee° meal. , On and after July lat, olio pound of • Wheat substitute must be used by all bilkers, .confectioners and public eat- - mg -places with every nine pounds of standard wheat flour in making any ' takers' products, and .tlLie same rule obeli apply to -every person in Caoada who hakes bread, rolls or pastry for Private -consumption. ' On and after JulY-16%-in -alleCtinaditeertsteof-Port In this method of- co'olting, the lesis in steaming was as small, reletively, as the gain was large, Over boiling. Steaming conserved both. the mineral substance of the green vegetables and the. sugar Of the carrote; A. French intestigation showed a similar basses in the 'comparative cooking of Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, celery, asparagus, corn, beans and lentils which had been boiled for thirty' mi- nutes. The average loss was thirty- six per dent for total mineral matter and fifty per ,cent. for potassium. A cent, food value for the potatoes COQh- loss, se potassium as as aeaenty. ed in their jaekets. ' two per .cent was found from the As another experiment, apinach and cabbage, 'selected becetise they were of common Use mid: were known to be of the family -of vegetahlea which lose most through -boiling„ were irepared as if for table service except tor the oinission Of the • seasoning The spinach was witalted carefully and tlie. crushed or otherwise damaged parts Per taking one match into a name, were tossed aside. Just the neces-, tion factory Jessie ,Atlelaide Price, of miry cleaning was found to result in Loyton, was lined ten shillings, a loss of One-third Of the .purchase Birmingham collects about six lien- weight of, this vegetable, including the dred tons of old tips a year, and sena lama 'sand and sell whicha,clings to it for £8-00 pet ton. • 'spinach' and makes it difficult to clean. - a , That no drops of water- might adhere TaeAinerican Red :Cross has hand- ed the British Red Cross .Z10,004, the to the • leaves, the were carefully . dried.' Following this-. they were inieed, thoroughly to insure uniform, samples and -the -whole quantity was .........._ 'divided into, three parts.' - • ' BREAD MIXEP\ VIC-4 1111...0.,...._7:14.2bilP14 C040.4.64 sad deal -Intiide do sokouri dough. Delivered all chews Paa Oro bone; or through your Auk" four loaf gm $2.75 s cioht Oak $315. • .. - • . T. WRIGHT00. HAMIUTON CANADA litte ' end 1445 A.rthur the proportion is to be an- creaded te_one pound with. every four. Pont -1. - Aithbr and the West. this in- -crease is etill in abeyance, preceding • the report on the quantities of sub- etitutee available. .It is providedin this Order that on and after July 15th no licensed dealer , shall Sell for private consumption east. of, -hut not including Pont Arthur, white.- flour to any .perion who does not from him sub- • stitutes in the proportion of not less then 'one pound to two pounds of standard flour, West of Port Arthur the Proportion is kept at One pound substitutato four:pounds Wheat tour, The brand "Victory Bread" is to be. affixed to. every .loaf as guarantee Ithat the prescribed amounts of , sib, atitutes for standard wheat flour are ' being ineluded. therein.. Bread not . bearing this label nay be seized and atai person violating the regulation is liable on conviction to a penalty not exceeding $1000 and not ;less than. $100, or imprisonnient for a 'period not ex'ceediag three months , or both . fine and imprisonment.. Fines are to he. ,paid to the municipality if the. , municipal Aker 'secures the convic- tion or to. tire -Provincial Treasurer, where a Provincial Officer'esecures the. conviction. A Treat For :airs. Coopee. . . . On such a glorious July day it Was not strange that Mrs. Antoinette Law- rence felt that it Would be wicked to . waste. time on 'tasks that could.' be done in any. kind of weather. •She Meditated over the matter, while .she .sugared -Bobby's sagtinialwa Then-her-4*-s- brovr- cleared. '• • ' •.- or: knowl-PlIestakesthe: babies and assaa•• get Mrs...Cooper and go lig for a'Whole day of exploring. ; "don't believe Mrs. Csiolier. ever'wept off' eaploring ,an automobile in her whole life." "Are .you sure," Aunt Ann asked dryly, "that Mrs: Cooper would•enjoy e day' of exploriag?", . • . "Now, Aunt 'Ann," Mrs, Lawrence protested; • "dent cold-witer, rte, please' Who could help -enjoying' it! Vha,.. kit Eversley has been talking. ever since abut the dail caalilled her ."What I -object t�," Aunt An re plied, "is your peer psychology." a .'"What in thieWorld do you mean? ' You. knoti°.:taim tremendously interest-. . ed in psychology; why,'I specialized itt it college:".:• • "I'M •not talking, about books." said: Aunt Ann., "I'm talking about psy- chology applied. to Mrs. Ceoper. You'd better look out, Antoinette!" But Mrs. Lawrence only laughed as - she lifted Bobby down from his ,chair. esriAenctirotlilnyeit'te' derful -day,' -g.s.thorth.saauvied, itrili;acost °Leen; :Wm; nothing 't not capasa., biea in a 'marvellously shortsaime she had a luncheon Tut up and, the babies readY, In ten minutea,they were at. Mrs.. Cooper's, and Antoltiette was enthusiastically explaining her plan. "I was planning to Up cherriiie,H4 said Mrs,. Cooper, shaking her head; ' "Oh, cherries!" Mrs. Lawrence cried; ."They Milt he put ' any day,. wide_ there may not be another (lair like a this all sumniet's You've got to come; • Mrs. Cooper. I won't take no for an . Isnw6thre-end "she had: her NiraY .000.00.44, first inetalifieliterlat �T2O? [000 to •thaatitisttiish Women's leospeie Lord George Hamilton stated at a meeting. of the Eradergroand Electric Railway Company, Loadon, that they'. curried .909,000,000.. passengers last year. . • . '• . . • . The wedding took Thtee' in. the 'Chapel Royal, Savoy; recently,, of Can - Min John MclalaUghton; Canadians,. and Hon., Doris Kitson, 'daughter- •of Lord and Lady...Airedale. , The..1..10use of Keys, Tale of Man; has refused- the franchise to• conseieritiout objectors who- refuse t� -work. of national 'importance , menierial hits been.' unveiled at Great Eitstoti, Isunioow, by General Beale COlvitia 1/1.P., to ,Essex men who have fallen. an the War; ' . . • the ovens of the gas rangeis. 'Fondly The Preemaserm of North Louden these portion's were ground, ;Separate-, will' Provide,' equip and • maletain..a Beet pt. -motor ambulances for twelve reenehe at the Western front. - • None of flte street leave in Brisitil Will be lit. during, thirteen. Suminer weeks. • • • The peoBleaot Zanzibar have sent to Britadia. e. further _sum of 42.0,0010. for war purposes. A hospital. to be huiltain Wool - with as memorial as soldiers who rmves7 fallen in the war. No land. la•Hyde park will be avail-. abie ;for allaments, it. is all. re. United for perpoees:, A deed, whale, measuring over sevelitY, feet, we:a Washeil 'asisore at Felixstowe 'a few days ago, .• . nation. t'he cost of pumping." She laid an eager, Impulsive hand On Claes eleeve. • "Now listen! If all the patties in- terested Were to get together and. aet • (Tobe controted.) • • a • Sunshine Rain In the: Cianitra. • The first Batt •wast. put aside for 'analysis of the fresh substance. ' The 'second was steamed Over the . kettle of 'boiling water. , .The third -Pardon was boiled in' as -small a quantity of water as wai.pos- sible without the need of replenishing.. , Tlae time regutred for the boiling and the' Steaming • was the sante. When the two cooked pottions Were impovered the bulk Of the apinach left from the steaming waS at least one- half greeter then that left by :the boil-, ' The three portions were then spread' on trays of enamel ware and •dried in Of coarse in a' common coffee nun 03 clod bottled to await analysis. Next, cabbage . took its turn. - It was washed, the heart discarded .and one-sixth of the Purchase weight Went to waste. Three heads were selected, -each divi•ded into three parts t� make the three: samples rearesentativea The Same Precise as for spinach was used: onethittl, for the drying, un- cooked; one-thitd- for the steaming and one-third for the boiling. The 'steaming of' the cabbage required a third mere time than the boiling and the difference in bulk was noticeable. ',ref aaroot vegetables, carrots -tette choien, for it had been said that the common praetice of the housekeeper Wireworm le doiza.,a_great &AI eg, 'afecutting the 'carrots hall or dic- dansage in Notts, particularly. me re. Ing thein to form a more attractive cently ploughed glass land,' . ,disti for the table, sacrificed mu`clivof The death' took place recently at the nutritive Value; that carroti. boil- ed whole retained their .food values SWanbourne House,..Winslowaof • Lord Cotteelde, hie 'eighty-eighth. year, • , • Bee Song. Little belted honey seekers; .111 one Mind and one !soda-, to/nothing Oli for the rain, ;meet sunshine rain, Come and drain these briniining beak - .o_ • he done. I'm sure,' I The efivetyirain thitt floats era! . „ Gay nodded. The gee ceeteurete yea of mist over him eee Allis Yours to have and hold— ettgerw: plain • . atereti of toreopsia. gold; "Let's begin right now to find that . gladdeis the flowery throats Mu& of tileasuiseinueh of treasure, • os miad. _Caul eve 7" - I Wail 'Gent foe a Moment, Theit, The soft, Wafiti rain trent s the 'sultry Riches without steint or meiteure, E es, We olossible," rettirr. • Wee, • In the cludieed hollyhocks • bete beceese dieters tea y — For it the Mile uplift their eyes, And If ye be generotis heated, ,And the purple spires of phlox!. - CitlelY" 11"6"-ettell eetleg Revivieg the thirsiting things: 4t 46003 stou sea that suth eonel rot it each song,bird sings. :Whim these bland hours live depart- . ter.' Of course it required more time . 0 a a. * ThERE.13-BrAliry-sli •149. ,higranlikweed COI} P. • .• Ciantoe, r0). ipootts.eIZEOSKS.SUllellletFluttioO '`Bwroits.migaffullistftssmovoi nal& better. The carrots selected' . • . . for Oa experiment were chosen care- fully as to • their relative tize and weight. They also were divided into three Iota. , Some previous experi- ments had !shown that ;scraped carrots 'lost heavily in compatisoit with the carrot, cooked in its outer' covering, .mity- -very deafly heeremoved litter cooking. : ' • = Of these three lots one•Wee.;craped, put through a meat grinder and•dried; another was waehed and plunged into boiling water; ithe thitd Was scraped„ cut into •emall. and attractive pieces and nearly covered With boiling *a - eto of appeal--" ettl°1' itzt itself is °tut ° Old mother earth so dry mid bakea eds I shall taste, as nights grow long, whole than it did for the cooking ofa Co C°' e ogit, ORA letrioa• „1110 014TR 6". PREVUIT5 CHAPF'ite4 bElltHTIULTO .nnuourossossto - Milkweed Two Sizes -50c and $1 ' You are young but once, but toxic"! • of Ingipm's Velveoht • you can be ybuthful always if Souveridne Face POwder,50c. youcarefor your complexion -Italsoconcealstherninorblem. properly:Dailyuseofingramrs_ Ineludeclinthe-cornplete- Milkweed Cream. prevents –line of Ingrarrestoilee products • blemishes, overcornes pimples • at yourdruggist'i Ingrain% f ". and other eruptions. Since Zodenta for • the • teeth, 25.e. • " 1885 its distinctive therapeutic_ * -1•• pic.iti-r. a , . quality has been giving health •••• ' .Enach Purchase to the skinand youthful color* wztn the complexzon eteteepaymer . Each time you • buy pickage of Ingralu!'e Toilet -Aids Or Perfume., • skin toned up,:soft ati"d clean. The refined .way to banish jfac hottattureriaderuniortilahlorntgweviipetitittleLeaitc7:77ef a word eilineog.end-uhinincee ersneao---e- time you get a different portrait so and forehe..gd induced by you make a collection' for lir perspiration, is to apple light • boom. Ask your druggis't• . Y° lfe) F. F. Impram.Ce., Windsor 'Ontkrie . • -" 1 ualualla.' did.- She ciiptured Mrs., • -...=..."2:reeSreFirree NOW erode for the 'cooking of the carrots left ppea 2 she cried. • Why havejoa s• 4 „,ttlez, s a laleSsage to each cloud. slake Honey with the `honeyed -song: tho earrets cut into email pertione. 6sit trliiig Or" After er cm&long titers ssa e "I haven't," keynote/end. "taro been Iler harp !strings will thrill aloud. When all .o .i tooked they vsete erushed,'dried in gas ovens, ground 1 ilk working/. Diet you're right!) Oh fey, the rain, sweet sunshitie rain, Meeting the Labor Shor.tiige. 'weighed arid pot into 1,A„„„tties, eolltiO I'm right! Noot, God givesin nsercy wise. 4x -t six montlia. Ivo been study - ion sa los. tet tOfiettber- eters/tele in- It erimes—and His promise shines 1 A fernier itt Indiana drives a team allairsis followed.' f rq h'tehact to io To average housekeepets, the• tabu.' 'tere --.46o I ball that,a. tire and leads ihicohotses drawing -a ar,. lated less irk aaht/PhOSpilorud. calci - agent " rove Ile works nine horses and two .una and niagnesiurri unintelligible Through the rainbow teethe skims. modere farrriing implements, and' does - MAN ever, we ean readily under- . trier *betel" Clay glaneideateepett S ed -down Ws brakes 'with low w and ism Staripg. • 'By George, ont. " Scullened codfish mid riee is del- the. work of teveral Mon and teams stand the statement that the losses elms. under the eat .1yetein of laming, frem 1).inaeli were almest • rrHE Pure, rich, meliew A tone, and the sensitive reeponsiveness''' of' th s famous Instrument cone . bine te lift It high 'above ' the, conimonplace. It ls• piano dat nialotalit; Ita endUrIng charitie for. generations. • • Georgian Model, $600.00 THE WILLIAMS PIANO CO., LIMITED, OSIIAWA, Canada's Oldest end Largest Piano Makers P efoti3O•91."”•10,•11.A. kk ,, ti• 041.414 40..40 .00#"*.rirrs444.• 4,4 044", I Cooper, carried her for sixty laws through a wonderful bit Of "summer • world, and deposited her safe at henie • ' Mare 'flee o'clock. - "I'm Very tench obliged to you, I'm sine," Mrs. Cooper said stiffly, as she !cot Antoinette the hst;oispr. A6d at the station teiheet Tone and on the way Ionia 'told :him enthusiastically about the. ' treat that she had given "poor Mrs. 'Cooper," That night Torn and mtA2tset:tkiinerikzi,agen'Tt°beii7,-"Iwwh' 'e:::4114a)trt5:14:1111 le:vet vyel :111dhrtCse.di Club. eAp " at in'the eorldl" Antoinette ex-. /Then a score earne blowing out to ed. r. latent -eh het sweet stent—the Econt dof cooking chiarries. And suddenly. Antoinette was Silent. Of Course, the glide. ten •0,4111.•044 et:7 eo.e.t>eecett>_ 114 Atii• The want a piece of Meat •without fat4 hone or •gristla ' TheButcherMTheflmediate, uggest that you, Imy al An.. "0- *. 4.....Araott.:.erataaroeei.......eassaarte•� 443-