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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 21 Oct 1915, p. 6

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THE AEROPLANE AND ITS PAWT IN THE PRESENT WAR. > î of the Natural Leaf preserved in the sealed By Chas. M. Bice, Denver, Colo. In a sense it is ; stimulating . anc glorious to live in these troublouf times, and to witness the wonderfu achievements of science and invention, invention, though .- at present employed mainly in destructive efforts. The time, wé hope, will s'oon come whçn the great war will be a reminiscence, reminiscence, and humanity will turn to the pursuits of peace and happy contentment, contentment, and the busy world will move on as* though nothing ■*so terribly wicked and cruel as war had ever happened. A distinguished part in the great conflict has undoubtedly been played by the ubiquitous, and almost omnipresent, omnipresent, aeroplane, of the heavier- Selected Recipes. , Savory Roly-Poly Pudding.--Make a plain suét crust with three-quarters of a pound of flour and a quarter of a pound of suet, finely minced; roll Jt put rather thin and cover it, first with a, layer of finely sliced or minced raw potato, on this put a layer, of finely chopped meat of any kind, with a very small quantity of minced onion and a seasoning of salt and pepper. Wet the edge all round, roll up, tie in a scalded and floured cloth, and boil for two hours. Yorkshire Tart.--rLine bottom of deep baking dish with pastry, and spread. on it one layer of preserved peaches or peachy jam, mixed with a little preserved ginger cut into small piepes. Weigh two eggs, take their weight in',sugar, in butter and in flour, cream butter and sugar, add the eggs, whipped light, and put in flour, mixed with one-half teaspoon baking powder. powder. Pour this mixture oyer preserves preserves in dish, and bake good brown. A few minutes before taking tart from oven rub top of paste with butter butter or with raw egg. Butter Balls.--Select voung fresh Salt sprinkled on a range will absorb absorb all. grease splutterings. Salt, warmed, and rubbed on a soiled soiled light coat, will clean it. Salt-added to the rinsing water prevents clothes from freezing. Salt placed under baking-tins in an oven prevents their burning. Salt. stops neuralgia if sniffed into the nostril on the affected side. Salt will quickly clean a discolored bath or enamelled utensils. ,SaIt---a lump of--placed in the sink will keep the drain wholesome. Salt placed first in the frying-pan prevents grease from spluttering. Salt and water rubbed into the scalp is good for falling hair after illness. Salt and water removes the lime in new curtains, and makes washing easier. Salt and water cleans all crockery Self-Filling^ B104 Askfto see this new type. There are also Safety and Regular Types, Illustrated booklet sent on request. Avoid substitutes. , Sold By Your Local Dealer ' L. E.Waterman Company, Limited, Montreal blends. shape. Beaded purses in open lattice effect are for use with formal afternoon afternoon costumes. Some of these pretty affairs have frames of tortoise shell and gay tassel trimmings. Gone is the bulky, cumbersome fur coat that added thirty pounds to its wearer--in appearance, if not in actual actual weight--arid in its place* is a new fur coat, inexpressibly smart and youthful, with sleeves set into rather small armholes, close lines over shoulder shoulder and bust and most of the fur in the ripple skirt, which swings out below below the waist line in jaunty, youthful style. Hudson, seal is by all odds the favorite pelt for such coats, and unless unless the seal coat is trimmed with collar collar and cuffs of contrasting pelt it may not claim last-minute modishness for its own. Fashion Hints Thrilling Game of Life Difficulties Needed to Teach Skill and Patience, Dangers to Elicit Courage. Gossip From Fashion 1 H you wear a verv sm covers 3 you are as large setter; > There r veils of some so sin to trifle, filets ; more easily and better than plain wa eyes out not your nose style. If you wear a veil a bedspread, so much the are still more in style, never was such a veil season; every kind are offered, and expensive that it seems a 1 pay so much money for such a The hand-embroidered silk are works of art. . a gay touch is given the new- smt by hand embroidery done with the ordinary wool used for making making sweaters and such garments. This work is easily accomplished and a plain suit is made quite individual by an additional -touch of a well-chosen color. Braids of all widths made into ornaments and combined with silk cords will be used as trimming as well as the metal braids in gold and silver silver combined with soutache braid. Beads, too, have not lost any of their popularity and will be used together with braids. J et will be utilized where occasions allow. Evening? e-own s whites of eggs makes them froth more .quickly. Salt, thrown on the fire once a day, prevents the accumulation of soot in the flues. Salt--a teaspoonful to a pint of warm water--rubbed into weak ankles strengthens them. Salt added to potatoes when nearly nearly done ensures flpuriness and prevents prevents them going to pieces. Salt sprinkled over carpets before So run, that ye may obtain Paul, like his Master, was a man of the people. He mingled with them, saw their activities, their amusements and their temptations. Here he is present at their Olympian games and notes their enthusiasm, their arduous efforts to win and the joy and honor of the victor as he gains the prize. And in this scene Paul finds a symbol symbol of the far more thrilling game of life. Now, they do it to obtain a corruptible corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible. incorruptible. It is a game that has been played played for untold ages, every man and woman woman of us being on* of the two players players in a game of his or her own. The chessboard is the world, the pieces are the conditions of our time and the rules of the game are the laws of nature. nature. The forces on our side are our higher higher self, conscience, a noble ambition . and faith in God. Those against us are our lower physical self, the love of riches and pleasure, the world temptation in .winsome guise, and doubt of the good, The True and Eternal. The stakes for which we are playing i are a worthy manhood or .womanhood, usefulness, the respect of our fellow ; men, the approval of God and eternal < life. Or, losing, our career will be 1 one of weakness, failure and miscar- riage of this life and of that which is to come. Let no one protest on PLAN "BOOK OF GRATITUDE removes the mark. Salt thrown on fallen soot prevents the carpet marking, and enables the soot to be swept up cleanly. ' Salt sniffed into the nose in the early morning, and the mouth then washed out with warm water, cures catarrh. Salt and water will prevent the red borders in towels, etc., from running if the towels are steeped in it for twenty-four hours. melted butter, some beaten egg, a teaspoonful of anchovy sauce and a teaspoonful of finely chopped pars- Ley, with pepper and salt to season. The mixture should be of a workable consistency, and it is then made into balls with floured hands, brushed with sgg, and tossed in fine breadcrumbs. The balls are then fried in deep smoking smoking fat until of a pretty golden color, and when drained servèd hot and piled on a hot ashet on which a doily has been placed. To Prepare Cauliflpwer.---Prepare cauliflower as for boiled cauliflower and steam until soft.. Separate in pieces and pour over the follow?™ _ With polonaise, bustle and drapery the evening dress of future winter affairs affairs bids fair to add a varied effect to costume where last year the be- dressed throng, whether young or old, was, to say the least, tiresome. Besides, it was most difficult to distinguish distinguish at a distance whether it was mother, daughter or grandmother. The . eighteenth century sleeve, IS made of Wlllf'.P I'icfo nr* nr* Winter Afternoon Frock. The approach of cold weather not only makes the high collar more popular popular but increasingly appropriate and sensible. The high collar has a' dignity dignity about it that is pleasing, yet it i lacks that rigidity - and stiffness so 1 patent in styles of the past. A mo- j del which would make a most becom- account of this hazardous game. For it but gives zest to life, and shows the Creator's wise design. This world is fuller of great souls, history shines with more half cupful vinegar. Cook over hot water until mixture thickens. Remove Remove from fire and add two tablespoonfuls tablespoonfuls butter cooked with one teaspoonful teaspoonful finely-chopped parsley. Old-fashioned Ginger Bread.--Sift one teaspoonful of baking powder and half a teaspoonful of salt twice, with two cupfuls of flour. Stir to a cream, half a cupful of butter, the same of sugar and the same of molasses. molasses. Warm the mixture slightly and beat light before adding a well- whipped egg, a half teaspoonful of ginger.. Dissolve half a teaspoonful 91 baking soda in a tablespoonful of hot water; stir this into half a cupful cupful of sweet milk; lastly, stir in the flour, beat hard for one minute, and bake in two shallow pans, well buttered buttered or in pate pans. Banana Cream Pie.--Two cuds milk-. MISTRESS OF THE SEAS may show a layer of thick, creamy- white fur all over the tongue. Sometimes, Sometimes, when the patient is much exhausted, exhausted, the tongue will not be fur- fed, but dry, red, and raw. Thrush" consists of small white patches raised above the surface, and although not serious in itself, gener- | all Y shows that the constitution is weak. . One strange thing about the tongue is that, although it so often betrays the state of the stomach to the physi- cian, yet in two of the most serious stomach troubles-- cancêr and gastric gastric ulcer--the tongue is generally very clean. j The tongue in health is always under under the muscular control of its owner, owner, and. should be perfectly steady when , it. is put out. A tremulous tongue denotes weakness, and the tongue that is .coated and tremulous in the morning, but that grows steadier steadier through the day, is generally the -result of too much alcohol.--Youth's Yxoio uu inimin, puDiisnes in ftis newspaper, newspaper, Le Journal, an article highly eulogizing Britain's war machine. "Everybody knows," he writes, "that the British Fleet was considerably superior to the German Fleet at the outbreak of the war, but what is not generally known is that the activity on naval construction of our excellent Ally in the past year has attained almost unimaginable proportions. The extraordinary reinforced British Fleet can laugh at its miserable enemy. We cannot too warmly congratulate Great Britain on refraining from resting content with her proud superiority. Mistress of the , Seas,'. she remains the supreme arbiter of peace. Her territory constitutes an inviolable redoubt redoubt of European defence against German barbarism. From her impregnable impregnable rock will flow out a stream of armaments against which German obstinacy will wear itself down." Kolinsky, the Russian cat, is the peltry most in demand by the fashionable fashionable dressmakers for trimming purposes; purposes; somj of it is pointed with silver silver like a fine fox. Sealskin has come into its own again after years of oblivion, oblivion, and beaver is ? ubiquitous. Opossum is again used, and all the The Mouth in HI Health. One of the first things a doctor does when he is called to a patient is tq look into his mouth. That is because because it is the quickest and easiest way to examine an internal cavity of the body .and observe the signs of health or disease there displayed. The mouth is lined with mucous membrane which is quickly affected by many disorders; arid the tongue, which is simply a mass of muscle wrapped up in mucous membrane, is. a veritable horizontal guide post. Since it is a muscle, its general size and shape and its susceptibility to proper -control, inform the physician of the muscular condition of the patient; patient; and the state of the mucous membrane that covers it indicates the general systemic condition. A person person who suffers from fever of any degree will generally show a "furred" tongue. The. word graphically de- Chiria No. 9082. ing afternoon frock ,is Ladies' Home Journal Pattern No. 9082, which consists consists of a waist with a back extending extending over the shoulder forming a shallow shallow yoke effect, while the deep front yoke has a standing collar with applied applied tucked sections, which are - extremely extremely novel. , The* full-length sleeves are finished with a band and circular, .cuffs. The three-piece gathered. gathered. skirt is perforated for trimming sections, and is lengthéned bv a bias Ineffective Economy. Boswell, in his classic ." Johnson," tells the following i ing the opinion of his friend subject of thrift: "I told him house For Infants and Children. ; a certain gentleman's J there was thought to be such extfava- ; gance, or bad management, he was • living beyond his income, his lady had j objected te the cutting of à pickled 1 ma ?go, and that I had taken an oppor- j tunity to ask the price of it, and found ; it was only two shillings, so here was , a very poor saving." Johnson : "Sir, J that is the bluiideririg economy of a I narrow understanding. It is stopping one hole in a sieve." What Salt Will Do. y Salt will revive a dying fire. Salt will remove stains on marble. Salt--coarse--is a good cleanser of irons. Salt in water or other fluid retards NOW--You Can Have A PERFECT Complexion Pattern Company, 183-A George St, Toronto, Ontario. It takes over one-third of a second for the eyelid to open ànd close. the boiling. Salt mixed with soda is a remedy for bee stings. . Salt and water makes an excellent throat gargle. Salt and hot water will thaw a frozen drain-pipe. Salt will remove tea stains from delicate delicate china cups. Salt spread in blackbeetle haunts will kill the pests. Salt added-to snow makes the mixture mixture much colder. ' - _ Salt and water, warm, will stop chilblains from itching. Salt thrown, on a fire will extinguish à burning chimney. Salt and lukewarm water is an excellent excellent lotion for styes. Salt and warm * water is an emetic in cases of poisoning. Wants' to Know. Little Girl--"Please, Mrs, Brown, mother wants to know if she can borrow borrow a dozen eggs. She wants to put them under a hen." Mrs. Brown--"So you have got a hen, have you r my dear. I didn't know your mother kept hens." Little Girl--"No, she doesn't; but Mrs. White is going to lend us a hen that is going to sit, and mother thought if you'd lend us the eggs we could find the nest ourself." SKIN FOOD WRINKLE CHASI FSTT has solved the problem of beauty. Its use is bringing bringing back the freshness and bloom of youth, and driving away, wherever used consistently, the wrinkles of worry and age. Used for centuries by the famous beauties of the East. Guaranteed free from hair growth. Your druggist h»«« it. SEE YOUR DRUGGIST TO-DAY. gg st has USIT MANUFACTURING COMPANY, 476 Ronces valles Avenue, Toronto. gioutcu louiiu uu see u ms men were marching well, and was horrified to see the whole of the front two ranks bunched, up in the middle and every man watching eagerly the commanding commanding arïirf.'s. efforts to retain his seat. "Ease off, there!" he shouted angrily. angrily. . "No, 'e ain't," cried a recruit, "but 'e soon will be!" Limited According to Indian mythology, the earth is supported by eight white elephants. elephants. - ■ : 'Vj'v

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