The Seaforth News, 1917-11-01, Page 6MANUFACTURER'S OVERSTOCK
To be cleared ont at
WHOLESALE PRICES
54300
Phtmogrphs 01..1 141
Reg. $50 ` afo 005.
An exceptional opportunity to get a arst-
class machine ut a bargain, Equipped with
A.1 Motor, Universal Tone Arm that plays
all makes of records and Tone Control for
pull or modulated volume. Has, In fact,
all the features found on the higher
Priced
11 Thine . The case is in ,mahogany
linish.One year guarantee with each machine.
If days not as get :yours a represented return
ebaek. within 10
Price while they lust 135 cash with
order or C.O.U.
G. 0. ROBERTSON'
Manufacturers, Agent,
TUItONTU
77 BAY ST.,
.�. kt1i I0IIUIin I nn�iu9'irp'�i III j '
— foseplZ /OCifll .-
Author of Denner Than
"All for a Saran of Paper,""
Life,' eto. Published by Hodder &
Stoughton, Limited. Loudon and Toronto
CHAPTER VI.—(Cont'd.) a commission, but that would have
been foolish; you see I might not have roll it three-quarters of an inch thick,
been able to have got it, and of course Cut the size of the pan, Place in a
a man in my position could nonot go as well -greased pan and set to rise for
Tommy." „ thirty minutes. Brush the top with
"Wliy t?" asked Alice quickly. I egg wash and cover one-quarter of an
DOMESTIC SCIENCE, AT HOME
Sixteenth Lesson, Rolls, Tea Biscuits end Buns.
Rolls and ten biscuits make a de- each other, Set to rise es directed for
llghtful addition to the daily bill of bread for forty. minutes. Bake in a
fare. The regular bread dough may moderate oven for twenty-five mi -
be used 'in malting them. notes. Remove from oven and glace
Parker rouse Rolls with a syrup made of one capful of
Use the recine for white bread, the sugar, one tablespoonful of vinegar,
molasses, one-half cupful of brown
sponge method, When the bread is one tablespoonful of butter, Place in
ready for the pan, roll on a slightly a saucepan and boil to 220 degrees
floured pastry board one-quarter inch Fahrenheit, using a candy thermome-
th:ck. Cut with a four -inch cookie ter, may be
cutter, brush them with melted but- The yollca of two eggs
ter, then fold over in pocketbook style, added to these doughs when starting
pressing firmly. Set on a well -greased if a richer quality is desired.
pan two inches apart. Set to rise for Old Yorkshire Scones
thirty minutes. Then blush with egg Cools a sufficient number of potatoes
and mil
ls wash. Bake for eighteen
to measure one cupful when Mashed,
minutes in a hot oven, Quickly brush and while hot addtwo tablespoonfuls
the tops of the rolls upon their ar- of butter, two tablespoonfuls of 'auger,
rival from the oven with melted but-
ter. two tablespoonfuls of salt, one cup -
Tea Biscuits
Prepare the dough as for the Park-
er House rolls. Roll it one-quarter
inch thick, then brush with melted
butter. Fold over the dough and beat
with a rolling pin for three minutes.
Cut with two-inch cookie cutter. Set
in warm place to rise for eighteen
minutes. Then brush -with egg wash.
Sprinkle with granulated sugar and
bake in a hot oven for fifteen minutes.
Cinnamon Cake
Use the recipe calling for straight
dough method in the bread recipes.
When the dough is ready for the pans,
"That's something like," said many
of Alice's friends; "Alice will make a
splendid minister's wife,"
But when at length Mr. Skelton pro-
posed to Alice, she had no difficulty in am told that lots of men of every inch deep with one-half cupful of
far better positionoHe en Tomld dreamedr her a order join as privates." brown sugar, one-half cupful of flour,
far better than Tom No, thank you," replied Harry, ,two tablespoonfuls of cinnamon, five
of; the work she would have to do as with a laugh. '1 know one chap whotablespoonfuls of lard. Mix the dry
a minister's wife, too, wouldebe then- did that; Edgar Burton.Do you know ingredients well, then rub in the lard
dughly in accord with her tastes and him? He joined at the beginning of until crumbly. Place on the dough
M. desires.But Alice cared nothing for the war, but he quickly got sick of it. in a, moderate oven and bake for
Mr. Skelton. Her heart was sad He said the life was terrible; he des- twenty minutes.a
when she saw how pale he looked at cribed to me how he had to wash up
her refusal, but she had no hesitation. dishes, and scrub the floors of his bar -
The problem,was nottiso facedyher now, racks, and how he had to be pals with
ho ung was so easy tosettle. a lot of chaps who didn't know the
comparative
Harry strangerglike was not a decencies of life. Besides, think of me
comparative Mr. Skel-
ton; she had known him all her life, on a shilling a day!"Still, if your country needs you?"
they had been brought up together in
t the had gone to Sun-
Cinnamon Buns
Use the straight dough mixture.
Take the dough .ne. ready for the
pans and roll it on a slightly :loured
pastry board one-quarter of an inch
thick. Then spread it with brown
su sestet Alice. sugar, cinnamon and currants and one
the same own, they am doing more important work ounce of butter to every pound of
day School together, they had sung at home," replied Harry; "they could dough. Roll like jelly roll, but in
duets together e1 concerts, and al- not do without me at the mill. It's slibes one and one-half inches thick.
ful of scalded milk. Beat well to mix.
Let the mixture cool to,eighty degrees
Fahrenheit, then crumble in one yeast
cake and a sufficient quantity of flour
to make a stiff dough,
and a half cups. Turn on•a pastry
board and knead well for twenty mi-
nutes. Now break off' pieces weigh-
ing one and a half ounces. Mold into
ball;. Cover a tray with a cloth:
lay the molded balls on the cloth and
allow them to rise for ten . minutes.
Now flatten them out with the palm
of the hand. Cover and let rise again
for thirty minutes. Lift with a
spatula or cake turner and put them
one inch apart upon the upturned bot-
tom of a baking pan. Use a little
sifted flour to cover the top of the
scones. Bake in a moderate oven
for fifteen minutes.
Do not grease the upturned surface
of the baking .pan, bat cover it with
a slight coating of Gifted flour.
Egg Glaze for Rolls
Use one egg and four tablespoon-
fuls of syrup. Beat
well thorough-
lytroils a
mix, then applyY:
brush.
The hosewife will find that, if she
buys two medium-sized paint brushes
of fair quality, she will save material
ly in greasing pans and in applyingglaze, giving the food a better appear-1
ance. Treat the new brushes to a
soda bath in scalding water. Wash,
well, then rinse in plenty of cold;
water. Now dry, and they are ready';
for use. Always wash the brushes
1t th•
rth
m
Pr tectb �g
A good article is worthy of a good package.
A rich, strong, delicioustea like Red Rose is
worth putting isito a sealed package to keep it
fresh and good
A cheap, common
tea Is hardly worth
taking care of and is
usually sold in bulk.
Red Rose is always
sold in the sealed
package which keeps
it good.
SIGNAL FOR DAY OR NIGHT,
Improvement on the Flags Now Used
For Semaphore Signaling.
Flags are not very satisfactory for
semaphore signaling. Their "range of
visibility" (for obvious reasons) is
much diminished in a strong breeze;
and under such circumstances a flag
often becomes entangled with the
staff.
An important improvement has been
invented by Sergeant H.First
A. r tpi ice,
ce,
formerly of Battery A,
York Field Artillery. It is -a rigid
semaphore, fitted with an illuminat-
ing device for use at night—when, of
course, flags would be invisible.
Take a wire ring fifteen inches in
diameter and stretch within its cir-
cumference a circular piece of white
bunting with a red centre. Provide
the ring with a; straight handle con-
sisting of a brass rod and wooden
grip. Furnish yourself with two of
these, and they will give you a sema-
though she had never looked at Harry all very well for boys like Tom Poland, place so that the buns barely touch after using.
in the light of a lover she had always I who used to be so fond of you, but for
Been fond of him. I people like me it's different."
Harry was in a good position toe;, There was a silence for a few min -
his father was a manufacturer in elutes,
fairly large way, anal he had just been; " and then Harry went on again:
Alice, you know how fond I am
admitted as a partner into the busy-' of you—in fact, I have loved you all
ness. He was twenty-four years of - my life. You will marry me, won't
age now, was highly respected, you?"
throughout the town, and was looked Harry was very disappointed, and
upon as one who, in a few years would not a little surprised, that Alice did
hold his head high anon,; commercial' not answer in the affirmative right
men. `away; but he had conceded with fairly
During the' last few weeks Harry'; good grace when she had asked for a
hadcomeoften to Mr. Lister's house,' few days to think about it.
stensibly to talk about business, but "It is all right," said Harry to him
Music a Necessity in Wartime.
In time of war everyone expects
to sacrifice a certain amount of lux-
ury. By a simple process of taxa-
tion such sacrifices are automatically
systematized for the entire com-
munity. But the question arises:
really to 'see Alice, ! self as he left the house the nig
I am sure she means yes. And she's' What is a luxury, what a necessity .
each rother and d
smiled at Harry'st e ! a fine loss, the finest in Brunford." I It has been proposed that musical
quent visits. ! That was why Alice sat alone that instruments should be classed as lux -
"I knew our Alice would do the;night
ivehinki g her She
hadtpromised! uries. In other words, music is to be
rig „reply classed with liquor and tobacco as one
wife;ght thin aid Mr. Lister to his three days' time, and although she. alas" those useless frivolities that
that "for a time she went thre about; was very fond of him she could not c utterly and patriotic citizen
Pollard boy, but she threw him
over of her own accord. Harry's ai hying herself to give him the answer every
nice lad, and he's making .a -tidy bit of! he desired. When he had left the! should be glad to give up.
house her father and mother had come 1 What an anomaly! Music, always
brass, ,while Georgy, Briarfield has' • becomes time of war
about made his pile. In two or three ,oto 11, Alice, have you fixed it up 1"' a absolutely, indispensable in to a nation.
years Harry mill havclthe business en -1 She shook her head, but didn't speak. h When the nervous system of every
tirely in his own hands, and then there
will not be a better chance in Brun -
ford for her."
Mrs. Lister sighed.
"I don't think our Alice has for- so,,,a aH�..n ..• - to -night.
gotten Tom Pollard, though," she re- can't do better, my dear. Iiave you When patriotic emotions demand ex -
plied, (fixed it, all up?"pression and encouragement, it is
"Nonsense," replied her husband, "No," she said, music that will supply it. When
"what is the good of her thinking. "Whatl" cried the father,' you dont,
about Tons? I thought he would have . mean to say you have been such a thousands of people have to be brought
done well at one time, and if he hadn't fool as to say,no!" together to one common purpose,
taken up with brat Polly Powell lot; "I have said nothing as yet," was' music is the only universal language,
he might have got an; but he did, and 1her answer, the only oratory that reaches every
then he went for a soldier. What is George Lister heaved a sigh of re -1 heart, We want "0 "The
the good of our Alice thinking about lief. "Ay, well," he said, "it's perhaps.
tLeaf"w and the Canada," "The
him? Even if the war were to finishIa good thing not to say yes at once. MapleAnthem to be sung in every home, al
next week and Tom were to come:Hold him back two or three days and' public place. Yet some so -
back, it would take him years, even: it will make him all the more 'eager.( every
if he had luck, to make five pound a! When a man comes to me to buy cloth called economists limit the possibili-
week, while Harry's making a thou -
"Conte now, lass, you neednt be so,
shy. I know he's asked you to wed! individual is working under. e nstent
him; he asked for my permission like; strain, the calming, g
a man, and then he told me' he wasto ! fluence of music should be given every
portunity to make its presence felt.
creation of a real and lasting nation-
alism.
One-third of all the land in cultiva-1
tion, in the United States is in corn.
sand a year if he's making a penny."
"Ay, I know,' replied Mrs. Lister,
"but you can never judge a lass's
heart. You know how it was VIP us
George; at the very time you asked
me to be your wife you were only
making thirty-three shillings a week,
and William Pott was making hun-
dreds a year, Ile was a far better
chance nor you, George, and people
said I was a fool for not taking hire;
but I couldn't."
"That was a different thing," said
George Lister hastily, "that. Pollard
boy went wrong, Besides we need
not think about that now; Alice gave
him up, and very likely he will be
killed,
On the night when Tom was alone in
the trenches, Harry Briarfield made
hie war to Mr. Lister's house, and it
• was not long before Alice and he were
left alone together. Harry had made
up his mind to make his proposal that
night and be had but little doubt as to
the result,
"Look here, Alice," he said present-
ly, "I want to say something to you,
something very particular, You must
have seen for a long time how fond
I am of you, and perhaps you have
wondered why I haven't spoken, I
wanted to badly enough, but 1 waited
Until father took me Into partnership.
You see," he went on, "at the begin-
ning of the war things were going bad
with us; there was a boom in the cot-
ta' trade about a year ago, but when
>,^oke out there was a regular
PEtita"h th0W ho-weverethings
We have
phone - 54 ',r1 we are
evenings121 ugh
I'� a
I never shows as 'ow I am eager
sella But of ourse you will take
him?"
"I don't know," replied Alice.
"Don't know! Why don't you know?
You like him, don't you?"
"I don't know, father" she replied,
and then she rushed ouit of the room.
"What's the meaning of this, lass?" of civilization and the lowest orders
said George Lister to hit
r "Has of intelligence:; The savage goes to
war with the beat of the tom-tom in
his ears, and the greatest religious and
.political movements have equally owed
their impulse to strains of music.
ties of music by placing an embargo
or. the instruments that should lead
us in singing.
The musical sense is one of the
highest and noblest possessed by man.
It is also one of the most fundamental
•caching down to the earliest stages
she told you anything?
"Not a (Tobe con in ed.saidj Laster.
A Few Don't For Hunters.
Don't pass a loaded gun for inspec-
tion to a brother hunter, or anyone for
that matter.
Don't leave a loaded gun around the
house or camp or anywhere else.
Don't—whether it is loaded or not
—lay hold of a gun by the muzzle and
pull it toward you, from a canoe or a
wagon.
Don't climb over a fence with a
loaded gun in your hands.
Don't think you can do accurats
shooting with a dirty gun.
Don't "walk up" on any wounded
game without having a cartridge in
the chamber of your rifle, ready for
any surprise,
Don't by any chance set the woods
afire,
re
Time was when music, no matter
how universal in its appeal, could be
heard at its best only by the rich, but'
the last ten years have changed ally
this. The tremendous advance in they
manufacture of all kinds of musical 1
instruments, both of the old kind to bel
played by hand and of those that re -1
produce the work of great artists, has
put the highest type of music into
every home.
e People are learning better every
any the great truth that music is not a
luxury but' a necessity.
Here in Canada where we have a
composite of classes, races ands tradi-
tions, to be welded into a nation and
into an army, we have only one lan-
guage that all can understand, . one
means of expression that is common
to all. Music to,createand foster
national spirit and consciotisness,
music to stimulate recruiting, music
to brace and inspire those who march
Vs war and rush to battle, and finally,
music to sustain those who have to
remain behind and wait—our need is
aria music, and music, and still more
music,
Let u do nothing to discourage the
one most powerful influence in the
"Measure thy life by loss instead of
gain;
Not by the wine drunk, but the wine
poured forth;
For love's strength stancleth in love's
sacrifice,
And whoso suffers most hath most to
give."
---Harriet Eleanor King.
Keep seed corn away from rats and
Geo. Wright 8r
Co., Prop,.
If You
Are Not
Already
Acquaiiified
let me introduce you to the Walker
House (The House of Plenty),
wherein home comfort is made the
paramount factor. It is the one
hotel where the management lend
every effort to make its patrons
feel it is "Just like home."
THE WALKER HOUSE
The blouse of Plcnly
TORONTO, CANADA
AIRCRAFT'S PART
IN FUTURE TRADE
'1'IIE WORLD'S AIR ROUTES AND
THEIR, REGULATION.
Suggested Commercial Routes and
National Rights to be Observed
phore as serviceable in a high wind
as in a dead calm..
So much for daytime signaling. For
night use, there is an electric lamp
adjustable in such a way as to pro-
trude through the centre of each red
disk. The lamps are energized by a
small battery -box hung from the
operator's neck.
These two lamps (affixed for night
use by screwing them into place) are
white. A third lamp, that gives a red
color, is fixed in a socket on the front
of the battery box, which the opera-
tor, in a squatting attitude, places
between his feet. He has thus two
whites and one red, and, by waving his
circular "flags," he can send any moss -
age desired.
in Aerial Navigation,
We in Britain, who6e interest has So
long been centred on the all-important
progress of aerials navigation for de-
fensive, as well as offensive purposes,
have not, perhaps, given much thought
to the significance of such progress
when peace arrives, says a writer in
London Answers.
Some folk declare they never wish
to see another aeroplane again as long
as they live, since the sight of such
winged monsters has portended horror
and disaster to many who shelter
within these isles, possible doubt
But there can he no po s
that the enormous development made
by the aviation of the present -will go
ies.
on after the cessation of hostilit
Fantastic though some of the read-
ing may seem, Lord Montagu of
Beaulieu's book, ‘"The World's Air
Routes and their Regulation,"
is a
where
fascinating study, and one
sound common sense and practicabil-
ity
ra the b!l
ity have not been swamped by
im-
agination.
The Right to the Sky.
The preface of this work contains
certain interesting allusions in regard
to aerial legislation in pre-war days.
It tells of the International Aeronauti-
cal Conference, Which sat at Nancy in
1899 and which decided that "only
A lot of bulbs in pots will cheer up
and brighten up the home the com-
ing winter, but they must be planted
now.
Send The.m To
PARNER
Anything in the nature of the
cleaning and dyeing of fabrics
can be entrusted to Parker's
Dye Works with the full assur-
ance of prompt, efficient, and
economical service.
Make a parcel of goods you wish reno-
vated, attach written in-
structions to each piece,
and send to us by parcels
post, or express. We
pay carriage one way.
Or, if you prefer, send
for the booklet first.
Be sure to address your
parcel clearly to receiv-
mg dept.
warfare could reveal the abuses to
which the airplane could be put." Pro-
phetic words, those!
Mention is also made of the first
Act of Parliament passed in regard to
the regulation of aviation—on June
2nd, 1911—which provided for the pro-
tection of the public against dangers
arising from the navigation of air-
craft. The first two sections gave
power to the Secretary of State to
prohibit the navigation of aircraft,
over prohibited areas, and to inflict
penalties for offences. The list of pro-
hibited areas included railway centres,
dockyards, farms, churches, piers,
forts, etc. This law, however, Fritz
seems to have taken pleasure in vio-
lating.
Turning from the historical to the
practical side of the book, Lord Mon-
tagu gives a sketch of suggested trade
routes and national rights to be ob-
served in aerial navigation, British
law allows the owner of private pro-
perty the right to the sky above that
property. In the same way, national
air rights, Lord Montagu contends,
should extend over the whole land
area of that country, and, in the case
of nations possessing a seaboard, the
usual three -anile limit round the coast,
as is afforded seacraft.
Aerial Pglice Craft.
PARKER'S MITDYE WORKS
LI791 YONGE STREET
TORONTO - em
fro
"X1"bilaskohjoi
Aerial traffic could be regulated as
follows: Private airplanes up to 2,000
feet, the space from 2,000 to 4,000 for
silenced aircraft used for commercial
purposes and passenger traffic; the
upper heights, say from 8,000 feet up-
wards, to be reserved for Government
purposes, and the international levels
from 10,000 feet.
In order that this traffic shall be
;la + well regulated in the air as in our
London streets, air police will be re-
quired. Aircraft will be registered at
Lloyd's aerial register, and landing
stages, captive illuminated balloons
for the benefit of night flyers, and
mountain ranges or any great heights,
will be definitely indicated to ensure
safety. Lights or aircraft will be
similar to those used on the sea and
on the land, and the rules of the road
will be observed.
Regarding the actual routes them-
selves, these are so arranged as to
waste the minimum of time in actual
travel. What do you say, for instance,
to embarking at Croydon aerodrome
at seven in the morning, calling at
Marseilles for lunch, and arriving in
Naples at six p.m., in time for din-
ner ?
in -
per?
Annihilation of' Space.
A short trip from St. John's, New -1
Iounclland, to County Kerry in Ire-
> land—a matter of 1,800 miles approxi-
mately—should be accomplished in
sixteen hours.
Fantastical as all this may sound
to our limited intelligence, and still
more limited imagination, v.lien one .4y.
considers that an aeroplane nowadays
is easily capable of a speed of eighty
miles an hour, added to which is the
immense assistance rendered by th
wind currents—many of which :(low at
a rate of anything from thirty to sixty
miles --one can soon run up the speed
for a commercial plane to 110 miles
per hour.
The calm assurance of the book
makes one gasp occasionally. Yet,
should we not all have gasped if pre-
sent-day happenings could have been
revealed to us twenty years ago?
No mistake will be made in increas-
ing Ontario's flocks and herds, !A
great mistake will be made if care if
:v. not taken to breed quality as well as
numbers.
Already in many regions timber .
shortage and high prices have follow-
ed the exhaustion of the local timber
supply. From the public standpoint '
there is a •real need for growing
forests vastly larger than. are now
planned for:
oss11111IIIIiIaIIiI916aeil
4,
't
e
into `,l uyingI x$11^. io
wywo
meoet
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dps
1
66
Only Genuine Victrolas and.
Vidtor Records bear the Trade
Mark known the World over
s
1i a Eel's F Y ice"
Look for it when buying and be sure you get
the genuine article—the real thing costs no more
Berliner Gram -o -phone Co.
LIMIT
MONTREAL Lenoir StreetD
1027.406 0,
%6JII 111111111 1111111111111,000
sea'.elf
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