Loading...
The Exeter Advocate, 1919-1-16, Page 6Oar Way ---Not The Only WAY. lir: aik:41g UsthiS year to save 100,000 It would really be pathetle, if it elkilaren• We on (le it 4 we are ',toren% so irritating, to vonsider beta re:43'1Y Id, lear11. much people lose in thie world by!, their reausel to Mare. Really, the; Thrift Recipes, nurnhce peeple who are perfestly • fierl v41111 their ma meagre! -nee4 "aelc•—%euphopped wale linewledge, aildmost. eantemptuouise ;1,21.1.d•let:'?;',1 iqr,,,,11/paele.,110inite'dta'rieleuP e,e of any effort to enlightea them, II: the persmi liacel boiled tart:a4 eboPPed calere 4.0 help le ste31,ee33e• IeNeaP001.1 grated "011iOni 1 krry.g,z. .1./1, average baleen ;`, tdestpcen s.alt, 14 teaspoon pepper, 1., • aealna lag :laterally insapahie '''11'bni$Pee" fat'11 egg. • eentereeereneg that a person with 'Goose Stuffing. --1 eel) her pot - 1 etce greata ep may ietee,, ate, aa tcaepoon each ,.hyi3 c. ana sage, -tied *erttethire; wsach inipseene rsult "el PePrer• 4 °111(Eas' ..4. •• :he days oa Jeeas, ciewn te! ocat ties app/es miioes and tab eer ,essn thee, we fine melt eat wet throegii sieve. nela the potato and resie eaying, Yeenson!'ecst and tele wen. enehen‘e, eatb tei.e men. ties witn Claciten an!. Ries- Seallep.--1 cup. dont? r.ot this Ole earpenrceti :tea . atan Letled rise, la cap Is eat hie reetes.- seuee eicaeee Azle' than white saesce, 1 egg yolk. beaten,' lerohren. jarase and joset igh . Sat. sa ena 3.-aas? And his sietere. :el 01 • *• hits. fitip suit and est: en4th visa Weerae • M;ar• elfea:ta• rice. waxy, 1htn tt nine e:i than> ;taingsas si,a'•a=dt7a4a veg. Make tt„ menet eane eye, ato elre eaeeci. While iest ada ahlehon. 'et elesittly, f ' rdaseee echish m'oht niaae cee 4., • eel :=4.'ntl' for tieee, leesieg Pad iate greased hair-, • • ;v1th bread erizrabs' esind-tiies they tue anal 1:e' 1•.• .,4„ .1! r .r e. • -• • • •.•.. 1 If an hour. eueesee. Ara,..te, :t teey leceneuen. 7- en.- up3 COM; aes nee. !eel -aeon will leo ..;•'3 731 .c..1111; seese, etsy .14,ve med.: 1,11: 'I; : at% kts 1 to t i.e., ritaideg te leave. Ana •the wear the spt pt;rsiey. na;.; tiot. more leaelne he 1.Q 7113".7 eFg.'•C .lezd 1r1:111.' Atit! ;tee che tree:, •,,eanste ;neat eatm tee 1.1“nt 17;:",!ZO :eras:- anti Yue. lesetel, cull (Le yaks of • _ enee. eenteesee in a Rod a..a-aai 4: ;,rg:i an a ,li:enesi with _•• -"ere, sr, 6les 5' day, two worn...me3 tees minetes. Then • •-ealy ola Issere "1 t rn held_ the night with'. Sad raddhrau---1 melte sook.ed: Pdily." yawned one, the fat velafatie udel sc.1'.11°." teasP"n 11!,•• tennieratare ran 'up to 102,• '• ="1' --Ji4'412*. 2 e"tl‘ r rasa waning. hes as cro...,s am a: speta salt, 11a ceps milli, grated rind. lot.e. I den's see how it is year. half a lemen. Gradaally add the ne-e:een never 1;:inp .you They -re mid; to the 31 03'd scpiash, then that' taways &' 1'e she added fretfe'ay. eeger. salt. seasening, slightly beaten ee why kinny arel 7rte d lemon peel. Pour ean't Fa s1:ttle tedte" Wee yell ehlead slavesuet innate iinto a greased yeaddlng dish and belce rind a big grow; woman likes! 511 .7 merate oven until thickened me has Nny ones." pike custard. Serve very cold. Apple and Carrot Conserve.—Car- -The eliinny little mite" flashed! rots, (1 .'131 1 tmert, tart apples, diced, and bit her bp. But she said plea- eantly er.otigh, "It does teem ralter 1 tatart, ornenes. elieed, 2, eyrup, 2 strenge deem% itr c.T.1. salt. Cia4k the carrots in suf. "Strange," echoed her friend, exificeent. water to ecocer them until they should say it is. George and I werci1are lende" nc''' drain thenl' Add7 talking about it this utorIftg- You: the other ingredients, and cook the aid Jack don't either one leek ae! mixtnre until it is clear. well as we do, and look at your chil- dren. How do you do it?" THE WHITE METAL 1N WAR. "You wouldn't do it if I told you,"! Aluminum Will Take Plena of Wood ; said the friend, coraidering critieany a bandage the had just fitished. in the Days to Come. "If you mean high-priced special- Aluminum has found an immense ;st, 1 couldn't afford it," said the fat number of uses in the great war. For one. the si3e of lightness, It is •g ilon't mean doctors at all," said; ployed in flying machines, to re -en - the listle woman. "I haven't had a. force the framework of the wings as doctor in the house for two yearsewell as for the bodies, and most par -1, and the specialist never came after: ticularly in the construction of the en. he opened my eyes to the sins ofglues. wrong feeding. It's all in the thil-' All sorts of canal> egetipments are dren's diet and regular habits, going' made of this metal, from soup kettles to bed early and no exciting night, to tent pins. The list is too long to movies." !recite. Each nghting inan's mess kit ; "Well, I can't afford four quarts of; is of aluminum—his meat can, his milk a day at twelve cents a quait,l, spoon, etc. IIis canteen is of the why there's $2.50 a week right there i name material. for rnlik alene," said the sleepy mei', When he goes into the fight, his ; ther. "And eggs for custards at; most important and effective weapon i present prides are out of the ques-,I is commonly his hand grenade. It is, tion." I loaded, very likely, with a powdered. "Nc.)," sailit the little one tartly, mixture of aluminum and- potassium , "Bat -sou cast afford a couple of nitrate. Nothing could be more harm - pounds a fifty -cent Checolates a less than eithel separately, but when weth end naevies for the four of you a detonator -causes them to enter into zees oe three al,ghts a week, and. sudden chemical combination, they every day for 'Billy and Dote furnish a frightful explosive, You epend $3.50 a week for things. Aluminum is in a way the most pie - area detriment to you all and turesque of all metals. Less than fifty then complain beeause the children years ago it was a curiosity of the are sick. I couldn't afford to do laboratory. In 1886 it had a xnarket that.' The name "skinny little mite", value of $10 a pound. To -day the still rankled, it was plain. Price is about 1.3 tents in Europe; in suppose if we wanted to be this country it is somewhat higher. tightwads like some folks and never It is by far the most plentiful of all take the kids to a show nor buy them metals. Every clay bank is a mine of sundae we could support a cream-, it. One cubic yard of ordinary clay ere-, too," flung back the "lady friend." contains about 800 pounds of alume And conversation languished. num. I wanted to congratulate the little Such being tho case, one inight' be woman for her courage and common :Dense, but that last shot scared 1.,18 01.1t. So I could only niuse on the queerness of human. nature. Every paper we pick up is filled with the im- portance of properly feeding the be cheaply separated from clay. At children, every place one turns are present the principal source is a min - helped suggestions 'from the clinics eral called "bauxite," found in scat - provided in the cities to the bales of ftee literature sent out by the gov- ernment to ravel readers. A.nd yet hundreds of mothers are going on still, creating perverted appetites in infants, feeding chocolate candy to GREAT WAR PUTS BRITAIN FIRST VICTOR DT INDUSTRIAL FIELD AS WELL AS IN BATTLE British Industries Have of Necessity Developed During War Period— No Longer Dependent on Han, A remarkable story of how British industries formerly dependent for their life blood on Germany have under the stress ef wea demands risen to a state of complete inde- pendence was told by. Mr. Kellaway to the Industrial Reconstruction Council. We are now first in the world in almost every sphere of in= dustrial eXort, he said. Beginning with raw materials, Mr. Kellaway showed that mica, absolute- ly essential to the electrical industry, was so ceetrolled by Germany, al- though half the world's supply came from India, that when the war began the world's market was on the point of being trensferrea from London to Hamburg. But Indian mien can now be exported (ally to London, and the British electrieal industry has takeu the place Germany once hold ami hi now the first in the world. Ore for Tungaten. Thefore filo war the Britieh Empira puzzled to know why aluminum at a few cents a pound is so dear. The reason is simply that chemical science up to date has been unable to dis- cover a means whereby the metal can tered and limited deposits, which is a pure oxide of aluminum. Some day the problem of separat- ing aluminunnf,rom clay will be solved, and thereupon will be ushered in tete aluminum age with a veritable revo- beams only a few months oid, geeing lution in the world's industrial. at, The metal 'will to a great ex - tided potatoes and salt pork to little' fairs. tent take the place of wood. There children who should be having cereals will be aluminum ships, alumin.um and whole milk and eggs, and then u are bridges and aluminum furniture Olt- comPlaining because the childre not well. And worse of all they les will be built of aluminum. scoff at the very things that would Largest l'elotor Vessel. help them and backup their mistake with the argnment that mother al- The British twin-screw Diesel -en - ways fed the things they are giving. gine& vessel Glenapp, which has just Mother did, because she didn't know been built by a Glasgow shipyard, is any better. The subject of coreect woo -I -clang to the local press, the feeding had not been touched upon. largest and most powerful motor ves- when another brought us up. And sel in the world. It is of 10,000 tons look at our disordered digestion and dead weight and has two sets of en - jangling nerves, Read the statistics genes, constructed by Messrs-. Har - of people dying of diseases caused al- land and Wolff at their Glasgow most entirely, doctors will tell you, works. These give a total horsepow. how wrong habits of eating. er of 6,600, whieh figures represent a Let as get out of the idea of think- very marked progress in this type of ing our way 5.5 the only way. Let us veseel, be open minded and willing to be told. The woman net door may have some- .,, wo don't. Let's learn it, evci if s'ee "skInny." The government fuse to go up higher. The' wise men will take the lowest room; but only the shirker will re - MYSTERY SHIPS TRAPPED U-BOATS 1,Mr.••,•• LURED UNDERSEA CRAFT TO pEsTRUCTION British Admiralty Reveals Some of • the Exploits of a Fleet of Decoy Vessels. One of the most exciting chapters ef the war against U-boats is a series r of accouuts of notable ° engagements between British decoy_ ships and the submarines, made pablle by the Brit- ish Admiralty, While -the whole story a the part played by these decoy ves- eels, ."mystery ships"- or "Q" eraft has 170i.been revealed, it is evident • that several of them were used to lure the undersea craft to destruction. Some incidents hi this campaign ale made' have been made known. dealing chiefly with a few tsf the exploits of Commarider Gordon Camphell as maw- : ter of the decoy vessels; but ,others in which he and other captains partici- produced. 40 per cent, of the wolfram cy•'• Trout which tungeten (eseeutial for !'1 3 -peed steel rad U metallia filaments) is made, but so eaceess- fally bad Germany captured the trade that no British manufaciaaea was able to est:death the industry in this ccurtry, To ilia; position Ger- many owed her great suneriority in munitions nroduction in the earlier stage.; of tha war. All that has been changed. We are now able to -pre- duce all the higlaapeed steel we need and to export at a reasenable to our allies. We wed to depend entirely on Ger- many for potaah, eszential for fertil- izers, dyes, drugs and glass rro- duction. Germany relied on her practical monopoly in Europe of natural depcsits of potash to enable bei• to bargain for the recovery of her world markets. She will be ills. apPointed. British enterprise and judicious Government assistance have taken that power from her. "Sensational" Air Engines. Machine -tool production looked like an Almost insobible problem at the beginning of the war, but so greatly has production increased that there is no reason why we should not be- come entirely independent of outside supplies. .The advance made in aircraft en- gine:: is "sensational." Engines rot only have become mere powerful, but their weight for 1 -horse power has decreased to about one-third of what it was at the beginning of the war, and before long the power of the en- gine in horse power will be the same OS its weight in pounds, i.e., 1 pound per horse power. Our position in 1914 in regard to the production of magnetos teas very grave, but, instead of one first pro- ducing 1440 magnetos year, as in 1914, we now have 14 firms producing 128,637 a year, and the quality is the highest in the world. It is lighter in weight and more reliable in service than the Bosch or the latest examples found in captured German aeroplanes. It is not only on the fielci that we have beaten the Boche. We very nearly lost the war be- cause we were almost entirely de- pendent on Germany and Austria for scientific and optical glass essential to success. It is humiliating, but it is a fact -that at the outbreak of the war a considerable part of our suctillery was •equipped with gim sights exclusively manufactured in Germany. Two Brit- ish firms started making sights, but the position was exceedingly serious when the Ministry of Munitions was formed, Recently these two firms wen' producing 250 per week. The sight is a beautiful and delicate piece of work, and its production in, such numbers and in it perfection whish Germany never exceeded is a triumph for British skill. Before the war three out of every four electric light bulbs in use in this country came from Germany 02 Aus- tria. We are now manufacturiag ,sufficient to meet our essential needs. Home Again. Over the sea our laddie will come, For the battle is over and won; And the boys who fought on the fields of F'rance Will lay aside pack and gun. Oh, tbe sea has been changed since our ladclie sailed, And beneath it no longer hides The menacing crew of the eubmarine To destroy the ship as she rides. Yes, our "addle has stood on the battle lble, Fade to face with death and despair, But the good' hand of God was his strong defense, In that flaming hell out tbere. Over the sea our laddie will come To his home and friends and kin; So with tears and smiles and, a throb- bing heart We'll wait 'till the ship comes in. Faith will move mountains if back- ed up with sufficient work. eneesses seetanneeessenes, esnans, aseseree_seweet- catwriabt aroughton =min conmaaa.v by special areasseeineut 'witn. 11104A Atis4. Toronto' OHAPTER XXXV.—(Cont'd.) !that when Maxwell: is Mayor they'll' "No," he replied after censidering . !soon get it back," a moment. "I don't believe so, nerve," was Jerry's comment, "I h ld 't tl • k I 'a ha e the I 8 ou n un le Y You see, that's a thought I've al-, "Well, nobody would dare to testi- ways milting could be ways had in mind—to fix things so ' fy against him. He eould break any Of coarse, if anything pinned on me, , MM. Of eourse I only tell you what was shown the fellows are saying under their 4 • '1"clanve that would' be liable to a jail! Ittnoit Irnowth4AeCrhel.sef'asn caosnv: up, there would undoubtedly be somei.rdeeantehe; :sentence; but I woulda't be one 0f.! bfi.41 lot 'of money- being coughed up the underworld' these days., And b.v the saloons and breweries. I bet eeltlinalesda,y about 0 eu"druersteblaf that s0Nrotr oaf "Oh, that's the worst thing you • there's a whole lot of it that doesn't ex- go go to what you might eall the legiti. roan, I don't feel that I like you at mate expenses of the campaign." . all. A kind of a big "Sure," said Jerry. "I don't stip4' people into his web—gettiog spider &wenn' pose Dolan lets much that 1m eellects of it youreelf......,, other get away from him," 1 examinations. Ttvo weeks later he In September Jerry took his bar people into trouble and keeping eiear I , pi:tea now are available, That at least 'Say, hold on, Nora," proteeted received word that he sled passed. He 4a small fleet was ustal in thia work Magaire in an aggrieved voice. "You .STaf' jubilant over it until he carried I. the news to Nora; she contr.ved is evident from the Taut that Camp- - don't understand. It's just like :eller a while to make him feel thaa, bell at differ -ant timea appeara as the t0 13'; gmeNn,e1;40110nOteisfin aarrnideeesaepettl?this satlal-d . It was a rather empty a,•hievement.' master of the Farnbovough el Par , IQ •• . , . She eel:ea him what his plans were t gust, the Duaraven, and the Qz. The al pitan'ef 'ea*.nisia4nee".11 v,i'liebg..6, t... ,, 1.4 s‘ , be had nene, eiceept that he Prize an • - , othei decee shin, was COM- nothing necessarily - cr'imi 1 lel a meant to go to Mr. Traelt for advice.: manded by Lieut. William E, Sanders, anybedv, you see Then 4118 e I' "Well," she seid, "I Pipe he'll' be s -.. - ea( 1 0ne 0 able to do something for pm; For it and the Stook Force by Lieut. EaroWthem understands that he hes, v. Pa" ho wou't and you refuse to let me Alden. • ' To Plan and at the proper time he has . ensne.3 (0 the enceeetere between te. deliver the goods, Well. the etard aalc Mr. Maguire to help yell get a thee.: shim; and the 1.7..boata are filled ,! t me (1133 5, tht:: ' e aaid g ar 1 - better of than you were befere." I don't see that you'll be much with dee& of heroism and instances up ealin= how' .Terry was silent: it really %vessel in which the discipline of the British 3,it'4f, 0,. 3. ththrrm ear things that sery nice of her to hark beck to Ma4 Navy wcte digplayed under taying cir- en le et% 0 Islor0,Reineent. he results ; , to he eo unenthusiastic over his ac - 'e n.a*`""i gaire. It wasn't very n.ce of her tl 1 • t comp a• men —a t mg t mig rt clecoy shipe, heavily armed, but with men produce the results without h h h , mean ewe to t em tot . t. . • • , -lepees For mums months the but that O11111...... • . their lookout. °thee, .h t h • ineabang the law. tluae gam; hidden 1;elund false lad To tell the truth, she was in a bad tl weeks. '.1 133)4.41 ziazait tiourses in the "It loa's le 1:41e asl, if Yati, Nyere (kelvin:, a 1 ettv lire line ' Nora 'humor that evening; n triviel episode seas whieh were tlan huating grounds - ,, a P - t , , , of the day, a thing that lied indeed. (11s4lr'rVing V NI' bY -lo Yu!:, been a minor auecess on her part, had of the submarine, go on doing. that sort of thing. , rasned her nerves. She was again In their charade -a of lazy colliers Aren t you tacit enough?" or slow eargo craft they presente3 to "Just about. I've had about enonglalat 'Bilbow and 81os:son's exploiting ' their fall styles; 'he had'that =orn- ate submarire commander an iuvit- A man can get away with it and be ing put on for show purpozes the inr; objeet of attaek, but owe he was protperous for a certain number of most striking and becoming clothes ' well within range of the British guns years, just as I've done, but if a fel- that the had ever worn. Surveying the false superstructure hiding the low stars- at it too long bell over": herself in the mirror, frcm head to guns fell away and the beloloss col- ItatY..ume.garnseoulaudotfuethreelern• ruleners Zalq toe, she had been enraptured; "love- lier became suddenly transformed into liha-'ve been workIng for me, 1 dou't llye;: ;,•vas the onlsy 0niclird to tsfrvibl a fiohting craft, beet on destroction. silos-coil:11rd saw. so Illertuatifuril! /It evted- mind' telling you, are a little too raw It was dangerous work, requiring a M their rnetbods. I don't stand aor rear rich woman lisd been eachanted• high order of courage. for the sub- that. I've been thinking I marine trust be lured near before the ' out before this comind draw literally bought the clothes off g mayoralty ' had her back, defying the tilnid sugges- ; .1.13, could samv beesie their worn, campaign.; I have a. bunch it would tions of the Faleswornan. Nora 1g had bb the :aase thing to do—not be mix- saw her own glorlove and proper 1 Meantime the Run frequently ecl itg it at all. . I can get along setting made the permanent posses - I scat his tornedo home, and the fleeoY ,,,,it u the excitement of politics. aka, the grotesquely unbecoming shin was disabled, sometimes on fire i„d like to settle down and farm i at in nd I' country; and eve !night have our possession, of another. As she „ part of her crew wounded. In looked at the infatuated purchaser of that condition the bottle was fought t I ' the • t ' 'd , the beautiful, inappropriate gar - get society that would be nice people ments, she felt injured and disdain- whe'd worked their way up. in the ene Was it for such results that she world and got ..orae CdUCfltiofl)lOt exercised her talent and made her. i "Panic parties” was Offe of the the blue-biood circles, but just aboud t self charming? How happy she aI I' Nora commander to coax the submarine tell you what and often the submarine destroyed. Used "Panic Parties." !ruses practiced by the decoy ship's ts d , could be if she could own such clothes e ust as nice to you as any 'bus- ), 1ple to buy them! b How hateful to alongside. 'When the mystery ship . She avoided' thereowsheo aveo-ided at y such unworthy other similar interviews, giving hinr sdeee tier ought was torpedoed these panic paarbtaines_ :a definite answer. She was pledged P took to the boats, apparently She could not explain all this to doning their vessels, but always to Jerry, and vowed. in all likehood, Jerry; he would have liven unsym, , leaving on board another crew to to a life of poverty; but there -was a pathetic. He was displeased -with pleasurable excitement in being ccen- her anyway for reeumints her worl1 man the guns and finish the submar- i fronted by the temptation to aeqture as model at B:lbew and Slosson's 1 ie if it came near enough. Instead or merely entg other peo. 0 nrst •ioned b sudden wealth. • the Admiralty occurred in March, 1916, -when the Farnborough, dis- generous enough to look at it *ore quadrennialeumunicipal elecs t ! guised as it ealliee, was attacked by in the citytheactivities .prelimin- moan point of view, she was earning( . panic party" took ary to aas well as for her, to the boats and when the submarine tMn had b sebmarine The ,rerryi's ptereat seiLeY 411 ••••••Mmaaso..rey CHAPTER =VI., She thought he ought insteird to IA congratulating her on her epirit,• WAS hard work, and if he had ben closed in to about 800 yards the rcials arused go len. 1NNV.ealet: putting' it alf .v_v en he read ln the' 1)1 1:r j.tuhnet e aside for thseite• "Oh, Jerry" she Tig' standing almost on end. Five rounds peered that John Maxwell was hop- neear ,,,a Parnborough opened fireton her. The oger Trask had taken outPRe u'iX m upon his mores? saida breaking quite abruptly' ' U-boat submerged and the Farnbor- '11 eis or of- lican nomination pap • i theP - ough passed over her, dropping depth 1were fired into her at point blank ing to be the candidate or the Demo- aayllortable- ' range and she. went to the bottom of tc.yraticTchiteyreniwaecrheinceonf contests t'tsh the for Inom:nations; for two months vaithin Prior to that action the Farrtbor- t : ough had cruised throughout the en - the sea. partyeaaciblivial rivetcalgidateis cam - silence, "I do hope °nal' gat a start fice of District Attorney. Hi in that will make you rich some 'day, Sometimes I don't 1 terest was intensified when it s ap-a feel as if I could bombs. The submarine reappeared be really happy in this world with, out being gich. "I'm glad you put in 'sometimes.' If you always felt so, there would be no use in our even thinking about getting married." It3eingber psrlinuip.rre;s lag peLty eboSaesPt: about it." Her eyes flashed' with "Perhaps we'd better not thinls I tire winter without being attacked. Within a month the • Farnborough ed in the grandiloquent languagedd g , en as su enlyC coaxed another submarine near peculiar to . political campaigns that 1 it would present to its opponent a matter with us both? We didn't us softened. "Ob. Jerry, what's th , enough to sink her by gunfire. don't mean to be snappish. But 4 ir Commander Campbell later was united front.. Trask won the Re- publican tri3tatiooen., ftor nDmisterdictmAaxt: : 7ou ttrobld only be cheerful and cone , to talk to each other like this. ' transferred to the command of the Q-5, and in the following February, 1917, his vessel was torpedoed hy a tw°erlrlielra;s tletier ecanetiadaste lor Notwithstanding the Democratic pro-, nidy, ,whys, ye co jeu,se were going al Mayer* ien0t0,7ilevaays,4snyou used' to be, -1s I talk as I just preached so near that a shot from ,satisfaction even within the machine. submarin.e, which eventually ap. fessions of harmony, there eves dis- be eieha whether yOU really 'thought the Farnbortnigh beheaded the U- The news that P.atrick Maguire had so or not it -er '1 I 1 • 0 fl1.ucfl twhiethtozrere,enthneingsutberawtineepetnvaLdsuhnekr, boat captain as he climbed out of res.gned the presidency of the Ward- ed his retirement from politics fur - Fourteen Maguire Clu.b and announcs nished a first -page sensation for all wouldn't, mind a great deal if ved aline; seer* so er were, if eatti only made me feel always hopeful and expectant' yours,elf. That's the Ithe Q-5 in and beached her. For this , crew pouring out, Destroyers towed ated variously. u-pon its significance; "I'll try, Nora." the local newsnapers. They. specul- way you used to be " , exploit the Victoria Cross was award- ed to Campbell. and those hostile to the local Demo - 1 antic machine were not convinced ' 1 The .:decoy ship Pargust, with , by h.s assertion that personal rea- ; Campbell in command, was tor- sons alone governed his course and pecloed on June 7, 1917, when dna that be guised as a British merchant" vessel. 113°11Vhether Maguire supported it 01e en e Dem ci. a tic lake vrould enthusiastically sup: paste tissue paper under the rents and, The submarine came to withrn fifty not was a matter of little concern to stitch back and forth on the ma,chine., yards of the Pargust, which then Jerry; what did concern Jerry was This will 111 in neatly and securely. (To be continued.) Mending Curtains. When you mend the lace curtains Opened fire on her with all guns. The the fact that the Chief of Polide, submarme crew poured out of the Dolan, succeeded' Maguire as the „conning tower and held up their hands dictator of the Meal Dernoci•ati a e m - in token of surrender, but the U-boat dltire.TpI0ieeev force ordwmlitd passedasseoor rirour;c1j steanied away trying to escape in the titetbe li a thing to xw roist. The Pargust again opened fire electionpossible and Trin ask's dsure Maell'sefeat Jerry on her, and sank her with one man knew that padded voting SLS were clinging to her bow as.she went down.iheing peepared; it was common L'ne- The decoy vessel was towed back to , Op .ameng the patrolmen that : on port by America destroyers. Two I election, day "colonizers" in great Victoria Crosses were awarded for ' numbees were to mo-ve from booth to this successful action. . buncedtehr andvotevnootme overnames of andpe r soveroalsvagain?bo When baking molasses bookies also heard it frequentlY said that the' ,.......___.-0---..........., , down- and bake On to raise were dead or had never lived. Jerry eagerness of the Democratic machine cookies on and to take them aff, and "It's a crime the way they!re ah.ak- turn pps tinside funds was hardly second to the bottoni. It is easier to lay the its eagetness to win the eleetion ing down the tenderloin," Sheehan , they never get a scorching. said to him. • 1•The Chief does it in The total amount of butter secured' person. Won't trust that graft to in Canada for the British Ministry of anYbody else. Tells the poor devils the Food under the commandeering this election is life' or dente to them, order avae 6,508,768 pounds, accord- Ingb. for ithe protecton they 11 have ing to a 'staotf,etmheenct ailsiasldradli berta office ())374.eltiBleoaArdl... ,em a all, except that he tells 'em afterwards. He has no mercy on .'. and they ought to he willing to pay The Purchase of Stocks and Sands is made comfortably easy whea our PARTIAL PAYM'alsIT PLAIN Is used. This really helps you to save money as You put by just what you can spare from your regular earnings, making your monthly payments to us, the in- stalments going towards the pur- chase of any selected dividend - paying stock. We invite you to write now for a free copy of our booklet entitled "Saving by the Partial Payment Plau," which fully explains our system. It hi.. Connolly & Co. Membea s morasses Steels TOxellanse 105-106 Transportation Building MONTREAL