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The Clinton News Record, 1916-05-18, Page 7There' Sa tie Cry about the delicious flavour of This flavour is unicitie and never found in cheap, ordinary teas. Let us waif you a sample. lack, Mixed or Green. zesenteafe briier Selected Recipes. Ginger Nuts. -Three cups flour, one- third cup sugar, one-fourth eup but- ter, ode cup molasses, one tablespoon allspice, two tablespoons ginger. Mix together in order given,' roll with ands into smaleflat nuts as large as a mantel, and lay on pans lined with brown paper. Bake in very slow oven. • Prune Charlotte. --Stew ane ._and one-half dozen large prunes. When c1d remove stones and chop very fine. Whip pint of cream stiffwith three tablespoons sugar, then whip minced prunes into this, line 'glass dish with ladyfingers and fill Center with prune cream. Or serve in individual sherbet glasses. Leave in ice box until time to serve. Grape Cornstarch Pudding:—To one pint boiling grape juice and paste made 'Of two tablespoons each of cold water' and cornstarch. Ceok until starch. taste is gene, 'their add one teaspoon butter, two tablespoons sug- ar, juice one one -Wt. -lemon and one- fourth teaspooh salt. Lustre, fold in one stiffly beaten .egg white and pour into inolcl decorated with split almonds and citron slivers. When cold, turn out, and serve garnished with grapes. Fruit Wheels.—Sift 'together two cups flour, one heaping teaspoon leek - mg powder, one-half teaspoon salt and one tablespoon sugar. Rub in two tablespoons butter. llIix to soft dough with milk and roll out one-half inch thick. 'Spread with soft butter, dust with one teaspoon flour, four table- spoons sugar, one teaspoen •cinnamon anti sprinkle over, one-third cup each of chipped, seeded raisins and clean- ed'currants. Roll up, cut into one- half inch slices, put one inch apart 'on greased pans and bake in hot oven. Swiss Steak—Three pound tote tom round steek,.flotir, two teaspoons ralt, one-fourth teaspoon pepper, small piece of •suet, ono -fourth teaspoon mustard.. Wipe steak carefully, dust on •salt and pepper, rub in as much flour es it will hold -eat least one cup —using c_cige of saucer to help, grind flour in. Fry suet, add mustard, and brown steak in it on both sides.: Al- most cover with boiling water, boil rapidly five minutes, reduce heat and simmer three hours. This is• good fireless cooker recipe. Before serve ins, add, •if liked, one-half teaspoon, :erre y salt and one tablespoon Wor- cc tcrrhire sauce to gravey, which should he rich and brown, and not need more four ,to thicken. Chopped mushrooms are also good to add, Crown Resist of Laude—Mutton or lamb may be used leer this handsome roast. Have butcher prepare it, and be euro that he sends home all trim - ratings. as they constitute half the weight paid for and malte.up well into stew. Cover ends of bones securely with stripes of salt Bork. Rub flesh with salt, or salt when partly cooked. Set in hot oven ton or fi`ctcen minutes, thedereduce heat, and, if nece=sai•y to keep drippings from burning, add riot water: Baste often ..and cook- from forty-five to sixty, minutes,. Press cup in. center of circle of meat. to he sure its shape Before serving gill center With pea.; or Blanched chest: nuts, cooked tender' iii +',tock' and. lar, ed, or With' S_iratoga or French -fried potence.- • cup of sugar creamed with a half cup of butter:, Then add half a cup of soda cream, a teaspoonful of soda, two tablespoonfuls of molasses, spice to tate, and half a cup each of" chopped walnuts and raisins. Mix soft and drop front, a. spoon, These will keep 0 long time. Sour Cronin Filling for Cakes.— Whip a half cup of sour cream and add half a cup of powdered sugar and half a cup of blanched almonds, chop- ped fine. Flavor with vanilla. Pancakes.._ -Dissolve' half a teaspoon- ful of soda in .two cups of sour milk 1 and add one and one-half of bread- crumbsr one tablespoonful of melted p butter and two or three eggs. En- ough fiche must be added to make the batter the;right consistency; Housekeeping Helps. One pint of lard weighs one pound. Oil of turpentine will remove tai stains. Stewed rhubarb is an excellent spring feed. Oatmeal makes every good 'thick- ening for soups, th A. sweet red pepper should always! hang in the canary's cage. Never buy spicas in large qu Ven; they lose their flavors. Beeswax and salt will make rusty flatirons as smooth as glass. Coarse sandpaper is better than. sandsoap to scour kettles with. Fruit grows more important a breakfast as the spring advances. To remove shoe blacking that ha been spilled. on clothing use vinegar Toothbrushes should be dipped in boiling water occasionally to disin feet then The good housekeeper goes over het food_suppliee every day, to avoid waste. In using canned vegetables' foe cream soups, the liquor should be dis- carded, , Worn table napkins are useful fol drying the lettuce, when preparing it for the salad. Thick blotting paper under doilies will prevent hot dishes from marking Eggs when scrambled should be stirred constantly. A wooden box is better for keeping; bread than a tin one. There is no finer polish for tinware! an wood ashes. -" G?5 i2' given in'then and drifted down quiets eae lyto his death rather than fight long- er against th'e inevitable but'the sight A Tcn icr oo 's Woofing : of the other Ipan still struggling, and ohvieu fly' spent, roused •him to one more effert. 0y CLIVE.PH LLIPPS INOLLCY It vac useless to shout to the fiorse,' (Author.of."Gold, Goldin Cariboo," Etc, but with itis free hand he managed' to ) strike it in the face, end .drag its head sof CHAPTER XIV.—(Cont'd.) broken by hitter hard work,' his in- stinct recoiled from this new peril, and a whole heap. I rode that devil' here he rose fighting and pawing the air in a day and a night to get you. He on the very edge of the flood. wash's broke when we left," and he It was in vain. The man's blood pointed to the weary roan, "I'ye lied was up and the ice -coated boulders to poor old Bill; I've stolen a horse gave the beast no footing. With a and done my best'to steal a matt. 'I crash the two went into the river, the don't suppose it does matter," and he horse on its side, whilst the mane sat dawn on oris stile of the boulders „thrown clear of his mount, disappear whilst the hue and' cry .came nearer, ed some feet down stream of him• His could see then lanterns 'flashing Twice the Beast was turned over in the flood, now like drunken stats along the edge and for a few moments the of. the bink not half a mile away, water swept over the man, but before "If you had told,me"that it witis for either• had been drifted to the level a woman I would have corner" of Protheroe, Jim had regained his was no doubt of it. "But it wasn't," horse's head, and twisting the' fingers They had reached the eddy under "No?" hesitating questioningly on of one hand in the beast's long mane the shose; the big boulders loomed up, the monosyllable, "but you told'Bill swam steadily on the down stream grew clearer, and the roan struck bot - so. Why didn',t, you lie to. me?" side of it. tom. '• "It wouldn't have helped. 'You Once he had his head above water, At the first touch Combe's .knees didn't go for Bill's woman." the colt swam superbly, " driving seemed to give under 'him. All his The doctor flinched for the firstel against the current with all the energy strengtht had gone, and having gone f through the depths he seemed likely enough to drown in the shallows. It was only by an immense effort of will that he ,braced himself sufficient- ly to stagger out of the ebby. He Could have fallen where he landed, but a cry front the doctor found one last reserve of strength left in his com- panion, and calling upon that "last ounce,' Jim blundered down the bank and into the 'water, falling against a great tooth of rock, which broke the force of the river at the bend. By what seemed a miracle, the pinto had just madegood its footing on the very lust point between it and the swirl which 'led to the ice jam, but the doctoi was too spent to profit by his horse's good •luck,'and 'though Jim grabbed him as he was swept by, he could do no more. For what seemed to him five of the longest minutes he had ever known, the water 'crushed him against that rock tooth, whilst his, arm was reeked with the pain of keeping his fingers crooked in that bundle of wet cloth= ing, which swayed with the current, but which he had not strength to drag back. (To be Continued.) e, -_.---- TOWNS WITHOUT '-AXES Where a Former Generation showed Wisdom. Its these •de.ys of expensive living; almost under with the other, until in despair 'the beast 'turned up stream again. .But it was too late. Jim krtew it, for he could hear the ice` teeth gnashing almost at lits heels, and he only struck out still from astubborn determination to fight to the last inch. His reward exceeded his hopes. Since he plunged into the Fraser it had seemed to Combe that he and his horse by immense efforts had ,just managed to i•emahi stationary upon a plane of.sliding water which carried theta towards the ice pack, but now for the first time the' long lean head which had bored down upon him, push- ing him always nearer and nearer to eternity, began to forge ahead. There time, and opened his mouth' as if too young life battling against death, defend himself, but thought better of Cif crossed it, and shrugging his shoulders asked: from shore to shore, Combe and his "Have you got all my instruments horse were' level with Protheroe, and and things there? That is my' bag, I h.iitg same sort of a breakwater for think, and he pointed to the satchel so that before they had h strapped upon Jim's horse. But it was not enough. The doctor "Yes, I got them before I left" was still in the saddle, and Combe "Very thoughtful of you. Hand could see the pinto's head sinking them up for me to look at. vin too lower and lower. If the doctor stayed stiff to get off my horse yet" , where he was, the horse embarrassed Jim obeyed, and by the faint light by his weight, must drown, and in of a match, which Jim' had to hold for spite. of his efforts Combe :quid not him, the doctor explored the interior melte his voice heard in that swirl of of grip -sack. "Our his as the ' rn i '' d stinet roar ar a 'friend Bill got these lima- • , of mob, but gine," he said, • "He was thinking of in mid -stream each voice became lis- his own case. He always is. .Wrap, tinct, individual and hostile. them up in this and put them on the! He heard the -waves roaring it him bank. Someone will find them"and he could feel"the undercurrents pulling we shan't have any use for them onseparately at him, he knew what they this trip. We don't want to carry wanted, and the fury,, and the num- any more than we are obliged to." Ger of them daunted him: Jim struck another match and the His only chance was to cling to his doctor finished his examination. horse; his only hope of saving Froth- doctor have all the ordinary appli- ances eros seemed to be to let go, and if for cases of accident at Bolt's, I possible., drag the doctor out of his suppose?" He was quiet now and saBut at the last moment Protheroe business -like. "I guess o" seemed to realize what. was requited "Well, these will do then. We shall of him, and slid out of the saddle, ]folding' on to his horse's mane, and waters: On the bank, the noise was make them all in a devil of a mans, swim ing as Jim swam. Sir Max Aitken, M.P., who is the author of the best record of warfare since Napier's "Peninsula War"—his book, "Canada in . Flan- ders; being the official story of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Sir Max Aitken is himself a Canadian`by birth, as he is the son of the Rev. William Aitken, who was Scotch min- ister at New Brunswick.- Sir Max' Aitken has sat as Unionist member for Ashton-uncler-Lyne since 1910; and on the outbreak of the war he was accepted as the official "record- er" to'the Canadian Force. • WAITRESSES IN BERLIN. • High Priced Cafes , Are : Forced to Employ, Women. The Berliner Tageblatt discourses half mournfully, half jocularly; at the changes which the was is effecting in when everything costs double what the capital, and especially in the cafes is used to, and .four times more than and eating houses. The first signi- you can afford to pay, what a boon ficant change was the bread card in- to live in a city without taxes! Are stead of bread ad lib. Then the table there such hangs? you ask, Most ter- d'hote was suppressed, then the.lintit tainlyl ation of hours, the "verbot" about casting of it inaccurate. Neither There is Orson, in Sweden' This schnaps after 9 p.m., the fleshless. Jim nor the doctor attempted to avail municipality has its ordinary city ex- clays, the fatless days, the slfrinlcage of beer, the shrinkage of potatoes, p the diminution of the sugar supply, and, finally, the disappearance of the waiter. but the water -proof ease will save some of them Pm lad o brought By eltis time both horses had drifted anti-, g you tong below the level of the ferry, which that, Mr. Combe." When Milk Turns. If the housewife will paste thes There was a pause whilst Jim fes- way now crowding with men, gesticul- tened the bag in its- place again, the ating and apparently sheeting to the lights were growing very close now, two in the' waster, and sbme of the and the voiees of the searchers plain- more sober among the lantern bear- ers Navin t ih f • g go a erx out tower ds t ly audible. Combe could distinguish millstream, were endeavoring to let his own name, uttered from time to { thee..a rope down towards the doctor. e�"Well, what are we waiting for? But it was hopeless fishing. Aren't you coming?" The line was not long enough, and the r "Back to Socia Creek?" to"Nathe Risky, is c , Isn tv v that where e you wanted to take me?' ! "We can't, That blanked ferryman has gone and I can't break the lock." Blotting paper saturated with tur- pentine may be placed in drawers to keep away moths. The best cereals are whole nature grains, steamed in a double boiler for 24 hours. LURED GERMANS OVER A MINE. Canadian Troops Trick the Eitemy at the Front. • How the Canadians have once more done the Huns is' told by officers re - earning on leave to London, The Can- adians have long been top -dog in their conflict with the Germans and it is said that in the trenches opposite the! men from North America there are twice as many sentries as elsewhere aiong• the line, for the Canadians are forever thinking of some new thrill for their enemies. Jim saw that himself, as the words It wasamarer than elle ice pack whcih that some years ago two officers of `---u•- - ------«--- themselves of it. Side by side, etunned by the noise around them, they battled with the Fraser, whilst though the farther penses, but it imposes no taxes. Moreover, the local railway is free to every citizen, and there is no charge for telephone service,schools, lib • "klops" •en the Sar Instead of and "beaten" " "Is that so, and Jim Combe can't bank seemed to: conte no nearer, the I res, and the like. cross this bit of a river without a red lights of Soda Creek grew morel All this is due to the wisdom of a waiter is now handing bombs in the boat to get back to the man Miss dim and distant, .and the figures on former generation, who planted trees 'trenches; instead of offering pro - Clifford is nursing? Phew! Here is the fetry more indistinct, oh all the available ground,with the found remarks on various comestibles the way," and the dare -devil, crammed Luckily .for: the slvintmers there was result tlta:t during the pst thirty he is discussing machine guns et the the only top hat in d Caribou mare tight- even less tee in the river than there Yetis the town authorities have sold frontr. And in his place is the known ly on his head d 1 ' b • over X1,000,000 worth of young trees lass' Waitresses have been long known and timber, while judicious replaritrees in Berlin, but -they were mainly con - have provided for s similar income .in fined to establishments whichtsported a red or a blue light over than door, , spuria ns east into had been in the morning when Combe the edge of. the grey flood that went crossed it. The frost had not held in roaring by, slipped and recovered, sit- the upper country through which flow ting his horse now as firmly as Combe the tributaries that supply the Fraser himself (might have done; slipped with its first run of ice, but there was again, and the next moment was swim- ming, horse and man, deep in the angry waters of the Frazer. the future' establishments which were not visited Then there is Monmarlon, in the! by ladies. In more reputable places enough of. it to add to their difficulties, Midi, France, Here not only ate the waitress dill no tSuddenly the light of Soda Creek there no taxes, but the timbers on the a make her tap - he went out altogether, and the dancingcommunal lands are sufficient to grant i aver for the simple reason that the t conduce Berliner never knew how to lanterns on the ferry disappeared, and each person a small annuity. There � conduct himself towards a respectable CHAPTER XV. at the same time a new sound struck are only seven electors in this hamlet , girl• upon their ears a dull grinding'so, to avoid anything 1lke rivalry, the But war has at 1 seven last compelled her appearance at decent establishments f .. !VI ET q M'Sa pAApt: JN CA le/ADA d -tier rilaking asap. Eer soften!. Inc: water. For Mmotrtng peiint. ... For dislnfootini. •refrl Amrators, o'Inko; closets, drainsandfore00 other purposes paPUUCgnUUDT5TUTRd. C - ire° FREEMEN OR SERFS. In Germany the Individual Belongs;to the State. Lail ' m bitewar Y German professors t e took it upon themselves to instruct the uninformed people of the United States on the beauties. of the German government, says the Wall Street Journal. Harvard's German professor, did some especially notable, work of this kind. He showed wherein the Empire differed from the.Repuhlie of the United States, with everything in favor of the Empire. One of his prin-' cipal'points was that in Germany the individual belonged to the State. Germany's compacb strength and united front feet tribute to the ef- ficiency of this form of government. It makes for strength. The individ- ual "belongs to the State" as much as the feudal vassal who knelt before Itis lord and swore that he was hence- forth his mail "of life and limb and earthly honor." _ Tho callous indifference to human rights or human life shown in the whole, war is a complete answer. The rape of Belgium, rho ruin and devast- ation wrought u h ' g t in Poland and Serbia, the cynical sneers at civilization's horror for the Armenian atrocities, furnish an answer. Louvain and Rheims are "answers. Verdun has been presenting 'the obverse side' of the medallion; where" another answer is written-.-that'of'the State's appre- eietion of its own vassals. Wave after wave of • humanity breaking upon an almost impregnable defense shows the value of an indi- vidual in the eyes of the master. In the columns of a recent issue of this newspaper a description of one, as- sault as seen by an onlooker was pubo lashed. The Germans were moving forward in mass formation, when: "The French, guns opened, and mangled humanity was piled in wind- rows. * * * In a short time another line in solid formation was sent Por - weed; as they started to pass over the piled -up heaps of their comrades the French cannon again blazed, and the pile of dead and wounded 'looked lilce a solid wall. The sight that fol. lowed I think no man ever saw be- fore. High explosive shells began blowing into pieces the nfasses of dead and dying. "It seemed fiendish. I wondered that the French were so insatiate _ when, horror of horrors! I discover- ed that the high -explosive shells were from German guns, blasting the walls of dead and dying 'that another line of German troops might pass through!" Why should they not do it, when these individuals belonged to • the State? There is a classic story of one who, reading of thehappiness of a future state, jumped into the crater of Ve- suvius that h might the sooner en- joy it. After the story of Neriine even the hyphenated American might be excused forhesitating to jump. nto the crate • of pro -Germanism in order to bring about in this country a government where the citizen "be ongs to" tate S tl'e." z b t� • The military authorities of Berlin lave placed a batt on fortune-teiling.. t appears that women and girls with tusbancls and ewcetltear•ts at the front lave been mulcted by crystalguizors,, , "Well, I'm blanked! Protheroe! noise, which grew louder and mem a returned themselves to the local You infernal drunken fool, come back, distinct with every second that pass- council, says London Answers, and according' to the Tageblatt, she Come back, I say. You'll drown, ed. Nearer home we have the island of has come to stay. After all, lie says, sure,. They had drifted past a hence in the Innishmurray, tiff the west coast of t But Protheroe took no notice of 'Jim's frantic cry. In that roar of wa- tery evhiclt was. already about his waist, and seemed to be climbing to his ears, he' could hear nothing from the shore which he had left, and if he had done so, he had sense enough to know that it would have been more dangerous to try to turn back than to Ireland. Frere there are no taxes is not the waitress a pttrely Germania! river, and at the next, to which they institution.? Was it not one of the.! were being',hurried; the ice was pack- simply because the fourteen families minor duties of Wot n' - ing. If theygot into thatpackwho live on the island resolutelyr - a h slaughters, I be- e fore reaching the further shore it fuse to pay, In a recent report to the s to the h to offer the a?drTheying I I P horns to the heroes of Valhalla? They I 1 would be the end of them. Tho horses; the Local Government Board, the rate- are therefore 1 spent already,must collector stated that he could not get ere ort an place Ban on fortune -Telling. when they serve p go under in the Berliners with the national beverage.. t chtu�nfn • a boat on u i is no a jovial crowd, they serge , Straining his eyes to the utmost to the island on such en errand as ' and the tables seldom . dIssolve fall g and grinding ice. the mainland to take him But t t 1 d Combe thought that he could just die- collecting rates. At a meeting of the zttg'uts ne line of the farther bank. ego n y Council it was stated laughter, go on. t' • h tl SI' Co t Not long ago, so the story goes the left his lips but it is the f 1 ' f h id Canadians discovered that the Ger- mans had, in some way wholly unex- pected, tapped a Canadian trench telephone wire. A connection had e been made which led to the German objeetr.. Somewhat darker than they one of those positions in which death of as non o , e con h the'1 h ear in the dark below him counci, w o tried to land on the human beings in dire straits to cry for, but was it near enough? 'ehey were island for the sa me purpose were 0 the impossible, And Jim was in a being carried clown stream many yard:; stoned off the shore by. the inhabit - worse strait than the doctor. In the for every foot winch they made in ants! swirl as his foot there were two small the direction of the shore. It was just recipes in her 'cookbook; it will n trenches, Thus the Germans were be a catastrophe when she finds. the able to hear all of the orders passing milk or ereant has soured. , She may on the telephone in that vicinity, ' There was a good deal of consterna- tion when the testing of the line showed that it hacl ben tapped: and the firsti mpulse was to Cut the Ger- even find that the family likes the newt Inge better than -what -site had planned. Ceicce—Cream one cup of sugar and one cup of shortening together. Sift man wire, A Canadian colonel, how - together one . and one-half cups of ever, had a better notion. He took Flom, and a teas;poenfulFof soda, cloves, rho matter up with headquarters and cinnamon, anti nutmeg, and acid it to laid a deep Met to profit by the cir- the 'sugar, alternately pith* ai ten of qumstance, milk. Chop a couple of raisins; At a certain point, the Canadians Sprinkle then]evith half a cupeof,flou.v had finished a mine under the Ger and add to mixture, ' ' Frost with aid man trenches. Its explosion was de - soft 'elrorolete icing. !faired, Then the Canadians arranged It Cherry ry Pudding,—Beat one eggwith a. fake .s b set of orders.. With the Ger- a third of a eup of sugar. Add- •,a''mans listening in orders were issued 03 cup of sour: mill. in which a fourth of for an attack, The Germans did :not a teaspcopful' 01' socia has been tris• ; know,of course that their : en ti•cic• had solved, and a teaspoonful of nteitecl been discovered. huttt r, Their add a cut Of flour 'pc orders >vete em 1 ur ,and that the arta-}. slioulel be heaving darkness around them. They, is made .doubly hard by the tempta- might well have been pieces of daft tion to struggle against -it, Death it - wood, being hustled down steeanm, bat self is, probably not so very dreadful to Jim they would be in that dreary Nature is full of :bogies to coerce het futude in front of him, the horse he wilful children, and the last bogie of stole and the Man he mmurdered. all, used mainly to .make us play ou And the unsteady lights of the Soda our. innings to the end; is possi'biy the Creek lanterns were dancing along the most gentle fraud antongrt them, but river's. course coming down stream to- that struggle in the dark against the wards him, nearer and nearer, until he irresistible waters, with life ,and safe - could hear the voices of those who ty so near at hand, was bitter to bear, carried them in spite of the noise of and at the very climax of it Jim's the waters. horse gave in and turned its head With a curse he, swung himself. into down stream.. the saddle, and wrenching the roan's 1n,a moment they woe racing to- , mad round viciously, he galloped up wards their death. After.slh that long stream for fifty yards, over a chaos ; t'bborta fight against the stream, ! slippery boulders. with the shore almost, within reach, Then he turned lti ; horse's head to- the faihirc of the roan's courage had g wards the rivet•, and drove his spurs ruined thein. If he had been alone it hone but though the colt's spirit was ie possible that Combo would have r,. Listening to Good Purpose. There its a species of sentry groups 1 employed near the' trenches. They, , are called "listening patrols," and their dune{; aro to Ile always on the t' alert to give timely warning of any !attempted attack. One night ah of-' I facer on his rounds inspected a list-' ening patrol stationed in an empty farmhouse. He asked. "Who are you?' . The reply was "Listening patrol, pin" "What are your duties?" "Wo listen for the hen'caeklin' and then we pinches the eggs sir." 1 Safety WoUncled. .bVit• S. S. Kensington—We have such , good news from the front! Dear Charles is safely wounded at last, A•-.-.:_.,..--err_:-.,1,-,5 �,M,— xx4".... u cw.cca:,ax: .z_ars ar----,•--•_•--.-....-,.,,- a cup 01 stoned cherries. Bake -in a ;the very point ender which there lee is hot oven. and -servo -with vanilla. sauce, a " Cattaclian mitre. ' The Germans Seer Cream Pie. --Beat two egg didn't erlow abon't ' the Mine, either, till 11t>;h'., then add a cup of sugar, i Profiting by the i i'ormation obtained cup cf thick sour cream, hall a cup of over the telephone wile the Germans raisin:{ and half a teaspoonful each in turn, planned a surprise far their of cinnamon and nutmeg. Bake be- aggressors. They literally packed tween two crusts. linen in the trenches where tlfesuppos- Dressing for Cold Claw.—'whip a ed. attack vveulcl take place, thio sleep eup of sour cream Lill stiff, then add they were aw,tmclddni '-el;, .y half a cup of vmegeir, slowly, half a they were, waiting for the Canadians eup of rugae, and salt to taste: 1 to come on. Ginger R,alls.-•••Cream ,half a cup of I When time had been given for the sugar with half' a cup of har•teeing, 1 Germans to , maice- ample preparation Adc! one egg, well beaten a eup of !for eifoltual resisfance,'the,Canaciians molasses and a. cup o1 sour milk fir 'exploded their hind „tied 'then made whiclr'a teaspoonful of sole has beenla small •ttedci. Scores of. Germans' dissolved Silt tlielf is spoonful were tciFleel and it'isn't hlcgly that each of cloves, cinnamon, ginger: and the Germans will ever again believe nutmeg with wisp of flour and add,! anything they hear over: a telephone. Then add enough more. flour to; make) _ ,z,• a rather stiff batter, .Hake in gem In after ,yens a pian re oices`be- pan rayica of the failure of'yeatlifnl ambit Ili,:nuls. ];sift otic egg and add a tions. - GR �v ,W: du'n,L , t 'fir >1'ii ¢p ee ever almists and card readers who claimed o be able to tell when the war would . enc!, whether men would he killed, ore an arm' ora leg, gain the Iron Gross or suffer other. fates More Blouses, Lingerie and Skirts—more Table Lilien '9 more Sheets and Pillow Cases more Curtains — are starched with "Silber Gloss", THE CANADA STARCH than any other stern in • CO. LIMITED MONTREAL, CARDINAL, ' .�. BRANTFORD, FORT WILLIAM - Makers _o} Cro 1 "" a a wr Brand" d r� "Lily White" Corn Syrups, and Season's Corn Slaixh. 233 St t a • r Canada. Your grocer has it. ' r. . ry sc p. z rJ•I CQ; For nes aarnn PiriK s tiA.T.5JZz0&Raz, rug: ite%a IL Boss Ball) ALL Si Cures the sick and sets as a prevetitive far ,thrry, Liquid given en the tongue. Safe for brood Mares and all others. Best kidney remedy. By the bottle, or dozen, sem by en druggists and turf goods haus:r+, or sent express paid, by the manufacturers, t lankier, Distemper, Causes and Cure," free. OPONST MEDICAL 00., Okemlats; Goshen, Ana., PCS eeFeeftreel 0 acaeanrcmm eseeel 1'1 ale 4 E eve c C ° IN Si "' SAN 1,1A? Sig S NEAT F F. Dailey Co of Canada Ltd., Hamilton.. Canada j C WRY seem X eee ete