seemed to force itself upon 4 tention. ~At dinner that evenin orderly go in a to me, Io THIS IS THE TIME TO PUT OUR SHOULDERS TO THE -WHEEL- IN VERY TRUTH. Tmurder against Garenee. The | ' i | hive Saacoes sugar beet fields and soup ctories in northern. France and ; er directs that the funeral "shall ¢ WE ARE ON THE BROW OF MP ried to erample the note ual I wart THE HILL--LET US MAKE THE SUPREME EFFORT. iv: SPACE AND POSITION DEDICATED TO THE CAUSE BY THE SALADA TEA COMPANY - notice nothing, but then he shell-shock. I remember reading where that loss ser sense net ' is one of the symptom A - ~ There was quite a scene in the PRIME STILTON at luncheon on the next day, tion, arrived from ' ass sent the padre round to us. said he had come to arrange about the funeral. larence was quite rude. "There isn't' any funeral," , asd By Douglas Valentine. ------ | getting very re a5 : The padre was usin 8 andker- When Clarence announced that hisjcorner of the room--if the cheese' ch, ef. eing rset was 'sending him al were not put outside, Iie is a well-/ "in. Loi he said. blowin iste there sig mannered youth and, he was very n! ico! sine hers a" when I think it! ei e gi" "Perhaps, et we've had it 2 wee | time there'was aunt in Stilton cheese cheese rtage ut the time, and J cis "Ue exiuned a Clicdnae ect a fine ripe Stilton, its|or.so," he sa he. zet used 'to the: Beauties Pe veiled Paneath a snowy | ripeness. sae en't been out Sow his goggles; and, as no one ds the dear old padre, Clarence $a hite napkin, evoked rhapsodies even | here very long, eer ane, and [ notice ri his equanimity. je Corporal Mulberry, the lugu-| I'm not so good at standing ae that ass B chippe brious and unenthusiastic, who acted! some of you fellows of ee "Raggin' ana? " he a "T think as mesg waiter you want to keep the cheese in here,' it's time we finished up this diedee. "It'll be tastetike after lunch, sir,"|I could sleep outside. he said, when I, as mess-president,/ night. " acquai inted him with Sigiery ce's! I tokd him we would put the cheese aunmt's generosity. "Ow as it in the mess-box, and stand it outs ide, | don't get sto le comin' out!" ah added.!on condition that he made himself re- v 3 ' 'cheege, and, while for those who are it must be very delicious to lives for. ' days in'#s fragrance, as far am jut, as her mother had done, no better ana ¢; had bee: 2} an 1880 model of housewife competing with the 1918 type. tine , Personally, I'm not h great lover of |eoncerned, I shall stop cr ate here There was once a woman who! fa thought herself an excellent house-| Italy; more than 50,000,000 pounds of keeper because she did thing exactly sugar was sent to the. bottom of the ocean off the United States coast re- cently. r Since about 70 per cent.. of the Put in plenty of. vegetables and 'no worse. Then there came a guest, a rice or barley. t little girl who, had learned - many' . TORY BONDS TO \things from reading the latest' Books| Country's sugar supply passes through Even with poor BUY VIC ;and'magazines a girl who was always the hands of the housewife, it is evi- stock delicious THE LIMIT OF YOUR PURSE eg py Pee fe ran had dent at he a ont important coups ean be prea P dding THEN D BUY MORE. but after that note I felt' I couldn't, aos we orar abeeancar Just as in the use of flour substit- made by a BORROW AN rues old Clarence, . So I took the, bare : en saccagr age pinidiyke a utes, she will learn from experiment a dash of Réatly, it seemed to ge , 2] fal of both time and strength and she! and practice many ways of using oth- and s' er. Colfax, ee othe -'had missed all the improvements that|er sweetening. She will also Jearn how to substitute other energy and fuel-giving foods for the sugar she hag relied upon in days of plenty. All this takes time and thought, but m made on the ways and me- thods of a past generation. She was |BOVRIL it is a voluntary contribution to ulti- The little girl who read and learned : mate' victory. mixed the lard and flour for her pie Canada Food Board, Licence No. 13-!'2 instead of any kind that happened to; be available, her crusts were flaky and | feather light. She-put her dust -- In nothing do we show our patriot- in an old pail, poured in a little kero-! ; than in our willingness fo sene oil and covered them tightly for fa} 'a "Tine with every request of the an hour. Each cloth was &s 48| government. One of the biggest re-| those the woman had been buying af | quests is to get along with as little an agent at thirty cents each. She) woo) as possible, a request which will we ns, peas, berries, etc., in &/ inconvenience the folks of our north-| sieve and the work was wondrously| er, clime nearly as much as the ban simplified. She kept a clean newspa-! on sugar. So far wool cards are i per over the kitchen table, changing the future, the giving up of wool i papers as often as necessary an simply a test of our patriotism. \s much scrubbing of the white oilcloth| "Tj is how one mother met the sit- | Remodeling The Child's Sweater. | po0n's work. --_------- To Dry Citron Peel. Pare the citron, eut in pleces of salted water ,until tender. thick syrup, Using one pount! | gar to ont pint of water ni Pou und of the prepared citroa. is/ the citron and let, simmer unt'l yrup is nearly absorbed, then with a new interest in what had be- come prosaic, dragging housework. When she suggested that boiled salad; eweater, a dark blue, was worn pve one three years it begins to look = if is | tight- fitting lds. a new one muet replace it. crusts with a fork and used ice water --_-- z ---- monty for the yarn and two. after | convenient size, and boil in siimhtiy Make x of ea for ea Add re yo!) rapidly, stirring constantly, unt') ti ia the was sa i well youu' Dry s saved. uation. Sweaters will wear out even! -- 2 to tivnt The woman who knew watched her} on grown-ups, and when a child wears warming oven and stor: in any t.<ht : , receptacle, fruii jars or pals dressing could be canned just as easily| frayed at cuffs and collar.. In nor- as peaches the woman doubted, but' mal times the mother would have giv- experience proved that enough dress-|en it-to the Salvation Army and) if Special Notice - Ke be bought This year how-! Mulberry's forebodings were notisponsible for the safety of the box.! ontil that cheese is removed. |W ing to last three months could ought a new one. year, i . ; . - realised, sae in due course the cheese; Ci larence, however, was quite huffy' hans 2» it"? he pen ag vociferously, "the| made at one time and with a big sav-| ever, she decided on new collar and| hia =. waters, made its appearance on the table in| about it. He seemed to regard any place smells Kke a--like a tannery!" ing of time, fuel and dishwashing. cuffs. For the cuffs she simply cast 3 3 st the ruined Peer which we were! criticism of his aunt's cheese as a slur Or poison- -gas factory!" said I subsequently discover- Ss In default of ajon himself. Sen Cor the headquarters ! 233, vs' somebody e ae i orpora Mulbesry had pane ed that some ass in ; Colfax, 'tig handkerchief to his nose; The girl who read went back to' on thirty stitches, knitting with two | school but the woman who thought she: ;needles, and knitted back and re : knew subscribed for three good maga- | until the cuffs were as deep as were | , >. " 7 Mail" arti-| mess had hun a "Gas i. card on : Say rome ft [Be eee, ad) dat Caren, oo eth ne ee an a rea ae onde! fot ne areal "Its 8 ) !" said Col- in in ear to ' inner, ha iscovered , : ' e whic '. se, 2 | walt anal . a ti» enon: i He me very upset, and wanted ue sees speechless with TOMERA would learn. | by measuring on the child. The oo | BO Ny DS "Rot!" roto torted Clarence, who was 'a march Corpora] Mulberry metsee "Did you ever hear such bilge?" ha . 'Yar is,just as simple. | operati ng Gn the cheese i pee a spoon. 'the ona unk ked plaintively. "Can you smell The Housewife's Part. Cast on seven stitches and knit: fpr your children by TS tie ome a P evrithing 1 pee of 'Ct be i? "¥ f r* cheese, anything?" gain the housewife has to prove, «¢ross the back. On the third time: using our And he dumped a writ! ning mass o larence te a riend o , an a * " re, ar d 2 the . bluey- mae fom se on Colfax' s plate.| should hate to hurt his feelings. But, bien' SS Brown, fanning hin. he policeman of food control. In ee a unin, ete, vey Partia! Payment Colfax hurried passed his plate to) | really, its odor was a trifle overpoW-' cif with a newspaper. "Good Lord!"} on hands lies mainly the success of | ; twutwo stitches. Filan ring. It seemed to hang in one's | I countered cautiously: aking 1% pounds of sugar do for til you have twenty forth --_ wT -- ae ae | don't think I'm very hungry' cutee in the most extraordinary ee "Do you smell anything?" I asked at, person in the family for a month. Then knit straight back. and forth un- Hasy monihly I } to-day, thanks, old man," he said./hion. 1 noticed it when was Clarets. The burden of maintaining the Allied til the coliar 'is of sufficient length --_ -" pe a "J expect I'm u bit.over--tired. I was (dressing in my billet that night. So, "Only a very slight and agrecablel sugar supplies falls on us. There ist to start the point on the other side, planatory Booklet and ous, ver hoe oa that burying fatigae | apparently, did my servant, for when! ort of cheesy odor," he replied stout-}vi9t enough sugar available for us all when Sordi Aes Lita ree 'the stato how much you st se : " KL ad'he. left the room very quietly. | found he had made ready for me a hot; ly (To be 'eontiigind:) to livé in our peace time cee oe scllacay tian ary : ' mare to invest 1 for each Tt was a good cheese, Of course,|bath, with a piece of carbolic soap, Pebhtit tap tabery 2 oe! great war programme has reduc The ¢uffs are sewed together an it was a_ bit ogee But then that's | and a change of clothes OLD-TIME NEWSPAPERS our isons ges Bast; the sugar} - ae aan as it shoul Clarence says in the; Of course, strong cheese has rather airen D i y 8 --_-- . " j county. where thiey qrow. its a favorite a hearty odour. : 5 EL? Oa), ae RE en ed . Have an us "i 405-106 ation Bldg. eb sisting entire-| The first news a tons of sugar > shipping in order that Fie MONTREA QUE. ax #0 when a vaeteer ly on them. . And "A have 6 live'in| 6.3 paper came i Belguim should have food; Germans} for = 'kimple outlay ofafifty cents in (aed the cheese) cropped up at dinner Close: intimacy, in very hot) weather, existence when written accounts of, : : Eats pt NE < the Imperial armies of Rome were sent to the generals in command in all parts of the provinces. In 1566 the, first ~ official sheets were published in Venice. : They were written by hand and ex- . hibited in public places, people pay- ling the small coin of a gazetta to jread them. Hence the name. | The Church, averse to all diffusing | of knowledge, tried to impede this 'source of education, and"Pope Greg» | ory even prosecuted the editors. | The oldest form of newspaper in England was in the beginning of the |yeign of James II., the so-called , "News-Letters," written by hand and 'sent by post to subscribers in the that even Colfax posltivels ly *refpsed to sleep in the mess--we were rather short of dil- lets, .so Clarence and he dossed in a with a fulsomely ripe Stilton cheese is a bit trying. Mind you, I didn't tell Clarence this, because I didn't want to hurt his feelings, and his people had news- Renew it at Parker's The ¥lothes you were so proud of when new--can b2 e to appear new again. Fabrics that are dirty, shabby or spotted will be restored to their former beauty by _country. In 1709 the first. daily sending them to Parker's. |paper, the Daily Courant, was | issued. : | The oldest of, the London daily papers, the Morning Chronicle, ap- peared in 1769, edited by the famous Woodfall. The Morning Post is the oldest of the existing morning pap- lers. It was founded in 1772, fol- | 'owed about 1788 by the first daily | ev ening paper, the Star. Vhe Times first appeared in 1788 (as a continuation of the Daily Uni versal Register, and its originator and owner, Mr. John Walter, suc- ceeded in 1844 in printing the Times by steam power. In 1845 the Daily News founded with the help of Dickens, and it was the first paper to lower its price from 6d. to 3d. CLEANING and DYEING Is properly done at Parker's Send articles by post or express. We pay carriage one way 'and our charges are reason- able. Drop us a card for our booklet on household helps that save money. -PARKER'S DYE WORKS, LIMITED Cleaners and Dyers, 791 Yonge St. . Toronto -- o----_--... Eat Frozen Fish. Fresh frozen fish is just as pala- table as fresh fish. Only--a good many women do not know how to handle it properly. The thing to remember is that froz- en fish must be de-frosted in cold wa- ter. When this has been done clean and prepare as you would any other fish ang cook in whatever form you desi Fish which hes been frozen is just as nutrious as any other and its cheap- ness should make it more widely known, Two Sizes--50c and $1 ee odio years Canadian women have fou m's Milkweed Cream the most raeet pa tofet toe ation on the market for mplex jon clear and porn ies, fo. h Rates vater dally, eof ae off hang mee frown the finge It has-therapeu mits qualities no other phe ent possesres lways have a box of Ingram' . Raa eola Souveraine Face Powder (50c.}in the house. mere cues od olliness and Dereriratton iPpea. and r, Haw vlese compte xion. It ta r drugeiat a there is a complete roducre including A Fleture with Each i Purchase . \ ------_4-----~-- & Grapefruit should be cut in halves, Bach yen Duy a rs ihe : ; Toilet aids 2 Pp a e year an an: ety the pulp loosened from the skin and Goridvained era leceeporeraisofe --|the pith cut out, then chilled. It may be served plain, with sugar or with honey, and to some tastes salt is desirable. Serve one-half grape- ut i fe your home. Ak F, F. Ingram Co., Windsor, rn ie Canada is receiving only-just enotigh sugar. for her actual needs! There is no surplus for wastage. First, all waste of sugar'*must cease; second, wherever possible, Corn Syrup must be used as an alternative for sugar. $e You will discover a real economy, and a delicious addition to your household supplies if you Syrup | Corn 4 Here are a few suggested ways to use CROWN The Brandi is important! BRAND or LILY WHITE a to give to Real Corn 8: Syrup is GOOD --very dishes a finer flavour than sugar gives good! If your experience 'ells you otherwise It is because you have Use y. Ss not tasted the genuine, which is CROWN BR AND Corn ila as a Sauce eroduced from the most nutritious on Puddings. yan of the Corn by witolesome . . . --and selontific processes. Ise LILY WHITE instead of Sugar In Cakes. Remember the brands. LILY ' : . WHITE and CROWN BRAND, and Use either brand in Cocoanut or other Puddings. ithlat on getting thes im, for' purity, Use LILY WHITE in making Marmalades, semen ane Pe > ' Write to the G aaa Food Hoard, * 3 Jams and in all Stewed Fruits. Ottewa, for Bulletin on Corn Syrup. A great many recipes are im- . proved by using half sugar and half Corn Syrup. Buy a can of LILY WHITE or CROWN BRAND Corn Syrup to-day and become acquainted with their great possibilities. Sold by grocers In 2, 6, everywhere 10 and 20 Ib. tins. Canada Starch Co,, Limited fruit to each person. EB