Halton Hills Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 7 Feb 1918, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

M li»l» â-  â-  *â-  / ^ ^ Between Cousins; OR, A nnCLARATION OF WAR. v:! CHAPTER XX.- (ConlM.) just like young cats- certain to be "I can well believe that it shuold ' "^ 'f'- the binKest Tom a-Roing. At put you out, Mr. Albert, ami you with her age a fine lump of flesh is enough such plans in your h-ad. But it is so »" strike any of them silly. It shP certain that we shall trouble vou? If wa-sn't moonstruck shod probably teel it were not for father, 1 should be for ^^'\ »t the idea of marryinK a man leaving the country- it would be i with a tool-bag on his back. ^^ easier for Miss Fenelhi herself; but I "1^"^ sh« s not Ifoing to marry him, cannot, leave him in hi.s ailing state." i ''"stily explained Albert, not very This tone of (luiet assurance and , P''^"'"'"t'y touched at recognising his that "we" was the last drop in the "^n taunt in this more brutal garb, cup of Albert's wrath. Such a "'t's .iust a passing fancy, of course, dcsrenl into details seemed to tut a «"'' 't's the business of her relations seal of cer'aintv upon n thing which â€" -'^e rational onesâ€" to prevent her he still persisted in treating upon the level of a mere bogey. ^ "You are a blackguard," he said, be- tween his closed teeth, yet plainly en- ough, while by his t,ides his hands nervou.^iy closed. "An I you anther brother, eise you might well happen to choke upon that word . " The face of the elder man had gro-vn dark and hard disciimposed making a mess of her life. Trust me for that! I'll make it impossible, somehow; but meanwhile I think you ought to know how matters stand, considering your impending connec- tion with Wxk: family." "Humph!" .Mr, Kerrell, sitting in his office- chair, before a table piled with ledgers fell into a brown study, \vhose depth ut "scarcely ''>' "" "i"""'* Ijcautificd his low-browed, thick-lipped face With craned neck and starting eves ' """^ about Macgilvray of Rock- his hands .still clenched by l>is .sides '^'i"*' "? ^''^'^ J"'5t been making tools his body taut and ready, Albert stood "'' -^"^ ""' ' suppose. If he had come close before him. One movement of Duncan's would inevitably have pre- cipitated a physical collision, that old, original way of settling (|uarrels, to which, ill moments of elementary pas- sion, even civilised and even cducate<l Man occasionally return.s. Rut Dun- can, although his eye held that of Al- bcr-, in a grip that in itself was a warning, moved as little as does a big to the point this couldn't have hap- pened. That would have 'iw.'A her up, you bet!" Here, also making a virtue of neces- sity.^lbort confessed tlia truth, whose primary result was to cause the man- ager to bound in his ohaii- in an almost .~huttlt-cock fashion. , "What! Refused him? Decidedly vou'd better hand her over to the near- ELECTRICITY FOB CROPS. On June 18 the electrified oats were ! fifty-eight inches high, while the oats BriliHh and French Experiments Show i not treated so were only forty inches Amazing ResultR. ' '" beight. On June 2f) the compari- \ son was seventy-three against fifty- So successful have been the English six inches and on July 3, 101 against experiments in increasing crops by sixty-three. electrical charges that France is going Oii August 17 the charges were dis- into the work with great energy and j continued. On Sept. 12 the oats were on a tremendous scope. Le Journal, j thrashed with the following amazing one of the leading Parisian news- results. The electrified crop measured papers, gives the results of the first' 108.5 bushels to the hectare (two trial of the experiment at Ecosse. acres), while the other crop came Thirteen acres without other fertiliza- ! only to 72.5 bushels. The straw of the tion were fed by electric charges former crop weighed almost double emanating from twenty-one parallel that of the latter. wires strung on six and one-half foot i <• â€" posts across its surface, 90,000 volts | Prunes are one of the best fruits to were shot through these wires, strlk- i serve on wheatless days, since they ing at frequent intervals ball-like in- , supply iron, as does whole wheat Food Control Comer I»rtioi«WantedforOa8h MtatotorMi MotvMai SMaiawoiki lM«i Old 01ita»i Ont OlMa: OraaawM: Watehaai Biani TkbU TTu*. .Standard Flour and Standard Bread For Canada. Announcement is made from the Of- fice of the Food Controller that a date would soon be named after which Canadian mills will not be permitted to use more than 265 pounds of spring wheat or more than 275 pounds of winter wheat to produce 196 pounds of flour. This will give standard grades of spring wheat and winter wheat flour for all Canada and no mill will be allowed to manufacture flour of a lower extraction than the standard. By tratohMi miii»»i ^ _ ^ _ Writ* vt xnd by SxvrtH to • B M. k T. JBirXZWB, lamltad ' ANTIQfK aALLERlK.S tS Mitt 30 OoUaff* Street. Toronto. Oat. terrupters between which they flash and sparkle across sixteen inch spaces. This electric current stimulates the growth of the seed. The oats, sown on the 27th of March, scarce and expensive. making available a larger part of the Dried' apricots, prunes of other dried ' wheat berry for human consumption fi-iiit if soaked for twenty-four hours' ^nd by stopping the manufacture of instead of overnight seem to require; Patent flour, a considerable saving of less sugar for sweetening. Sugar is , -Ij-^/^-^P^ ^MorLter a'^nlfiTrm «O.000 were killed; at HasUngs the THE SAFE WAR. Percentage of Killed is Par Less Than In Battles of Old. Despite the number of deaths in modern battles, the percentage of kill- ed is far less than in the battles of old. In the 1917 spring drive of the French army 15,000 men were killed out of approximately 200,000 engaged. Com- pare this ftgure (one of th.-; bloodiest on the allies' side) with some statla- tics from ancient and medieval battles. At Cannas 40,000 Romans out of tablished which Normans, though the victors, lost 10.- taniisnea wnicn ^^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^^ ,^^ ^^ ^^^ j^_ 000 Frenchmen out of 100,000 were, it came up on April 13 and the current | Feed to produce one dozen eggs extraction will be est was fed it thenceforth. From the : costs 10c. with pullets, 14c. with two-' °J^y ^e increased if considered advis- IGth of May on a noticeable difference year-old hens and 19c. with three- [ '*"'^- ! jg asserted killed, without reckoning in the growth of the oats in this field, year-old hens in a three-year feeding; The Food Controller is also making ^.j^^ wounded and others not treated by electricity ' test recently reported by the United , arrangements for a standard loaf of could be noted. I States Department of Agriculture. the WHAT'S WRONG IN THE HOME? cheerfully began the ear so she listened carefully for dog when a little dog is snarling into '^''t a.sylum. Preferring a quarryman its face. His hands were in his pockets, nor did he even take the pre- caution of withdrawing them, and as little as there was a preparation of defence, as little was there a provoca- tion to attack. For the space of a few breaths Al- bert's tiii.<e at'itude per.sisled, then gradually relaxed, and with the re- laxation c!ime a rush of smarting shame. The boy's impotent I'ury felt itself silently rebuked by thi' mart's mature self-ma.sterv. to a landowner â€" why, it's not oven de cent! A fine connection, indeed, ha, lui! â€" and I who have been saying to •lulia that Mr. Macgilvray's influence would probably be able to get me on a belter ji.b than this!" Me sal down again, drumminr 'ti- oationtlv with his thick fingers upon 11 bread from the standard flour. He has written to millers, wholesale flour dealers, wholesale grocers, retail flour dealers and retail grocers, emphasiz- ing the necessity of discouraging hoarding of flour. It is pointed out that the new regulations will not les- sen the quantity available for con- sumption in the Dominion. Millers are asked not to sell more than the usual quantities of flour to bakers and wholesale dealers and t advise their custnnierji not to stoc heavily with regular grades of flou' Wholesale dealers are asked not t allov/ retail dealers to stock heavi". rt When the flintlock reigned the av- erage proportion of killed and wound- ed in ten battles, beginning with Zorndorflf in 1758 and ending with Waterloo, was from one-fourth to one- fifth of the troops present en both sides. The heaviest loss was at Zorn- dorff, where 32,916 out of 82,000 were killed or wounded. It was also vers heavy at Eylau, being 55,00^' out of 1GO,000 men. In the campaign in Italy in 1859 â- flea v.-cre used on bo^h sides, and !e proportion of casualties to com- â- itants was at Magen'a and Solferi- -> one-eleventh. In the Franco- "russian war, when both sid^s were -med with breech-loarting ri'^ -s, the erage proportion of ki"ed and ounded at Worth, Spicher- -. Mars- e-Tour, Gravelotte and S-r'an was one-ninth, the heaviest Io.=s hfing at half an ear to Albert's soothing as- surances. "How do you mean to pievonl i! ?" he ungraciousl.v inquirc'd. To end the interview with as little "^'irst by gaining time. His father further loss of dignity as was pos.sible 'â- '* against it, mercifully, and he is ill; seemed all that remained. i that will <lelay things anyway through "Oh, it is no use talking while you the winter; ami during the winter it's "W(dl, Mother, .Mr. Benton, "what do you want for [disturbing sounds as well your birthday?" | a squeaky hings of the swinging „,ith regular grades of flour and .. "Nothing at all!" Mother answer d i door in ihe dining-room caught her at- tail dealers are asked not to sell mor defiantly. i tention as she passed through it. Down than one week's flour to families, e: "Why, Mother!" faltered Ruth, i ^^"t a memorandum. The wind was cept in cases where it is impossible fo. "What's the matter' You're not sick ' blowing and the offending window in the customer to secure supplies week are you?" 'jthe same room began its rat-tat-tat. ly. Millers are also requested not to I ^^r;:^^:^^;;;; "^herrit wa? one-sixth "Yes," she an.swered, "sick of hav- ^7/"" T ; y°" ""^ t'"" V ^^°^Z '"^'^"l'"!- '''''.'Jf *° i ^''^^ T^?'" â- â- ".» •â- â-  ' >-- 1 â€" in,, „.,,, ,u:„„„ „ • . ii. V, ed Mfs. Benton as she wrote. West quantities of flour when purchasing rmt^ rif fh(. .•h-iii' -i nd leiulinif (inl V ' '"*^ "^^ things come into the house ,• â-  â-  , .., „ ., j .. i. ^l -,â-  rms ot tne man, and lending oniy > ,, , 7. . . , , ,u- dinmR-room window rattles. : other products of the mill. "neii all the time it is the old things - that should have attenti9n. I tell you, these little annoyances are get- ting on my nerves and I can't enjoy my home at all for worrying about all the things that need attention. The kit and the smallest at Sedan where i was one-twelfth. it AVOUND STATISTICS. The bathroom door stuck at the/bot- Mr. Hanna states that it should be i torn and the windov/ had to be prop- distinctly understood that "millers, ped up because the rope holding its wholesalers and retailers who do not iron weight had broken. One hinge accede to these requests will be Showing the Percentage of Mortal In- was missing from the kitchen cup- promptly dealt with and the ship- 1 juries on Battlefields. are in this jiig-headed mood," he de clared, gathering together the frag- ments of his initial haughtiness. "Rut you will think bettor (f it, and so will Fcnella; I will make her think better of it. .And, in any ca.se, this pre ton to one Fcnella will beconio ration- al." "And if she doesn't?" chen faucet leaks. The dining-room window rattles until it nearly drives board door and the spring on the back ment of flour by or to thesi persons j screen was weak so that the door will be prohibited." me distracted. The window-blind in I my bedroom refuses "Then something else may happen,! than half way and the bottom board â€"will happen, in fact. I don't knowl on the stairway creaks loud enough to, „.„_„ *,.! what, but it's just got to." [wake anyone from a sound sleep," " '' could not shut quickly enough to keep The letter adds that Statistics of men wounded in trenih a date will be ' ''â- warfare have just been published for flies out. The offending board on set afte.- which bakers will be required tbe period between January, 191<;, and to go upmore^ jjj^^ stairway and a board on the back to sell their bread based on the price Ju""- l^^^- Seven and eighty-seven steps which needed additional nails of the standard flour. Therefore, hundredths per cent, of wounded ra^n bakers who purchase large stocks of - d»e on the battlefield. Ten and six- i The kitchen stool had a habit of los- ; patent flour may find themselves in an teen-hundredths per cent, die later attention and the chddrcn and 1 will; Though much longer than she had ex- as the patents and even more con- i wounds, rifles and revolvers 39.16 per give you a shower of 'annoyance re-,peeted. Mis. Benton viewed it with ducive to health. Samples of the ^ '^^nt, bayonets 0.59 and gas 5.61. movers for your birthday. How's; satisfaction. What a joy it was to standard spring and winter wheat i Bombs, which have supplanted bay- that? ing with wild plans of action, his '"''t. Pronounced the arrangement un- vanity .smarting under the conscious- 1 '''^'"^'^^'^• ness that the advantage of the inter- 1 "How about buying him off? ' sug- view had not been on his side I gestcd the maiuiger, after another, i„at , , ^v , „ ,, ,. „ -.i i ^ â-  i. 1 j .1 -i, • I gloom v pause. "k hundred pounds' , j know that all these petty annoyances flours will be furnished and all mills I (roes along way with a man who earns' "'" '^''B'n at once!' exclaimed Mrs.' were to be wiped out in one day! | will be required to produce a quality CH.APTKK .XXI. j thirty shillings a week. .\nd I j Benton, determined to grasp the op-i What is wrong in your home? If of flour which will not be superior in its deaih-bed of withering i shouldn't mind going halves if it rids, portunity. "I never fell Ihat we can, the items were counted, the sum total color to the standard samples. Every and yellowing bracken, the j vis of him." ' "'ford to have an expert come out here: would doubtless astonish you. Induce mill must furnish to the Food Con- summer lay beautifully dy- Albert .shook his head, with in-, and allend to these little things and I the liandv man of the house to set a troller's Office every two weeks a mg; and from that very bed, as from! creased decision. To DuMcan's in- [ y,>u never have time." certain time to attend to all these ' statement showing the quantity of a bed of birth, autumn ro.se up, with 1 terlocutor of the other day Mr. Ber j ..i-,, ,,.|.^ ^ j„ f,.,,,^, ^,,^, i,,,,,;, ,. utn^ ^.^ j^,. „, \,^ ^wn "handy ^vheat ground and the weight of flour m her lace a sad.ler. milder, more ,n-! rell's proposal seemc.l almost humor- ,„.,„„i^^,,, ,,^_. j,„^j,^,^^, ^' | ^^^^„ "y^^'^.j,, ^.^ \^,^^.,^^^^ ^^j de ' produced therefrom. FaUure on the f\h, high and mighty, is be? That's: Mrs. Benton immediately .started on! lighted to see how much can be ac- [ part of any of the mills to comply the worst sort to deal with. Yes, 1 " '""' "^ "'o house, trying to view itjcomplished by determination plus glue, with the Food Controller's regulations might have known it, â€" had a taste of j througli the critical cye.s of a stranger, j nails, string and u few simple tools. , may result in cancellation of license, him ill spring, .A regular pig-head-, i'he eyes can usually endure more than! Try it. One hundred and sixty-seven Canad- ed, cantankenius fellow; and always j ' ian flour mills are already under Upon h.'>ather Ardlocli sinuating because more suggestive | ous beauty. For Feneila this Reason of passage was a passage in more senses than one. These stormy autumn weeks held for her both a new bliss and a new torture. She had been too used to I just he crossing my path . cherishing even though calculating! â€" care, to pelting and appicjval, to bej able to bear disapproval lightly. So much coldness after so much warmth could not but chill her to the heart.' lIoW much greater would have been j ber happiness had she l)een able to' shari' it with those nearest her! , ' Without her father's support, there' were moments when Fenella's courage And mine as well," laughed .Al- bert bitterly. "We're in the same boat, so far as that goes; but sure- ly we'd need to bo idiots not to (ind a way out of it!" "Well, find a way out of it! Il'.s your business lo do so, since it's your imprudence that is lo blame." Through the words there rang a cer- tain note of waiiiing, ap))ieciated by onet work so largely, are classed with artillery. Percentages for w'ounds iiv the heail and neck are 21.92, for the trunk ihey are 21.63. while wounds in the extrem- ities stand at 56.4 per cent. Twenty-three and sixty-two hun- dredths per cent, of the wounds are classed as serious. 63.01 as medium and 13.07 as so slight that the victims can return to the lines immediatelv. WAR ME.NIIS TO SAVE WHEAT, BKKF AM) BACON. Breakfast. - Buckwheat griddle! Pea Soup. -Cover a shin bone with cakes, syrup, toast, tea or coffee. 'cold water, and bring to a boil. Boil Diivner. Boston roast, corn bread, 1 gently for the whole of two hours. might have tottered. And even his' Albert at its full value.' siipnort was but a passive one. j Left to himself, the black-haired manager remained scowling into space, which was his fashion of being iie- piessod. It really would be an awful iiore to have to break olf his engage- )elhrothalâ€" stern though practical considerations had seemed to warn been the chief motor of his action, they had not been the only ones. It was his reason which had pointed out to him the advisability of "settling down," but it was his taste which had seleeted ,Iulia, whose large and some- what "loud" personality had for him that pei-uliiir attraction which bright colors and big patterns hav<" for cer- tain primitive minds. lli his opinion he quite outshono her sister, if only These weeks of betrothal, full secret happiness, were nevertheless empty of what is usually lUKlerstood as joy. This was as Feneila had known it must be. Kven when, in the Pass, she had felt Duncan's bands upon her own. and had raised her face to meet his, it had been with an overflowing, but not with a light heart. .She had sinno<l agiiinst a soiial law, and must pay the penalty. The very sci'ne of their and hard-featuied the young people of that which lay luf- fnrr th(ni: no pleasant dalliance, but a bittej- struggle with the picjudiic of a caste. Yet, for all the voice of rea- son, it reniaine<l hard to be treated as a traitor lo a common i.'ause. From the outer public the situiiliiin .Htill remained screened, the engage- meiii, beinjf so far unpublish<Ml - the one conce.s3lon wrung by .Albert from his /a'her. So long as it was not an- nounced it remaint'VI pt)s.sible to con- sider it as non-existent; which meant a gain of time for further measures. The absence (jf the Attertons on a round of visits struck .Albert as a prrividential arrangement, since even well-guarded se( rets have a way of leaking out. To Air. Berrell, however, il had hoeii necesiary to speak, precisely for fear of this leaking process. stntement which Albert, in some tre- had been matle to feel it in sumnie nidation, pomonally made to his future There were ways and means enough, Urother-in-law the fact did not figure the heavens be praised! as a fuel, hut riilher as a danger to! (To bo continued. ( be averted. Kven In this modilieil .> shape Julia's fiuii(*e look it badly. "That fellow? The troublesome workman?" he repeated, in a tone or' Ik'iiorance, says Dr. ,lohn drier llib- arrogaiit astonishment. •â- |In.'» your ''cn. 's quick to betray itself. A young sister gone off her head? How did woman met a young man in a library, she get acquainted with him?" lard in the course of their conversa- .'^omcwhat shamefacedly Albert ex-' n,,,, the man remarked that h. plained about the sb^k-calls. ; great reader. "Douc^dly imprudent of you to al apple sauce, tea. Supper. Potato soup, oatmeal muf fins, apple sauce, tea. The recipe for Boston Koast, men- tioned above, is as follows:- - Boston Roast.- -2 cups dry kidney beans, 1 cup bread crumbs, 2 cups grated cheese, M teaspoons salt, \k cup li(|uid, 1 tablespoon chopped onion. Soak beans 24 hours. Cook in salt- ed water until soft. Drain, put I license from the Food- Controller's Of- 1 ftce. All the remaining mills 'will be similarly licensed. The profits of the licensed mills have been limited to a maximum average of twenty-five cents on the milling of enough wheat to make a barrel of flour (196 lbs.). I Keep sharp grit, charcoal and green feed before the hen always. THE RA PE OF TREK (IROWTIi. Fast Does a Forest Rebuild ment, but it would be a still greater through food (diopper, aild oniun, bore to have Duncan M'Donnell for a ,.|,eese, crumbs, more sait if needed brother-in-lnw Rather than that he , p,,,,.,, „f „,, ,^,„^.,, j„ „,, j^.j^ ,,^.„,„ would let .lulia go. .At this punt were cooked (about 'i; to moist- of bis meditations Mr. Berrell noisily "-- -""^'o v";'""' â- ^- '"P e.<(pelled the air from his pufl-ed I '""'• '•'."•" """ '"."f. I'»l<e in moderate cheeks, -his fa.shiCii of sighing. For,!"^''"" '»•â-  '1" minutes. Baste oc- casionally with hot water and fat. Br.'akfast.- Oatmeal porridge, bak- ed apples, brown bread toast, lea or cnffee. Dinner. Fish pie, nuishod potatoes, liidled carrots, cup pudding. Supper.â€" Cream of celery soup, war j Then add one cup of poas brose, pep- per and salt to taste, and a very little grated onion. Boil for half an hour longer strain and serve. ! Emergency Biscuits.â€" 1 cup white ^ flour, I ou^ gryham flour, '4 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons butter substitute, ^^^^ ^.„^, „^,^ „ ,,-,,^..,1 5 teaspoons baking powder. Milk to, . moisten into a dough a little too sof 1 1 Itsei. . to roll. Drop by spoonfuls onto a I The rate of growth of trees in the greased pan, and bake in a hot oven, j forest is usually exaggerated greatly. -â€" â€" j Dr. C. D. Howe, who during the past Breakfast. - - Buckwheat griddle j summer made a stuily of the reprodue- cakes, syrup, corn bread, coffee. j tion and growth of the pulpwood spe- Dinner.-lJaked beans, brown bread, I cies after logging, in the St. Maurice baked potato. j Valley, Quebec, on behalf of the Com- Supper. â€" Scalloped tomato, bread, mission of Conservation, produced the stowed prunes, tea. | following conclusions; The recipes for Baked Beans, Brown i Over 2,000 trees were analyzed to Bread and Barley Bread, mentioned | determine their rate of growth in Raw Furs And Olnaeni' Wautsd Klg-hest PrlCM Paid N. SILVER 280 St. Pkol St. W., Montreal. F.Q. 20 j-e;u-9 of rellabl.j iradlnK B«fei-»na»â€" Union Bk. of Canada uiitiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimtii»s above, arc as follows: - 'diameter, height and volume. While | : die tea biscuits, j f'""!"' salt ' lasses anil bjeail, co<tag( syrup, tea. The recipes for for lh(( reason that there was more of Pudding, meiitione<l above, are as fol- hour.s, her. To renounce her would un(|ues- inws: - i Bailey Brown Bread.â€" 2 cups graham flour, ' the results of this study have not yet 1 cup white flour, % cup molasses, | been tabulated, they have gone far 1% cups sweet milk, % teaspoons t-nough to justify the statement that soda, I'i; teaspoons salt. Sift the Within the forest type under consider- tionably cost a pang; thi thought of it quickened his* spite against the cause of that pussibU' re-i nunciation. Sympathy here joined, hands wiUi antipathy; for despite the suit withdrawn, Duncan's presump- tion of the spring still rankled, and always would; and this offence was and soda. Aild the mo- ' atioii, it takes about 40 years for the the milk. Pour into well ; little spruce trees to acquire- a dia- ish Pie and Cup | jfi'eased moulds and steam about three ' meter of one inch; 100 years to make I a six-inch tree, and 150 years to reach 1 s AVhy' it''s°that good old burg spelled wheat the minimum diameter limit of 12 ! s T-O-R-O-N-T-O. />^rft<. Mow there IS just one t-i* -V *^ WALKER HOUSE In ONE TOWN where I And, say, you ought to see me grin When my trijk heads that way. The only other time I was so happy, Goodness knows. Was when a kid Dad bought me Red topped boots with copper toes. When other trave'leis hit that town, They, too, don't want to roam, For they say, "At that WALKER HOUSE It's just like staying home." Where is the ONE TOWN where that WALKER HOUSE is? Don't you know ? Bread. â€" 4 2-3 cups , blacker than Iho first. Ah, but he' ed cup 1 tablespoon of jam. Cover to True, in the should bo made to feel il, just as he'one-half th Shown Up. Fish Pie.- 2 cups finked fish, 1 cup'f'o"'"' '^ 1-'' '"ups barley flour, 2 cups' inches established by the culling reg- seasoiieil white sauce. Rfix the flaked milk and water, or water, I cake com- ! ulations in tjuebcc, for white and fish with the white sauce, put into a P'"<-'ssed yeast, 2 tablespoons sugar, 2 ' black spruce. Balsam grows some- gvcased baker, cover the top with '"'''^'spoons fat, 2 teaspoons salt. Soft- what faster. .A one inch tree is made buttered bread crumbs, and cook in the ''" the yeast in part of the liquid. ; in about 16 years, and it takes in the oven until the crumbs are brown. jt'onibine all the ingredients, and mix , neighborhood of 70 years to reach the into a dough. Knead and let rise to | Quebec diameter limit of seven inches double its bulk. Knead again. Put ^ at two feet from the ground. into the pan, and when double its bulk ______^_«__________________ bake about % of an hour. This re- ' cipe makes two loaves. I Cup Tudding.- Put into each greas- cup with a batter made j as follows: -2 tablespoons of butter, Vi cup of sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 2'/4 cups flour. 4 teaspoons baking Baked Bean.s.â€" Pick over the beans powder. Cream the liutler, add sugar 'over with cold water and soak over gradually, and egg well beaten; mixt"'Kht. In morning, drain, cover with and sift flour, baking powder, and j f''"-''*h water, heat slowly (keeping salt; and alleriiately with milk to first water below boiling point), and cook 3 The House 0/ Plenty 1 3 The WalJ^er House j § Toronto a <Je«;- Wiight & Co., Proprietors IfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiiiiiiiiiS was a low ."iiirh a thing' Young girls are ShurGaIn Fertilizer â- j am reading .ShukespeaiJ now," naid the girl. "Did you ever read Komeo and .Iiiliet ?" "I've read Romeo," said tbi> young man. Prune puildings or whips cheap and wholes<imo ilessorts. make mixture. After turning into cups, put in the oven and bake. Breakfast. - Cornmeal porridtfe, toast, pear jam, tea or coffee. Dinner. Fried haddock, mn.shcd po- tatoes, creamed onions, emergency bis- cuits, honey. Supper. Pea soup, baked potatoes, brown bread, rhubarb jam, ten. The recipes for Pea Soup and Emergency Biscuits, mentioned above, lue as f(dlow9: â€" until skins burst. Drain beans, throw ing out the water. Put into a bean pot a few pieces of salt pork cut into cubes, Cove* with the beans, and add 1 tablespoon of salt, 1 tablespoon of 1 molasses, .'1 tablespoons of sugar. For 1 every ipiart of dry beans used, add 1 cup of boiling water, and as they cook add more boiling water to cover. Cover the bean put, put it ir the oven and bake slowly six or eight hours, or cook in a tireless cooker. .S fer to add a little mustard. >ome pre- ahy s Own Soap Its fragrance is pleasant but the great value of Baby's Owa Soap is its creamy softening lather vvhich cleanses and beautiucs the skin Doclori and nurtet recommend Baby'i Owa*- Albart Soapl Lioilud, Mdi., Moatttol Sold everywhere. M(^/'':S^<0e^ty^u .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy