EEE Wi : Good Reading. them with powdered sugar and serve Whimsically now, = 4 'What are the farm boys and girls| them very hot. «© . | "It isn't enough to bring a crippled reading? Are they reading at all? Rhubarb Snowballs = %cupful of hero back to life? uh 5 What are we doing to upply good Tice, rhubarb, sugar, cream, water. 0. Cousin Dick!" Lois's small, reading for the bo irls? Boil the rice in water until it is tender| eager face flamed. "You ow haw 1 "can we do to create a desire for and dry; then wring small. pudding; love doing anything for you. t's. reading in our young people? These cloths in hot water and spread a layer only worth-while thing - that : are some questions that all parents | of rice half an inch thick in the centre pened in a year. But you're g may well think upon, of every cloth. Chop the rhubarb soon, and then~I just know I ean't + ugg these are the china bargal "In the first place, boys and girls and place three tablespoonfuls of it stand it." Pa] > read several Re of SE IE hat, on each layer of rice. Sweeten the "It's a great apple year, isn't it?" advarifeet or ani ihéy'ie goliE fort may or may not be called literature.| snowballs, tie them up tight in the Cousin Dick remarked. ALE er Tothing" ey're £0 IT 1S They look over the papers'and maga-| cloths and. steam 'them for twenty| Lois looked at him in astonishment.| All right Ei take that pitk dish zines that come regularly to their | minutes. Then turn them out of the] "Ever try collecting a carload of fot HOLA rg iy homes and read what appeals to them. ! cloths, place whipped cream on the| windfalls, or better, and sending them ¥ Sometimes they are persuaded by un-: top of each one and sprinkle sugar on| to. the city? There are hundreds of spammed rrr serapulous pesple to invest tor or| the whipped cream. Serve the snow-| children there that can't get= their, I:cep Winard's Liniment in fifteen cents in some paper or maga-; balls in individual dishes. ! zine or story book that is not exactly] Riberh Ca mae of Swen N high-class. © Here let me partly ans-|ened, steamed Xu rb, cold water, i . worms { Ne ont tendes plants wer our last question. Allow no paper, ounce of gelatin, %. pint of cream, A 1 ut worms u ually tr sta of 3 - "they. book or magazine to come into your! White of 3 eggs. Dissolve the gelatin home that does not furnish clean,}in sufficient water to cover it; then; high-class reading matter. Are your; strain it aver the Thubarh elt fhe girls fillng their minds with trashy) mixture is cold, beat the white of the ve ; s rol F. ; love stories found in the cheap story| eggs stiff and stir it in; then whip. By HOWARD CHASE FARWELL. 1 : 2 an ne ecislly Jomatoss. samr papers? And are your boys reading) the cream and add it to the other in- ---------- ee wo pg) pt an : h Eat on as Te cheap detective stories and imps Jle | gredients. Pour the whole into a fancy : -- : -- we fought th . posts 10 3 stands by adventures? We say "cheap" stories | mould, 4 ; CHAPTER 111. - Could someone have kidnapped her; Lise 'each! Sl arte of but though they are cheap in moneg| Fruit Rice Pudding--1 cupful of| = po : dragged her-away while he was sleep- ye j v - y ar Fa a via fuls of e line had tightened again, per-1;..% ransplanting. Bends were cut from} they are expensive in the damage they | cold boiled rice, 3 tablespoonfuls Oli iitine him the use of only one arm ling? Small chance. And what if they 'Manil pach eight inches do. There are good love stories. And | sugar, 1 cupful of chopped pinéapple,i Holding th : y ome arm. | did They'd certainly not be robbin| 1eAyY Mant PARSE SUS UEC URS . £0 8 8. And: § , olding the rope high above hig head 3 in height and of sufficient length to there are most interesting detective|3 tablespoonfuls of water, 1 cupful ofl he made it into a noose, which hei; of any cherished treasure. 'No, Bn je the plant, and stand two i r stories and stories of adventure and|orange juice, 1 cupful of chopped|slipped over one shoulder and under indeed, his .one_smbition was to get encizcle the plait, ang, Sign dL MEDICINE { 1 . and] fil of | the other armpi her off his hands. That™w ouldn't bel three inches from it. "Bach collar, ] Lo BDU ficticn that are founded on facts and blanched almonds, 1 tablespoonful ol} pit. kidnapping; it would be lifesavi held together by means of Mining, Chemical instill 'only the highest sentiment in| gelatin, 1 pint of cream. Whip'the| Following the line again he reached| But Be hoes te iv YE 'but eld oN x 2 ans i Soon Mi Bani i and' the minds of those who read them, - { ¢cream, warm the, water and soften| the girl and adjusted it properly on: feel a little worried fo cord "and _slipfied, over a plant, Wesnf ee or NBERING d them, » Warm : a) ) on: feel a little worried for she was, after| pushed into the soil until "approxi-L- f° ENGINEERING There are several ways in which | the Belatin in Jue, Water; thet gtr de Te ors 2 io remain attached all, really his care. 13 suything seri- F tcly>three inches of the top pro SUMMER SCROOL ~~ BAVIGATION | nephdind 3 ei i into the 2 life- ver might prove dis-! ae > . > ' Iygh-class Teading rmay be supplied. the ge BUR he Hie wa or ao the| 8strous, as a sudden rei on aed happen to hex ly jected above the surface. Soil was| § Ju and August December to April Perhaps someone says, "How can we cream. the rice, the sugar, the a h ad "Good morning, everybedy! The] Celed iv. beth inside and out. ALICE KING; Acting Registrar = DD Tr Dineapplé, the orange juice and the oy perhaps tear both from about hail came from the beach at his right. eveled up sey Ys inside and out- oo 2 y dfen or ourselves?" Here is a test,| almonds, Pour the whole .into a as Turning, he saw her coming toward 'side the collar. fey 5 apply it t beriodical and bool | Mould and serve it. when it has be- Gripping her by the arm, he sghout- him. Mr. Cutworm found it impossible to sty So rr peeled bunk oid gd serve 6 when be bas bo fant CTL) Be i ROR en CLR Sl with Ht a ; . mg atl. ' § vigorous nodding; of her hea ent. e was barefoot, the coat of | vegetable tins, each with its top an ott everything that does not come up Chicken With Potatoes--1 ghicken,} affirmed his suspicion, but the look her dark blue suit she garried in a ev yerdoved, may be used with ts its standard. If any reading mat-| flour, 2 pounds of tomatoes, cinnamon, on her face, revealed by a vivid flash| bundle under her arm. Her hair was! equal SuHCCess. z ter develops higher ideals, a clearer|1 kettleful of water, % pound of but- i lightning, brought & chuckle from | streaming in torrents over her shoul- : - y visien of te; 4 Iv stimulates ar Jor ¥ gounds of potatoes, Salt, pepper ame little sparrow!" Then nel oo nice bright day to starve, isn't its Lise. er appreciation of the joy. of living, | oughly, Rub it inside and out with| compressed his lips tightly. No doubt it?" she continued. Po what 4i4: they have 4 opeating or a clean, healthy sense of humor, ft flour, then with cinnamon. - Beil the about her gameness--she would pro-| Bronson straightened as. much as rifte for®; ; ' g ) 4 i "bably take any chance for the right the pain in his back would permit. "} giiess, son, it was;to make every |- is fit reading for any person of any| water, place the chicken in it and ciove y & "We'll ni is back he ] permis her| shot tell." . 3 : Sas ake. age, provided it is suited to "their cook the chicken until it is half done. | For an hour he struggled on, until! haughtily, "I'll see to that." rfp ere understanding. Bo:l and pare the potatoes and place, his chest and arms and legs ached in| "Um--Um--so I noticed this morn-| Minard's Liniment used by Physiclans Some people say they cannot afford! them in a frying pan with the butter, protest against the supreme strain puting. - But, there, that was spiteful of| bss 3 ¥ several dollars a year just for papers| the cinnamon, the salt and the pep-|upon them. But he drove relentlessly | me, You were all tired out--had to Canada is 385 years - old, dating | for children. If it is helping to edu-| per; then remove the chicken fromjon, | _ | drag me half way across the straights| o © Gartier's first visit of 1635: 156] | cate them and give them high ideals the kettle and add it to the contents : el el San Ig at his wit that old rope. 'Tt was just splen-| yo; 014, dating from British on 1 ha in life, most le can afford much|of the pan. Extract the juice from '. ' ; Ge is : cd au 0 Sh g * Bob' Lot p more than that, ee for those| the tomatoes, strain it and add it to at his body. >| "What's in that bundle?" he cut in,| quest of 1769; 63 years ld: Sating pe D r "21 The back-current. That they | pointing to u "My overalls and shirts are roomy more than tha." However, fon those the tomatoes, Hoel, | 800501 Iy lh The back cmment. That ey lar Hiab. sho at is | oe _ | emer extra money in books or magazines |in the oven until it is done: hundred feet of it. 'Grasping the line. feet--Just oodles and oodles of them. | RI fil wt TE nt you a wea Them with thes ge 7 Lise oR rene there is access to the public library, with both hands he gave. it three pow- | Big, luscious, succulent ones, too. : : Fe 31: 1 which is, or should be, in every dis- What Lois Did Not See. [erful full arm pulls. He felt it slacken, ha Lio dig thers yitha stick, and most| § : 7 A ret 148] Sue trict. From those available, books| « 11 think i adful| again and knew that she was respond-|of them squirted their danger signali "ie ¥ IU DAD \ Pe eu 1 suppose youll think it dreadfuli pp 0 EE won and drew out of reach before I could yours. ts iB LONG carefully chosen. of me, Cousin Dick," Lois began. fh he set to himself; driving $ t them. 1 a : a : Above all, boys and girls should be] The young officer with the worn Wor A ey atom "of gh Sent was down there sho houre '} ¢ A 10 : taught to enjoy poetry. Let them|face and the crutch smiled. Cap.! For what seemed an eternity he fought| "But that will make them all the : fr m all ! GLOVES. read it aloud frequently and learn to| Blair had such a nice smile, the girls! on, struggling to free himself from ibetter, of course, Just think of nice| § ) VR || x express the meaning, not merely|all said, which meant that it was! the gripping waters below. baked clams. You'll have to sharpen| "H e to the perfect | ¥ill outwear any other mak "sing song" the words, and it is sur-| sympathetic and interested, and did Suddenly, he was drenched with al green sticks to eat them with, off B out Ce Glave on the market, becatse prising how soon they will begin to|not look as if he were laughing at you breaking backwash, and then: lifted) course." AB nif you will use(3=~> J they are sade by skilled work. | reat Petry. Il overy perionitmnit high into the air and thrown sprawls Bronson nodded, a little doubtfully.| | C men from the strongest glove could be impressed with the fact that] "Suppose you try," he suggested. ng into shallow, receding water. 1 He rather resented her quick sugges-| : 0 iy lo dll 7 bles through reading, almost more than| «yf ly is 'a at P'---well. dooks e staggered to his feet," half] tions. He had been in a good many riet al ream » : If it really is 'dreadful'--well, looks} stumbling, had running landwards.| rather difficult situations and rather ) Insist on getting Bob Long any other source, we receive our out-| are very deceptive, that's all." Every second he fesred the tightening] felt qualified to meet: them. He frank-| "4 Ki pe hs Brands from your look upon the world, how much more| Lois, sitting on the steps below the' of the line and the inevitable back: {ly did not like this little chick erowd-| _ : : : y they. will save you money: we would read of what is really worth| crutch, lifted her serious young face! wash that would pluck him up and ing into leadership. im-- gS while. so that she could look steadily into|toss him seaward again. He heard ut she went right on, planning and : 7 t R. G. G & Co., Limited ot : ; "spoke almost fiercely.| the swishing rush of the water behind | sugges ting and asking questio. A NAY : ' 'Wisaipes TORONTO Tested Recipes. Ws Syes one Joke wines 2 ee him; felt the spray of its breaking| ~ "Because you're the man you'll want 4 C= AL 1 be : : EP Rhubarb Fritters--Rhubarb, 1 pint| imagine--how dreadful it is to be a Sr ed 4 ack ee ro ihe todo $e heavy work: bi $ youl The : Bulk Carlots a BOB LONG BRANDS | of milk, 2 eggs, a little salt, powdered | girl at home-~taken. care of all the calf upon it his fingers groped frantic g the pit for our clam ove a 5 4 ~ WE apa] Knowa from Coast toCosst | sugar, fat, 6 large tablespoonfuls of | time--not allowed to do' things--the ally for something to grip. But the you'll want me to go out a Oyen: ) ! ; IORKS coll: ya. 10 toate flour. Peel the rhubarb and eut it into| same thing day. after day and month|object beneath him was too big to get wood for a fire, won't you? So Tll go pieces three inches long. Make a bat-| after month, when there's so much his arms about and too slippery to right now--and I know you'll think ter of flour, the milk, the salt and the| needing to be done out in the world.! afford a hand-hold. A water-soaked our clams are the best you ever tasted. eggs, and beat the mixture until it| Oh, it seems as if it would kill mel old timber of same sort, he knew. (I know how to bake clams, you may| ° is light. Dip the pieces of rhubarb|I wouldnt mind how hard things were Just as the in-rushing wave burst be sure. 1 Ie 3 Bae . him his right hand touched a' Lifting and lugging stones was not into. the batter and fry them in hot|--truly, I wouldn't, Cousin Dick. T'd upon 1 / ) : gE | fat until they are a golden brown:| like hard things. That's what some- Gn pike Ae is Po thie sus somTorting exetslse for Bron 2» Pile the fritters on a napkin, sprinkle] thing in me 1s crying out for all the' feet straight heavenward and whip- hole in which to make the clam oven-- i | ping him first toward the land and. but he stuck nly and Sucomplaine | 'd always been able to | . : then toward the sea. The terrible ingly to it. Th Mir dd f N tur strain of it wrenched Syery muscle do his share, carry his burden, with a 5 . e al es 0 a e ) in his body, but his hand clung des- the men of the world and he was not 5 : perately. He felt the old timber wob- going to admit himself outdone by a| Jes hy s-------- . ble uncertainly and then lift' free of Woman--especially by this particular | 1H! Man is the climax of nature, of law | splendent flower. which shames the |the sand, only to wobble and settle one. . | | i i toward him, He is royal and has been | The tree is one of the most indus-| It was all over in half a minute, share and insisting, even, on lighting twice crowned. Once "with riches |trious of all the armies that toil for but left him crumpled, gasping and and tending the fire, He had slipped and honor" and again "with loving | man. Look all over the farm, and it | choking across the timber. cas wa f boxes of matches. into his kindness 4nd tender mercies." For | is work, work, everywhere! Here is Only a few Steps More now and he pocket = just such an emergency. him the flelds toil and the great |the timber grove. How cool and de- would be safe. e staggered up, One of these boxes he gave to the girl. stumbling into a pile of projecting' A ntly she was entirely oblivi- stretches of grain turn to silver and lighttul when the breeze comes. .io where he made the line fast. = 'ous Pe studied aloofness, chattering golden grains. For him the flocks-and | through on & summer day! It is alll "1 aving hold of the rope he pulled and confiding like a friendly chipmun herds increase. The cow becomes a |quiet here; yes, quiet but busy. Con: |it frantically in, the next wave drop--throughout their first a . chemical laboratory, turning crude | sider what the records of those yearly | ping the pes almost. at his feet. And| "And how about that lumbago," she material Into streams of life. How the | rings mean. There the records of a there she Jay, curled in a dripping, ordered, cocking her héad to one side, | patient fowls. work for him. For him summer's work are registered.' Two | gasping, help ssa. ball. % ~~ |"you must do as I tell you. That's| toll the patient ox and faithful horse; | feet added to the height, an inch add-| Dragging her to a place of safety what father does--and he's a regular and now we come to another great|ed to the diameter; figure up the ag- | he dropped, face dows, foo. exhausted growls old bear Bre all people with} toiling host which from spring till fall | gregate and iow many loads can be them. the rope | ailed behin "F tha As yr ps mach for oury _ work for him with a persistence which taken from the forest, and then only * + ; CATs A ee 3 a J excites our wonder. Let us think a the equivalent of the growth is taken And thers Be lay tl the or he began cold 3 moment of sthe laborers in the veget:| away. The trees are in haste to grow | swelling waters, played full upon his} "Really nothifg. Really only you] © able kingdom. HR that their labors may feed the stove uncovered head. ='. - | must, do what I tell you. Give me your| ~ There is no sound of saw or ham-|and bring the wirmth of summer into! He awakened | i y re AB STR mer, no tall to toll--no laborers' song | the chill 3 r. They have been |scious first of a binding --yet ut the same time persistent, tre- condensing the sunbeams for men and | back then of an aching of mendous, quiet work on an immense | storing them up, wrapping them in fini Hy of a splitting heada: scale. - = 'that rough bark 0 man may have he rementbered ab "The labor of the olive'--an im-| posts. for the farm, poles for the shed, | perfal fact dressed in poetic garb. |lumber for buildings and flel for the Joa We love the thought, It opens a wide stoves, Plant trees in the waste places | door, When the warm winds thaw the rand they will dig gold out of the earth snow, and the genial sun ushers in the and gladly they will toil night and day | spring, and the frosts let go their grip | for our comfort. What faithful friends | . and Providence. All things converge | glory of kings. again. So he plugged on, doing his full | » he of the roots, it is 1tke the call of day ! upd st' vio 'calling them to bos, the blessed trees, not only