Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1914-11-12, Page 3# Hints for the Home With the Batten a. Few persons kinsw the seonvistIA- P/308 0.11•GT delimits taste of euelsc.d bana118, Few not tu bananas. born realize their inil zit1vi altte. ba.nanas can be employed in many excellent; nays. They are fine plainly boiled in their facins .and served with cream sur eweet better for breakfast. They may be boiled with salt perk, or baked around a leg of fresh pork (peeled in lest instance), or fried and eerved \vita broiled lamb kidneya end ba - eon. Usecl in tale way both the kitl.n.eys and the banenas take on added flovio.r by 'being together. Se - lea fruit whieh while pipe ie yet perfectly firm, Ten minutes are re- quired for boiling and five Ctr fi little fore for frying. The fruit will kt, you knewwhenlb is. done, ior il falls into a pulp as easy to digest as baby food. Bakedi bananas may take the place of potatoes on a luncheon table, as they rare excel- lent with all meats. Rake them in their akins in a hot even, and nunch them occasionally with ;the fingers Lo see how they are progressing. Bantutas and Midneys.—Veal kid- neys awl bananasare the ingredi- ents of this melting dish. _Take off a little of the .1cidney fat—use only a half or quarter for one person— and saute it with butter in quite a hot pan. The kidney must be browned elightly, but still he left a little pink inthe inside; this .slight rareness 10211)T01,e8 t.lte taste and leavee it tender. When cooked, push the kidney to one side and put in a Minima, cut in lengthwise slices that have been sprinkled with lemon juice. These will fall to pieces with the .00.oking, bub all the better. Pile the pulp beside .the kidney on 6 hot plate an.d eat once. Banana Croquettes.—This is a very nottrishing dish, easily prepar- ed .at a few minutes' notice. Peel and swap ripe banamas. Cut .eaeh one in [two pieces and cut off- the sharp end, making them look Eke a, croquette, Roll -them in .ohopped nuts of any kind—either peanuts, hickory or walnuts. Ley on a, leaf of lettuee and 'serve with a, little French dressing eontalning a great deal of alive oil. This is a splendid luncheon dish for ithe hungry eeh.oel boy. , Cream and Banana M.—Hetet together in a basin a little granu- lated sugar and a lump of butter, tha yolks ef three eggs, ad:tittle arailk and sherry and some banana ahox- °uglily mashed. Pour the mixtn.re into a deep dish end stir M the whites of two eggs, well beaten. Bake in an oven not too hob, re- move and. serve. Banana Eritters.—Place haE a pound of sifted flour in a, large bowl. Add two tablespoonfuls of olive.oil, halt au teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoominl of vanilla cabana Bridals" atir with a wooden spoon for five mantes. Jatat befoee serving beat the whites of ,the three eggs, add to the batter and gently mix for one minute. Now put sax peeled sound basm-nas, each in .two crosswise pieces. Roll them in !the better, plunge in boiliitg fat and fry ten minutes, turning with a skimmer onee in a while. Lift up, thoroughly drain on a towel and neatly trim all round. Serve with the following sauce: Place in a ;howl ibbe yokes 'of two eggs and one tablespoonful of granulated sugar, Mix weal with spoon Boas two minutes. Boil in a saucepan one-half Clip of milk ,and and onselsalf ells? ,of 'cream, adding seven drops of vanilla. As soon as it ecnnee to 6 boil, pour geadually over the egg a and eager, continually stirring meanwhile. Transfer into a bausepan, set pan on the fire, heat for three minutes withoub. ceasing stirring, but .ao not ellew to boil. Remove the pan from the fire. Strain than:ale a cheesecloth into e bowl ancraelae. ' Banana Souffle -LA del.iclous hoe dessert to be served iu isernekine is into& of one cupful ef bannes,s, elsiers. ped very fine two cupfule ,ereasn whippe,d ad and five eggs. Stir the fruit and cream together eaxes fal.ly withoutdeseroyieg the slight - tides off the latter, and the eggs well beaten, but not separated, .encl hall fill the buttered nameleina with the mixture. Deka in a quick oven until they are light and delleately brown- ed. Serve ivLb euger end stream as soon as thee come nese the oven, A &outfit) will Sall if it is alarmed to stand unt 1 4 00018. To Make Gnod flake. One of the neat thorough realm books gives a list, of rules for mak- ing cake, evihith, if they are ewe - folly followed, will result; iti good cake nine times out of ten. C400d leaks as a Metter .of carearailinese and recision, nob of Melt. Hare the weightie and lticaaurea exascat, 1)o • notatix the cake -anal 'the even is ntieela read' for it-, to go in, Sift le flour befere measernag it. hf baking postale'', or cream of laetar Ts used, silt it with the flour, Mix the <Ake in an earthen bowl wir a, woociee spoon,. teat tato slake end whites's of the cave ewer - Stela. Cleease the 'tins .1).11 lard', ales S\ ' .1) , tilti• 6bleekene. Acid a quarter of 41, easpoonful of ealb to all 'cakes. If the 'mike awoke opee as it gam , It flour has been used. ff it rine; in a pone in the centre the °Veil i limiting; eggs and itt ts it a k 0:4 it 1Uttgb ; therefore 111 W11,1. ,attcl the flour lot. ltt fining the pans. 1st 1 he mixture be 71 little higher the 81.Ctantizan n the mitialis, When tins whipped elates pee waled de not Mir, Slut eurn them in lightly., so 65 IttiV tt; break thi. air cells, The oven should be only trader - tapas bob at first, se that. the cake can get heated tiosough and can riso before formless .6 ,ental., Thi leenslitnatt then be inereesed o.) that, when the 'rake has been in the oven one-thalf the time required fer baking, la +Hata ernet will be form-. Moving or jerrieg the ettke beforn the air °elle are fixed is-al:nest sure to eauee it, 'to fall, 1)o In:einem the oven drier fur the first five inintites, after that is may be upeneti and :that gently, Cake takesfrom fif- teen minutes to bn hourto base, ac- -cording 'to the kind and thicknees, ie done when ,a brotsm straw run into it comes, .ont clean and smooth. Be sure the cake is done .before re- moving it frera the oven. Let it s.Land e few minutes itt the tin and it will then come out easily. Inland Hints. To remove rthe shine, horn a black or clerk blue ekieb, rub well with a pie.ca of flannel dippedin spirits of turpentine, and dry an 'the .open air. -Whe.n a small clock is beyond re, pair, it will he found very useful for the sick room. Sob the hands each tiane 'medicine is given to. the hour when the next dose is, to be given. A few drops of camphor on the toothbrueli will. give The mouth a fresh, °lean feeling', and it will harden the .gums ,a,nti prevent any- thing like 'cold sores or affeations of the tongue. Sheets of tidal pieced - under doilies upon tallith glass .pitchers or vases containing water rare set will. prevent the water frown soaking through end marking the polished tables.. When team is too thin to whip easily, placei -the dish containing -the cream en a pan of .coacl water nntil it is thoroughly chilled, then pub it into a pv,n of hot water, and it will svhap,nrithonth difficulty. The ,amb of eatecessfut Eying con- sists in getting along with ea few articles of furnatuae. as possible rather than a,oeumularte many dif- ferent •*roes.. Remember that' every additional one is an added oars. s "B USINESS AS USUAL." Hamilton. Is Setting an Example to Oilier • Municipalities. Hamilton, Onterio, has .a.ecentecl the British motto "Bueiness as Usua,l," a.na .evidenibly has euenee'd- ed in making .business a little bit better tha.n,ordinar3a An example of Hamilton's d.eter- ruination to do things in. re ,big way is the eonstruction of the -new atonal Contraugihrt Hotel, work on which was begun the lost -week in Octo- ber, The new hotel will be twelve storie,s high and eost considerably over a million dollars, Tile main contract has been let to Stone & Webster, and one of the couclitions is tbat all sub-oontracte wiE given to Canadian firms. Material used in !the .construction ie to be made in Canada as fa,r as possible .and the work is to, be done by Canadian workmen. Every one ef the 250 roomshas 51 bath in con- nection, andin equipment the ho- tel will be the equal of ,anything on the American continent. The Ham- ilton Bridge Company bas the coe- trect For tat; 'steel work, which is now ready for eleaivery, so. there will be no deleys, and several hnn- -deed thousand dialers will, be paid in wages during the next twelve' Montilla .. TIle following diebinguished names appear on the Bea,ra of Dire•etors :—Sie John Gibson, ex- Govetair of Ontarsine L. H. Frost, president Feeist 'Wire 'Fence. Co.nn Wenn_ William Southall of: the Hamilto.n • Speettator . Col.. D. 11. Cytets 1,. .1.3irge, of the Ottearla, Screw Co., and othee prominent Hamiltonlans, .Another instance of Ilamiabon'a. priigreasivenese ie the .atiquiring of the Caeadian l3ratio10 of , Proctor Gamble, manufacturersif Ivory Soap•endi arise°, Thiene/1a isbuild- ing a xslJion donee Plant, worls on itarich wes started some weeks .ago. Pnblio wo.rits aro being pease- cnted. with eametaing mere.-tiren the oasaistary vigor, and. Hamilton te ".1/104.1C Maria" Arrives—A Getman Ifewiteee Shell Berating, Fernlike a Great crater. The British .soldier is as difficult person to impre..ss or depress, even by immense flak filled with high explosive which .detontste with teerific violence and form craters large enough to act as graves for five horses, The German howitzer shells 8.10 eight to nine inches in calibre, and on hived they send up columns et gre.aisy black smoke. On isecoeint .of lade they are irreereeeetly dabb.ed "coal.- boxes," "Bleak Maria,s " or "leek Jobneons" by the eoldiere This teetiniony eomee from an ()Meer of Sir JOhn Freneth's staff, tvhcsee narrative; haa bent officially published by th.e Press D. -treat" Otto drawing vividly shwa the immense craters made by the German howitzer shells and tns donee mess of black armoire they make on bursting as they pin:h.—Drawn. by H. W. ICeerkkoek, in Illustrated War Netvs, ' • THE SUNUP Sink STUDY IN TE RNATION AL LESSON, NO SEM BER 13. Lesson VII. Jesus and Peter.. Mark 14. 27-31, 53, 04, 66-72. Golden • Text, 1 Cor. 10. 12. 27. All ye shell, he offeuslea—At the very time when Jesus might have turned all his !attention to himself he thinks of the disciples. - Then would suffer because of him that night. And he wanted to re- lieve their pain. Irt was inevitable that the shepherd must be taken and the 'sheep scattered.. 28, Howbeit, after I 6111 otaiid Up, 1 will go before you into. Galilee —They would be united again end he would be with them, Se the sorrow.of Gethsemane a.nd. 'the t?esin of Calvary were to be eharaged into the joy of Galilee. 29. Bat Peter said unto him, Al- though all. hall be offended, i'et- wili not Ij—The braggart ;always re - &eta in -some unfavorable way upon others. Peter not only !boasted lzimself became ofhis, suppesed breverry, he alsodiscredited the other disciples. 30. Even tibia night . . atileuu shalt deny 'Inc throne—Seerus knew Peter. He spoke quietly to him. It would almost seem as though Jesus 'spoke so quietay that the ethers aid not overhear. ' 31. He epake' exceeding vehe- mently—A great nia,ny people take vehemence for much easength.. It is frequently the dissipation of ivthat hiale strength remains, There was no real bravery in Peter, for bravery ie isa silent as the deep flowing stream. Its pres.ence need not be a,nmionneed. If I reueSaaie with thee—His utherenea gains in emplia,sis as it :Tome in prudence. And in like sustainer als.o ettia they bil-u-StiPset.deeeajl'aillsabise'Onla91.4drasen.d.sedes°01:11.1r,„ cock crew the se.eond time. New when he thought 'thereon, bettee direiples feat they lied he snake Pome peeteetetion of fidelity and bravery, nature, his true self, vane bo ehe lie -could look np.om hit true bytaOof'eolbelenYeiowne—s%e n!cla Se'ea4-talis' eta: fr.".b.! other self, 'his evil. side, which . Teelteeitiarl with them. , 'caused him tu deny his Ma.ster. Verses 53, 54, See Lesson Text And whet a mean, ansi, s.hrunkes) ! Studies for Neaeimber 1, - s.elf lse WV 1 66, Beneath in the court—Tilt trial, was taking place in an upper THE -S. VA YEARER sla 1,11311 111Y 1,00115, One of the maids eicf the legit . ' ' smieats—Theee was no resit, evident,- Tho publishers of ,Everytnain's Li - y, in the bause of the high priest Mary lea., been considering a; during those hours ef darkness, imam ee broader,.ae, ,seope. Leak_ We may well believe thee he was now se -warmed up thee he slid not need the ;heat of e. fire. And the (took crew--/Ihis was the first warn - There was still. time to get away before the 'second denial be- -came ne,ce entry. 69. The maid. turned .to those that stood by and salsa pointing to Pe- teraallhis is on.e of Ft1b9111. abe• was sure end positive. "One of them." Everybody in that countyancl knew who "theim" refeered to. ,a.nd who Peter wasa . BeHe .couls little bane hidden 'himself by 'denial as the os- trich me by stacking, its head in the sand, 70. And after a little while—Pe- ter evidently stood by making as hold a frona 'as poesible. By keep- ing oompany -with the enemies of Jesus he woukl be aecounted an enemy. At least .s6 thonglat. But they . . said to Peter—Not once .terice, but serersa times, was Peter confeonited with the feet, He not only looked like a Galikaan, but he spoke like. one. -What would a Galilaeatm be doing there that night when the 'renowned prophet if Galilee lied been captured and W851 on tidal 31 he -were not of the asompany of 'the propliet7 .se,71. But he began to curse anti to etyma.n ., I know et this.nian of whm o ye .speale—The lebyee was yawning e Pater had been. Mending upon' its e,dges His vehement activity ceased him 'to lose his; balm:lee. ,anall he aell slid not convinee his .1 600.SeltS that he had nob been one of Jesusi.s followers. Hia aecials, with ourabig .and aweering, might lia.ve assared them that he haat lett Jesus end 1}0M., Was Ilia 'a, disable, 72. And Straightw,an the eeeond time the cook screw. And Peter "called min,d the word—He 't,76,a so busy denying when the oo.ek neew OA 105e:tine and ero afraid of beefily danger that he did nob n.otiee the weaning sound. Now the hat) gone a.s far •as .could in. denying Ye- . sits, end, doubtless, he . also feat assured .he was in no clartaee of bodily harm. He was enedstating the awfulness sa ab -when the 67- Warming' bin -leo -ha -The nights ternsiting this tass, been deem.ed are. -.sold in Palestine even 'at Easter advisable nob to deviate frean the 'time. The,olinsete is srnlas to 'that linea. on whichsthe library wee -Dia of. ;seine Pinata of Califfrannts How"' Oina,14y plannecla bait bo, eepplement ,ever het stile s dans, nun' iSs the at with a dents:lied arm whion they nights Inc .cool.' end is fire is wel- 'cone. Peter hed not; so rar :Dor- gotten his own -personalneeas es to be indifferent to the .pold, She looked linen h4ne-1)oubtless she was anicerned. about others duties aind would net have been attiacted. by is •maal warming lansself ab Ilis fir e had ine re not b ee n someitMeg enflame] aboult tiie masarite ear of the luab priest s.cotirtyned weseke- tete want the 'fact of the eaptatee of seating an example that other alsi mhos xnj'gill wee semaaes, e prophet, So tais eyes oven of iweine „beta ewee, eeeeelonee anti the KerVaallia won't] lceen and the ery "heal times" is the &street way tl.'silYihing cut {)fbbs ...raillery, '1,Olum also west with 'the 'Io create feeling of uneesieees that will emelt, in lateseensiating the be be admired tied its 1:0511±8 1.8 1.01:tit ,rtught be expected, Ethel (finding ale sermon tedious and thinking it high lame fer the eelleetion)--"Ola mother, do pay the man and let's go home "Sued 'for breath, of promise, chl" °Yes." "Any defenee 7'' "Temporary insanity, and I expeta 1;0' Ot0V0 it by the lotanotters evreste.'' "Oh. Bobbie," eaid his aunt re- Proac141111Y, "sell/ Is it you never remember eo sky "Plunk you l'/ "T expert it's 'cense I don't get things given fr0 s5e often enough to p080' 1±8' 1" a11orwore4 the youtig rliplo- al a t , Nazarrette, oven Jest; s—There are in qte words bosb eeetainita and a taunts She av sti no itioulet, ' 68. But he . denied, eareisseere 114118 etsught and he knew it, -He eow does what- the cow erd always does; tries to evade thariesue. 1 neither anew, me enaletetand -waist taloa arseetsla.-Thie meld spokea dia. led different from that, whieli Peter need. It would seem that, Peter, understanding plainly what :sae oniti, tried --60 make, out, he dia not undereiand Ilea lather alas is the interpret:a ap e, , , , l -1 atar e .iy,nliks 9 , lee namte to, sino7W nenonalle o W tat, rea, ly was goieg on- bbat 11-P.aist, Either view indleates the foolisimeep sot Peter, And ate went ouils—The maid nerhajts %via iai a buery, or she atteehed little eonse- stilettou to the pre.senee of Peter, Ile had .an opportenity to get assay. TYPhoid and the Soldier. br, William Osler urges the Brit- ish array authorities to vaccinate. English- soldiers against typhoid fever. Dostor Osier says : `The work of the French army doctors and of British army surgeons, par- ticularly in India, has shown -con- clusively the remarkable reduction in the inCidenee of typhoid . when vaceinatien is thoroughly carried out. The experience of the Ameri- can army is of special value, as the disease is 80 much more prevalent in tbe United 'States. The number of .m.ses in the home army has fall- en 'fawn 3.53 per thousand men to 0.031n six years, and the death rate Iran 0.28 in 1909•to zero in 1913. In the .army at home and abroad a strength of 90,640—there were in 1913, only three cases of typhoid fe- ver, and no d•eatas: The greatest improvement has been during the three years in which the vaccina- tion hes 'been com.pulsory. What this signifies in the- United iStatet is best appreciated by the fact that tne civil death rate for the year 1912 from typhoid fever was 15.5 per hundred thousand' of the. popu- lation; and in many instances the garrison% are in regions in which the diettsse ieasrery .neeSsaleattl" -- Flight t.terit. II.`Collet. Who deoseped three bombe on Zappelin thed ae, Dueserklort . formerly lived at, Winnipeg. G un Silencers hi 1Var, !llY11VE LOVE OUR OFF CERS RISKED LIFE TO,'SAVE WOUND. ED FRENCHMAN.. • • Where the Booming of Gem Shook Apples Front the Trees. A 1111±801 0511 driver at the front sends home the 'following deserip, that of how a British eolonel risked his life tu save a wounded French interpreter, He -we's driving -a' motor -ear con- taining an officer with aespatches and an interpreter through a dis- trict "vniere the booming of glans shakes the apples from the trees." The intempaster, haviug left his maps behincl, lost his -way, and was sent to inquire at a tottage. He immediately rushed out, hav- ing found Germans inside, iand was wounded by them. He Sell 'in the road, and creveled into a ditch, The Germans same out, -writes the driver, and I stopped them all right withany rifle. All Shot Down, FROM MERRY HO MOB NEWS BY MAIL A BO VT 21 17 N BULL AND HIS PEOPLE. Occurrenees in The Land That Reigns Supreme in the Innin menial World, The army (1 GattIrtyitt 1410,r1011 re paseiog xnen witia viieotaeleg, 11 sin 7100p0aR1 to 1.4.01.a 6 .e(6.1).4 of Australian Light Ilene ameng tralians now in England. ' Among a detachment of 120 wounded which recently arrived at Briatal, 'there were many Cann the Royal Sussex alive -anneals Six hundred1311.atiaahani tram- way men!hav joined the many. Thie brings the total enlistment for the city up to '20,000. The National Relief Fund is still growing 'steadily at the rade of $100,000 a day. A total of 925,000 thee now been reached. Neaxly 300 Germans in England have (hanged their names for .Bri- bee3gbin%flien9gboYS'i.telig.e41.stiParr7osseSS ''it.‘"C .616 A Territorial, named Private Let - tertian, of the 6th Batealion King's „ Liverpool Rifles, was 'mit to nieces "1 have no rifle. You aro a nae by a itrain ab Hayward's Hecuth. shot, --. Keep me eovered and An attempt ,waS made to wrask get him. If I 'fail, deliver the the Dover express est, Mather Green - despatches y,ourself." o spolte a Station, when special police found a British colonel (wonder if he minds nlargeironchainitidtoain. -me putting Ia rank)) who was on Liveipoolwtstzeablyrislbeeby torrenua 1 rain and one eneamp- fhoits. vi:apyrteongehivperhtivsaltiefeeo, 11 e, n)ene wee flooded one, elle men hey_ blessyou, sirl , and good luck," and ng to be eent home 1541115 fresh sae- ts with the tvortis to the Almrangemenwere made. ighty Under the famous ga,teway leaving my lips I dropped another, Battle Abbey, recently, Farl: tNevb.esoreluatteealpyedcottinIdehneotganiteisshatufopretrhinegy rBer,truiez,mfooandde:ouvees,arns,plestenaripaevizal twbheoir hozwv 4n rme eohvaelmgeedn mOanglyzitheo laneou fdrnoix- a's's jnillo!w6 clubelienseco* ;similar circumstances .can realize pleted. Sta.tues of Queen Victoria, how long it seeros befere the last King Edward and King Geoege, cartridge -is pressed home, and al- carved in atone, have been pleced though a very eold morning, I was in !the three -meant niches, now covered with sweat, yet cool, One of the :leas:ling beaks in Yo.rk- and oollected. I'm positive I only shire has filled the clerical -APS Va- cated by young men who heve gone missed. once, and fired till there was not a man in sight, at least,on 'e°rallpHloiss-mblaent.iejsrirsollYi'a!sdySeell'evii•les'. by bile MR feet. - Mr, James T, Hamilton, e wen - Thai, Awful Mass. known Southampton eteckbecriea the BPerk bowling green I can see even now, as I sit h 8 ere ,nd magisrbrate diecl suddenly on writing, that awful mass in thegate- whilanistere :playing tea winning shoe, way. But they were not finished, for 'Ilhe Filet Babtalien of Tirailleara a volley greeted the appearance under the ommand os asolenee of ray officer's head from the wood, Brady, was xeeently ,revievred at c and he being much lower down the Wemlalee where the men are en - roast this allowed them to fire at camped, by the Belgian Consul -Gen - him, at the oaabs. time being ont of e.r.v.a. my sight. I just .caught one chap Lieut. J. G. Sutton of who-appearedifr-om an upper- will, Tal.bet, has sent home to pa,r- ()Ow': I'KieW triei'e MACS en'ts u±8 Ste-veil/1ga, Hemas.ailthe other volley at the officer, but 1 did eial deg ei bbs Gerinwa Tassel wil c nob see him as I was busy myself ill's Talbot aptured and brought at the 'moment. Then I saw bis Mite Falmouth The twe smatter football -dubs ab idea; he had taken moor feont a Maideohead ansve 0011thribtlied Wien tree truek and. crawled un- fewer than fifty members to Loea der its eover balif-way across the Kea, as aeity, Beta oseee eeee ad ablande011neeell ,all xosbeltes, including roBu't to' get to the interpreter • he cup bontests, ; had to go about three yards born the proteetion thus offered, He DISTRIBUTION -or SEED. gives one lightning leap, seizes my — tfieorohnt,n ell‘a,00eldlitietiaiellayh r threcnevrshaehinfiroinm, From e D E xi) crime]; tal my position, and then he again By instructicin of the Hon: Minis - deeps 'back under the. trunk. Tudg- ter of Agriculture a distribution of Mg by the terrific volley at the mo- s meat he must have :been ailed withuperior sorts of grain and potatoes lead had he been Et, second later, will be made during the coming winter and spring to Canadian and 'even now I noincl clearly love farmers. The sample,s for general to examine 'that tree trunk, for no distribution -will coneist of spring nutmeg grating ever had more holes wheat (about,, lbs.), whiM oata (about 4 lbs.), barley (about Jost Got (lear. lbs.). These will be sent out fretn easeuee eeeet ujear just as a Ottawa, A distribution of pota- relief arrives) from a distant out. ?feedtl s (iltit.fenvafo arlib. eseaeariples)f161 ex 11111beycar i-,. . post, 111)0 had heard the firing and mental alien, the Central Fenn at Ottawa supplying only the pro- vinces of Ontario and Quebec. All samples will be sent free, by mail. Applicants must give partisulara in regard to the soil on their farms, and some account of their experience with such kinds or grate. (or potatoes) as they have grown, so that a promising sorb for their conditions may be selected. Each application most be sepre rate and signed by 1.118 applicant. Only one sample of grain and one of potatoes tan be sent to emit' farm. 11 'both samples are a sited for in the same letter only one ' be sent. Applkations on any kind - of printed form cannot he act:anted. As the suppiyaf eeed limited, ' farnaers ere advised tr, epply early a but the applications will not nate- eerily be filled in the exact order in which they are received. Pro• ference will always be given to the most thoughban and explicit re- quests. Applications reeeivea After the end of January will probably ,bo-t-oo late. A I aPPliouifous tsr irno (and applications front the provimee Ontario and Quebec Mr points:eV should be addressed to the ITMetein- , ion C rreallat, Con tral :Exit e she ente, , Cil'enre°S1..eriYowb•c°18o1 earab a.7111cdhillviiriet;a1 s!Itnall F4841:1: 3.11)0111i eeart tietleinClea with the perpetual cry idoei aypo t Lela:, "Souve iv," "Go • your anife, Pnirtfaert MN' 00011r • fa riliers in any other provioon Rliould be addroesed (postage pre - peg) to tate §-uperitatteclent of the a 1,41,Vg r 6,noh till It arm Director, Deminion Exissrli in that niovitete, 3, H. CatifS,Dni,E, ' bli e He alaximathe inventor of the Maxim gun silencer, expects that the Present we, will demon. seeing the car had guessed the cause. 1. explained tn the sergeant in -charge the best position to place the men in the wood to oo-ver our reteeet, and a few minutes after they left my officer appeared With. poor Francois, who, anhouga now able to limp, looked nearer • dead than alire. 7 Carried him to the ear and there dressed' his wounds to , haves elinetease, seta "Weataisersr .etrate the military advantages ot Ile beet of -my Libeary." While . !the object of his invention, just as the British Forbade Mentism of Deed. Everamena. Library Wa6 .a.nd, is to battle with the dervishes at Khar- make eaeily available the greatest turn demonstratea the value.of his Ths"ilished. I told the officar that; I intantied- renwiting his brave act, and as we drove off was as- toneded to hear Mtn forbid me to mention a -word about it. This 1.°yrf beenalelaels.dt1Ten").e..b<ellistte'll:r!tto- IL?lisTon°11henlie'cl."-. t'imbos impress ;1)7 ill: runnel -the firing. 'Phe eoltlier. toe, look in his eyes, would obey .iinY or - „leers le„ froo, eer.eo,is strain sew der:ever eoming from that officer nonsequent .Fistigne; ,The . sileeeer sgal”. eVe" at the riak o`f his life' It' not wily muffles the noise; but also "!"'sn't 't•)"Itl' "t reduces: the retoil to a. gentle push, hell' hh° ihat it' m118b • le4k in,te,d of , ,,The sol- out. --On, eo, they maka just a, dier," says tile World's! Work, "no beatlY tuts ab°"6 it" and,' sally longer flinches, ieseeoeeely as he having Es tree dos cover, theta wits pills the trigger, That is conducive '10 risk allYhtsclY w°uld hays liil°fle to better marlcsmenthip, and by the same. So' "rail smebhinff "51005 ibolssl 1355 si3i'os st,'a 51, the so]- dele°01.13,;ol.11,' s4' eassl 1)!I'olteh 41441,1'0°It.IT 'nrel 70.1siti rof teltuetakei eenemy'soise! „1i,11is„. the eist)..terlrh N‘reiyifephooNNt. el i tttitlresimm 10n Acuity in loeeting the -firing hue, The alfficulty is still further In- creased by the faet.that the flash ie absolutely annulled in the slain.' a -lasses 01 ell time, the ratmet the father's machine gun, Accerding Wasierera' Library is to lenient to to the Worlds Vilork, the Maxim, the reader the multifarione plumes gun silencer so Muffles the noise al of life which lima their inteepreta, firing that the eon -intends of the talon itt the lighter field of modern liter•arbere, Altliougsb Fiet.ion must; neeesserily fignee largely in the liet", this ±8 nt) bephaearci re-issee sif novels, hub a sincere easit parpo•seful 'attempt te fo ram late a -coil ectien <,1 books whieh shall adequately represent the reanortieisen and ameginetiye- trees all' our mein 'time. The Lilt -rays- rill, as N.,. ;eases -dna iLs slope; extending arom ibe quaint htimuur of MArk 'Twain to the historkal-arleenturtaalless of -Stanley Wesemen, smoothly euranded off by volunsee of seleeteidesesess front the poleof our leading eesay- Aostan Dobsen, C1, 11 . E. Russ seal, Clement 5l,s,'s Ez' G T( ('1,i.' t•ereon, etc., etee ' 'sleet, look 66 the trouble money etin41 you into." -"Yestalant leolf Saii 4. .1.2 tit the teonbie ten get sent ouK t itty-,-"4.Ottc '1,/11,010., :last Met l tamt. 'imk the 'titgt girl he'd eeve'315:'El11el-Th'tit:t The man whs bob contettvith ltiSin7;1:44Al411e;ItieVhialta merely oraees, but who me a year ago," Kit15y--".1 loow pets his mina into Win own work, in tibat, belt as one groan r bae/ sure to rise, • taste inaprovee, ytw At'liggan ,; they een lave ilesse bet - ions ; thie Lena, is ratified new, end ensithea, aseetlairatater Thitt's ri-dfit, Give 'them to Ale. iatow thee, kiddies, sorarnble aria that's why we Mae mar ffiss 8. Never Ray die. Tilnpire noroiris more ()hoar,