Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Jun 1925, p. 9

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Breakfast Apple Bauce Cereal Bolled Eggs ; ' Coffee Luncheon Fried Left-Over Cereal Maple Syrup Lettuce Salad Lett-Over Prunes Iced Tes ' Dinner : Corned Beet Potatoes Beets Cold Slaw _Btrawberry Shortcake Coffees ANSWERS TO INQUIRIES Seoteh: "1 would appreciate a ré- cipe for Whelewheat Bread." Answer: Wholewheat Bread: Ine to a large bowl put two cups of seal ded sweet milk, one-fourth cup 6f granulated sugar and one teaspoon of salt; let cool till the milk is luke warm, then add one cake of compres 'sed yeast which has been dissolved | in one-fourth cup of luke-warm wat- er .Also add thres cups of whole- wheat flour and beat well; add ohe and one-third cups more of whole. wheat flour, stir vigorously, and dov- er the bowl with two élean cloths. Set in a warm place for five hours, or till the douth is double in bulk. Now, without turning it out onto a bread board, as one does in mak- ing white bread, merely scrape half | spen these pans and place them in n place for perhaps an hout, of dough is again double in Bake for 45 minutes in a mod- oven, Young Housewife: "How is one to 2 he Editor hears < That Canon Scott, presching in St. George's cathedral on Sunday evening on the story of "The Prodi- gal Son," sald he alwi felt the term for this beautiful s! of' hu- man love as a pattern of divine laye, should be "The Penitént Son," as in the eyes of God sins repented of, confessed and lived down were past and the good out-weighéd the evil. Canoh Seoft severely scordd the American magasines for their poor, cheap wit based on this and other Beautiful Bible stories. "'Burely there are many amusing things In 11fs," said the prince of story-téllérs, Af LRN, A At Za hae IN EVERY HOME a 4 A Ba 0 hi hau VF SOOTHING HEALING ANTISEPTIC PANS NASA AS ee f| of Mr. an make blacking stay on 8 steel top- ped range?" Answer: Never try to black a steel topped range. Nothing will stay on it, and nothing is supposed to be the finest grade of steel wool, which you can buy at any grocer's or hard- ware' store. This is all the care it needs. . Mrs. E. 8.: "Kindly print a rve- ¢ipe for baking powder tea biscuits. Answer: Baking powder manufac- turérs always print an excellent re- cipe on the paper cover of their cans. But here is another good one: Tea Biscuits: With two knives (held together as if they were a pair of scis sors) cut one heaping tablespoon of butter into one quart of bread flour which you have previously sifted with three tablespoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of salt, and one tablespoon of sugar. Add one- balf pint of cold milk and mix well (it will make a soft dough). Then turn the mass out onto a slightly floured board and roll lightly to about three-fourths of an inch fin thickness. Cut out with a thin cut- tor and bake 20 minutés in a hot pen, on a greased pan---possibly Tomorrow -- Canning Tomatoes Whole, k o---------- : All inquiries adqressed to Miss Finan a care en "Btficlent eoping" ent will be answered in these columns in thelr vequires considerable time, however, owing to the great nufber received. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped sud self-addressed envelope must bs enclosed with the question. Be sure 10 wee YOUR full name, street num- ber, and the ndme of your city and J "without treating the Word of God with irreverence. Such stories are never found in London "Punch." ---- That loyers of aninfals, while they always dislike seeing the beasts of the forest, great and lordly tigers, driven thxpugh the streets in cages, felt assured that the wild ani- mals in the Sparks circus were as well treated as possible in their cap- tive state. They looked clean and well cared for, and the only unhappy part of it was their loss of freedom. bse, about it all because it was the last time they would be greeted at the entrance to the ball room by Major Getieral and Lady Macdodell with their gracious smile, and the pers sonal welcome always extended by tary College. That the school children appréei- ated tKe Woliday to see the circus parade, snd the boys followed the clown to his destination with joy. you are a small boy life is not warth Hving if there is a eircus In town and you cannot even see the paride. "it everbody works in Heaven, like that man Doyle says, 1 want to set an' churn." Bac A pretty June wedding was sol- emnised in 8t. Columbia's cathedral, Bembioks. When Margaret, daughter re. Michael Blimke, be- came the bride of Severe Veaudry, ! Son of Mr. and Mrs. Aime Veaudry, Stafford. Twenty-two young people #1 graduate from the Alexandria Bay, N.Y, high school next week. -------- applied. Simply clean the steel with | That the girls say théré never was such a Ball and the older people felt [Ji that there was a note of shdness them to the gussts of the Roya! Mil. JAMES RED R. J. RED 230 Princess St. 254 Princess St. Are the only Furniture Merchants "in Kingston authorized by us to sell our line of beds, springs and Mat- tresses, which includes the genuine » stermoor mattress and Slumber King Spring. Montreal, One oaly can be young oncé and if | Hor Toronto, THAT YEAR BY MILDRED BARBOUR OF FREEDOM CONCERNING THE ACTION AND CHARACTERS DANE LARRABEE successful business man, handsome, prosperous, approaching middle age, devoted to quiet pastimes, his home and his exquisite young wife. NAN LARRABEE, who as Nan Farmday was a promising vocal student and who, |" after three years of marriage, has begun to regret the career that she feels she , might Mave had with its adventures and freedom. > GORDON PRESCOTT, » cold, caloulating Batchelor, ' a good friend of the Larrabees, » in love with Nan, and, CAROLINE PRESCOTT, his second cousin, a schemer like himself, who had wanted to Marry Larrabee herséll, and, on losing him to Nan, had apparently become hér friend. Ndn, finding her conventional life dull, tells Larrabee she wants to go away from him-but Larrabee .refuses hér an actu] sephration, making: her the unique altertive proposition of 8 year of freedom, in which she shall live where and how she pleases and he will do likewise. At the end of the year, he stipulates, they will then decide if the separatiog ig to be made per- THE WISH OF THE BAD FAIRY When it became generally known that Nan and Larrabee were going to pa a year, it aroused a storm of comment and criticism in their circ cle of friends and acquaintances. Nan was rather dismayed. She be- > | lieved that it was matter that lay be- J pie ind ge fod i eh | terrifies me. She still has the power to give me the impression that her standards are always the right ones and when she sends for me, I feel like a naughty child brought up to answet for a misdemeanor." "It will be hard to make mother un. derstand," Larrabee told her, "but I will do the best I can. She is very old-fashioned, remember, and has pure ly conventional ideas in regard to marriage." They went together to see Mrs, Lar- rabee, Senior, She was lying on a couch jn her sitting room, still prettily boned in pale blue framing her white hair. There were flowers on a table beside her, a box of bonbons dnd a novel. It was obvious that she enjoy- ed her invalidism, although the eyes she turned on her son and daughter in-law were deep with reproach. They scemed to say: "Look at what you | have done to me, this is all your fault." seated himself beside hér couch and took both her little white hands in his. W------ ~~ pink and whité, with a lace cap berib-| "Well, mother, how goes it? Feel ' Winnipeg, wr "| has been decided for you and you have Calgary, formula of reasoning. Nan is bored with her life with me. She feels that I deprived her of her youth, of freedom, of a chance to find success in her own profession. Life with me is stifling to her instincts and desires. She feels that she is sinking into a negative back- ground where she is only Dan Larra- bee's wife, the chatelaine of his house- hold, the hostess at his parties. "Re- member, mother, that Nan is youny, She has charm, personality, talen which she never had a chance to try because I mafried her when she was a young girl. You have lived all your life in a safe haven, a circumscribed, conventional world where everything followed beaten trails because they were the safe, the conventionalized thing to do.' You have never come to the cross roads of choice, the cross roads of destiny. Mother dear, the saddest thinly in life is a cross road where one oses wrongly and can. not go back afd retrieve the lost hap. piness which the other road might have offered. I am giving Nan a chance to back and follow the other road. ths it-may not bring her the con. | tentment that this one has done. 1 pray it won't for. my own sake; but I'd be a selfish cad if 1 did not stand aside and let her find happiness if she can." . 'Mrs. Larrabee spoke with spirit: and you," she flashed a maleyolent/| glance at Nan, "are a selfish and un- "You are an absurd idealist, Dane, ~~ SIMMONS LIMITED Vancouver rn asked no greater happiness than have 'a Joving and indulgent husb and a home and children. If you the babies you should have, wouldn't want to be running if the country with a lot of bohewm The art you are always pra 3 is only an excuse for a wild life. ¥\ deserve to come to a bad énd and hope you do." With this parting thrust, she sed them from her presence and } went out feeling like a criminal tenced to doom. ! (To be Continued) Ba 'ready Denbigh, cog a 4 of men are at work at various' : under the good roads system. Much improvement can be noticed already. Rev. P. A; Scott is again at the parsonage, having spent the past fe 'weeks in Napanee. i F. Rogers, reeve, is atte county council in Napanee this W. A. Thompson, a former nn dent of this place, was a very come guest of his daughter and in-law, Mr, and Mrs. B. W. J - womanly woman. In my dav, girls A

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