The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-04-13, Page 6• A Delightful G rden
Freshne S
characterizes the Flavor c
,
• gt.
PPa. I
eilderfoot iWooitig
fly PHILLAP.PS WQ11-Y
tainther Of "Oeld, Gold in Cariboo? EtO...),
t For a -moment be thought tif
,
to them, but men.- do -not hail every
.!Passer,hy on tho prairies and he
ebanRed his mind. Ile :did not want ,
Anything._ of .thems ,ao he lay- still"
Whilst then. without .4 1)01180. Ar turn
of the head,rode silently past him rad
;disappeared In Me mist.
"Indians* et course,° be raMttereas
"they must. have ,seen tbe horse." And
than ha fell to wondering why tbejt"
CHAPiER .(Cont'4). titer he broknIis.neelt not at first:lied me4e no elan e"w.h tjler were
riding at that hour.in the morning to.
'IYItS"1113141111(414/thbnitlith
,r„'4,1tiZet:Tado,(Peasfli)1:1;149t4;t: Fetc711:5210::,
• B$14 demon zurever wore bide.
the m
wind shrieked. around them; the
Quality -111/411%/Ung. It' cI TWoztlr'illreg YrOW.M.• 'lTheoose, litter f the, d ttl ci bout nit(' waste
e yar e • places ..,.through which he,
frightened horse's .feet, end the ,t3:QU'LgillgoPcc-:ditz,c1m PP9R.
rain 10114 'big' blood, :red ilanksj The homelessness of the prairie was
Within a radius of twenty -Or. tbirty revealed to him And almost frightened
feet of his fiying hu.Uls it IX" unsgs 111411* He 'land known the Prairies all
nif liVlagothial cOine, iNt tl' ftis. hte, but this aspect of -them had
men held on to the ropes, hoping that , neer struck bin) before; .'
in time he might quiet 0own,a.. little. He had eominittek,Suicide, and
s „Cinch the -bag on forIne.good and knew it, not an unjustifiable coward -
tight, lioss: It might get Acta: eff." 15* act, but the voluntary killing one
Bolt obeyed, and, Jim .shoolc,,hilltiSelf the less „Of .Jim. Combe.
°Nothing -ietia$ is there ea* it would lae practical of his O
.'tt'Sr' the fastenings,- • e sr '3 world as 's ni however, if one may Judge from. some
:worde•the 41S4Y,
In the ;ordinary course of...things
though they would have, passed; lw
silence, -and near ..enouglt ,t0 satisfy
their own curiesity. 0 '
s're be Continued.
•
•FRENOH: SAY GERMA,NO ?..F113,"
Comparloen of 4100 ReYeel• Wide Cilte
crepaneies. •
It is eintaltlered in France' that the
•,serlaas inaccuraCy of the German, eine
ualty 7 nOtti 18 deitnitely.'eatablishetli
liaTti -.X 'Warner •Allen, :Writing Iron
•thea British headgearterse, It soenie,
,Cheese Dishos„ . they :wear. If dirt ,and grease; ere steady, you devil,". he went to the grey and barren life without rest, 'articles. rect)ntlY" Pit"°1eil Um'
den Press, that iu ngldt
an ha
'
. e an ordinary long allowed to. stand on VieodworIc it horse's head" Which ared its teeth, without withaft the light of acy Or inaceareay theseitst:lse:afi
rter,,,,eb. roll and cut into slices retriov. Mtline that severe xneasnres must be laid iteeeara (IOWA(' and hacked away h°Pe. But he. had the plunge, a Matter, of d ,
doubt and dtpeuesion. 14,
't• glg` ..erlistes se aa to lea,vir retinataltenlo remove the dirt; end usually from his aeres. the corral" draggiung nd shwait'ivaa, t.140 late to reconsider dee)), in sem° caaes it anew% to tee
. 6
piece, , of ceueebt, . Butter each silo.. Where extreme methods are need the the four men with it,
:.
and cover •vory thichlY 'Avith ' grated .iinieh. ja:rt'ul'aVed, with th dirt, , I For a, qUarter•of an hour an tried he Wed& not be robbed of his .rovixt.r:d.
' AmOrie* cheese; then piles the elices ' 'Btaina Sholild be .reinced from un- in rda to eppreaeli near enough to She Wfilild be ,happy , 'even- .if ber
. one on top- of• the etho, saat a.ilaif finished. weed „befo).$ washing. Grease mount the roan* but. by 'etriiiiPg. hit-, liaPPinces. )Vas bmild' up In theta
•' Pirit of milk ;withpepppri.4.1t, od, a .t 11117, aTe• the nieSt eenAnteng The ing and Whinge. the Savage brutal another 'Tell, 'thid, therofotp...at ,14i0,
little grated nntineg and, when it is grease., ellsnild ,firet be. Wet 'with cold frustrated every. effort. ..' 1, , 1.,1,),Tiwpthentoet.aliil!fhatttlibeitbav
hishorse.np‘oi
d.brpegpun,
boiling pour over the bread and eheetei Weter to Preitelet lePreading lend,',then I '4calieS0 we'll have to throw' him [
, part. Place in a Welt -bettered, deep washing !ado' 'after all, but it's a pity to take any- his own strength had waned. ' :That
1 thing out of him that Way,t'.. and then day he had e° far eaten nothing'. He
' Making sure to have it seek into" every 04:131 brbah!dso. ')Ipvittiholi,a. stre.ng
a had done work enough to hill an ordin-
Pan and bake for: 15, minutes in a , To blench an nitiniahed ent-fau, suddenly Jim's Voice came from
• moderate. oven, 'basting four or fiYe 'Winch has been
darkened,
oxalic acid,
1 higher level.
iwevheilz. I Let him go "
times with the juice that coves, trem made in 4 solution Of One teaspoon -
ft, When cooked. the top should betv'e fin it, one .,.c,,e. P 'of, hot water, ,___,tuai he The chance had come -whilst he was
a golden brown crust, . '. • . , applied to x,ne entire surface wu'u a Speaking, and with' a tiger -like spring
,lleston Reast......aeoaa up tee cell.% brush, ' This is allowed to dry and
tests of a pound i.t .ot kidney ijeails . then the surface ivacrubbeclnS usUal.
adding ' half 'pound of e1eii,a1- ' For.the,washing, the surface should
and enough bread: crumb5;4tot,eidrialte the be °I.Ie over with a wet cloth,.
clothe then
' 'mixture stiff erleuale to handle., Knead. Scrubbed with a brash and soap, or a
and make, into a,..roli,. prepo:re the. fine sand soap. . In scrubbing, the
roaatingtilt by heatini , and patting •brush abet" always go
With the grain
butter and water In. the dripping of the weed" never across the grain
then when the butter is quite melted or in a circular motion. After being
and the pan hot Put in the refl. Bake thoroughly scrubbed the surface
tomato sauce.. Chopped .onions
butter' and water, Atld servo with water and then wiped as dry as pos-
for about 15 'minute:, ha.stings.Withir470:. waboetnel: be rbeaed off with
with
allele •With•a cloth wrung out of warm
defile warm
be added t this_ i e d
aefiegte flavor ,of the enioisilarecan)rbae.rii4lerly esho.lild
As l'ttl water.Eks .
givea by. be
.u.wpeildl.douthae vegroola.kt
of the saddle except space, and even
choppipg them 'and eookin
. in the butter and tvater that iseu e5 deal tlf" water is asad. the
for
the 1,41tiha... , , , s comes
water -soaked and
_and wd,40ordiceni?es:iithpat receded as soon as the brute shot
int0 the air, coming down again
-, two gyi, A-1 v.
0...4- So..p...po.onfuls of ilo r a ThoroUgh rinsing is aloe essential, as stiff legged and sudden at every point
otherwise the surface becomes gray of the compass in turn. But this was
, Vandervalle'e Cheese Sou • .,
_,
Ifie.Take
thix it with hau t , xi elle and muddy looking. in washing, a not good enough to shake off Jim
. a ee,111)ful, Of milk,' wood floor care must be taken not to :Conabe, ' e
melt a lump of butter ta ,s'z'
e ie. of , a
add that; thenaano h ` t ti sPlash water On the baseboard. In "Thein's ' baby tricksP.she muttered,
we:ailing .a' table thc. edge and "under andas. it the roan heard him it rea • d
filbert ( b t'
, 4 Ou a' quarter ounce) and
to your , taste and, 'the Yoke. of four 'the
1.4g gia p cheese • . ' • : • .. : t le
edge' Must be carefullet Washed. m.411111°0 at the window saw riething
4 t e whites
• the four eggs ;beaten stiffiv, PeP-Per 11111)1T111741. .-the:tolielt: t'f::-*Irlia.luisi-7'
,
salt- -Butter' a - meld, put -in your '
ay man, and-urdess he was much mis-
taken..the .boot •on his left leg was
slowly filling with his Own blood.
Ile could ride • the roan with one
'With the other he contriv-
fithyehic4oevhbz.bilaiiod t4altmaniT'aitq,ieei.otiging .the handeto nenZact the sandwiches end flash
It was done so quickly that no one from the cartridge bag, which still
rode • securely' on his back; and, re-,
had time to see how an scrembitd clueing -his pace to • a lope he ate and
into the saddle, and after that there
drank as he rode. •
Was not enough time for the spect-
ators to .seeirshelter in the first door-
way that offered.
But it was e magnificent tight for
guide him, and he marvelled at the en -
these who were shfe from the mad
beest's heeis. • , durance of his horse.
.,Fortunately the savage wind had
In 'spite of Jim, the. horse had got
suffered the sleet to lie sufficient -
its head slow' Its back was -arched not
soethatethere-seemedenothing-in-frent itepa the plateate over which he rode
to seriouelY deteribiale the :ging. The,
ground rang hard as Iron and as the
fever of exeitement • died' oftt .rea-•
Hied that the' night had turned bit-
terly cold.
For half a that night Combe hardly
knew •that he was riding. A man sat
in the saddle in the hien of a •great
• darkness, swaying in time to his
horses stride, and at the proper time
lending suola assistance as the rider
can' to the ridden; but that was not
Combe. . ,
influniaaelf was awa-a-,-raiiietlines
in one place sometimes in another•
lerow-he was -holding -a yellow -haired
rider, crashed heevily to. earth.
Theitrforea-Momentesthey-sawatine child -,his Shoulder so that she,
on his feet; his cigarette, one only sign "al see' over the corra an Wa
old Al lassoing a wild cow;: now he
of his horseman's vanity, still between
was 'seek an nglana in places �f
his teeth, the next he wee again
purelY imaginary magnificence, where
astride of the, rising beast.
a young queen With that child's fell -
Then he vanished from the corral
tures wee holding court -amongst, i
numerable Anatruthers • eybo moved
slowly and spoke in BooksEnglish with
• He supposed that the night mest
'have' commenced, though there were
none of the ordinary signs of time to
eggs Add e • • This under sinface becomes greasy in the driving rain but the *fist figure
of -et hoese•rempantalike-theesOpPorter-
eofeasebaxahlieeshield• . •
The man was invisible until the
.greatebeast, -jerked- baeliwards
mixture a m1
let it cook for one hour
in the saucepan surrounded with
-trolling-, water and ethe-liee-fir-Theet
turn out the souffle andaeerve With a,
mushroom sauce : The sauce is a
good .white sauce te'Which you have
added already -cooked mushrooms.
Clean them, first of all cheep them and,
cook them till tender 4inlititter and
theii own Juice; thefl throw them in
the sauce and pour It -over your souf-
, Emile 'Jones' Cheese Soaffle.-1-
. Grate a half pound of Groyere'eheess
Milt in a cup of milk a desseatspeOn-
fill of flour; beat four whcle.eggs.aud
-
add first the Cheese- and then the flour
and milk mixture. Season with pep-
per and sale and put alleiato a mold.
Let it cook in a saucepan Of boiling
water for an hour and a, half. Then
at the end of this time put it in the
oven foe half an haute ..
Sheese Puddinge-Boil up a Pint of
Milk and peek it on to one tablespoon -
fat Of rice tidal-, which has been mix-
ed with a little cold milk, put back
into the. pee and stir until th,0 mix-
ture, thiekeps. . Remove the pail from
..1.-
the Are and add four Minces of fleelY-
grated cheese, e pineh of salt and
eayenae, two Ounces of butter and the
yolks of two eggs.' • Mix all well to-
gether:and then add the beaten whites
of the eggs. Better a Pie dial) and
Pour the mixture into it and bake in e
moderate " over for 20 ' minutes.
Sprinkle gratetreheese over the top
before Serving.
, 'Savory Cheese Pudding. -One-half
Veifel Hints. •
When. -aaoltingeebeefeein a firelea
cooker do not PO salt on Until the
beef is done.
White velevt 'can be -freshened, by
applying chloroform to it after' free-
ing the velvet of dust -a•
A_ teaaeranafithnf turpentine to, a
pail of waterswill brighten faded car-
pets Ibotterthan ammonia.
.aCatton crepe table••napkins are a
coTivinience in the summer cottage.
Their reqnire no ironing. • '
If you are short Of brikirtg powder,
sift together one part of bicarbonate
ef-sield '64)1 two parts of Cream of
tartar. .
If any boiled starch is left over,
Save it and put it into the *rater with
Which oilcloth or linoleum is washed.
It Will keep -them new and bright.
Gelantine pudding can be made
More nourishing by mixing it with
milk_ instead of water; but be enre
that the milkis not tee hot or it will
angler,
In making Aces in which you ure
fresh flea, let the fruit soak hi good
sherry wine for eight or ten leers
Freezing will net harden fruit _treat-
ed in this way. '
evith a crash. , • .
. As the. resin. rose again on. its hind
lege, Combe 'drove the -long rowels
home . with the creel force that
there. was .in .'him and, the 'panic
stricken beast rtished blindly from the
cereal.
-There WRs -ie fence -a tlie--filr-e-n4.rof
it, luckily only' of light poles, set up
to keep in Young calves. •
,It never seems to occur to a prairte
horse to rise at a fence. Certainly it
never occurred to that maddened roan:
With a rending crash he went though
the young pine poles; shattering them
• like match stalks, and so .was gone,
• the rain -lashed .ocean �f. dim prairie
• , •
NEW MAP OF EUROPE
Royal ,
Geographical Society Has Much
Work To Do. .
. pound cheese grated; one ounce of but- The Royal Geographical Society in
ter oil, pepper, salt, one, teaspoonfulLondon is a y hive ,of industry' these
days, not M the ordinary way as one
of the eonserarative old British insti-
tutions for scientific research, but_ as
ateeteratire l.- Thiachine-making
of strong Mixed ,mustard, an egg.
Mix all and bake, it in a battered dish
' 20 minutestill set Serve it very hot.
Ch'ineee, Corks -Make e thick white
.
sauce end when it bas gotten cold add, mape of the rapidly shifting geo-
the yoke of one egg and a • few drops greedy of Europe, supplying the:War
d lerrien juice. Sprinkle in a slice of Office and the Admiralty with geo-
gretad stele .hread and enough grated graphical date and maps woiated out
'Ones to flavor it very strongly. Then with scientific Minuteness on land
leave for two hours to get .quite cold: and .water routes, topography, moun-
Shape into, small pieces like ,corks, dip Min paSses and all the details- which
. 'there into the 'beaten white of egg and the military strategists 'nest have.,
I
-* then into very fine breadcrembs. Have The scientific geographeri ' are
reader some hot 'fat hi a deep pah thinking ahead to the time tor "fram-
fry your corks until they are a golden ing and dictating terms Of peace?
browd. •._. ' . when the map of Europe, will be
•• - • Prom the same source eoreee the made .oed
g -er a gain annear boundaries
.
directions for making cheese belle. • lase down ... it stupendous work con-
•
Cheese Balls. -Take twe.:deseert., sideilate ' the vast areas of territory I
spoonfuls of • flour and • blend with a which hag :lifted through military
ae little milk; add the yolk$ of threeTealenpAtion, and whieh ultimately will
eggs, , Grate -two. ettneeseal, Gruyere. Mere . tir: he eettled-aur •tempo•aiy err-
'• ell"se and two ()uric" at Panneeeenn permanent at a peace congrces-ethe
. .7ea4 add to the finer' and, eggs, .. Theraceorete •ins Reis:doe Prancer:Italy-J.-Ms-
' ' cheese Shatild be grated es finely its twin, qv. ,balkanS, Ceatral and Tarest.
e possible. Heat the mixture, ste•ring Africa, peleea aeetko.paeme 181113(1well so are to keep the" flour from and rake, ,
-lumping; and cook for fivit
then add the juice of otio7hoif a mu i;ioil
itierjoe :.,. Die Valiie, iecretell of the Royel
zecietY •iinil the administrative dii.tee. ;
e awl a little dust. of cayenne penber , tor ;f the •• imititution, said it was :
. SO riside to get told. ' Then, make into OW; too soon yet ao outline the 'so- 1
5M411 halls arai roll in er,f:t .113(1 bread- caned uriew„ man ea Keeopese Tee ,
. erumbv; Pry in ht;ilingg fat imtil they, arena nf Occupation were indefinite 1
' • are golden brown, 'drain andeerve at ,
a .,.i.nee on a hot toot . . . . . , and contently shifting, and it ere
•mains to be seen 'whether recogrine'd
i
aid established Political 'boundaries
,
- lIelv to °eau Walla. and CelPnge • or the past arc to be changed Par-
:. Di. the are of all ' Woodwerk there =nanny, As it requires something
. .
• is ono caution never to he forgotten , more than militate, occupation to
.
-,--to ele,an off spots just as soon trt),j change thein._ .
euggeeted that. they are as accurate as
the ilinglioa 'Weaken, which, iio doubt
has everabeen thrown. 1•
have," he continues, "received on
unquestionable authority . figures
'which Make itaat ]east legitimate to
regard with Oleg raVeSt suspicionaali
information provided by the eneniY as
to his losses The Germeas pride
themselves on the: frank' sal open
fashion in which they Renounce their
losses to the world, and compare it
with . considerable self --satisfaction
with the silence of the French in these
matters:' • '
?The Freeeh, however, despite these
protestations, have been patiently en-
gaged in putting the German stathe
ties, to 'a practical test. They have
Often noticed that the total German
losses itt killed, wounded. missing, and
Prisoners announced for ,a given regi-
ment during a given period is consid-
erably less than the number- 'ef
pri-
soners algae taken from the .same
regiment during the same time. The'
result has been that thedepartment
specially charged with this task hes
been able again and again to convect,
the Verlustliaten (official German eas-
malty. Mae of flagrant and deliberate
omissions by merely comparing them
with theFrench list of prisoners. •
. ape following etattetice concern
fear. regiments .whichh ave.' been con-
tinuously engaged on the German
front': •
"The 108th Regiment &ale Twelfth
Gerfnan Army Gera's' tost.thiring a cer-
tain, period 403 prisoners, according to
the French official records, The Gen
man casualty lists acknowledged dur-
ing the same period 259 prisoners, and
of these 28 are not inchided in the generalissimos down to 4Torreirey? and
Preach return.ThereIs, therefore, a the 'Pella' are sworn friends. ••
shortage of, 144 neen, or 35 I' pr;eut.
MARVEL OF
ORGANIZATION
•
AN AIMICAN'S OPINION ()V
:Corresitendent Sol). It Is. Decorah)
. A4'• -"Orettt'Irnsb."!. . •
• . The NeW York ile'rald .correspond-
•.ent in London cables to that paper. as.
f011Ows; 7.
Ilavelnst returned fronro- ATV
day' tri to the Dritisli.. fr..ont). in
•Franea.and rianders, during. Which
o'irftlhr. Ii1"45,C1114:01;ohrveTisInttli,4. to pass
through and..-ulong the battle.. linos
.froM.. A village.. neer New?' chapelle
!ta a point wierleolting • .the -trenches"
where. the gallant Canadian)). are. cc-
7titenting. the Onion of • the " Dnipire
with the blood •of. their heroes;
"I, have heard the...shriek.. over my
head. in places wiiiirn..liritainPs , gun-.
nevi are:returning to 'tits' for eagle
Gernian 14'0 haVellowed.With re*
fleeted: eritheshism 'gazed. upon•
rtahi'ssoldiera marching on the
reade. over the fieldo, of France,
hIh nOrited. toWar4..
battlefields:: upon whichthe deatinles
of the world are to be , dacided,..and .1
have etaised My- hat in solemn homage
to thiniOndil•rot.Wastedi, War •_wern,
oirouncled Townies,' each Of • WlieM,
having done a man's fun sheets'. in
the 'Great Adventure,' • is taunting
confident that -those who 'follow after
hip will wrest .final victory from the
fee. 4.
. , • ,
• Britain 'awl France. United.
•"My journey to the front was made
while the issue of the great battle at
Verdun ..Watl, in the balance -,it May
still be -and when all'the 'thoughts
of Britain's...army were wtth„ and its
prayera for, the succese of General
Joffre'i gellarit'French, and my thrills
oirar 'a few shell, that• burst within •
my line .of vision or. far over - MY
head seem ludicrous wheel.. have had
time to -read and digeat the news- 0
the fateful happenings nein.' the gate-,
wayofleerreiee that reads to, Paris.
. ?But though that titanic cOpfliet
overshadows the sounds of war that,
gtccertain.13traT IrrAe3ra- 411.11w7il e.
be lnter-
eeted .in the news that lining aa the.
• result of my obeervatiMis.'
t‘Firsts--•That France' and Great
Britain. are indissolubly .united as - a
result' of their .joint sacrifice's.
• • "Second -That the :soldiers of the
French and British armies, from from the
of tile War- , For they"Fin-atPush." '
. "The 112th 'Regiment of the Peer- "ThirdL-That the British army.. to-
teenth 'German Army. Carps lost -234 day is a Mighty Machine, becoming
prisoners,. eccordieg to the French, but,
Gernetuaelialeeteelenewiedge_nalyaa,_ mightier . hourly, a marvel of
effi-
ot whom 34 do not figure in the -creirez-Te' els-thatelseltind. itt„ as it'eon--
,French reaords. ',There is an 'oniistion thin" 't.p. grow, move forward . and
of .186, or 79:4 per. cent., 'in this ease. fight, is an amazingly scientific Of -
'The 144th Regiment 'of. the Six- ganization,. developed in less than
teenth Allay Corm lost 94 prisoners, twenty months, which provides . the
esatheine only. ilvaefig_ute ha..the. Ger- .best -of fotaistuffsefor-the inner man
•mlin lits, and. the other- 89 men, or and -warm clobhing and all other_ 'es -
'94.6 per cent. • of • thetotal, are. sup- gentials for the outer Man, the: while
posed bY their misguided countrerm.en - . •
e low-pitched drawl; or again he was .. • it is* ever forwarding troops, guns,
, to •be seri eanting, wnereas they are
haek in- • the- sick -moire looking- inta e,ertainli In French hands. . . • ' ' monition 'and other' accessories
the heart of the girl he. had loved , The 153rd •Regiment of the FoUrth against that greit - hour when the
since she. had grown grass high and 'German Army Corps' lost 196 prison- . ,
final `great . push'. comes that will
:reading; in it. the name of another: . ere, but the Germans Officially acknow- end the .war, .
Tatiee the roan "peeked" badlite and lodged only 58 of Mese, Of- whom six. •
are not named in: the French returns.
the third time .so nearly carne down on
his head that Combe came 'back from Therefore, 138, or 10.4 per cent., of
'his Mental Wanderings pulled up and. the. 133rd Regiment have been omitted
now -the German Veriustlisten." .
dismointed.. If he would ride . fie-
ther he. 'realized that he must give ' • .. . ' • :-.-*-----" .
the Ilene r'bat even if • he needed n
MANY - WOMEN. ENROL.- '
hirnself..• • ' • ' ' • ' ' .
Th'e fence of the. pasture had long ' '-"."' ' '
English Wrairele Have Uniform
. since been left behind; ,it -was toe
swallowing.up horse and , man. •. .. •
In Winter upon the northern ranches dark . to look for 'a stake; there Was ' For work on 'Land.
evening conies .early, and. on this day. eething bigger than a ' .clump' of Women in hundreds of • thousands.
heels of midday, ao that as Jim. Combe sage .brush to tie to, aed•tired as the in. Britain are risked to enrol for•im-
.
dash out of • the Corral it was al_ roan was, . he dared not leave him
ready dark. • . • • loose, aS he Would have done withapy
•Tor the first half hour of his ride -he , imdf.narY e()* pony.
: Taking out his jack knife, he dug a Booed of Agriculture, Which has eu- by a little wayside shrine of the Vira
had ne, time to think... Nature' previa -
ed him with that PM:neer; .of Man's deep'. hole in the hard earth, tied a 'therieed the use of a special uniform, gin and Child. Two Men stePped sud-
to of a short skirt, leather &illy out of the 'ranks, lighted two
rio stormleggings, strong ,boots, washable linen' small candles and placed thena•before
• P' • ho. had dug, replaced the .soil be had coat: ' . . • .
mediate work on the land. Very soon
each will. . given an armlet. The
scheme under the contriet of the
STOP MARCH FOR DEVOTIONS.
•
•
Soldiers Light Candles at -Wayside
Shrine in Montenegro. '
War is not all.herro and death; as
the following little story illustrates.
,
On • Christmas eve as a divisien
of Hungarian Honveds marching
through the Tara district in Monte -
EN.:601.0WPNIIPIO -socoptis:Agyr, worm
Q
Arm,
NNW posTmAsTER-GfalpRAL,.
Two .Pease, in the /3rithdi Post Office• . '
Department.
•Tii.face that „Mr. A. J, lase has
be appointed •13ritieli ,Postmaster'
Gen:Orel in saccession to Mr. kerinet
Samuel, where les will he .aisisaad hy
his cougin, Mr. liaPike Pease, with is
assistant P.M.G., has led to the an-
nouncement that there are now "Two ,
Pease in the P.O.D." (Poet Office De-
partment.) -
It is a curious fact that the two es
cousins sit on Opposite sides' of the
House of Commons, for while Mr. J.
A. Pease is the aillierat M.P. for
Rotherham, his cousin is Unionist
member for Darlington.
As a sportsman and athlete •Mr:
A. Pease won many honors. lie ply -
ed .foothalt and :Polo for Cambridge,
where he-wqn his -Tugger -whines' was,'•
master of the'Varsity.staghoends, and
has also captained the. Durham
County cricket eleven: His political;
career begari-wheirlid-WaS-32;
tered parliament for the Tyneside
Division in 1892e and repeeaented thab
constituency until 1906, when he was
defeated. In 1901 he re-entered the
'House as member for SaffronaWalden,
,where he was defeated in January,
1910, and three months later Wes re-
turned for, the Rotherham Division of
Yorkshire. '
CoMmOnly known 1,0 his fellow lit
P.'s as "Jack," though his name iS
'Joseph, Mr. pease eetired from the
Cabinet on the formation of the Coale
ition . Government, having held the
post of presidept of the Board of
Education from 1911-15. He was for
negro were descending the serpentine years one of the Liberal whips,' and
road leading, down steeply fron the., as midi was popular on both sides of
mountains the- first. regiment pruned the House.. In connection .with his ,
duties as a whip, Mr Pease telle a
good story. /. .
At an all-night sitting he thought
that a certain M.P. was absenb. He
was really present .in every division,
but at other times he Was: asleep in '
one of the recesses. Mr. Pease Mans
ed. him and sent 711 telegram to his
house at seven in the morning: "Come
down at once be relieve guard." The -
\member turned up at his ,own house •
at eight o'clock, fully expecting to
receive a warm welcome from his
wife and much sympathy for haying
been in the, House all. night. But she -
said 4Where have you been?" He -
replied. "All-night sitting in the
House." She eetortedi "Now, it's no
use you telling me sueh a thing," end
hereupon -Traduced' the; te eiMrtun
signed 'Pease." This Perm nearly
rained a split in that happy hpme,
but after ,explainetioes "peace" reign -
as before.
,11141.de -pr:a.et-i:e to Pe. t all '
worties -down at tlie bettern of my
heart, then .sit on, the lid and mile. -• •
no -Me -Ricer
pain, action • , • • knot in tin loose end of his tie rope,
swallowed 11m. put the knot at the bottom of the hole
drove against him that he sat bowed taken out ana stamped it in fit'm and • Miss Farquharson, secretary of the
hard with his heel. • • Natienal Political Land League,
Yet he had no time to feel the misery ,.gTound rest Uffiese the retie could girls on farms, says : •
. • "
le* in ' his Saddle, so dienched him.
' • .
,
that le seemed to .flow throsigli hint : •
Then he lay _down on the ...frozen which. has placed some thousands of
of 'nail, He ens tiding it se e( i to
- - ' - -- --em. I n pull the world with him, Jim had . no , "I could deal with 5,000 'applica,
a greatvoid, out of which from time .
,i., ;_..: ' _ • _ '
fear .of losing his .horse so fastened. tions frorn women anxious le ..work
to time teuge beast leomed_ uncertaitt1
TY: --lie ,kneN(iH
. them foe the erefotels , . , .
. . on farina. We insist that • a woman
' who replaces a man 'should be paid the
Which moved lumberingly, and uriwill- .'. . • CHAPTER 'X.. . - . .
ingly out of his .way, • and alongside I Man's. wages. It the reemer refuses
' 'For over an hair Combe lay. aliei•e-, to pay ' equal wages for equal ,work
him, though he e.ould bately see it as., he 'Was Watching the horse and •think- ' We do not supply him with Mho... . a
he raced past it, ran three and twenty hie, whilst the blackness of the night) "The Gosteennient Is anxious to get
miles of the ferweneeoe tee Welter pas- paled and grew even more. weird-aral , women living in the cotintret' to I -
tyre. . ghaetle from the grey that had crept theateerners; but. they fix .2s, a day
.. TWies: he, gees*ed lta so dark .hettl. the ' into it • ___ .. • .. t.. ,- ...'--- „for -.1-t.ich work.... That it, .nul. adequalm-;
day beeoine, and ' each' time he left !la' Then it 'seemed to him . :hitt &nue- 'Half a crown should be. the Minimuin.
fragment of his clothing behind hint thing heavierthan a eoyote moeted ..
Next month we are sending 100 wo-
to •mark his ceurse. On the second 'Among. the sage brush on ihe ridge to men inte Wotecietershire, who will be
',•
..occasitin ' he streele hard treirent a his. left. ' Ile listened,. but • the noise ,', paid an average of 4s. ..a -day for
projecting bar, end his left, log sem was not reneated. ..11m , Wes too. good • eetiit fai7ming. ... a .
ed to lose cot) sciou eness., Bet he . riet ri - plainsman to persuade. himself that , "We are very particular to. find that
.Iown and rode as .
. •• • - • Ile tee ears had played: him false because,
decent houei'will be neovided foe
,eould not afferd te worry :about 'trifles, atie could 'oat' viiiretkand' their 'Mee- eytn'y, girl we send on the land, and
ng
' ;-
90(1 as 4 )ja..ew'fiarker ev?I'Y triint'"' '7at:4v, atal 1'04de, the Irinni had i oingdo be 'one af the' prob-
he realizedthat ,th-ere were no *emubeard- it toowa
..7-Theliale s standing lemS in_the-new •camnitige.!_s_ .
_ . _
tame ,thetalve er east -thlte,,"to-nfirrimiY.-e- Iv, al *fp ears pi ice e ,wn teem -a s
he
'mons,
111,8 lie 11"4!o 1(). ,?t"P.ot chsn 's ould fl( V(. 1 li it 0 Watebed for 'coyotes.
•Per-Y011.0g- - • • --• ••• --apereeitteerrfailee-eowboyeartinstata ate
• Ile pould' not see where he Was go-• tentioii those 'm01)01111 thieves were
ing; peihaps' the roan' could, and. oton • ror too' nutnei•ons on, the • lioine ranch
*he could. net, Jim was not going tre., for the roan to plea much a t tentio»t�
take a pull' at.hini yet.' AA long thent 1' Still Watching the•ridge,
tho. horse stoodup. and kept g;ing,. Wins yet•hut a vague line fii-Thefog
the miles were • eaten under his, raw (it 11 4. what he took to.he
11,4 'all :that Mattei..ed. 1)110 h', 1)1110111X loe.ls. a 1011g it,.
5110 Or the essence Of Jim's eontrillet. lajt ;,(t ;ttiny. (.1 h:re Toti 110,
HIS partner, -rate Was playinghe; levii-tinet • 011,i1.1', Lntintr just •
hand now for.him, and he refused to above the line, IA nd nt lak he knew
interfere in the , game. .1ks long as them (d) thehetufif of riders pasting,
ie'fasted it Was e'xcelleet to.fly,threeighe as they befitived; onScen 00,tba fukber
thezderit Pthiging. Facet, and tis to 4.111 side' of the ridge. lie toald see hew
eed 'eared malting, When the roan theheeds roseand fell With the niOve-
fleet bolteilafhe wildinee of the sttirm, Merits, of the horses beneath them, and
all the SPIenditteenerges_afatheeseta4ethen ;for rt-nteme13t431e-39dettraffe1t1ei
beastebetiverte ,hie ilthees.got into 4itter plainly into slight' where g ,dip. or -
bated, and, he Weenie intrixieutea with mired. in. the ridge. "
the madneee of ills1 140th the mist and •darkness he'might
416 cannonedinto, the ,flank ,of one never 'have radioed, them. at the, cljs-
of the. great Hereford' bdps, half Aeon twice at which they passed, .50 vague
.for it moreen t ny the eioeme So dint, and were" they.,••if his ears
his. horse • roeled and :rillthered,• und had not Warried him of their 'comingt
almost, 10;4 , his feet, but the men t but they SAW, hitni'..tif that he felt sure,
tail§latiRh -• as
e ' t heyetvered though Ito had not stirred in his lair
wnt on:
er wet 511(40 . brush, and, curiously' en.
It ti absolutely immix Wain! whe-• °bah liis hut'se Inyl not whinnictl.
, • .1. ,
IEVEll •
rit000tic, Distemper,
and Alt none . and
and- ail. otioirs, tin Innt tor how ,.•tir one ," icept front
,tergat Ilya()and
fluting, amyl of Dons, tiltionnoa with' ilE,Oitivitj
' .1wzm ..(70r400(.1.7irb; rar .dospa- t1t6n paro n
e.aFirA. OtAO 'Mall alas home iruintrintend to do 50. tiost
•,(litng foi• brood trutfon; Iota' On On Wood, S1'Olit1711 Is
Poid ail druggists • snit. harness ,oltni:"AAr. rittnifoo,,
turoto onto 'wanted: ' • ' "
isvoits, sitzDttiLt, a0.4 tinoteit!tti, fiotinitt, tad., V.:1.4..:
the in -sages. •
• Many others . followed their- •ex-
amples and 'the number grew to prob-
ably a' thousand ,altogebhee. It Was
• dusk" and. the Spectacle of the tiny
'flames flickering clear in -the 'still win -
'try air was ti .dramatic. spectacle to
behold. So 'numerous Were the' field
'pay worshippers that as the • space
immediately around the ehrine 'gave
out , hundreds of Honveds. dug their
-tapers irito the grotind around it. The.
whole sinew el:roared meadow On which
the shrine -Stood had been converted
into a •mass of flickering flames. . Si-
- !rattly- the'iner-stoode, eeeding'ethel
,Glosistmas peayers to the "Christ,-
kind." • yk •• .
- A private turned to his. 'Lieutenant
and teal. eoftlY, "Perhaps the dear
God has oticed this the ,signal efber
ell." • a • ". •
: Then the snow euel . the sdaric and
theslush of the roed mice more mai-
/awed up the. long. •-calunine-eof the
_Bleck -Me u-etaiteseineed erre
e
. n •
•
--'llathei Says We Couldn't
Run The Farm Without
CROWN BI
B
comippm v.:444yRiup
Z‘LI 'MD (fa, LP 1
Tts .dewaright scandalous, The -number -Of 20 pound line1 buy.
But, as Mother pays,. we use it for 'most everything.
"Nothing else tastds quite so good on all kiuds", of Hot
13read, Johnny Cake and Griddle Cakes. .
• - "Mothersuses -for alleber- evoking -for -Go oldee4ahei,
Gingerbread and Pies. '
"And 1 am almost ashamed -bo Mention the.
:quantity of 'Crown Brand' end bread that ray
youngptere egneumo. This seirim oOrtalnly is
a favorite th my home'''.
The 20 round tin ri con tionl,ent nr,d ceonorriost how).'
,
oso,oltitoticii you 055543"Crovni Thtiad '152,1; and to
Pound tins rind a ratind ttaas ram Ask your &Ater.
THE OANADA STARCH CO: LIAITED
tootrtakAt... dominion., 8FIAN1100O. 401117WILLIAPAI:
N41e744 Whee" (*Aral. nt -.Pitttotits ibstt
Alat 'Silva Gloss" Laulta6,3411
May we scpd yn.: a eopy
o't "on i` E&w t o k,
''Pe5tertsatidCandies"? .
--practical-helpful -and free,
Write for It to our Mougesi
'Office. •
2e1
es 'era,
[EDVIARDSBURG'
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