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Port Perry Star, 14 Aug 1924, p. 2

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| E | 5 : in J Hopson oh >, G RE EN TE A And then," Jane contin "the, . ' sp 3 .B480 4 a p . boa find Tt is h ; delicious than | a tn Shes off in isolated hoa ad one side-and' It is much more d than down with'ss off Jn" iad ond lt goes an ~ the finest Japan, ) Young Hyson -- or Gunpowder. everywh | Aunt Dessie couldn't nurse to save and he did wish tha ---- ere. '| her life, but she could make delicious call his name. "Barry!" : : : soups and jellies. She made them called at. FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. "'SALADA," TORONTS fmte-- a . t l= night and day. The doctor stopped would understand what was for them and distributed them on his but Barry walked up to him round. When I came back in time to utmost dignity and offered his put Aunt Dessie to bed to regain some "Good boy!" cried the father, of the strength she had been throwing patted the dog's head. This away with both hands I hunted for of the tricks that the three days before I found all the Berne had taught spoons, T learned then 'that she delighted to show hadn't even locked the doors; she' = The days were i hadn't had time tol" young monk did not fail "Came back?" Milly inquired softly.' Carl, and before many "You were nursing--" | he wrote: : "Oh, I was better than nothing st] "Barry found Ms frst travelertin -- : : d Be 5 y _. ing|® time like that. Anybody would be." an ---- bY the tired Do not make the mistake of cutting] ung gig Aunt Dessler lorie ap things! jhe sow last aight Sh JTouadad USING THE WILD FRUITS. = |inig ga oy ¢ Hp on Corvomin a ; "Wild Plum Conserve--5 lbs. p Tea! : all air and light in the room. afterwards 7" € the room at a temperature of about! ™ | the Hospice. This is the first time ¢ d ! a8 SC : . 3 70 degrees. Shade the windows, or Surse he Sid, bless hor eurst, that a dog with so short a training plums, 2 Ibs. seeded raisins, b lbs. Toto Toune Sache vas iowa by hae enough to remove strain from thei oo. cin. upstairs; she hadn't) has done such a thing." sugar, 3 sranges, Jules of 3 len en . ofthe name fs In "The Northe eyes but do not make the Joos n seally thought of that before." "Barry knowhow it Zot to be lost," . Blice ae oranges ve ne rir dark. Be careful to see Pp "Jane, you fraud!" Milly cried. | gaid Carl to himself. Veo 2 removing _ se gs. "Put frait, at | ry a Land," . book 'sugar and lemon juice in kettle with|turous journey of two tient does not face a window. Do not nl Another time' the monk' wrotes ICE FOR THE PICNIC. just enough water to keep fruit from make him uncomfortably aim By hao much bedding. All that is needed is up of peasants were: lovers) ot : to keep the skin at a comfortable] During cold weather, a cold drink Wholtiy OP avalanche: The. 'sticking, bring to boiling point and temperature. Remember that the|is usually preferred to a hot one for simmor gently until the fruit ig clear the picnic lunch. "But a piece of ice and thick and of the consistency of is always so bulky and melty and great complication of measles is brouthe preumouis Sud whe You messy to carry in the car," someone is tient you are givin I 5 y prafhieat Your pala; yo certain to object. True, a vacuum bottle will keep cold things cold; the that disease an invitation. 5 the ras es In yHbiordinnxy gases the go only objection being insufficient capacity, away about as quickly as 'it came-- Shree ar four days, X08 Laver ee The simplest solution seems to 'be ing thy tbreak of the Wp just preseding the outbreak o to chip the ice and pack it in vacuum bottles. Two bottles will hold suffi- rash and drops as it becomes Tony o] atien Jovelaped. 5 B 3 vesk iH Pa has| clent ice to furnish cold drinks during gone well. It is always well to have| the day for half a dozen or more per- medical care for measles but is espe-| Sons. To get full capacity, fill the cially important if complications) bottles with ice water when they will oceur. contain no more ice. If a pure water supply is assured at one's destination, the problem is still further simplified, as concentrat- ed fruit juices or very strong tea may easily be carried to be diluted and; chilled whenevr someone gets thirsty. : The best rule for successful picnick-] "Barry is our finest dog. He has ing is "plenty to eat and drink but as!8aved in all the lives of forty persons, little luggage as possible." He is happy, but sometimes he goes ation mnivenin to the edge of the cliff and stands Rare Variety of Game Fish gazing down the long and winding| Being Introduced Into New path. I believe that he is thinking of Brunswick. you. Will you not come and visit us?" The hand that wrote this trembled, At the request of a number of pub-|and now there were no more lettews, lie bodies of St. John, New Brunswick, | for the young monk had died. There the Department of Marine and Fish- | were no long lives on the Pass of St. eries undertook to establish the Buro- | Bernard. He who_gave himself up to pean brown trout in loch Lomond near ; the work of saving Tost travelers knew St. John. The first eggs for this pur-{well that his days would be few. pose were obtained in January, 1921, from the United States Bureau of Now that Carl had no more news Fisheries. A small number of the fry | Of the dog, he thought of him even from these eggs have been retained in oftener, and before long he and his! one to nother, ox aroing the Tittle friend, 'Marco, started to go over the group, last o al rl. For a mo- the ponds aL ® Satenery, aud In the pass. Marco had friends on'the other ment he questioned. Then' there same little over two years old, a few of the | fide, and Carl had a 'deep longing to, Into his eyes the light of a great joy, larger and better developed yielded [Sc Barry. It was 'the edge of the; He made a familiar sound, faint 'and some 5,000 eggs, which are undergo- | Winter, but the storms had not yet, distant, it seemed, but yet clear and] ing incubation. The eggs of the brown | been severe, and they hoped to get distinct. It was "Barry's welcome"--s trout are not easily obtained in Ameri- | through without trouble, and his farewell. ca, and in continuation of the stocking | All went well up to the beginning! So Bary died, in 1816, after twelve of loch Lomond, some 200,000 Loch fof the Valley of Death, Here the When of unselfish, faithful service. Leven trout eggs, a variety closely re- | snow began to fall heavily . The sky nthe cemetery for dogs was lated to the brown trout, were obtain- {was thick and dull, and the.wind was' °Pened in Paris the place of Honor. ed through the United States Bureau rising. It came in savage gusts, Wo8 gi of Fisheriés in exchange for Atlantic were Do' you ever slip into his room, be measles. = Bo quiet now, so clean, so cool, And through the shades of twilight gloom Glimpse skates and boxing gloves, each tool Piled on a shelf--a bat, a ball, A tennis racket; over all The scent of shaving soaps and creams, Th= goal of surly boyhoou dreams --- To think of him, your boy at schocl! book states that Tete Jaune cache was - "so-called from being the spot chosen by an Iroquois trapper, known by the sobriquet of the Tete Jaune or Yellow. head, to bide the furs he obtained on the western side." x The only other printed reference te the origin of the name is in'a letter to the Montreal Gazette in 1874 from Malcolm McLeod, whose father, John 'McLeod, was a figure of some note in the fur trade In the third decade of the nineteenth century. His diaries, letters and papers were in the posses sion of the son. McLeod states that Tete Jaune cacke commemorates a French Canadian named Decoigne wha cached his furs here. The statement reads as follows: "Peto Jaune was $0 called from the color of the hair--not infrequent amongst French Canadians of Breton and Norman French origin ~--of a enterprising French trapper, of the name of Decoigne, who used this singularly appropriate locality--an ime mense hollow, but comparatively level, of some 70 square miles in area, amongst the mountains there--for his "cache" or entrepot in his line of work." . There is one person named Decoigne in fur trade annals. This is Francois Decoigne, whom John McDonald (one of the early fur traders, called to dis tinguish him from others of the name "John McDonald of Garth") in his ' | autobiography styles "a 'young Cana. 'dian gentleman 'from Be fer, M. De colgne, a clever young man." He wag employed in the fur trade in 1795 and we find him as a clerk in the North- 'west Company at Fort George on the North Saskatchewan 'river: September 18, 1798, and in the same region in 1799. In 1804 he was in the Athabas ka Department. In May, 1814, he was _ in charge of Jasper House, Brule Lake, when Franchere, the first man to des cribe_in 'a book the Jasper Park re gion, came east from the Pacific coast: Later -Decoigne transferred to the Hudson's Bay Company but continued And if a mother's heart you bear, His room becomes a hallowed place, And ere you think of leaving there You kneel beside his bed; your face Is pillowed where so oft his own Has lain, your boy so lately 'grown Into a man; and from your soul There throbs a prayer; in calm control You pled before the Throne of Grace: 'marmalade. 'Put in hot, sterilized 'glasses or jars, 'cool and seal. Wild Plum 'Catsup--5 qts. wild plums, 4 Ibs. sugar, 1 pt. vinegar, 1 ut' qt. boiled water, 1% tbsp. cinnamon, as! 1 thep. allspice, 1 tbsp. cloves. Prepare the plums as for sauce, first boiling up with soda and then pitting. - Boil vinegar, sugar, water 'and spices, then add pitted plums, bring to boiling point and 'simmer gently for about thirty minutes. Put in hot, sterilized jars or bottles and bruised, © Somehow he made her | understand that she must lie os his, 10 see Barry an back and put her arms aroun . Cue neck; and "what a proud little lay | "And 'you will see him," said the brother he was when he brought her, Monk, soothingly, as if to.a child, ¢ safely home! How he ever thought; NOW sleep, and you shall be called of getting her on his back Ido not, 800m as he comes. know. He had not yet been taught Find the early gray of 'the morning, that" arco was 'brought in, still half ~~ == |dazed. Barry had found him and When Carl read the letter, he smil-|pawed the stifling snow away and had ed. "We know, don't we, Barry?" he joyfully licked 'his hands and- face said to himself, "More than one of {until he began to awake. But his our little girl friends has had a ride! brain was stupid and dull, his eyes on your 'back, and you learned just|were dim and misty; wild fancies and how to crouch so they could get on|terrors had seized upon him, and easily," while Barry was barking joyfully for At length there came a letter which! help, his only thought was that a said: wild beast had attacked him. He fumbled with 'unsteady hand, 'pulled out his knife, and stabbed the loving friend 'who, with no thought of his own. suffering, 'was, with all his strength, struggling to drag him to shelter. The brave dog's blood red- dened the snowflakes that whirled angrily -around them. Barry's steps staggered more and more. At the gate he dropped and his eyes closed. The 'monks 'knelt around him and] watched him tenderly. "Barry, Barry!" cried Carl, in a voice that trembled with affection and grief, Barry moved his head slightly. His eyes opened. He looked slowly. from O God of mother hearts, whose boys "Have gone from home to school or shop, Where once their whistling, romping noise-- A silence, as'if life would stop! Be with them, God of tenderness; As they are thine, their young lives bless, And in temptation's trying hour Give them of thine all-conqu'ring seal. High Bush Cranberries--In Sep- tember the high-bush cranberries be-| gin to ripen. These should be picked under-ripe as they then make better jelly. Carefully wash and pick over the berries and put in a kettle with just enough water to cover. Cook gently nth the fruit {s tender. Strain -through jelly bag. Add an equal am- ount of sugar to the strained juice, bring to the boiling point and sim- 'mer gently until it jellies. Pour in hot, sterilized, glasses and cool 'and seal. re els at 'For Sore Feet--Minard's Liniment WHY NOT EAT IN THE BASE- ENT? How to keep 'the kitchen cool is a problem in summer. One woman has solved it nicely. Here is her method: "Use. the basement. Do the cook- ing there and eat there. Make it your summer kitchen." Five 'years' ago, when her house was built, the basement was finished as carefully as the rest of the house. It was divided into four big rooms-- kitchen, fruit cellar, storeroom and furnace room. The, walls were plas- tered throughout and the woodwork and doors were painted gray. The kitchen is 26x15 feet, extending the width of the house, with windows facing east and west. The west end of the room is used a8 a dining-room. Here is found, be- sides the long table and chairs, an old-fashianed bookcase with two com- fortable rockers. A twelve-foot square of . linoleum softens the cement floor, and on the shelf beneath the neatly curtained windows are an old- fashioned clock and a couple of plants. All woodwork and furniture in the room are painted a cool gray, and touches of color are introduced in the book bindings, the rocker-cushions and the bowl of 'flowers or fruit that usually graces the dining table. power; O God of love, be with our boys. MEASLES HERE! The child who has contracted measles will probably break out with' the rash fourteen days after the time! of exposure. But he will show the first signs of illness three or four days before the eruption appears, and as this pre-eruptive Stage is one of the most critical periods of the child's illness he must be under care ful supervision from .the very start. Nine or ten days after exposure the child who has contracted measles will begin to show signs of "a cold." If the little one develops a cough, running nose, and watery eyes, keep him at home in a room that is just comfortable, neither too hot nor too cold. If he has fever keep him in bed. If the trouble is measles the rash will probably come out in four days, but bear in mind that this is not a rule without exceptions. I have _+ Been cases in which the rash has de- ~ layed a full week without the child ven to a monumen t in his mem- striking one precinice, Ainging itself FY: This shows the little girl on his being the worse for the delay. The rash of measles is first de- tected inside the mouth and throat. You may see it on the soft palate and the mucous membrane of the cheeks thirty-six hours before it comes on the skin. When it breaks out it generally begins on the face and around the ears and is blotchy instead " of uniform. A fine, uniform rash ap- (pearing first on the chest, indicates | scarlet fever, but a blotchy, rough- {looking rash that comes out first on the face and has with it some swell GOOD HOUSEKEEPING. Great responsibility is 'placed 'to- day upon the woman who is handling the food which is to furnish physical fitness, good health and give the hu- man being sufficient energy to go forth to their daily business so that they, too, may be able to conquer the world. You see about you the ailing folks suffering from many digestive ail- ments that would speedily disappear if the housewife would make a study of foods and the proper methods of cooking so as to conserve the nutri- tive value, as well as appearance, of salmon eggs. The Loch Leven trout eggs were secured from wild trout captured in the streams of Montana and are the result of small distribu- tions of such fry made some years ago. An equal number of Loch Leven trout eggs are undergoing incubation in the Banff hatchery, and the result- ant fry will be distributed in selected waters of the Prairie Provinces. emi The greatest calling for a woman is to be a homemaker.--Mrs. Wintring- ham, M.P, back to another, whirling the young men about with furious blows and bufletings. i "This grows worsa 'all the time," said Carl. "Let uy rest for five min- utes and eat our lunch, and then push on with all our might" "A struggle like this needs some- thing better than bread and cheese," said Marco. "I have brought a flask of the strongest brandy for just such a time." "My grandfather knew the 'moun- tains as well as I know our own house," said Carl, "and he always said that a mountain climber must back whom he rescued after the fall of the avalanche. She is: holding fast to him and Barry's head is turned a little toward her as if he was telling her to trust him and mot be afraid, for he would surely carry her safely home. ' x (The End.) ------ i MY ENAMELED VASE. I. bad in my possession an old 'brown. and-white vase with very ood) sible 'red rose painted on one side, I knew nothing of china painting, lines, but it had an absolutely impos- ; "George used to kiss m 1 that was when he first knew me. He | kisses me right now." "A case of 'hand to mouth,' eh ---- iti. Self-complaceney- 'means either too proud of his naware of his defects. that a man merits or td operate in the same district, name. ly, 'the Athabaska. The cult of the mirror is easily one. of the oldest in the world. hardly believe that 'there was ever a time when a charming face went whol ly unmirroréd, however primitive tha. 'medium of reflection had .to be. Bye gazed entranced at her own Image reflected in'a glassy pool; 'and we know how, long before the inven. tion of glass, the women of.old Egypt, Greece, and Rome had thelr handamir ~~ rors of polished ' metal--burnished . We can Minard's Liniment Heals Outs. 4 Of bronze: or lass sot or less decorated frame. Nis -Bome: of 'those 'ancient 'mirrors, em- ployed as they were in the service of - nor was the vase valuable enough to In a more justify spending even a 'small amount of money. However, I had some blue "enamel, bought at the ten-cent store bo je my ol stove. Bick paint with" : Seven Thor has Mid of ov - I'imixed a lit ck 'paint with it] RN oa to soften it into n pretty' gray add] Wan \ Suaracten oo, 4s symbols of the gu "flowed it 'onto the surface of the| "HEN Soharday. sr eit te, vase, (It the food. Banish the thought that anything will do for a meal and give the plan- ning of a menu special thought as to its value in muscle, bone and struc- ture building; also that it will furnish sufficient energy and heat to enable each member of the family to be 100 per cent. efficient. Make it a habit to have each day, two, if not three times, some succu- lent green food that has not been touched by heat. This means some uncooked food served in salad form. LOCKING UP. "Aren't you gonig to lock up?" Jane asked. "Aren't you going to lock up?" Jane house, you mean I'd as oon think of locking up the well or the pansy| bed! Of course if you'd feel safer--" | "I'd feel like bres through the walls! That's the way I 3 ; Aunt Dessie"" : A look of enlightenment Milly's eyes. many years. of Jouuty Venus Aphrod : Sel hom thelr fair owners , often dedi -- of the fas 3 | cated them in the native hope that the- object not unlike the new | would impart to the faces vases sold in art ¥ AERO - CUSHION INNER TIRES eh Composed

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