Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 8 Mar 1916, p. 7

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

0 paper . bef er ay given a thin coat- are g ay Yaseling l way, and*pliable when > the fall and will first walk. they come a Presarvation of Furs. Good furs are each more expensive, so it 'who have them to give them special attention. ~The Russian method of cleaning furs is excellent. = Put some rye flour into a saucepan and heat 'as hot as the hand can bear it, stirring _ constantly; spread the flour over the fur and rub well into it, 'brush thor- oughly with a clean brush or heat gently until the flour is removed. This method is for dark furs, For white furs such as white fox or ermine, dip ,, & perfectly clean whisk broom into mop the fur well * pure alcohol and t y with it, rewetting it often until' the . fur is soaked. Have ready as abund- ance of powder starch and 'with a flour dredger ili the wet hairs full starch, workin Loh with 'the fingers. #Then dry, powder 3 gain thickly. and shut up in two days. Beat out the powder "7° the open air with a whisk, shake and toss until free of starch. If moth . larvae are discovered in furs, a_solu- tion of ace! te of potash and spirit of rosemary, 1b grains to one pint, will ip : Neck' furs' should be 1p ; wrapped, never packed tight- r will flatten, = Muffs should be hung on a rod, stuffed with paper to keep in form, and furs not 'in a moth-proof 'closet should be! i. yearefully. sealed in tar paper, or if! newspaper must be used, camphor, behooves those f su or of is ing sift con before Insects dilike both salt and alufn. fore put- - Always boil new iron ware bfeore spiritual achievement--exhibited this : N not crack with the tne flesh, - fa year. becoming tho flavor. ; ~ Save time when knife previously arming the before the fir adding as long if the loosened after them stop boilin, . To polish oilel ful of paraffin to A washing it, and it will look as if assured by the +2 polished with beeswax. . = so I f t _When mice have intruded into the g it down into the skin pantry find their entrance hole and Was won. seal it 'up .8 boX charged with red pepper. well with kerosene while the grease: grave faults, water, using no soap;. the spots will disappear. Have Accustomed Themselves to the Yo 'treat - s ture good' as a 8 2 ise. This is quite distinct Paul's use of "faith" as. creed. which became a technical term the method of Socrates, who ex- posed sham knowledge of Cross-ex- amination. Faith is accordingly the faculty which can sift things unseen, and select those which are real. The | chapter is %e show how 'the men and salted before Women of the canonized past--im- Be salted before mensely different in character and ip 'around edge and chos, 2 in brisk heat until for 'browned. When sery-: 'ectioners' sugar over, : Useful Hints, ~ Meat should not. it. : faculty of verifying promises truly ever apply hot water to frostbit- from God, and when verified acting SR {upon them as realized During the winter bedding well. assets. 82. 1 Jeon, the noblest of the jud- blankets and ges, illustrates verse 1 peculiarly. Be- Pood coded tn vss ht acs ot. Lo the dest) of Sith had put the ZU, Fon, Shervation « T i ivine leadin nd question he was _. oughly washed eamioe have 3 good timid and hesitant as a captain should railway, cleaning by be who is to risk lives on a forlorn knife board hope. Once assured he can treat his : } Somtemptible Tittle By 3s an al- are improved by ready victorious host. rak is an 1 one or two rr ore] » example of the same kind of faith on gar when cooking. a smaller scale. The clothes wringer will last twice must not endow with Miltonic gran- pressure at the top is deur, tells us how faith could work using. ea {in a man of one talent; he really be- When boiling' vegetables never let. lieved that his Strength lay in the g until they are done, hair that symbolized his Nazirite vow, | soggy and heavy, : |and put forth that strength' to the oth add'a tablespoon- ruin of the foe. Jephthah, a mere to the water used for robber captain, accepted victory as' i terrible price he of- fered, and never 'dreamed of with- holding the price when the Of David, enough to say t h Soft vily that intense "belief in the reality of! ith Soft Sudp' Beavily God's yhromise is the one character 4 istic that redeemed a man of many For wagon grease. or tar spots rub albeit of obvious and un. 'fresh, then wash out in cold, soft limited' lovableness.: He and Samuel ; and the prophets are a new and higher |, To clean a greasy stove dip a cloth class, as the structure of the origin- dry soot and rub over the greasy al suggests. Samuel is especially the laces. Then apply blacklead and founder of the prophetic order, whose 2 whole function arose from the pds- it is proper to peak rises to an elevat be quite 'general. Qs Turnips aud beets 1. 25. above its own standard. they will be golden age in the past, + his great father--has sible application. ---- ie WO 88. Subdued dynasties, like Elijah or Samuel as kingmakers: 'Wrought --The integrity of Samuel's admin- istration (1 Sam, 12. 4), and the pic-y ture of David's just reign (2 Sam, 8. BIRDS LIKE WAR SOUNDS. Noise of Explosives. ,. 38. No worthy--For it is at bot Samson, whom we tom the subconsciousness of this un- | worthiness which prompts the world to be cruellest to men and women far 39. Witness borne--The word of verse 2, repeated at the end as a thes- es that is now proved, Received not j--For the best is always yet to be; only imperfect religions place their 40. The thought that we never can Yietory be fully blest till we are all blessed ogether inspires Paul's magnificent picture of the destiny of creation in Rom. 8. "Thou wouldst not be saved alone"--Matthew Armold's address to the widest pos- 12. 1. Witnesses--Not spectators, The word is attached closely" to' the keyword of the last chapter. great names there have received ness from inspiration that the ; session of faith. stand on the roll of examples to A hh. Er Ce ry Baemanen MOUNT CAVELL, B.C. This mountain has been re-named British nurse who was put to death by the Germans ion of 11,020 feet, cars of the Canadian Northern Railway. An ex- ade, giving: easy to commemorate the heroism of the Ill-treated--The word recurs in Heb. 18, 3 and Ileb, | Battalion of the 5th Noi abandoned Dardanelles will rank as the. biggest m ye the war. Rudyard Ki story, "The Lost Legion," ha: matched, for Colonel Sir H. Beauchamp, fifteen offcers and men have absolutely disappeared human ken. Sir Tan Hamilton has told how charged the enemy's position, through a village, and on. to ad wood beyond, "pushing on, d the enemy before them." The is silence. "Nothing more was seen or heard of them. They ch ed into the forest, and were lost sight or sound. Not one of ever came back." The forest into which they char; was scoured through and throug next day, but not one of this ba heroes, dead or alive, was fo Though there have been reports certain belongings having been covered, there has been no verificati of this. 'Not the slightest trace has been met with, despite every eff They are the Lost Legion. A Squadron Disappeared. In the late South African Wi there was an instance of a British force apparently being swallowed into the ground. An entire squadron of the 18th Hussars galloped into the darkness and utterly disappeared: Nearly a week later ib was found that the squadron had been captured b the Boers, who had lain in wait for the' too adventurous body. There were several somewhat simi« lar instances where large bodies of men 'were captured without leaving any trace. Here the parallel with the case of the Norfolks ceases, for the only men known to be captives 'in the hands of the Turks are one offi- cer and twelve men who fell before the wood was reached, when the full body consisted of seventeen: officers and 250 men. } In the earlier South African War, Fa some. time aga. The and is visible' for twelve miles access to the mountain from the RUNS THE GERMAN WAR MACHINES VERY DIFFICULT ' MATTER TO MEET THE KAISER. Neutral Writer Describes Exercised by Gen. Von Falkenhayn. _ Mrs. Hendrick Hudson, a neutral Control The ipl wit- | eral ymay Molt] man- kind. In their turn they witness of the power of that faculty by which they did their deeds. Lay aside---The figure of the footrace in this verse is a link with Paul, whose perpetual in December, 1880, =the . 04h Bat~ talion left a station and disappeared, Many weeks later, little parties of footsore and ragged men i crossed the .Natal frontier, bringing tidings of the Lost Legion, According who has returned recently to France after a prolonged visit in Germany, has contributed a very. interesting article to the Paris Temps, from | which the subsequent passages are | quoted: Sao "General Von Falkenhayn, who was | to the tale of the survivors, the bat- aced at the head of the great gen- | talion had b&n surrounded hy the staff when Field Marshal Von | Boers at Bronker's Spruit, apd the ke fell into disgrace immediately ' colonel, with 'a number of men, had after the battle of the Marne, is at been put to death; the remainder had : the present hour the most powerful | been disarmed and set adrift,on the man in Germany. In regard to his | veldt. antecedents, one knows that Von Fal- kenhayn, while a young officer, was The Mystery Explained. A troop of the 10th Hussars once obliged to give up his military ca- | .. 4 g : { reer on 'account of having run scandal- | Sisappented when out wn hve fo ably David again is in mind. See 2 ly sympathy with everything that was 'ously into debt. He left for China, | Yn hy igh his i, n de a ast 'Sam 7. 11, ete. Stopped--David's healthy in other people. The weight where he obtained employment in a. Toye I dhe Roki went in ve ! youthful exploit might be referred is hardly superfluous fat, of which a commereial house. i ily © Hig 29 : man | ving to, but the next clause shows that the modern athlete would think; it is ra-| "When the expedition against the ji Sell | oe Na llopod writer has passed on to the book of ther clothing, which a Gr oXers was organized, in 1900, Von | ee Ct erless Desa ww ie ge ope Daniel, | (as the word itself im alkerthayn was permitted to re enter | "2k to amp, no intimation o | 84. Escaped, like Elisha gt Dothan, altogether, he army service, because of. his valu. | WaS received. From weakness, like Samson for his uted as 3 eet bo which in a ilast-exploit, War--The - Old Test- dy clings tons" (margin). Patience... ich. the military operations were | ®*P! : . | ament - aboupds in instances of a Rather, endurance, which should be} conducted. Since then he has risen | Do Eas fri believed] Slasgicaly; expressed in Psa. substituted everywhere except in! steadily in rank, but he has not been Bia ih 3 ok hE oe story of the Maccabees rises | places Tike James 5..7, 8, where a word | #hle to shake off his previous reputa-| "*a¢ the men took the wrong road, (above all, almost uniqu ; | moth flakes or spices had better be put in before sealing, as one is not always sure that every stray egg has been destroyed, ; Draperies, carpets and rugs, if soil- ed, should be cleaned before putting them away. If out of reach of a pro- fessional, the amateur can accomp- lish splendid results, "After removing a8' much. dirt as possible by 'brushing and heating, wash the draperies in a gasoline slap solution, using a pound of good white Se to a gallon of gas- oline, then Hise iu bush soline. arpets and rugs should e brushed this solution and then with clear line and finally rubbed well with cloths. "This will ra Bird life along the battle front ap- pears to havé been little disturbed by the continual thundering of the guns. Birds disappeared from the war zone after the battle of the M4dine, and some naturalists attributed their mi- gration to the din of war. They came back again, However, and little by little. accustomed themselves to the noise of explosives and even find. an advantage in being close to the con- flict where there is ampla nourish- ment around the" soldiers' quarters. 18. The Doves and wild pigeons are the most abundant, while_ there are many cuc- Koos, tH SBP % ind mn, 16) will Hlustrate. Obtained--Prob-| use of it is characteristic of his live- Long afterwards the mystery was ( able. knowledge of the country i plained by: the finding of forty-six | a: : : + d tried to ford the Kabul River at e in history,' describing "long-mindedness" oceurs. : tion. SR : and. s {88 true, Sholy war." The problems It is important to keep the close con. Masimilian Harden, the well known 2h impassable: part. The leading | stad an Jesus. nection with endured in verse 2. not-yeh ef Fait Sn I fle ER vest 4b ech emerged, and faith could | 2, 8. Author and perfecter<=For | ois * pf General Von Falkenhayn's ' ths. 1 Il raise the nap as Fel ax clean the. carpet. Tt seams needless to add that this should be done in the open air, away from any building. Roll them on: poles, scat- ter through them a preservative and .. seal in newspapers, igh our one_cup cups stale cake : Ek ver line water for five m one L . half chop- | © Louis Rousseau, a well-known ornith- ologist, has discovered that the": ha ol ars Birdy and made then thrifty 'stored away prudently underneath. Doves fly about between the two lines, paying no attention to the bursting g in trees as close as they, find in the trenches. Monsieur | givil the chiractér of these nd their nests in the holes of dead , with a provision of breadcrumbs pnél, and none of them appears id of aex 'upon = the'b ving. ly; Jona . He has| jpop [thought of: "Others The: allusion is 'probably td the fine story in 2 Mac- cabees seven sons martyred for the faith of I | minent Iso. A ingly prominent 'here also. better ed to ii be 'remembered that in the da an dreamed of, Not till the gospel came id men fully know, but i glimps- wi battlefield-. without od : faith'is "begun, continued, ani "|selection as Von Moltke's successor, | daiphs-. Philistines" especial-! in him whose earthly life was. the 1, his publication, the Zukunft, he de- Hh and Ws arme bearer are| Supreme example of it, and his living jelared that "it was a bad policy to in- a : © | Spirit the one power that can PO-| trust the fate of Germany to a gam- .duce it in us. Hence the human name | hler even if he were a good. one at Jesus, for we are to realize the Un- | tq game.' This bold utterance caus- seen as he did in the days of his flesh. ed the suppression of the Zukunft for The ig of Calvary here is that 'a whole week. - of the woman who saw her the joy of our Lord, in the present ; 4 reality of redeemed humanity, a new Boss of the Kaiser. heaven, and a new earth, empowered "Being 'extremely jealous of his him to endure the most appalling tor- authority, General Von Falkenhayn | {ture man's fiendishriess ever 'devised, keeps away from the general head. | i quarters all persons whom he sus- pects: of trying to gain the confidence of the Kaiser. Many court officials ) have on different occasions tried to a broken light of him. Note that get audiences with their sovereign, the supreme agony of the cross was: only to be invariably rebuffed hy Von the "gainsaying 'of sinners against Falkenhayn. Sometimes the refusal n. 12. 8 were caught by the themselves" so margin, beyond all is very curt and ungracious. In other ers of the Old Testament. |question the right reading--the instances diplomacy requires that t \ different word in the knowledge that men for whom he dled gome thinly veiled excuse be given. t is apparently would not let him same them. So if The chief of staff then usually in- i he despised shame it was not through forms the petitioner that His Majesty proud indifference to men's thoughts jg just getting ready to depart for n|of him. It was for their sakes that another. front, but that he will grant [We cared, not for his own. the desired audience on his return to Sh Soi Sere : +. This promise, however, is never kept. It is by such means hat Count August 'zu Eulenberg, Grand Marshal of the Tmiperial Court 1890, has been prevented from seeing tof Zare- the Shunaminite ' are' the woman's point: of view 4s resurrection-Expressly allud- { more than once in that sto a return to this life could be Em ] The. isolation of the Kaiser is'an im- ant facto, Th the plans of the of the real situation : 1 Von Falken- the ERE tiam 11. fs 4 hig mperor William for several months. | uj every man had been swallowed up| by. the swirling 'waters. e same country provides an ap- paling example of .a, Lost Legion. In 1839- an army of 21,000 men, under Sir- John Keane, entered Kabul. The story of what followed is too long to relate in details It is sufficient that there wee massacres of high-placed British officers, a sixty-five days' siege 'of the Anglo-Indian Army, and a capitilation followed by a promise of 'escort back to India. The retreat | beggh in severe weather, and of the 16,500 men who set forth, only one man, Dr. Bryden, lived to carry the dismal tidings: back to General Sale at Jalalabad. indie be le sa ass on More English Spelling. A reader who was amused by the little article in which - the 'various pronunciations of the letters "ough", were illustrated sends us this amns- ing proof of the fact that the English language is as' versatile in spelling, one sound in a score of aye aa it = in pronouncing, one. comb on" letters after a dozeh fashions. { "Mr. Hughes, on his son Hugh's cruise, took to bpoze when he heard: the news that he would lose his dues and gain the noose if he did not s shoes inthe sloughs to take views -of the ewes, and also learn » ka bis u's and q's and spell you's quéue's and who's and too's and to's and two's." 73 However, we must protest riming 'news" with "booze" or 4

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy