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The Clinton News Record, 1916-02-17, Page 6aeee. 'Fresh and Reistehin,g 11 Ten er oot s Woo n By CLIVE PHILLIPPS WOLLEV (Author of "Gold, Geld in Cariboo," Etc.) B76 is composed a clean, whole young leaves. Picked right, blended right and packed right. It brings the fragrance of an Eastern garden to your table. 333r.s.a.(03BC, MC IMOD= com, a-zemanT ‘,Tie lam e emer • Whet Farmers' Wives Want. I crust; leave opening in centre to per - The •farm women of the country, mit steam to escape while baking in in response to inquiries front the - moderately hot oven. When cold • United States Department ee Agri,- serve with vshipped cream. culture, have been telling of the needs of housewives in rural sections. They mepresent the average farm- house as a model of; inconvenience, pie plebes. Fell, them with the mar - and the housewives facilities for ef- malade; cover with lid of pastes and ficient work as inadequate, elumsy and nerve-racking. e • They pronounce many of the rnen indifferent as to how hard the Women may have to work, what they must be deprived of, or as to any share they should have in farm finances. They say that women must cerry in wood, carry out garbage, pump water proportion of three-quarters o from outdoor wells and cisterns, work pound of sugar to one pound of fruit. in poorly -lighted rooms, waste hours Roll out some peste, cover the pies in cleaning and filling old lanterns and bake in moderate oven. Leave and Imps that even then give no an opening in the centre of the lid light, fight the ily pest in unscreened to allow the steam to escape while porches, Put UP with a thousand un. baking. neceesitry hardships; and take mil -I Guernsey Pudding. -Half -Pound of lions of needless steps every year, all best suet, one pound of flour, half - because men don't care so long as pound of dried currants, half -pound they get their food regularly and of stoned raisins, two eggs. Nutmeg their own comfort is provided for. 1 and cinnamon to taste and half a One woman says she has to do the saltspoon of salt. Shred the suet, churning by hand, while her husband chop it fine and rub it through • the drives to town after a pound of nails flour. Wash, pick and dry the cur- er a pouch of tobacco. I rants; seed the raisins and mix the Another says her greatest work is I currants and raisin's together and carrying wood and cobs to the hitch- dredge over them as much flour as en eange and removing the ashes. will adhere to them. Beat the eggs Another says the main entrance to until they are very thick and light her house is the kitchen door, ,and add enbugh milk to form a batter. through which everyone enters, let- Stn in the eggs, then the spices ancl fect upon the northern cattle lands or ting in flies tramping in dirt, and salt and lastly the fruit. Dile Your it may not. There is a whisper al - that in her kitchen all the men wash, pudding bag into cold water, turn way; sometimes a threat of winter their deity hands' and coma their hair, inside out and flour it well. Then in the air. Even in summer, in spite sometimes within three or four feed turn it back agMn mid pom• in the of the glorious sunshine, you cannot at least half the year. is. , • , a strong string, but take care to leave Quince 'Pie. -.Quinces are prepared in the same why at for quince 'mar- malade. Make the paste and line the bake Quince pies made in thie way with the canned variety are excellent during the winter when friths are spree. Plum Pie. -Cut your plums in two and take out the stones. Make paste; line your pie plates and put in layer of fruitcakeand one of sugar in the CHAPTER L "I am afraid that you are a poet, Miss! Cliffoad." "What do you mean,- Mr. Anstru- ther?" "To be polite toes young lady with an imagination. Did you not tell me when I was in Larkshire, that it never rained in British Columbia?, Don't you remember how blue your skies were when you were six thousand miles, away from them? May be permitted to ask if this ism fair sam- ple of your Eden'?" • • The speaker, ,a tall, slight -man, of not more than twenty-three, stood be- side an upcountry cart, the collar of his waterproof coat tuned over his ears, a wet cigarette drooping from his lips, and an icy sleet storm driv- ing into the back of his neck, in spite of his endeavors to keep it out. Every line of his thin, well-bred face expressed discomfort and dis- gust, whilst the smartness of his get- up emphasized the roughness of his surroundings. The ladies he was ad- deessing, in spite of the disadvantage of sex; seemed ithnitely more in their element than he did. , "Does it never rain in • England, Mr. Anstruther?" "Yes, but we admit it, though I neer r saw anything like this in that knoweare hat where he is," mutte ed Anseautner angrily. "don't suppose that he does exact- ly, but he will find his way ie we let him alone. None of us could, do that in this darkness." "You truet him wonderfully, Mr. Rolt." "We have known him a long time, Haven't we Kitty?" , But the girl had nothing to say. Perhaps her sympathy and her exper- ience were not at one. Anstruther growled something under his breath, and theprocessionmoved on again at a foot's pace. - • • "Well, your horses seem to. have had enough of it, if you have not, Mrs. Rolt,"-he said at 'last, as the pair balked resolutely, at the foot of ,an exceptionally steep pitch. "Get up, you brute," and the angry man laid his whip savagely across the quarters of the nearest horse. It winced but.stood still. Again the whip fell, and thehorses backed so that the cart nearly turned over. - "Stop that, Mr. Anstruthea." • There was an angry ring in the lady's voice, but he was too savage to notice it. "Pardon me. Miss Kitty and your- self cannot stay here all night. The mul-maligned country, I suppose mounting; he proceeded to make them. brutes must be made to go," and ths- thises what you call a blizzard," and But he was hardly on his feet soon - he dug his heel irritably into his et than Mrs. Rolt was out of the cart, horse's ribs to turn that animal's and as his hand rose with the whip in quarters more empheetically upon the it, he was caught by the wrist an' slanting deluge. - held as firmly by -those thin Ithite At thismoment a man rode up 00 a fingers as if it had been a man who ragged -looking cayuse, plain headed, but quick and handy as a eat then These are my horses, and I'll held him. and not too straight in the shoulder, 'You forget yourself, Mr. Anstru- This man looked at the speaker with manage thern myself. Go on and ask a scarcely concealed sneer upon his Jim to wait for 'us.' Kitty and I can weather -stained face. * do without your help, thank you." "It's no good staying here, Mae. Anstruther raised his hat with a Reit," he said to the girl's companion. muttered apology, and dib as he was "This won't let up before dark, and bid, wishing himself back in England it's going to turn cold. Shouldn't won- and pretty Mrs. Reit at the devil. der if we got the blizzard that gentle- What,. he asked himself, did women man talks about." want in such a country? However, en- ' "How far is it to Brown's, Jim?" less he was very much mistaken, "Can't say exactly. Pretty Dick she would be obliged to call him back says we are off the trail. I guess he's to those horses before he had gone very far. Such ill-bred brutes could right." "What is this then that we have not be made to underetand anything been following?" but the whip. But Mr. Frank An - "A Watering trail seemingly. I've struther was very much mistaken. not been this way myself -for years, Polly Rolt.was not only a superb but the tracks all break up different horsewoman -as good with cattle, her ways a bit farther -on." husband boasted, as any cow -boy -- The month was early October and but she loved them and understood in October the weither may be per- them; understood them because she loved them. So she stood there in the deep mud and driving bail, pass- ing her fine, soft hands over the weal - ed flanks until some thrill of her gentle nature had soothed the poor beasts. Then she stroked their drooping gully we armed theough," suggested Mrs. Belt iThrough the dark and not quite certain of hie direction, the unhappy tihee tchrico (tenderfoot) splashed his way, and once in the gully put leis back into the work. It was not his fault that the axe' never hit twice in the same place; it wee to his credit that he aept on hammering, until at last a ,. green pine seven or eight inches in diameter, yielded to his per- severance., With infinite -toil he trimmed it, cut it into lengths, and 'then packea it back in three trips fo the cabin. Jim had been waiting for the last twp trips, and as soon as Anstruther put bis axe down, he took it up and disappeared for five minutes, bringing back a huge burnt' "tick" on his phoulder. , There was rather more wood in that burnt "stick" than Anstruther had brought in his three trips. • With half a dozen deft strokes the cowboy cut two short lengths from Anstruther's green pine, for fire -doge tossed all the reg of that gentleman's hard -earned -loads out of the way, chopped, split, and kindled his own 'dry log, hung the billy on an impro- vised gallovvs,•and began to cut the bacon. (To be continued.) of the stove or table Where the feed' batter; tie the mouth of the bag with quite forget that winter' reigns here Another says her house ie infested apace enough for the pudding to That morning, the long undulating ears and took the mare's muzzle Into uplands had been stretches of sunlit her arms, putting her face down be - with mice and rats, that none of the swell. Have ready at pot. of boiling to. purple, royal in coloring, boundless in side the beast's, and talking tender rooms are decorated, and most of water; with a plate in the bottom the floors are without carpets, rugs or Matting; that there is no drain from the sink, no indoor sanitary closet or coeveetences, no bathroom or hot-weter heater. - Most women want pretty homes, or at leaea convenient ones, not just boxes with few partitions •and ill- dvised errangements. - They want bloominre shrubbery in their yards, good fruit in their ea - chards, and gardens that yield some- thing foe the table. They want their prevent the pudding from touching gold where the cottonwoods shed "Drop the reins altogether, Dick," ding and let it boil for two hours and • • 1 th • 1" Who is this man with whom we have that would go under; never the people "But as a whole. And even this we shell hole like that, erou know;" to which their leaves in the httle wet gullies; she commanded. N.oev, old boy, come shaken in their confidence in him. you can't ,cateh fish in a shell the bottom of the pot, put in the pud- • •' extent wrth fair broideries of pure nonsense which beasts undeestand. GERMANS RECKON THE COST OF PEACE RESPECT KITCHENER. German Press Likens -Him to Duke of Wellington. The most remarkably frank appreci- ation of any Englishman that has ap- peared in .the German pressesince the beginning of the war is published by the Berliner Tageblatt, as the imme- diate result Of Lord Kitchener's mis- sion, about the effects of which seri- ous Germans are plainly uneasy. Lord Kitchener is evidently regard- ed by the writer as the modern Wel- lington,,to whom he freely comparee him, whilst the whole article is an ap- preciation of Lord Kitchener's Mili- tary and organizing genius as fol- lows: • Nothing is more stupid than to un- derestimate an_ adeersary, and when England sends its best military man to the district in which possibly the war will be 'decided we have every reason to examine the man, his capa- bilities and determination, as impar- tially as possible. To begin with we cannot but admit that what Lord Kit- chener has done ill the course of this war as an organizer is deserving of England's cunning and violence, and HUN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHES A FRANK ARTICLE. Enormous Burden of Taxation seen, But People Are • Defiant. An exceptionally frank artiele re- garding the actual economic aenditions in Germany appears in the Koelnische- Zeitung of a recent date. The writer calls attention to the seriousness of the situation and expresses great doebt as to the passibility of Germany being able to inerease her income after the wer in a proportion sufficient to meet the situation. Extracts of the article follow: • in the interests of our fatherla "Never shall we be able to forget required not only from him who c ln-I the seriousness of these times. The- plains without reason but also f m effects of Olaf war will not be wiped him whose heart is 'devoured by r al' out with the conclusion of peace. In suffering. Complaints will make no all circumstances, as the Secretary of ing better; but many of these 'det re ' State for the Imperial Treasury has of woe make breathei in our front n said the Reichstag, we shall have the field which may be more seri a to bear a colossal burden of taxes af- than many breaches made by shells,, ter the war. It, is useless to make "The dictates of the sirnpliest grad - guesses about the extent of the com- tude 'ought to shut the mouths f. sideration shows that after the war talking has long gone by. We hasse those who complain. The time for b g ing taxes. But even euperficial con - we shall have to place a far higher entered upon the days ef tough enduta percentage of our income at the dis- ance and silenced complaints; and t posal of the State, in the shape of is more than ever necessary that ever' taxes and customs. German should find in every othee. In addiditon to these great sacri- German a trustworthy eupport." flame smaller sacrifices are required, and the future as well as the present SPORT AT THE FRONT. demands privation. How can one ' measure these sacrifices in compari- How the British Soldier Spends Hise, son with what our rroldiers have to Spare Time. bear in the rain of shells, in frost and The curious phlegmatic character of! wet and without even the most mis- Tommy at the Front is strikingly erable conveniences? illustrated by a couple of stories which "Let us not forget that many Ger- Mr. Ian Malcolm, M.P., tells in "Wart man women are toality walking a road Pictures Behind the Line." of suffering, and that there is much "One day," he says, "I was talking; need atnong the families of the lower to some townspeople at Trilport, near middle classes which is not yet allayed Meaux. They were telling me stories in spite of all readiness to help. of the retreat, and how highly they England is Blamed. thought of our Army. 'But we shall never quite understand you,' they "We know who is responsible. A added. 'Wlaat other army is there war is no child's plea; but this war is which, after retiring for so many days and nights with the enemy at their heels, would have 1behaved like the English? They reached MeaUX, mon- sieur, and whaf did they do? They at once began to play foot -ball, they teek boats and rowed on the river, tehneyfigehybeinngba,thed; and then they went Very amusing, too, is the story of re certain Tonally, whom Mr. Malcolm and a friend discovered when they were motoring• behind Ypres on a road - in which Jack Jacksons and Blick Merles had dug immense holes. The heavy Belgian ram had filled these with water, and by the side of one such sat Tommy, solemnly fishing with rod and line. "What are you do- Fore - •••••••••=10111...001 NOA.L.yryt _ eseartaprea_ o•N,N.p.:* preernara • Patter ON THIIIV GA El, stlEvinitEst UGH° of quite special horror because of the greatest respect. One must Judge not from the English point of view, for it is impossible to. apply the same standard to the work of a German and an English Minister of War. A Ger- man Minister of War would be ashamed of himself if lie needed 80 since the beginnings of our organized much time and - trouble as Lord Kit-, economy, that the German people as a the,ner has needed to get together and whole will continue to hold out in this prepare a similar force for operations. war for years to come. And every Nie sech improvisation is necessary in neutral knows that if England in the our case, eut in England, where in course of a long war can still claim a tinies of peace preparations have ne- success it will be the elements of the ver been made for a land war on such a scale, it must be recognized that German people which are physically and economically the weakest that Lord Kitchener has created his armies and organization out of nothing. will succumb to the pressure. If the my lad?" asked Mr. Malcolm's It is easily understood, therefore, English yet succeeded in gaining a ing, why the leading classes are not to bo triumph- it would be our babies and the weakest members of our people friend. "Fishing, sir," replied the. 1 angler, without a. smile on his lace, because England's sharpest weapon is aimed at the lives of our chilcb:en and of our weakest and most helpless. "Anybody in England who has the very smallest conception of economic life has known for a year past, ever a half. Keep a kettle of boiling wa- ter to fill up the pot as may be re- quired. When the pudding is clone, Oka it oat of the pot, dip it for an in- stant in cold water, untie the bag and turn it out on dish. Serve with a sweet sauce. Uniting the Family. come 00 up these uplands were wild, cologrless and and getiitil her hand on'the Mare's' neck to reckon. in the future in the devel- I now how to prevent. the answer was, "Wait and see." So now, in the grey 01 deeolate aa a stormy sea, void and she led the way up the steep bank, the opment of the struggle o struggles in f' ' - England will not be able to satisfy my friend waited and saw. Tommy without thelter. . horses going with her where no whip tho Eastern Mediterraneen? He is a her ambitioh - and to make good the soon landed quite a big fish, to the ut- It was a dreary outlook for the two could have driven them. typical repiesentative ' of English failures of her strategy by a great women in an open rig, drawn' by two, From the top of the bank it tiny niilitarism, which, notwithstanding all are asked how it was done "Well, you, • ter amazement of the onlooker, who utterly worn out horses, but it was :meth of light showed, head in the disclaimers, hes always existed and nsurder of Children, We who strong and capable of resistance must Mr. Anstruther who resented it. , i driven gloom, eee sir, yesterday I was off duty and "Do you mean to say, Cornbe, thatl "Jim has canmed, e think,e • once had a similar representative, a weL down with my net to the river you 1 matt of the same stamp, like Welling- ton. be made. Our enemies, now that the and will bring every -blow to naught. But to this end fresh sacrifices must • yonder. I caught lots of fish and put don't know whei•e we are?" he I "Just in time to save niy life," Sea • • • h - Is t , them into these holes for me and my Lord Kitchener, like Welliegton, de- war is approaching its cliinax, and pals'tocatch when we wanted them." terminee his acts on grounds of prac- now that the last trumps are being . .1. asked impatiently. Ve ain't in England Mr. Angell- "1 sae', maeYee" • ed. They do not want the chickens, tones when we lat'ard youtevere come "Let Mwn easily. ticalelity only. haur-a definite time in the week lawns mowed and flower beds sped- •How many households have a fam- thee, and -we foraot th order mile.- when all the members of the eamily tie " • 1 etorted the other, his color . Y°11 Were pretty hard on ----------------," . , gather in penect seremey oi ar • • , "Not half as heed on hen as he was REVOLT WHEN TRUTH TOLD. — hogs, horsee and doeesa around the , • e a e , es., - - : ' dooryard. a . . interval of genuine commemon? Al- though civilization brings many ad. Berlin People Already Doubt Some One woman: affirms ' that• her men - • • • • • eeso,-wee•e, not in Enekeuee mese on poor Bess," :snapped the other. Rolt put in hastily, "we are in Jima.; "I lcnow, clear, but he is in a strange -11 country, end things are 'not going and mechinery they requite), while the German Versions of War. have all the modern feral imnlements . • 't • 'ts train it bas the great • , i . fault of tending to disrtmt family in- trail for a moment, it does not 'that_ e ell for him. He -tenet a muff, really, . . , a little bit. , , . and yet everything has gone wrong To the Parts Figaro a French- these horrible methods of welfare, or other such utensils about the house. Winds know, h • ett lett r from Ber_ Seeing that everything that the Brie garian Parliament it \ems . officially has not an oil 'stove, a wathing ma- • Which way jien 9" tercourse. Each member has too many ter hi Jrbilfged,ieeliasereeei:tli for him so fete" She saYs,her men are not unselfish or education. mother, their domestic 1 • de of his Boss's wife could do . their. business; sons, their business or le&-stPou'eh of the curb, but the light she drew up at the little log cabin, be- limedescribing ' i a veY interesting tish 'spirit of invention has devised stated that from the begmmng oe the file31:5s, 73077 3 individual activities. Fathers have blesitel Ulu= slieosnrleyd thses . woman as wii en a e chine, ti gasoline irate a bread mixer i reTleted latetliC peaurious, but they clo not stop to • • ' • ' •side which stood two dripping horses. manna' ,certain enditions in the Ger- against us has hitherto turned into a war to the leek:fie: oiven bmabtctiire, think. ,. ea . ' • e . "I made it, you soe, Mr. Anstru- increasing difficulty in procuring suffi- th After t:elling 02 .the daily beletisinngmfor es, we may he sure that German doctors have been wounded, have died from infectious diseases and . duties or social occupations; aug - what theylikedwi 1 on oin e, le man capital. There is comPlaint of lack of walks ' ters their business, their &location, foreman of the Risky Rancho. i , e • Merit provisions and other eieceasities ue weak• a e e y's last spring will not find 96 have been d h 14n 'th ' Il .l- C ' b fl played on the enemy's tide, shall learn that in our capacity and readiness to make sacrifices we have by no meane reathed the end, and our readiness will be ell the stronger and more will- ing the more plainly we see through WAR'S TOLL ON DOCTORS. Most Deaths Among Germans and Austrians Due to Diseases. During a recent debate in the Hun - or their social life. - 215 have been'taken prisoners. Among "I'm afraid we can't make camp to- maelee ttee e een eoreeee • All these- things ate • right andyou, Now of life, the correspondent continues:. about the house, ,a serve o pou try• t to. I got fool- tomeee ' ' fences, destitution as ta handy helps, . night where we mean and help us out of the cert. "Life here is becoming unbeatable, worthy in themselves, but they do not ed by the weather myself. Didn't Kitt is too water logged to move and I am glad that it will soon be like vacuum cleaners, dumly welters tend to weld the famiiy, If members calculate on a rainstorm before morn- Y ' • ' e without assistance. arid kitchen .artielerie .' ' .: eng, but 1 know you, Won't whine ' if . . Anstruther hurried to the cart, and time for me to leave. The people here Pool water supplies are the 'draw-, you do get wet. You can't hunt and putting his waterproof oaer the wheel hate everything that is not German. of a family will make it a rule to de. backs it) many eases. 'One • protests week wholly to one another, the spirit Indien drive and follow me, I'll get They are absolutely self-sufficient, and vote themselves for one hour in the keep dry all the tinie. If you let the helped Mrs. Bolt daintily to the in this way: Why, lime is dinnei allgroued, as if her skirt had not been nobody else is of any account. They ready; the. men . ere corning. now; bus, one 'half alkali mud already. of family life will be quickened and you to Riley's cow camp in no baby is crying; the kettle has gone strengthened. Often the members of It's rough shelter and going, but But she tried 'not to laugh, and. dry; no water in thebuthee She has a family pursue parallel. coursee that it's better than this,' and he shook do not ihtersect. It is mere platitude -1 • .. his bridle and moved on ahead of PrettY KittYs her face flushed with the to let the bthy howl, run to the creek' the cart. weather, mede amends, caning a . ! sttcht . . tt ,, leo you erne/ yeey.anuoe, Kitty?" trifle more than was perhaps abso-. to point out that great events -travel, .- • 01 P • P7. • P the supporting - - --- inevitably cause disintegration. But Mi,TN. elltoelt haietk,cdciehaim: iffriyeissds. salie i•m43 latit,e,NlYevnee:ernS7nraY, rMlolly. arm and whispering:. she marriage, death, and the like -must thine sppeae pleasant, so these men dnean,t but it is nothing compared to their all heated up; hustle around; make pan enjoy their meal, :Now, can the peace between theect two. They'le hatred of England. To the English so long as the family -is together en- der one roofs the:spirit of union and just spoiling for a row. What is vile mean it but the Bos's hthself dare , this woman get an benefit from her • not flog the horses when she is near." al.' redited the bier:hest crimes un - dither ?" • . common interests should be fostered. temper Jim has , developed s ince I There is no lamed to the expression went back to the Old Ciountry. It's , ' of want, but the burden of it is that ' not like him!' • will not admit the superiority of any- one, except God, perhaps. "There is one thing in particular which exasperates them, and that is when the,y are referred to as 'barbar- ians.' They hate France well enough, der the sun, mid every German praws and hopee most fervently that the powers of heaven svill some day strike ana utterly blot 'out England. "We are. quite a • few sympathizers of the allies here, and in .spite of all the bad news we are treated to in the , Rolt smiled mysteriousle be- CHAPTER II. • couetry women want at least some of hind the folds of her hood, but she' zeinagtsgte,:uitnileurtrelabit,kaerid teir thU .0.f.ts, conveniences and cop- spoke only to the horses. useful Hints. Run a thread around the hole in Insect's dislike both salt and alum. Always_ boil•new ironware before using it. Don't put simple milk euddings in sideration shown to their sisters in the stocking before you darn if. "Get up, mare. Keep, close to Jim. lmuld neves brokee praifie, into and: out of ma- • tt by a few antlers, he turned to unbar - able log hut with a mud roof adorne city hornete-Selected. --- Famoue Old Desserts. , In days goae by the mietiess of the a yery hot peen or the nedk wihl He can see through'any mg. nests thehorses.' " Kitty looked e question, but Mes. His fingers Were numbed with meld, wat bulletins, we are not getting the - 1. and risme of the• :hticklee were where Pran°:h returned. At the time of the latest th Rolt's •feee was 'so io4' ceat of i in Champagne; 'the arriere pensee that the girl said noth- his English experience had taught him .11'ecesses ing, but just cuddled down into her that they thould be, :Ireelde which, 44 I German version of the event read like wraps to endure, as wall as might be, a matter of fact he had generally this on the bulletin boards: 'Tee French occupied a few of our Ad- vanced trenthesabet we, eetook them presently.' But istey forgot to men- tion that these trenches 'cost them 120,000 men. Many have begun to doubt the veracity of • the War Office end .gre mermen -Mg over the unrelia- bility of the news from the front, It is me opialee that these` people, who heee hitherto -let themselves be led like sheep to the slaughter block, will beccime like 'wild beaets ween they' finally leeen the eruth." house did not trust to her cook and curdle. - -:ii the long end dreary Aimee. over ore left the utharneseing to his, groom., • amide iteserepiiee dainties and :Toole' Turquoise ornaments' "Net that strap., Ur. Anstiuther. dishes intended fete :the: honored: be wet; but cleaned with a .slee yipes, which by daylight would haye See this is the waeei . , attest. With her owa !labile, Welted tha:mois. ,. seemed to English peepte ' quite 101- . But before Mrs. Rolt could' show on by coolc and melee, she merle .puff paste, fiee pouncleakes, custards, jel- lies and fancy trifles, Seger muet bet eifted, sometimes Unless' tirkey ie very young it possible for any wheeled velecle.- him; the silent figure, which.had sust s.hoeild be' steamed for an hoar before However, rancho -horses and teethe iseestine. - rigs are peed to such :Work, and the horses took charge the wet straps taken the saddles off the riding Mix mueltarri with vinegar itistmg1 RolVe Rah' Cranlbled 8,1,felY .t1I1.°11g11 yielded as if by nergee to the cow_ ' rolled or ceuthed fine, epices pound of water and it will remaie fresh the ravines, though the, cart ewes, it boy's' fingers; and the -beasts were led - at perilous, angles sem-Memos, arai the og by the Inclian to some unseen .cor- and freshebutter Made, but the delicate twice as long. - cies flint were the eesult would tee: Whrim.ebeeenuta are in 651 an they . . water slopped about en the floor of me . , . the met, Making it impossible to keepe , evemere eeee you put Ruddagore?" day gi atify our bed gatesere, ' are a delicious adeition (boiled) to a the feet ctry. ' Aestruther asked Combo. Senis alelicricies which have been eimple salmi. • After no hour of 'this the horses bre Irithe corral with the others. Peurofive oil into the bottle if you gen to boils badly, and the cold in- wi'l'y.:, (leen Do you want him insides" . a large bottle ni olives. li, 'vie creased, so that what had been sieete on such a night Anstrm uther ight preserve LIM flavor - became hell, et:lee:lag hke tile lash of have beeneforgiven for thinking that When boiling vegetables never leL 11 Whip. ' the hut was none too good for his "Do you really think that it is anY well-bred 'hunter. It: certainly was handed. down from one genetation to , Pea et. Potple.-Line the Itide of a deep deb with a paste made in pro- portion of one -bale pound of butter on lard .to a pound of flour, Then pime and sliee in some peaceee and sugar thein to 'taste, The canned fruitWill them Mem liceltag unta they are doue, or they svill be soggy and heavy. Silver that ie "daily ase call be keel; bright if it is left for several make a fair SubFtitute, at this season. haters in very hot„ etrena imiem water Fill with Cap of water, cover with top 0/100 0 week. N F LI r4 7' A. =fa.. rovev; enizootio. - gnarimweva.s2,-vectzsrann_eas-ormaltorersnovarrnrgsts. 1 1.11? 11o001 aftdellop; lila throat ppeedtly eured; cells And !torsos lo aatne stable kept 1'00111 having 111.111 1* 001110 $voIMIts I.V.Intenevor Coltmo'rhtp., 11 to 6 doses erten earth entt bottle guaranteed to oure ono ease.' Mate lee e, 0 holly eetire. stalliona, tilt. egeS and con- Milt/Its. 'Meet rkillcul vontpoutal. Largest set- tler, veterinary s1,011 knv tirtiggltd. et, delivered by Austrian medical officers the wounded - Conditions of Life, .Altered. namber only 315, but 971 have died of "We have never had and in future infectious diseases, 101 have been hill - bread,: have less than ever any lack of ed while rendering medical ctssigance, bread.: The supply of potatoes, which at the firing line end 331. have been caused us such anxious hours and which seemed to be in such hopeless taken prisoners. The groat number of casualties from infectious disease is due to the epi- demics of cholera and spotted typhus. Speedy Dogs. The swiftest dog in 'the world, tits marty. This is the reason why we borzoi, or Russian wolfhound, has made record runs that show 75 feet in hear complainte about trifilee instead of seeing. every sort of discontent and all superfluous complaints put aside 'at the outset. The renunciation of these popular and custornary complaints is itself a sacrifice whith is now_required could ee kept up. confusion, has now been happily as- sured. "Thanks to the -heroism of our sol- diers the existence of the Gorman citi- zens is so secure that he hardly re- alizem how little this terrible war has altered the cohditions of life in Ger- a second, wade the gazelle hoe showe measueed speed of more than 80 feet a second, which would give it speed of 4,800 feet bra- minute if the peed He 'Kuew Father. ( The pleilosopher is born, and not Made. Even in' tender youth the pee - good to go on Mrs. Roll?" asked An- not as good, as the loose box to which 6j0us gift. 10 'often observed, remarks struther, spea,king for the fleet time that valu,able beast had been imam - since his' spar with Conibt.' He Was tented, but Anstruther saw that there the Mancheger Geardiap. One juvenile philosepher was dis- wet to the balm by thisetime, had log was no help fer it. 'Ruddygore would _ all confidence in en Aqua Scutum, and have to take his chance with the reet, C0\10( the oalier day, whin the. news ,e, ' arrived at a ceetain house that the had been down two, oe theee tthes, his i "Well, what can I do to help . big theglieh hunter being as much at I "'Ir.ou .clon't have to do anything. head of the farm , 1 e tiaa 'ly, ieb :' • with hie "Do you think that it 'it:: an), good 'Jug make'yeerself pleasant to the regiment in Fiance, hail ,been mem& ladies. Pli be through in a .inineteee. ed. Tears Wore the order of the day; sea in :Rae cope -bey as its rider. to stop here, Mr. Anstruther?" i "You might cia some wood for ue, until the Abseil boy thouglit to in - The figure May half aisible in the' Ma. Anstruther," called .Ieliaty .from seere;, "Whereebouts WaS .dad Wetted - darkness ehead, rebied iis his horse the doorway. "i should love a great eel? e - '• - and waited. He was toe liar i:n ',trout , roaring else, I :am- " jest: eerithed, to. have hoard, and -yet ,ieltri. Bolt was aren't you, Maly?" .' ' • •- "Theta lest like father he re - He was teed, "Ie the 1-inecl.,',. , , , Itt afraid, Jima hearing,: like all hie' Ahste ether pieked ep the axe a lit- ' ' ' ' - : ' faculties, Was keen as that of a wild , tle doubtfelle, eee leeked hopeetresly or, methedically with Miiiteractererse eameme manecAz. CO., aoshon, 1.11.A. "I don't believe that that follow 1 "There :Ave smite pines hi that hist entteh the bullet!" ' sponded, -going , thing. ' : l ' ' ' ' ' ' -, , - hie breakeast; "hen Ileen, tryieg to laMsOiCa010101000)100101060101000)111iO4 )201( - Does Pain Interfere? There is a remedy ioares ent Read this unsolicited erateful testimony-, Not long ago my left knee be- came lame and eerie It. pained me many restless nights. So se- rieus did it beeoine that 1 witi forced 10 consider giving up my work. when 1 chanced 10 hini 111 SlOati`u Liniment. Let me :fly- less timn one bottle fixed tee Saes. Chnipeeeaeaoesiere Yee lig.M00171MCO 0•1300,MIZOVAllagOgI