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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-09-28, Page 6b r• 701,A7V77 TIC ' t Lir T. E Store!, L• '• vio.teicr?aa• oomp'uuy„ .t.4snuted' • • fsIcaet;reule • 3440 of the gang cementing bhp teals of `'the picture. Her was OinlatteK the ,coins on the table, aume of then, gold_—for Jest- sica's quick eyes .caught the shimmer of ibandhe looked up half fiercelyr* half coutemptuousiy .as the girl •en. tered. "Well. where have you - been? You'lee like a eats ora policeman -•- never to be foond.rhen you're want: ed. There was .a fine lady a*,ame to see you this morning—a- real swell` my girl. He laughed ,coarser. .130. of course, you were ants: of .the way. lad. d you got' to'!i'i• "Anywhere, owhere" replied Jes- aiea, who did not fear him when he was sober, though she bated him, ah ways. "Ah, that's the style! The swell lady' ought to have:. heard 'yore talk like that, She'd say I was bringing , i' neck of tae can, put thelid: on the .You up we11. Ootne hate and lets boater. wrap it with a ' blanket or have a look at you", - rug .and leave until. bhe` water is cold Jessica did: not move, but stared at `which will be next morning The: cane. him steadily- , •' are: then ready to Put away, Wheo "What!You won't come?,. he ''the- cans are "o ened_ you 'will, find said with , a grin, . "Well,.thers's theWhole tazriatoes.. nl►hoTe; tmnd Errm enough somethings for your ;obstinacy,, • you., to. slice, easily., ° little am ulel'% ,e •Canned' , Tomato Soup,: Boll' there flung a half-crown across to her, oughly tomatoes' and .o iioii�s, proper-. •and 'Jessica took it up, then looked timed ;to. taste. Strain, season with hiap, questioningly in the face. : salt, black and rad pepper and celery "`You're thinking I'm mighty gen- sped. I3oil again and can, This' erou.s, ek? So T • ern, my girl ma • he used in ` variety of was as ,.y, foolishly' .generous;'' • He laughed ; . Ya a y .ek- 1 so as a eat sauce,th mockingly, .. w. . a gain up,, 'm a to ell, yrhat dt Yon'. ou , say' if all the, ened and spiced, with •macaroni, ad - y dung, cheese and thicken;. , or coni-. lob's' for vou,ehr?'* g ' "11!11 for me!":re sated bhe -irl, store' b�tned' with .loft-o�c•'F meat or clilalten p g p and gravy, rice, barley, vermicelle. ping short in her task of making the a:tc.' mantelsheif neat; "ail for me!" Tomato Catsup.`-. Take'the 'desired"Yes, when you get it, little cat!. All amount of tomuboes and scald them to for you, indeedNo. it s for me; and freethem from the ;skins. Place I've • a good mind to take: the ,half -..them in a kettle with a bit. of onion crown back. A fool and his money's and. a of mixed spaces. Cayenne soon parted; but hers more idiotic. to bag art. with other e' should -net be added until the infix - p . e people's. Ian going ture is run through <a sieve to remove qut. I shall wantseine grub when I all .seeds.' Add vinegar,:black pep - get back -'arf a pound of steak; an' a per and enough cayenne to'mako the Potofporter, an.'' don't forget the glik catsup Sharp. Boi uv P l.• ..•and when med- Mind you remember now, or I'll break tum thickut into bottles. Use new every bone'in your body." With• which p forcible admonition • the man shuffled rut. After a few hours he returned, -not blindly •drunk, but spiteful, ill -tem Pared, and sbupidle brutal: • About the same time on that day Adrien Leroy was making his 'way in thenew ear through the crowded thoroughfare of Oxford Street. • "Soho? Yus, sir. Crack'ell Court, fust turnin' on • the left. ' -- I'll show yer, sir," piped the •ragged urchin. whose heartfelt interest Leroy . had purchased; along with his query,' by means of a shilling.. ' Cracknell Court was, Small, evil-- smelling, • and teeming • with children. Bidding , the chauffeur `Wait at bhe en- trance to the court, Adrien,, to whonm, dust, ,noises, and evil smells were. things, of absolute pain, entered one of the"dens and asked for, Mr. Willer. . "There he is," said -ainother urchin; and Leroy turned to face that indi= eidual, who w.as leaning against an open door..:. "Am :1 'speaking to Mr.. -Johann Wilfer?"' he asked courteously.' -. - "You are; returned etu ned Wilfer taken g the •begrimed pipe; from his . mouth; and staring with bloodshot eyes at the handsome, higli-bred face before hila. "/Can , you tell me cif . a young girl named Jessica 'returned • bo goes safely. :this morning?" Leroy inquired. • (To ,be continued), • :.Canning Tomatoes. - This as a new method .ef canning to/40toe4l Scald and peel the on*, toes, sirs usual. have the cans sterl- f lysed, place the raw tomatoes, in them *'hole,. pone tai boiling water bo fall the eaanss running' aknafe around in the cans, so that. all: the .crevices aro ;filled, then put on the" cover, 'Placa and cans in a' boiler or large vessel,. pour i, •boiling water •until •it• • reaches bhe Baa&fet otm• Regue.st, • TIEROUGU T9E.DARR SHA'. Or The Sunlight of., Love MAKER V.-(Cont'd). • ,Early for bias,,, , on the , following morning he was aroused by a loud *necking at his, front. door. Now • thoroughly sabered,, he hurriedly dressei},stumbled down the rickety staircase, and Openedthedoor, to find himself confronted by Miss Ada Lest- er. tier face was flushed, ..and, 'the angry light Jasper Vermont, had call- ed up by hie sneers at her vulgarity -the : previous oVening still shone her dark eyes. "Where is the galV she esked ab- "The gall" he repeated, staring at her in stolid amazement, "Yes•-Tossical" . •, retorted Miss • :Lester, her jewels flashing in a chance ray of ;sunlight which had found its way through the dingy courts "Wheat: is she?" "She is not at home," said Mr; 'Wil fes, "She and Martha 'avegone out for . the ,clay- to Greenwich, ' If • you'd wrote a-sayin' you was gain' !to' call I'd have made ,'enc stay til you Miss Lester'' looked at him keenly. "If you don't believe me,' said Wilfer, "go upstairs and look at her. room", Ada ran pasthim up the ebairs,,and, quickly returned. "It's locked," she said.•'. "Of course; :' she's quite ;the lady- keeps, the ,keys 'erself," sneered.. Johnna.Loo 'ere, er ere her hat s and coat; there's one' of 'er boots, so ' she mush be comin'.back afore long." Miss Lester appeared convinced.. She breathed more freely, as if =a weight lad been taken of her mind..' "Here," she said'. put mg some gold 'coins in his hand "is something to make up „for my troubling you. Rut I was real anxious; to know rf every- thing was right with the gal.".' Wilfer—debauched' and demoralised by drink—vas disposed to look at the worst 'side of things; and from this point of view thought she meant the • reverse if what she said,. • "Weald you be very'. much cut up." he said s1y1y, "if she wasn't able to trouble you any more' •or. answer. aw- kward .questions, • miss?" , She turned on. him with a fierceness that made him. recoil. - "If anything happens to that gal," she shouted, `"I'll turn' the police one you. For, mind my worsts=l mean them ; '1 shouldn'telave fired yester- _ day. very much, if I had learnt she-' was dead, but now,I, waiib her. • Do you smear? went-her.and- you- ;take-caee she's alive and ready 'when I come for her.,, • • Then, without vouchsafing • any further•,,•inf'ortnation, she flounced away,' leaving p Mr. Wilier staring' blankly after her,'' and . wishing for once that he had -stayed his hand,'in- stead of driving the girl into the mis- eries and-dangersof bhe street.. Little. did, Willer ,or Mi -s Lester' imagine that Jessica had found safe• - tee and refuge in 'Adrien ' l eroy's chambers.. ' worthy 'presence:?' No, womanchild as she was, she shrank. from , the thought;; then caught up her hat and arose, resolute. • - "Ke will think ane migrate/01r she murmured, with half-closed ' eyes. 911 will think: no, hatter, .he will forget me before Judean—hour. I will go back to- Johann • and chance the+ 'beating, Thisis no placefor one like me." With a little graceful gesture she bent over the mantel•and pressed her. lipsto the spot where. Adrien had rested tie hie Grin; then wibh noiseless., steps she stole from. the room: . The sun was:, breaking through, the morning mist, but she shivered as its warm rays touched her, and With a wearysigh turned towards Soho. •It was all over, the; little patch of fairy light ifs the dreary, darkness of her existence, and as she reminded herself- of this facet -she shuddered again. Looking back, she remembered .but. iittle;'beyond. the days 'she had passed. with Johann and his shre yish wife.. Tliis. strange.'adventure had been'the first ray of sunshinein her poor ex- istence. - Na wonder that she: wits 'erne happy at -parting with ib. Suddenly as she eassed into Oxford Street' she stopped, struck with an idea; thab sent her blood flowing into her pale ' cheek, flushing it into living beauty. Her 'large" • eyes . grew thoughtful and full of a strange light. "Why should I go back to -Johann" she murmured." . Can't I follow him —the kind geniteman ? . Can't 1 be his servant?"' • ' ' : The answer • came- quick enough from her inner consciousness. No, she must go back.- - Of what" service ,could . she ' be to` such a man as Ad-• rien ? There was nothing for it but to -return to Cracknell Court. So wear- ily, but still with ' that gree which: Sol -Ahern. blood bestows,: even though it runs in the veins of a gipsy, or. such • a street' waif as Jessica, she walked on and reached Johann Wil- fer's houses - jessica knew that the •man • was not her father, but sheknew little_ more than that. She had never asked him or Martha for any' information about her parentage—indeed, had scarcely wished for any; it .was enough for her that Johann gave her sufficient, bread to keep life within her. "• - ' . Thiat gentleman was, at the moinent Of her arrival, absent, -engaged oni business concerning "the sale ,of the --faked-preture tq r. H- arlcer,r • sjj Martha ' was stillaway; se Jessica, . pausing 'at the oor of the living - room to a:certai that ib was 'empty, •' softly ascended a stairs 'leading to the garret •which erved as her special - apartment.. • ,. It was ' as. slna 1 arta ' as squalid as' all the.other roe in that ..rowded court; but it was different from them in one respecb—i was Gleam A. miserable ch ir•.oedstead' • of . the ov ehespe't kind, covered with •a thread- bare quilt; a chsi r with the back broken off; a. was stand on three lege, and a triangular piece of 'silvered glass, the remain of a cheap mirror, composed the fur iture. • CHAPTER VL..' Love is the universal epidemic, ef- fectual in -al Climes - and conditions; there is 'n9' inoculation that will se- , • cure exemption from its influence; ' only given a warm human, heart, and there is the natural susceptibility. So it is from high 'below. The lit tie•blind god takes. no count of differ ence in fortune - or rank in life. Dv.; nasties fall, -thrones totter.. to; the •'ground, r•rowni tumbles to dust on kingly heads; but love rules and ve a on, immortal, triumphant, uncoil erabie: _ .... _ — Jessica had • never. heard •ef' Romeo and Juliet, of Faust .and Marguerite, or Ring rophetua and ' the beggar maid, All :he knew Was: that she lov- lees 'eonseious only that for - a.. - kind wordfrom the lips dthe roan • who had befriended her, for a glance ' from these dark eyes she would have' • gladly given4up ail the other glories tfhe world could have pub before her, Poor' Jessica, how sweet and yet home bitter ,had been the awakening .' in that gilded cabinet. How t►wect to find hereelf .there in reality, :and. not enlist -in -a -dream,; •no right -there and that she must go! • , "That splendid golden room With all. -the- -wende $ul_- undroatt-•a - things° waa not for her. She .looked down at her wet. dirt,stained• dress, at her worn, reeved 'slices,at her cold, red - • harass, tied ;shuddered. She lied no right theca. ' Shauld- sthe talcs advan- tage of his goodness to remain ` and. airily the beauty of his place -for, to het- it stentaed little le "s Eby her an-, fi�Nl d n th s 1 om a h s n This peculiarly' -shaped piece ' of common ' glass reflected' the. girl's beautiful face in all- maener of die - torted form's. Thequilt just kei3b her from perishing with, the c yet the mirror. the .;bed; ani'd•l'he room itself were precious to .her, for' they were . her own.' Beyond it. sacred tlireehold. Johann or Martha never passed.' She had a key to ib; and to enter now she unlocked the door; After theluxury of Adrien's rooms the mean quality of her own apart-- mere partmens struck the .girl more forcibly than -usual, ancrsinking. upon ,the bed, she covered her fac v' , and gave way to a flood of tears. But the .;weakness did, not Alasb long;. and after a moment nr two, with a and:- ten nd-ren gesttire, almost -Italian: in its his' tensity, : he flung back her ahead and - rose frets her crouching positibn. "I Will not think of the beautiful place. I will not think of him,", she told herself passionately. "Mit, oh! will he be sorry that 1 ran away, ee will .he laugh, and ask that proud ser - vault to see' that ,I haven't stolen any- thing?" '' ' She shook' her head' Mournfully 'hi her own distorted reflection in, the cracked mirror,. then she :sighed and went downstairs. Johann had retUrncd, wonderful tp relate, 'still fairlysober; but thi ; was probably due -to the neeeseity of main- taining at leatat the appearance'of. Sobriety in his transaction on behalf • MILK INDUSTRY IN GREECE. Principal Supply Secured from Sheep and Goats. • of _almonds, ,one-half teasprion of a1 - corks and press them far' down'.into the necks of bottles, then dip the tops •of the necks into sealing .wax. Ex- act ,proportion cannot be acearrately given, for • tastes differ, and the only reliable- way is to test the made cab- men and add any ingredient which has, a tendency to make it better. Some "iso a little .sugar in catsup, whereas others prefer it tart. ' ' Green. Tomato: Pickle. -Slice green tomatoes thin.. put.plenty of salb`on them . and let stand overnight. In the morning drain well arid '::add onions which have been ;sliced -_thin. • Pub vinegar in .a large kettle.- Add• a little sugar, cinnamon and chives. • The ;apices maybe put in a sack if desired: Put tomatoes, end onions in vinegar and let come to a boil. Tomato'Marmtalade.--Pare and slice three quarts of ripe tornatoes''arid• add three .pounds of . granulated . sugar. Slice four large lemons, put the toma. - toes.'sugar and sliced lemons into a kettle 'and cook " until quite thick. Then p'.at in airtight glass. jars. • 1 "• Loaf Cakes. _ •. When meking cakes with drapPings , if a few drops of lemon juice arebeat- en'up. with. the drippings the - cake will taste as well as if exude with but- er. - Lemons should l :r -be heat- edt a .. waY . or'' placed in - boiling . water, before . being sqpeezed, as. in this way much more juice .can. • be 'obtained from them. ' Almond Cake.=Cream -orie-half cup of butter:with two • cups of sugar; add. four well -beaten. eggs, 9ne-half cup with one-half teaspoon of baking soda. Bake in a moderate ever 404 cover with _plain, icier flavored with orange. 'Mee. . ` :Feed That pceds, fine of the meat important things; that every housewife should ,know shout food is -its. value as nourishment for, the body, We must, **fact, have foods: that feed. There ara several kinds of values' that all human. bodies. ,need, in. the food . they eat, and. with. • out Which they cannot be...healthy and well nourished; These ore; ,A • M aterial bo build the body and ry,e. 'pair waste, ' • Material to give heat. and en th.etr.. g Material to enrich and cleanse the - blood.. • . - Material bo form bone. ' Let us take them in order: elt may said of the body -build ing material: that; in.a sense, it is the . most. important •, of all, because we cannot live, without it, while we might 'et on living; for some. time without, most of the: others (though we could not long remain healthy). Cheese•, lentils, haricot beans,, split peas, meat, fish, oatmeal, eggs, nuts and, to a somewat less extent, good. bread, all have Much • bodybuilding material. ' Fats ofall, kinds, such a as 'butter, cream, suet, dripping, margarine -and nut butter, give warmth and energy, strength and power to work. " Sugar, Molasses' and golden syrup are . also heat -giving, and so are "starchy" - foods, such as potatoes,, rice and ' cornstarch. ' These . foods, 'however, contain very litble body-building ma- terial., Vegetables and fruit (other than peas, beans and lentils) contain scarcely any of the, body-building ma- terials ,' but they give. the body whit no other ,foods give, that is, certain juices which .'purify . and enrich the blood, and without which no onecan be healthy. It is • 'these precious juices which are thrown away when vegetables are boiled in water and • the 'water poured down the sink If these juices, were taken by people every day in properly cooked vege- tables: there would not be- nearly so much money spent at the drug store,. as they are the ' best possible form • of natural medicine.• The bone -forming materials are to be ' found principally in mlik and - cheese; good bread, oatmeal and in onions arid many green vegetables. They are absolutely necessary for growing children. The result of chile dren not getting enough of them -is' only too often to be seen in bad teeth and stunted growth. - ••+' One of the: ^principalsources of mond extract; one=half cup' of milk wealth of - the Greek people, is the .1. and two Cups of flour sifted with milk. industry, which,, however, lot twoteaspoons 1 of baking -.powder. still:: conducted in a primitive roan- Bake•in"a hob oven. for 20 minutes, nes. •The. principal; milch animals of i Delicate Cake.—Cream- one-half cup Greece are sheep ,and:. goats. - Cows: of .batter with _one cup of sugar; add are found 'only in 'and near the ''one-half' cup of milk, a teaspoon of larger ceties,l on account of the- poor 1 vanilla and tu,o cup . of flour sifted pasturage ' offered by:the hilly and with two teaspoons ofbaking powder: rocky country. The .capital necessary -Fold in the stiffly whites of to supply• the. rich pastures required 'four eggs andbake for half an hour by cows the expensive stables, trained; hands, , • etc, is lacking in - -According to official statistics, there in, a buttered tin. ' `-English Tea (•"aloe. ---Mix one' cup of sugar with the beaten yolk f t s: o two Things to• Remember. • in the oven whale, the irons are heat- ing. Evaporation will cause it, to be° thoroughly, dampened. in a very few. minutes, but don't, have the oven, too hot. . THE. COSSACES, -- Pass Their Lives on Horseback' in Ser- vice o£• the Czar, ' • The'millions • of" Cossacks that serve Rules. divided into eleven irois- kos or, groups, among which the prin- cipal, ones are those of the Don, lieu- ban,, Orenberg, Astrachan, Qussourt, Transbaikalie and Terek, - These groups have a double him:achy; one side being civil and the 'other- milli tary. Established --by several czars upon the territory• that they occupy; they are always'; ready to vault into the saddle for the defence of the country.' Their stanitsi or •villages are their ostroghi or citadels of de- fense.' There are no nobles among the Cossacks, as it is forbidden. for anyone to acquire property 'apart from . the possessions of the horde. Certain voiskos are practically come munistic.• Between the Cossack vil- lages slid the Russian peasants the divi ion is complete. Ethnically the peasants and the Cossacks; mayy be of• like • origin. The peasants conscien- tiously till the sell. : The - Cossacks pass their lives on horseback in the. service of the Czar and disdain the labors in the fields. The number of sotnias or squadrons"of Cossacks was fixed in time of . peace at 894, with about 100 men in a quadron, a total of 89,400.. But this number has been greatly augmented since the war bee gan. . • • Convincing ; Proof:. • ' Mother (at the party) Why did you allow that young man to kiss you ?" Daughter—Why, ma.1 Mother --Oh, you need'nt "why, ma" me. One side of his nose -is powdered and one side of yours isn't. ' TENDING 13BITISII GR'AVES'• 1. King George •Thanks French People For ',Kerk 'Done, living George took advantage of his. recent: trip to Franco to visit some of • those sacred spots which -fact -lie last resting places , of fallen British ' sol- diers.• 'If. anything were lacking to cement. the sympathies of the''ronclt . `' • and English it would be supplied by the care withwhich' the 'French .people are tending the graves of the"'British. Long before the French government decided to constitute the British: bur-- ial • grounds, British territory for all., time, the • people of France took ripen themselves` to tend these graves, - anid when the English Graves Regis- %ration Commission began its • servey on the field of Marne, ,it found that the rural population had facilitated the work by naming and numbering all the graves they possibly •could, and . by keeping them in order. King George, during his .recent visit to France, himself saw •how this had • been done, and specially' thanked some of the Maires and cures who bad helped. Many burials took place out of consecrated ground, and although ' • thd• work of transferring, buried - • bodies from casual gravesto recog- nized cemeteries, wherever possible,. is proceeding, th'ere.. remain many graves •yet• untouched. The British Red Cross Society las .caused all ' these graves to be Marked with a per- maneiit cross, and the French people ' keep them freshly supplied With flow- - ers. - • King George had a quick eye for these wayside burial places, and every; time her saw one he never, failed to • raise his hand to salute. Once, stand- ing bareheaded at a nameless grave, he quoted 'Rupert Brookese matchless lines: ' .. • ""There's some corner of a foreign field ' . i That. is forever England.,, Do ALLY your preserving with. Grease spots can be remoyed from the floor by means of alcohol. Allow 20', inches of apace for each person when setting- a dining table. - Parsley Y.or celer rubbed on the hands will destroy the odor, of 'onion's. Middies of white crepe save' laundry :wont, as.they,:don't have to be ironed. ' •-The finer you cruel), the ice to be used in the freezer the more "quick- ly it 'will freeze the ice cream.. Asparagus is delicious served with brown. butter for a change,; • instead of on toast with dressing. • $ 'To preserve rubbers, for fruit jars cover them with dry flans. They will be as,pliable as when new. - - A little olive, oil'. poured into abet,' tie' of home-made catsup after , the bottle- has; been. opened will. prevent I the' catsup from spoiling so quickly. , • To .remove old varnish from. •furs niture, bake 'three tablespoonfuls of baking •sada and snit it in a quart of ' water and apply with a rough cloth. If when breaking eggs into a:bowl apiece of- shell- gets into -the -egg, -by— just touching with the half :hell it •will -cling to it- And be easily removed,. -If eggs are placed in -hot 'Water a. few mi'nttes :before 'breaking the whites will separate froth the yiojces very easily. • .. They must be cooled before whipping up -the whites, . Rub it -little :butter under the edge of the spout of the: cream pitcher; it will prevent a drop of cream from running down over the 'pitcher. To remove tea, coffee, fruit . and vegetable 'stains , from white goods,' heap salt on the -spot, rub hard and rinse Win cold water -in which con- siderable borax hasbeen dicsoleed. - The covers of "jellyglasses are not . airtight, and since the success of the jelly depends upon the exclusion of all . bacteria.- that causedecay, it, is well b5 put a. good coating -of melted Paraffin ontop of the` ';lasses.. ' " When you. get your potatoes ready t� bake,'grease'them with'lad jut before they are pet Mee the oVen•r-It makes the skin come. off • withcat too' .much a of the potato adhering to' it, with no' waste, '• Try it the next time you bake potatoes#. en_ _ s+�-Wh necessary-to-irorr�-ii-rsCr{;flt�c rY-t `garment at once, -dampen it, roll tight, i 'wrap in•a "cloth, then in pager and put 'were "n `e1d'Greece • in 1911 046,642 egg"; add two tablespoons of melted , head of sheep. and 3,238,045. head of: butter, one-half :cup ,of'water,• one - goats; valued at -423,872,876.- To these l half teaspoon of grated nutmeg and figures. should be added 6,000,000- one and one-half cups of flour sifted head of sheep -and • goats . scattered with'two teaspoons ' of '• harking pow - through the rich plains' of Macedonia der.' Bake in a ,.moderate oven.. and the: hilly, districts of Epirus, I Geraniums Cake.—Line. a square, which . becume Greek territory after shallow tin with buttered • paper and the Balkan wars' of 5913. cover with rose. geranium.leaves;' It is: roughly estimated that of Cream,' half a cup 'of better with one these 12,000,000` head of cattle, only cup of ;water and two 'ceps of flour two-thirds :are milk -producing, yield- j rifted With -one teeaspo`on of baking ing 200,000,000 okes (about 65,898,349 powder. • Fold in 'the stifflyebeaten gallons) of .milk yearly. This quan- I whites of four eggs, turn lute the pan tity, •manufactur•ed .' bite unworkcd [and bake.. When the cake is 'cool_ cheese, gives about (0,000,000 okes or the leaves will' pull off easily, leaving 1-69,290,000 pounds of ::cheese', valued' 4- i no trace •. and just a fainttaste of the at 811,550,000. '.efts, this, eheesa• is f geranium leaves: _ Use'any preferred worked; the value is ,in'creascd; to at eciree ' least $16,440,000: It is thought that i Gold Cake.—Cee• am one cup of but - these figures could easily ba doubled ; if proper.' care were. exercised by ' thr with' two cups of sugar, add the , shepherds and' greater interest shown beaters yolks of eight eg+g', one ties- by:.agricultarests:•spoon of lemon extract and f sur. tugs' i of fl"ur,'sifted with' two teaspoons. of , • _e:"-- making , i r g Powder. ,. Bake a m�o'.iers. I , . Costs more. ` ' ate oven for one hour' "I've tried' to.1eacla• my boy limp value i' Orange Cake.=Cream one-half, cup ' ... of butter with two cu $ ref sugar, •acid ofmone,. �. P g y .: , ' Gocd thing;r'. s the �r .11 beaten yolks of six eggs and • eeell,`t-dc�"rt-iniosv Vit lige 'v-ise' •the•--t'sliite --off -one,—one half cup -inti have Thr 'tee rrrrieitru-t tow •Ile- wet -eta -16e grated rind- and ince of two- - a: quarter." . '• •' • , oranges and fur caps of 'flour sifted antic 111 a to Pure cane. "FINE" granulation. High sweetening power. Order by name in original packages. 2 and 5-1b Cartons 10 and 20 -lb Bags ree This Book Of printed and - gummed labels ,for fruit, jars. if you will cut a red half trade -mark from a Lantic bag or carton and send it to /Atlantic Sugar Refineries, Ltd. Power Bldg.; Montreal -f5 THERE -are certain words in our language which num up - a.;umber of qualities, and express, then tersely. '!.Class" is one, "Effi- ciency" anther, " Penman': still another: This last one when -applied to underwear 'means all the good- thirgd you, want in the ;underwear you buy for yourself. Don't forget •-r-- Penman. - Penmana Limited• l'arie - e.... 3..•i:,•k' F `tib,`":." s d. ,:"o.i,{e eieeeet IMINI1611110:1141COSIMMR,Matt.VeiVINOWYOMISTOMMTA121.WeSiitZMIcawrartztrauttrarres.sameac•amanai , rmanti.- , • L4,• ftr E POLISH ;., rp►CA1C �'' /1-� `I" = TAN. ..1PMCP Siiozs NOIS NEAT O c P. P. Dailey Co: aE CanansI.t,1y 'llsrnftS», Can,J5 .1• O c . ,7"—"*" '. fir`", ''�'�!•�i'l�:�"�•�i •,"�'�aw�, t J' m r ' , w