The Brussels Post, 1918-9-19, Page 6V
INDIA TO DE
DEMOCRATIZED
BRITAIN M %TURES PLANS FOR
\ 1ST-` ASK.
sauree of inepirat.ion to them, and not I Iier Laugh, 1 TAI.E OF TWO CROSSES.
The nip of autumn. Timmy Boy, has' „1s Seen by Uterine Soldier' Brent'
caught the ma of doors;
Ah! Suu41'the hitter. hiekary leavee I Dugout Entrance in %'ranee, i
a handicap on their freedom. 'Choir
loyalty and :.elf -sacrifice in this war
prove beyond m estion that they have
been and are satisfied with their re-
lationship to the Ihitish Empire. Suux• 4av when t Inn do,vu the plough see two er„ndes --crosses that hold
and yonder erc•hard's breath. i From my dugout entrance 1 ran
"We believe that a emulate result there seree will be yours. out the ptvautso of victory and prtuo
ton he achieved in India, cold that in 1 like to know my furrows wilt keel, to the allies, and that furnish a run
spite of differeuees in race. Detains ruttniufr :after death r,•i,• eCampte of Gernlnn infsl7ny.
and iluropeanx conn :cull will co -epee- But think a bit about the bride you;cys a l'. 5. trooper. i
ate with each ether in the great wet*k teller to heap you, ]a<l; flue c cuss• *.rand:+ hehiud oto front
ic• that. lies hofoi•e thein in Ind1a. We 11e sort: she has the laughter that line:.. u1,ny feet above the ground,'
Population of 21:;,00001ID 1ltrxl 1 p1,,,ugniac that the ditliculties are en- yells, mother had.
slily that India is yet ready for the ou what was ones` a tuwc•r of r3 nuts -
.
To Fill Status urruurs, for no person run soy reslson :dee cuth(hal, It is untouched by
nod. Sometimes I carat remember, bey, the German fire. Around it all i. ruin,
of \ationh measure of self-government ex, ting
color of her egos; The town is desolate, the eathedr.tl
The British GoverruuenCe pewee- now in Canada. I rather think that they were blue, itself stands a mass of ruin, That
went in the gra,hsul demrnratiratinu "In htdin there rue still, unturtn7n'' I knew her hair was brown. part of the towel that hoble the. eruss
i,• trade with no undue array, nearly `titietia mo people who She hind of matched the butterflies in aloft seems but a ivarow needle
of India will be teen neither read nor write, There are
delay, It has been conceived during n flitting walk and sire;
war time, . iutihy; out of the horizon. Every
d
and u7dres the war ends 'iitYerc•nces in raligjtul and ra;to whtcl Iter twelve-year sister could have day the hoche shells this town, an
soon it will probably he put into on- make common action on national lines worn her wedding, gown. want' fall cm the ruined shell of the
.tan while tln , ~rent couilict ragtag. difficult, ones } le sobers inu t be over- But Lolls :old brooks acus hOholinks c:abedrinl, But the cross still stands
rl':il v;lmllel r•nTlle hef!„'e 1•oh'. •'N71 ilS.tfAtrl all the were never unite so swats uptollebed. As though some 111,see31
The Right Hon. Edwin b
Montagu,-Seeretary of State For India tml stains of n tienhood, - As ,rust to hear her rippling laugh heede guide the whistling shells from
since 1917, is the man who tells what "Still, expsv,etiee• has shown that,across the golden wheat. this emblem of the Christ the cross,
England hopes of Indian seitagovern-. with the spread of education preju-1; proteeled.
went in future, and he, at the start theta; di epneer. unl relik'ieus (deity- Down where the rows are apple red Every aftetmoon as the slur sinks
at least, will have a large Phare of its 'erre hacetnes free potent, rind the more I used to see her go. down h3 the west this cross is sit-
-eu"erc,ui,. this }n•aees rantinues the grottier will A baby clinging to her hand, her houetted : faainst the evening skyn, a;
"In the first place," said Mr. Mon_ lielia Retrieve the spirit of unity that laughter full of toy; pr":n'rc of victory and ]near:,, lhai
,*tg1t, population
t "the of India is Syr. '"tut''u.lcrizc•: the great self -govern- .Sometimes it tinkled merrily, some- triumph of right over wrong.
000,p00000,pfge Of th • provinces into which int; dominions."
NURSES S IN THICK
OF 1T
the United Provinces eaeh contain a in answer, Jimmy Boy, a small village cemetery. It 1s the
I
I time, it bubbled low. The other cross stand in No;
BritishBritishIndia is divided, Bengal and But always it could make me smile yF1u,'a Lane. It in in the centre: of
population as large as that of the `.as When trouble erne it tuns her laugh largest noes in the churchyard, and
f p :\nd Chaplains Work With t
Reitish Isles. Madras is only a little ` `\ • ° t Interruption. that helped met to forget. stands out prominently among the
way behind them, and Bombay and
Respirators nh uFor me in every meadow path ii smaller headstones in the city of
the Punjab each contain approximate- Whist happened in the advanced echoes yet, the dead. •
1 1 • several months we have been
native states is about as large as diem,' great "show-" is revealed in f Sometimes the shrieking winds of losing men from machine gun fire' LG
1 a e g BAS
1 20 000 000 The population of the treesin••• stations during the t'ana I'cn
y •
Saving the Wardows,
The windows in autom„bile curtains
Wray be preserved for a long period of
usefoll,ess if reinforced with ordinary
adhesive tape or plaster. To accom-
plish tide it is hest to secure the: tape
in inch -width rolls and with a sharp
knife cut oath roll into three equal
slices. Fasten the narrow strips of
plaster firmly at regular Intervals to
the celluloid, both- horizontally and
perpendieulahly, permitting the tape
to over -run n little at each end on to
the cart•jn fabric•,
The reinforcement: should be ap-
plied to each side of the window. The
spares should he gauged so that the
effect Is symmetrical. When finished
the strips can be blackened with inti
or lampblack.
Useful Hints.
A sure way to prevent corrosion of
battery terminale is to cover them
with cup grease to -prevent attack by
sulphuric acid in the battery. Do
not use vaseline, especially in sum-
mer, as it is so thin that it runs off,
and so Offers little or no protection.
_ _... :.._
that of the German Empire..the *dining narrative given the; March across the quaking hills in this section. We have been tumble
"Englishmen originally were ansae- Canadian .keseeiated Press on Sept. , 'Here mieed a happy lilting like a to locate the gun that was playing ; -
te•1 to India by the commercial advan- - "I went over two advaneed sta- silver -hearted bell, such havoc on our lines. Our best;.
tsges it offered. It was a ease of the tions perilously near the front line,' As when 1 though to bring to her tic: patrols went out in an effort to Itis-' SDK A
flag aollowing trade As soon as our whiell the Beebe for days had been spring's first daffodils cover this particular machine gun
" THAT
position in India was establiehed -ee heavily shelling. Around them hun- I heard her fluting, joyous trill, and emplacement. Our best aviators cir-
! I1' you cannot get at the ail' valve
of the carburetor so as to pour watt-
i ter, etc„ through it to remove earbun,
have a peteeek with priming cup idt-
ted In the inlet manifold, This le also
eery useful for priming the engine
on cold nua•uings.
Cn test a wheel for loner heuriugs
,iaelt it up and take hold of top hind
bottom spokes, pulling and pusbdug in
oppaeite directions. if no looseness
is shown in this tray. try lifting tli
huh to see if there is play jn that
i direction, If ally play 18 sllotvll all"
I bearing's must be taken up.
In case your nater pump fails on
".1
the road. do Wei, despair, Keep the
radiator filled clear to the top, run on
high gear as muell as possible, keep
igetrit well advanced, shut off ignition
going down hills and change the WU
ter wensjon:01y if it shows signs of
overheating.
Always coast :wound a eornei ux
' ehP ga into srcand speed. Driving
, nronnd at high speed makes a ter
rifle strain on the tires, besides tend
ing to cause skidding. Your tires oil
give all the greeter mileage if tali
' precaution ie taken,
SPL916ID
O CHAPLAINS
U;\E BILLED WHILE lnfihdiS'ITI,;it-
ING TO W017NDI I) MAN.
The Bravery of Canadtea, 2'fnlplains
le Conspicuous Elea in an Army
of Gallant Herne,
Roland hill, aorreepoude nt yrith the
Canadians, writing from Terence,
says:
Wall the decline of theaielt pitch
of excitement eonlecled with the
' fil'e't chapter of the bid; battle now
rtipeeg' in front of Asnieus, stories et
the bravery of belt videal officers
and r'.cn,"' and thrilling Mellen -a ere
going the rounds of the C o z...lions
io the front and rear lines,
The Chaplain of a mot:nted rifle
brigade went over the top on the
morning the attack began. with d
party of streteher•-hearers. F''Oa
pouts he worked like a Trojan, help-
ing to carry out the wounded, minis-
tering to their needs, and offering
what enconragement he could I:o th4
dying. His example wile an insph• to
- tion throughout the brigade, for titta
1• role he was filling tyres qu}ekly paH$-
s ed along the line. While he ware
binding up the wounds of a badly'
wounded man, a shall fell awl buret
hear him, A short time later he wad
n picked up dead, It is said by bis
t seniors of the cloth mei the rams
and file of the brigade he had work-
] ed with so faithfully sand well that
he was one of the hest c haplaire, izt
, the Canadian Corpe.
. For the second time the Roman
Catholic padre of a Western brigade
hue been wounded. Be wee briey in
an advanced dressing elation when a
shell burst (lose by, Three fratrnlents
hit him, and while his wounds are
happily riot serious, lie is likely to be
in hospital for some time. As 110
waR being carried away he said that
he would take Bare aha+ lit: WU!, not
kept awry from France as long as
he was when he was wounded before.
The senior Chaplain of a ,livielon,
whose father was the Prit,clpal of
an Eastern Canaria University, is in
the casualty list.
He crone to France
' early in the war, and is admired and
loved by all rank,: throughout the
corps. A few clays ago he was close
to the front firm reconnoitring for a
licat:ion to establish a centre, from
;which to distribete free biscuits, eig-
' arettes and drinks• a feature of what
is known as the Chaplain service,
when he was struck down by enemy
bullets. and painfully, het not. severe-
ly wounded. -
i
which, while it seemed to denote the
helpless movement of a panic-stead:e
'skipper, brought the submarine within
tanof the concealed armament.
�� gy. nc
So placed, it required only a shel
o' two, well directed, to touch off the
bombs around the conning tower
at. once accepted the responsibility of deeds of gas shells were dropped at' knew the world was well clod so near the ground m an effort A HAYSTACK THAT DET.1VERED and blow the IT -boat out of the water
governing for the good of the axev- } 1 ii t teres S!m all the h iris of eeste3dav hate to locate tate gam that they were m
erned.
Law and Order Guaranteed.
"We have given India a peace such
acs she had never known before. Law
and order have been guaranteed. The
prosperity of the country has been
developed by our railways and irriga-
tion works, which have diminished
the dangers of famine due to failure
of the periodic rains. We have pro-
moted education and are. pledged to
a programme which will add im-
measurably to the prosperity of the
eonntry, for the development of edu-
cation will help to fit India for the
new role in the British Empire which
now Le marked out for her.
"Certainly the first necessity jn
India is to spread education ay wide-
ly as possible. Another neeessity of
the situation is the development of
Indian industry. At present. un-
fortunately, the standard of wages in
India is appallingly low, and the de-
gree of material comfort falls far
short of what we should like to see.
It has been the experience of western
countries that the development of in-
dustry leads to a material improve-
ment in the conditions of the wage
earner, and that these conditions tend
to stagnate in countries which are
almost exclusively devoted to agri-
culture: conducted on traditional and
primitive lines.
"Hitherto the initiative in the de-
velopment of India has been practical-
ly confined to the Government and its
officials, but we have come to the con-
clusion that we now have travelled as
the very portal, the fumes n ' r , . A BROADSIDE. .eo had that the medical staff. faded healingly danger of making a sudden landing;
and ehapleins had to work wearing Beeause I had it comrade who could in No Man's Land. But still the ma-'
iwank trent on laugh with me. ; chine gun was undiscovered, Every i
gas respirators. T re
without interruption. These stations , - 1•igdli its pat -pat -pat -pa t -pat -pat
WO,' well beyond where motor luau- i pie ii coded Trails, :would ring out, and often someone ,
benees can go, but horse vehieleeemake' paid the price.
regular trips. Canadian nursing sis- The wood trails are flee trails ---they It was as though some pltantonn
ter: ecndd to -day he seen peering farce no traveler's toll; emehine gunner was operating a I
ever the fringe of the German front A green sway, a clean way, they go 1,),autnm gun. '
line by hill and hollow.
m aF IPPR than a week back."Then came the order to advance.'
Canadian railway troops are al- You know their sudden summons by. Over the top we went, right on to
ready spanning the barren region a hunger in your soul the German lines. But still the
that was the scene of recent fight -
Your
wit to rise at Fresh of day and phantom machine gun worked. I
ing with ribbons of steel over which' follow, fallow, follow. As the pressed closer and closer
supplies can b; rushed far more Your Mare is berries ripe and red and to the hoche's lines we came into the
quiekly than by motor lorry. They
wild grapes brimming over, cemetery. Then someone discovered
have repaired captured German And crystal waters cold as snow jn the secret of the phantom gun.
tracks, and at one point have eom- 1 two palms for a cup. The Roche had violated the sanctity
verged several ,lines, making it look ,Your bed at nightfall balsam boughs ; of the tomb. With all his sacriligious
wide,ster-tufted cover !cunning
he had placed his machine
like n lrusy section of the Canadian: with
Pacific. I And sleep as deep as tranquil wells gun beneath the cross. His death ma -
until the dawn came• up. bine was placed within the very
A MOTHER'S SACRIFICE. : ea:view of the holy cross.
_ _
How Australia Has Given of Her Sons ; every dip and turn
The wood trails are fair trails—at. This is the story of the two
crosses. One a lt sponsor of
At the Empire's Call, I The byways, the shy ways, are set the allied cause, theenother a silent
with lovely wonder;
General to the Forces, preaching at, a foot -print on :rebuke to German ltulture.
si
Bishop Taylor Smith, Chaplain - ,The lightest questing step will leave __T_
a fern, I — .,
Westminster Abbey, told a story of The grayest gnarled and ancient
self-sacrifice. A wounded Australian oak has violets nodding trader. weieSkisseptember,
perjng winds September, the hills of
soldier in a military hospital, who And whether quick to amber brooks ember.,
was asked about his home and family; with beryl bubbles breaking, I ThisSeeptptemn phantoms drift over
in Australia, said: Or dim and slow through churchly: the laevo
"There were six of us lads and pines, the little pathways go, '
mother. We all enlisted, and left me- There's1 t f lifted 1 d Red glows the ivy like a ghost -
then alone. It was her wish. She smd , treasure for the taking, ' Shrouded in mist breaks the slow-
• beauty for t er glance
an lighted ember,
she hoped no boys of hers would hold Aed certain secret old delight that coming dawn.
balk when the Mother Country called. only wanderers know. Sunlighted vistas the woodland dis-
And now five of us are asleep, buried closes,
on the battlefields of. France, and I The wood trails are long trafls, res,
ye: Sleeping e shadow the still ]she re -
the only one left.' There were a• terjous and street --
far as possible along the old lines, am poses.
end feel that the time has come to few moments of silence, and then he ; A fat way, a star way, they seta Gone is the summer, its sweets and
train India to help herself by giving added: But I have not told you the; pilgrim faring; its roses,
her sons new responsibilities in ad- worst, When I got this wound some- And strangely as you go the shoes Harvest is past and summer' is gone,
ministration so that with time she one cabled to my mother that I had . are swifter on your feet, ! i
may learn to control her own destin- been killed, and that telegram killed;The old -tame burden an coo hack plaintively sighing rho brown leaves
les. her." ' is lighter for the bearing; me falling,
"Of a successful coneleeion of such I A resident of the small township of While here a hough is blossoming and an
the wend clove mourns all the
efforts we hay° the greatest hope. The '1 Wolkervilae, Adelaide, South Austra there a bush is burning, day ]mag,
history of India shotes a steady de- lia, informs the London Times that inAnd every hour's a singing bird for In the slim starlight the katydid's
crease there of the oil, so-called rad!-' a small narrow street of the town -
calling
mile you roam calling
cal di:mollification for self -govern-: ship, Margaret Street, consisting of And best of all --most blest of all—
with
ll— hushes in slumber the brook and
ment, and we all have come to the - only 28 houses, there are at the Front tt ith never bnchward turning its song.conclusion that the time now has ar- in Europe no fewer than 295 blood The wand trails, the good trails, its
are the sowers and ended their
rived for discarding the last remain- relations --fathers, sons, brothers, they lead ,your spirit home! weeping,
ing vestiges of racial discrimination. uncles, cousins—of the occupants of Gone. are the
p � England's Day their reaping,
"New consider the importance. of those houses. gleaners and finished
this change. At present the Indian Blossoms and bees with the song
is a stranger to the hardens and sac-' North of Sixty, West of Ten, the "August the Fourth jl a day pPn 1- }1i1ds are sleeping
el
rifiees as well as the honors of pont-
cal
cal responsibility. Dien cannot be , Driving snow and blinding spray
fitted for responsibility, they cannot Opening up the northern day,
be trained to vote, in any other way Heavy seas and moaning gale
than b 'vin them responsibility Carry on the daily tale.
iarly England's. s. t belongs 'o Eng-
land
Harvest is past and the summer is
land and the Empire. That clay is,
England's. The glory is hers. On gone.
it she made her great decision, and
y g l it is her high privilege to congratulate'
and the vote, At the same time, as Sudden squalls and stinging sleet herself that that decision was right'
much for their own protection as for Lash the guardians of our fleet. and noble.
that of their fellows, they must not Dies the daylight in the west, "Britain heard the call of duty and
be overburdened with responsibility,' Met. on ehore shall seek their rest, knew the cost of what she did by
nor must it be given to any persons', But the men who serve their King, doing it. If the world is not yet saved
who cannot be held accountable.hiving on to gale's w wog, h 1 ' wild it can confidently hope to he thanks
Through the winter hours' slow flight to Great Britain, who gave th�e world
Canada Proves nue Example. There men work and search the night, the chance it needed to prepare for
"Look at Canada, There you see ; battle at its leisure and in vastly bet -
the fulfillment of the purpose of our God, we thank thee for those rnen ter conditions than Great Britain
Empire, The fact that the people of North of sixty, West of ten. choose to insist on for herself."
q --Neto York T7mPs.
Canada are subjects of the King is a I — Etienne (Lt, R. N,).
aelergeeeemeeeeeeeeeee.
fit. .1
liELa,11 HAVE. yon seed
KY'SLIPPERSa ICAN"7
FIND TIMM
1 Ler teRoTtie a Des i
NAYS -Med, NE
FORGOT 70 9RINq
Nig ALo G
wf+A—T Dipa. 71 0—u Do
,
WailWailTH paws -
PAPER. TL
CECIL is LooklIAG Al'
11' NoWs lie WILL be
T'IIROUG14 WITH IT
t vERN 5ooN
New Sugar Regulations.
New sugar regulations have been
pot into effect by the Canada Food
Hoard by which restaurants are lim-
ited to two pounds of sugar for every
90 meals served, while soda fountains
end ice cream establishments are res-
tricted to 25 per cent. of the average
monthly amount of sugar used during
1917. The various manufacturers
rasing stager have also been subjected
to revised regulations.
Well -Executed Devices That bras-
trated the Diabolical Schemes
of German Submarines,
This is the thrilling story of the
"Baby" that sunk a U-boat. The story
is quite authentic and told by the
London Times Naval Correspondent.
It is one of several remarkable steer-'
ies shelving the way in which is -boats I
go down and do att come up again,
When the summons came from the I
thanks to our "Q" boats.
German submarine to surrender, en- j
forced with a few shells—one of
which carried away the ship's gal-
ley --the boats were lowered and pul-
led off, leaving on board only a
I woman, who, with a baby in her
arms, ran shrieking up and down the!
deck.
To the inquiries of the Germans
the answer was given that, the cap-
tain having been killed, his wife
had gone mad and would not leave'
the ship, aphereupon the U-boat
drew alongside the stricken vessel.
. As she approached, the mad wo-
man, rushing up to the side of the
, vessel, hurled her baby into the open,
hatch of the submarines's conning
, tower, and threw herself overboard
rte side
on tete oppoe
Whether the Germans were more
shocked titan astonished does not ;
matter, for before they had time to
think, the "baby" hod blown out the
bottom of their craft, and in due
course the "woman" appeared at
Buckingham Palace to receive the V.
' C. as a reward for his skilfully -
planned and well -executed feat.
Here is the case of a retired ad-
miral, commanding one of the boats
as a captain, R.N.R„ who placeed a
haystack on board his vessel, an
ancient -looking craft; and was in
due course summoned to surrender
by a U-boat, and ordered to prepare
to sink his ship.
An Armored Haystack.
This was complied with, to all
appearance, and the boats slung out,
etc., kvhen, to the utter ,astonish-
ment of the submarine commander,
he received a •broadside from out of
the haystack, and found he had,
indeed, caught a Tartar,
Then,, again, there is the story
of the "Q" boat which in the guise
of a battered and sea -worn tromp
!under Dutch colors, was crossing
the North Sea, limping along at an
easy rate, when a submarine ordered
the crew to abandon ship,•
So sure was the German of his
, prey that the bombs with which he
intended to sink the stranger were
brought on deck and placed around
the base of the conning tower.
The commander of the tramp re-
' sorted to some skilful manoeuvring,
"to 11.11.
TQM MV , -1•H ES'e Age
GoOD cleARS Not)
NAve
a
PAit:oY wlLi. YOU
GO oVeR To THE
CORNED AND GMT
Me A PAPeR. f
u
CANT JUST
NOW MISTAN
DUFF I.NAs
'To -
Playmates.
Summer fervors slacken:
Snmaeh torches dim;
There's bronze upon the braeken;
September has a whim
For carmine, pearl and amber
Touches on her green;
Busy squirrels clamber;
Restless birds convene.
Where. Indira; pipe still blanches,
Where hoary lichen flakes
I`orest trunks and branches,
The gulden foxglove makes
A mimic wood that tosses.
Warning to the trees,
Then droops upon the mosses,
Heavy with bloom and bees.
What rumbelow of revel
Deep in those honey jars!
A saffron moth, with level
And languid motion, stars
The air until he settles
At the last pink -clover inn,
Ignoring prouder petals
That would his favor twin.
Among thosee w•ildw•ood vagrants
I stroll, alone no more.
Was it the sweet -fern fragrance
That stirred a long -sealed door'
A little maid ran free.
And for one sunny hour
My childhood played with me,
The Private.
"Miele Sam."
t' In spite of their protests, the Am-
erican soldiers have become icnow•n
to us as "Sammies,' a name derived
1 from "Uncle Sam." who stands to the
jAmerican in the Fame ,relation ae
".Tohn Ball" dace to us, says an Eng-
'lish Weekly.
i Why "Uncle Sam":
(During the oar of 1812-11. Elbert
Anderson, jr„ one of the contractors
supplying the army of the north with
An ofldeer writing hone says of the provisions, advertised for proposals
private soldier: "There is a glamor for pork and beef ht be delivered to
and pathos about the private' soldier, him during the first four mouths of
1813.
Among those w•he contraetad to
furnish him with beef packecl in bar -
role were Ebenezer and Samuel Wil-
son, the latter femilierly called "Un-
cle Sam" by certain of the snldiers,
who sponte of his beef as "Uncle
Same beef."
Other soldiers, not knowing who
"Uncle Sam" WAS. thotaght that the
term applied to the letters "U.S."
etenmed on the barrels by the Gov-
ernment oflieials, and so it was not
long before the United States became
familiarly known as "Uncle Sam,"
and the name stuck.
especially when, as often happens, be
is really only a boy. When you meet
him In the trenches, wot, covered with
mud, with tired eyes, speaking of
long watches and hours of risky
work, he never fails to greet you with
a smile, awl yoi love him for it,
and you feel that nothing you can do
can matte up to him for it. For you
have slept in n nturh more comfort-
' able place than he has, You have
had unlimited tobacco and cigarettes.
You have had a servant to cook for
you. You have fared sumptuously
compared with him. You don't feel
his superior, You don't want to be
,`gracious without undue familiarity,' .
Exactly what you want to do is a! Bow -Wow Rationse
bit doubtful—the Major said he , When our soldiers storm and se -
wanted to black his boots for him,'cure a German trench, the first thing
and that is the hest way of express- . Fritz doer, when he can manage it, i8
' jt.'
g i telt pepper the ground connecting the
t i
with tri
its ie
i
eap u•et1 r enc1 t w t s conmun a -
The House of Savoy is the rei
dynasty of Italy.
When making pies with good
ing apples, save the skins and
wash thein thoroughly, cover
fining'time If he is successful, the victors
find themselves temporarily isolated,
cook- end cut off from supplies.
cocoa, This is where the "quick -lunch
with legs prove useful. They have been
framed to carry food and • extra cal
water and boil well, then strain the t-
liquld, generally• three cupfuls, and ridges to the isolated men, in whose
add a small bottle of grape juice. By wake they follow through the tonne
i adding the usual gnantity of sugar `fire. Their pluck and sense if. dis-
you can get several glasses of very cipline is extraordinary, and they
good jelly, , have been the means of saving many
-G'eT MISTAA
cac1L. A CUP
q Z125 'TEA
``-)., �r
f,
er
met•ooatEd•x•:
7 _
tr4 41'"w
a man's life
Strapped tightly over their body is
a double bag literally supplied with
pockets for food, coffee -eons, ammuni-
tion, anti anything else an 'isolated
party may be liable to require till
proper .cammunieattons can be res-
tored.
CakeWithoutSugar.
Here is the way to conserve sugar
and make n delicioue cake at the same
time. Take 2 cups of white dont
syrup, 1. quarter cup shortening,
eggs, 3 cups of flour, 11-2 tablespoon
belling powder, 1 cup of mills,
t:aaspoon of salt. Cream the shorte
hue, add the syrup and the eggs att
mix well. Add the milir. Sift 02
baking powder and the flour togth
add if, slowly to tho mixture and boa
Behr in a moderate oven as a lett
ca
fon layer ke, or small drop cake I
Ore, querter of a eap of raisins aide .i
to ti • b^iter hives more firmer, an
ewee:let,e,
r
1
•
i