West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Feb 1913, p. 3

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

be of all clung. " I address and - 1': iollat10 00* \.id u! the an)", l Wnto to-duy a my on“ m mu: IA]!!! ni ' And Has-hutch. Norm than .030, b mt. AN “VEINB FREE MOIVIIM of we Loni arga Bunk - m _. vary by. GIRLS rota-Guy- halo-II“ M 10"..”- Mul "" 00 Int. '9 , Y"! 00qude . 'r-umonl " A hr- 00“ s DEED It r5e.'m a f men-un- u I pnuuni 9 V I I “mum Fl ET k s Sta-i D 631.3 A. n wank», I'at8 w nu I boat! 1ttuib" main" Wnsqi "no-4' ' mn- In!“ hie-II. 'OTE" cum f treq “M" "t "pi Ml II. the room by)". rem " room I hum. rendering every obj t in the pm- " mum plainly ”would: lono watches the autumnal goldo. - upon tho white pllhyw with o gathering frown. Numethlug gluten. like dinuwudo on the h Hg. ourling lube- lying on the white, round“! vheekse, but Inno Leighton does nut amp to too if It in poorly ”on. tor hr eyes have rowed past the pretty young kw ml the pillow to mmexhing lying in white. nhnmmoring told» owns- the hock ot a t.hasr vluse " the window. A rry ot ran hn-oh trom [hue Leigh- (uni ups. Ltho a loch no croon- tho room and "latches the glimmering folds. me has rmmgmxed the (mud white will and the mill! veil on the, one warn " the mysterkmo beauty of tho ban. The ulnpyu-rn and white mac-h lie on the loom tu-mle ll. where thoy loll when Gay cast tttcat UN, and near them the withered chlo- u r of ox'ungtI Mammal The cry awakens any. and who atruggleu up to a sunny wrun- just as lone wheels "r-trot, her black ere, itamiutt hie ebony Ton lmltly (“and Je brand "atrt.atse to Gaynell'l room two no” at a time. The door was animate-nod. and Ibo tlet rd he: curly head in with a ripping autth, but she instantly checked her mirth In we noted that Nell was apparently "Imp. "1 ml] tell her mason-ow what I wxmanon she created." Ibo “nought. rum"). out of the room "airs n noise- "le as aha had entered it, tugd Boing nu to her own room at the other and of __ ,, _.-_,‘......, ......, w..- wvulu be " "tte knew who it was." she thought. 'trooptrttr her merry mischievous. dancing blue cyan. It Ivan In into the wee trma' hours when tho ttrand ball broke up sad the In: [urn tooh hm have. Once low up the L__ _ " r - r .. Grave, Leighton enjoyed Immune]: the when” and the unwary New. preo- amr at the muted hall had around. tthe would barely restrain hum-l! from cxplod- mg with hummer as she “steam! to the Inform; t"'tntgteoty. . "Ah' how dmspeytttl, angry Jon. would Buert my "sud-iii,' and". and I did not his}. When the In Btty up hush - ..__ --- v.5-” W I! Ire-Ll: I would hardly know iii,";? tone Leighton lubed muily. It would never do tor him to tInd out that she had “ppm-sod tho rare bouquet. and the po- lltn mama.“ he had um. to mm. Nell. u Ulyncll In“ called. " “You shall we her to-morrow, Ham. aha wild rarelomlvr .-.....u.'t, -c, *7 a "'""-". uu-uou on you. lone. to roman to at. up my end And Del her to are no. tthe ought to im- that I feel "only mutated in her. I cannot. undorsund why an. chum“ to In“ um]: I Inna-rial" rec-lulu- at her- mt. (have tellu me who has churned no Brfatlr I would thdIv Ln..- Ln" Inked gnu-Hy. "l " the [our abated; it 'ou, lone. to Mum and “h h, to m In”! that l Inn m- sun-MET; long with ovum“. "If. a botwoer, unwell," wnw m mntnc. [one alone " "I". a clear run- at I between Madman Pere luau." she am " duh] "1149 be in am?" ot Ev her up for trying to pm tho menu. bunt“! nu..- A In. no..." “1 "tmar. (an t N " (mesh-mm The, [nuts had not an "llroom. When tssrth II! " its heir all.” and 'tod mien-u Ivu man not her w-lmrrow. Barry." laid "arehrmlr; maul-in aha In: “a: home". with a cunning mile. a. many an event might happen he. an that time and the "can: to com- Hy thwart his hoves m that dim- 'P Gay ronld utter the warm to her Hp: that the mummy; ly been loaned to her. bat had npun her by Grace herself - m went on mouthing”: oeed mu attempt to deny i1 , you did not stay until the tmarhtrttr exam You don-d mall turn you tram 1witrhton minutes later lone [143th rune , dawn the corridor. Art aha pane. ll a room uhe pan-m). for m. notio- n. the door is nlighuy 3hr. lone _ it u n turther mth her white, , hanr and who cautiounly in. clear. bright moonlight drifts into om in a "od of mu. white, “Ivory PRIVATE OFFICE (humming down ill-chosen food. and rushing back to work. km straight to dys- pepsia, with all " man: in misery. Proper habits of eating, with n Na-Dru-Co Dys- pepsia Tablet after ’uch meal, restore good diges- tion, health and happiness. A box of tu-Dru-Co Dys- pepsia Tablets costs but s%. at your Druggut's. National Drug and Gum- lcho. otCanada. Limited. - I‘D For Ral orjii'iiiirtr,: Inna). Imagine . duel-Md [one 7* _.. L... damn-um we her like a daulin. nieiéir ii" tair" Ill_dblik0 a meteor ttad been to noon II. t. . Inc-3r vau- of mutual nitration handsome Perry Granville and site mu rd dutightodly, "Ho will e m aw?" m Evelyn. I In] pay [or trymg to pun“ it it I Bvar- m. haul-I! mum." " Harry V‘henkigh turned to th a "manual face. In our little Nell aurora-aim?" n, CHAPTER xvu der ith a gasp of horror. but from her white lips to pe. I In " qu-‘(Com'm In later the enrrin [farming l and shaking tie Nell "ogre-inf?" he I have not Icon her tftrtee i; It tot really unkind of rum to at. up my card we pt. Ah. ought to haul In who she could have Leighton. to much he "at. "I supp-e until she (homes to who the unbiddon mined than: from ther returned the them (mm her or; A Dark lmmonuly the ry Neil's prel- MI aroused. Nhe -II from explod- listened to the I!!!“ mm -- m“ "_.... NA-DRU-Co Headache Wald-s hop them ia quick ttme Molar your head. They do not contain either phenom!» toenail”. morpHne. op1um or any other dangerous drug. 25e. . box " your Drugglst's. _ m lam“. one. In. cal-Ion. co. or can-L Dumb. -e"e------aL2Ct"", "rule. duh You 1iirt7c7i"i7iCa7i"ai"sTaTaTi: " "m---- - - that had been Min-I time rhtly ugh not Hal ”K Wu... I "Pen-y. my love. my love," murmured ‘Gay. "1 have to die-the engineer does not are me. bat it is to live you. " I were to I y. you would be swept on to the fatal bridge." l The prayer nho tried to utter died on (her your). lips: “ready the misty steam [enveloped her lihe . deathshmud -__ the ,terrible glare of the head light danlad mud dazed her the vhf“. elthtr up: ot to the midtllt- of the track. prsticuiatiri_ wildly as she waved het' wh‘u- hummer "h.ef to and tro to warn tho rng‘m-or n his great new”. The mum} of her wild unmixed voice was but, drvwrted, in m: mar and thundvr of the owning train. Wnuld the erurhtteer um- her-would h: hear those panting. “citing prion. m would the iron mum-nor m it" mad ttitttr crush h" and u-arry its burden of bunny you!" on toi,wtrttetiott? It Vina an in Irma-1y thrilling moment. Gav stood uptm the track with a death white [are Illd Jinn sea. Ct .ing tho hov- réhlo m-ril of death for her lm’e's sake. On thundrred the "u.ornotire, now new" . ly a dnxen rods all. 1'! M lama ottrd if hwadlicht threw in hriphl white g'::n- over the lovely white. upturned. ammu- ed fawn and the slender girlish tigutw nandimz like s marble statute directly in mandimz the, path nu my“. 5.-. WC6"' ""#v'"' - _ _ . grave. lye-mic unh‘e rink bay shook and trembled like an eleetrie battery: but the girl never tetirred--mrarerty brottthrd. Would it he life or death for Little (by? only the white angels wanking the ter. rible wane from the smr-gemmed Ill! overhead could ttave.toretold what her h. to W19 to be. Mhe was so young. so fair to mm r'wh a trieie deny. - " The "sin '39 twenty mimmw baht!“ ttreaugtt he“ mm coal into the mum». ed upon her l "It I die." n will never km: make Me will never know that I blew-sec him with my last breath. "H9 marriod me on the impulse of ths moment; but he - rated for me; In an! me of! out of hit: heart, oat of his lite: yet perhaps. it I die to saw him he mly come some day tn kneel my“ my tomb. part the long gnaw and WM per my main. and I 'should hear my Iove': vnirr' even in my grave. I almost think T love him oo." _ _ the attempt!" The tar-of! shriek of the otveomintr train roused her an nothing else in the world could have done. Fan one instant Gay turnrd her (two up to the star-serumod skv. binding out her white arm): to the tieeey Mavudk Brave, daumlvss Little Gay had decid. T love him to.” Quick " thought Gay rose from her knew where nhe had Butte hone". and wrth a lace Ml white as: death. day-had mndly toward the little bridge that qwnm-d the black stream below. Throe of the raitse had been torn from the track. and the dark water yawn-d helm» as' thnugh anximw to swallow the prev that was noon to Ow hurled into it. It Wm: fur life or death: tho thouth And the handsome villain. who had so deliberately Itooped to Bach a diabolical twrttertte, strolled leinurely away. closely followed by his companion. who carried the dark-lantern. Row lung Gay stood there dun-hing dew. perately at tho thorny bum-hen. she nev- s-r realized; time seemed to slip by with the ramidity ot lightning. It warm-w seemed a moment until the fur-0t! shriek of the train. as it sped on Inward the fatal bridge, warned her of ite apprmu-li, . _ .. _ ahe heard Tum-im- cruoth out an im, premium from between his white teeth, “up; impatiently; _ - . cwl," mar" “ veil who a turn down the road for a mile or no: it will be a good half-hour bo'ore you hear her yhigth." While these thoughts were rmrhing through any] bewildered brain. Humid Tremaine Ind bin rompanion par-led again, - Guy wan fairly paralysed with horror. She had caught their terrible meaning In a nun. Great Heaven! what [mould she do? They Intended to wreck the want, nnd on that train was the lover the worship- M In mttdty. - _ Tran-nim- and his unmpanion moo hut- ily from the mossy log neu- tho alder-I. behind which Gay t.rotwhed in Inch ter- ror. and a low momenta later the sound at mutrled hummus rang dully out upon the my!" air. _ _ _-. - Then silence reigned. and Clay knew their terrible work was done, and the knew, too. the tram. freitthted with hu- man tsouls and bearing her young hun- band. was speeding with each pausing mo- ment on to its doom. ' "Every one believe. me in Europe," can- itinaed Tremaine cautiously; "no one iwould Chink of conneetirut me with thin “affair. I tell you on the boat of author- ,ity that upon Perry Granville', return to th-duwu Hall, early in the owning. the ldylll' [oneral diopnti-hed him at once to 2ly: city to bring in pet-non some vitally [important Duper: back to him which were (in the safe " his once there." _ Tremaine bent nearer his companion, ‘uayinz Manely: "The papers must never reach the eertoraH Perry (lranvilh- will have them on his pagan when he passes through hero on the three o'clock train to-nitrht. Two or three rails torn from the trait-I on the bridge yonder will do the work. We haven't much time to low; it want" twenty minutes to that time now. Granville shall not escape me to-night. " he dies In the wreck. and the old gon- oral pawn quietly on at Remnant Hall, there will be no one saw myself to in. hI-rit the Pumiit- Mills and the general} root million. Come on!" ! One ot them net down the dark-lznwrn ‘thnt he curried. and the light tell upon [his lace. Gay could scarcely "we" a wreath of .terwr that sprung to her lips as tshe re. vmgnized the dark. sinister face of Harold ' Tremaine. I Alone. friendjcu. homeless, helplen, ipenniie.s. adrift on the cold, merciless iwyljld. wan ever a young girl's fate more , pitiful? (lay wed on through the piwhy dark. you. little heading whither she was tro- llll. uptil at lam. uhv punk down, weak an.:' upgnt. upon I [gummy [or to m}. They wanted the mnvenation that was momentarily interrupted between them. and every word that Tremaine uttered in his low. cautious voice fell like drops of molt“: load [1th Guy's hear}. __ They Were so near, the frightened girl could have put out her white hand and touched them trom whero nhe crouched behind the m-reening amora- she was so he" them that she wondered the wild, tumultuous throbbing of her heart did "of betray her pruemn. _ - Me drew back into the shadow of the “denim-hm until they would pun; but irtstarad of doing so. the two men who Advanced “at deliberately down upon the mossy " upon which Gag had rented but almond-M since. trot/Soni 5:81.} Then; GU" GvGinow; aha wand of voices near I: hand aroused or. Without another word, poor any. who In toned about so pnifully by the cruel hand of Int, turm-d and led like a lintm-benten swallow down the dark vor- ridor. and out of the house into the dark. "H? ot ttte rtiIttt. - _ _ _ - 4'" In hour before and had cried her. "elf to 'si-tr-and robed kernel! in her street clothes, with mid, trembling hand. and heart that was nearly bursting. " an: read, now. Mus Leighton." tshe {altered tremuloualy. "I forgive you for Four unjmt Quinn-ion, because your roof urn-Mend me in my hour of need. I am 1tratqttu to your kind father, your Mun-r. the lood old housekeeper. and yum-sell; an well no to the noble you": man tho found me by the roadside that momma amt.ttrorurht as here. Tell them thin for Temptation h Oh . Percy your mar " I will know fared Hhe C'HAPTER XVIII mhhod tair that his nal death itself m y all al ave wildly I hw- the impulse of . rated for me ri heart, oat of f die to saw I cti d "what shall my love! y 'd her fare up Ming om her uds. 33' had decid- tly. “my love no win on my xur his dear hat I blade-Pd Vtho hor inarked I will d med, in the " train. r-woulll he 2 Priors. "r I mad tiight n of human wan an in. r tho p; he J hi! him, “not; _wMo Id nit' in Habits can hate quite as bitterly as humans. A man who had made it a. habit for twelve years past to spend one week of his annual holiday in bed, failed to do so last year. And the consequences? His habit retaGted by rendering him ill for the first time in many years. Nor is this an isolated instance of how-venomous habits can be. A man has been laid up for two or three weeks, maybe. and when he gets round again. he complains of that "weak feeling" in his legs. It's nothing of the sort; it's habit. His legs have become used to bed. and at. first refuse to change their habits of inaction. In fact, it is thoopiuion of a well- known physician that any kind of habit is bound to "hit back" if it ho discontinued too abruptly. No man can suddenly switch off meat to a vegetable diet, for instance, and remain well. Not will): so. but with some strong habits, such a: the taking of drugs, cessation often means death. A striking cxamplc of this was the casc of the author, De Quincy. He formed a habit of taking four ounces of laudunum per day, the cumplcto cessation from which vsoulel,have killed him. Int-vlligent First "ovn--"Have pun ever noticed, dada-. how often mamma uses the expression 'And so my? And an on'. And so un ..r' Fa.. ther-"Yes, my dear: but I am surry to 5a.r' that it-does not apply tn my trouser buttons." l There was a hoarse cry from the en. KllINr. I "My prediction has come true!" he ipanted. “There‘s a woman on the Mark! [She'll be crumhed mangled beneath the (wheels."' Him! the old engineer. great (drops of perspiration starting out on his ltuce in beads. ( With an etrort born of intense. horror, [be whistled down breaks. The great. dark, velvety on: closed V the white lips parted-and utterly prol- trated by the fearful ordeal through whieh she had just passed. Gay fell back in the engineer's strong arms in a deep swoon. Re realized the import of bar word: It oncerthe lovely young girl lying in a dead [aim in his urmrl had saved the train from a horrible catastrophe 3:439 risk of her own life. Will mt Baek if Ilisomltinnod Too Ahrllptly. With a great. hyatericul. quivering cry. Gay pointed to them. "I diavovered it!" o. gasped. "r-T-- meant to save your train-or-or -tiie!", The engineer had clutched the girl’n um raised arm, drawing her by main [one upon the rail beside him quick as a 11th of lightning. and the great, iron monster thundered pantingly over the spot where Guy had stood but an instant before -~ partted-tremhled-and then Mood still, barely swaying the spot where the ties had been torn trout the track. by a aingle hair'-bretuith. In that moment of fearful ordeal. his prOsenee of mind aided him. With iron will and nerves of steel. he sprung out upon the iron fender. A moment of breathless suspense follow- ed the white augelu looking down upon se,"; thrilling u't-m- must have wept for y. In no CILANIST. W. - - "on: DYE, one can hiya“, you don't no. hvo to kmwht KIND of Clad: yoanoodo m and. Ola-so ‘Myhkn "f Fumble. Send tor Fro. Color- iGi,nitor, Becki“. I“ Boon-I - unh- ot Drab. our other color; 11. 'om"oycrySeNetet'y Go., m. He had done all that. human power Could do to stop the train, hat it must pass a rod or more over the spot where the Mulder figure stood ere its speed would slacker). Would it be too late? All the agony of a “lemme mm crowded into the awful moment that followed. I "In then-.1: .ign about that?" asked the "iriiidii', laué'hing outright at the notion. "That's the worn! I ever heard oi----" "There's many a conductor would have prevented such a permit from entering his our first, it it cotrt him his position - there's junt that much to it," replied the lengiueer. nighing: “and when I saw the black chm-p cram I said to myself, Uint Hale, old boy, I fear you're making your last run on the train m-nightlook out for yourself.' But I didn't get a substi- tute; I didn't try. rn stick to the old engine to-nighl, Pome what may." " [was I'll shulu' the railroad buvinenu alter to-night," said the fireman, nerv. nusly. "Good ttracious! you‘ve worked me up to much a pitch, I'll get to be a raving lunatic dreaming of black tshvep and hump-backed dwarfs after this night's run. Run slow and keep a sharp look. out, and I gut-Sn we'll pull through all right. Jim!" _ “I've run so slow that lie last twenty minutes already," retorted the engineer. "and I must turn on more ate-am a! once." And as he spoken the angina whirled with lightning like rapidity round an alyywt curve in_the mad. "There's another wagon l have for feel- ine sort o' down in the mouth," won. on the engineer "lowly. "When I was about to start away trout home to-night, my wife clung to me. cryink like I baby. 'Dott't go on Four train to-night, Jim." she plead- ed. 'l have had hunch a hornble dram. Do Ber a nulmutute just for once- oh, do, Jim! I dreamed that 3 hump-back dwarf TOM? the tirtst person to board your train.' And. by the Lord Harry, her dream came true! A hump-backed dwarf was the tin" to hoard my train to-night." we ‘em. You can talk about ouqmtitiou and all that non at thing as mun as you like, but when an engineer sees a black sheep leap arrow the tux-k before he rtrarlte; .he firs, ,tat:ott, let him look on. for his train a wrribk- accident follows." A mid nhuddc-r ran over the tirerttan'tt sturdy frame; althoatrh he laughed and ridiculed the idea utoutly. somehow the solemn words of the engineer impressed hityvcramrelr. "We no not there yet." he "lowered (homily. "and I sha'n't breathe freely until we Black up It the Rackerwack De. pot. I've been running on the road nigh onto twenty years-1 now, and we old rail. roadvru know what Finns mean when we so? em. You can talk about superstition and all that non ot thing as much a» you like, but when an angineer sees a black - No LGerhiir"ihdire"iGrke tile gravity of lhe eutrineer'rs, trwartttftyre. _ "Your: the monaupernitioue man I ever traw," he went on. 'You use we are alum-t. at Lin-kennel. where you and I vhantte on [tr-night. yet naming has hap- pgljel," he gdded ttituyplyuttV. A watching My out of the corner- ot " on. tho angina“. Jim m. who lands jut a ho has stood over since the train Iqft the depot. gain. thoughtfully out ot the window, with " hand on the lever, while the train, mailing and punt- inc, duhea on thmugh the darkness of the night. " hope rotrre not thinking yet of that non-enu- we were .alking about. when the trttitt ruined," aid the fireman, throw- ing down his shovel with a hearty laugh and "naming over to the window when the "Acme". Jim Hale, stood in the same thqu‘htlul position. . . - II l BITS Til IT HATE. m, be continued.) “um. m... -'_relW. I----..-- _ Air, sunshine, water and map may be said to he essential io sur- v-essful laundering. The brnf ro- _sult,s are obtained it these four (agencies are generously employed. i Water diesolvea the dirt and can. ig?,',', it from the clothes; hence a generous use of water is very de.. lsirable in the cleaning of clothes. l Soft water is best, but if this is not available “hard water" which hey been ioftened by adding lo it an alkali-washing soda, lye, borax or ammonia-may be used. Ciro should be taken in the use of alka- lies, as the addition of too much will weaken the fabric and injure the hands. The amount to be used depends upon the degree of “hard- ness" of the water, and no hard and fast rule can be followed. Before beginning to wash, sort the clothes in the following order: Cod8rdt Chowder.--One and a half ppunds codhsh, one pint sliced potatoes, one-fourth cup sliced on- ions, four tablespoons flour, bmr slices salt pork, one pint milk, hail- ing water, salt and pepper. Try out the salt pork, add onions and cook slowly till they are yellowed, Then add a ‘quart of boiling water' and the fish cut in small pieces. Cook until thm latter is nearly done, then turn in the potatoes. When they are tendon add the milk and flour dissolved in a little cold water. Season to taste and serve garnished with thick water crack- ers moistened with hot milk. Potatoes en Casserole.-- Slice boiled potatoes and put them in a casserulc or baking dish with lumps of butter, salt and pepper. Bake for thirty minutes in a hot oven. If a gas range is, used, the potatoes can be improved by baking tor a little shorter time and then putting them under the flames for five or ten minutes to brown. Desilod Oysters-Welt one table- spoonful of butter and add one ma» spoonful of finely minced onion and one teaspoonful of chopped pep- pars; saute until tender. Add one- half cup of oyster juice. one table- spounful of Worcestershire sauce. a teaspoonlul of English mustard, a speck of cayenne, and two cups of chopped oysters. Cook slowly for five minutes. Serve on squares of hot buttered toasty. Rice Cream with Maraschlno Cherries-ish thoroughly 3, quar- ter of a pound of rice, and boil it in a quart of milk until the rice in soft: then add half a teaspoontul of vanilla, and lot it cool. Soak half a box of gelatin in a cup of cold water for two hours. Put the rice on the fire in a'douhle boiler, and when it in heated stir m the gela- tin, not allowing it to boil. Take it off the fire and heat in a pint If whipped cream. Add sugar and sherry and a cup of chopped mar- aschino cherries and blanched " monds. Pour it into a mould and leave on ice. Grilled oytlers.--lse large oy- sters. Trim them and let, them lie in a bowl with melted butter, salt, and pepper until well seasoned. Then wrap each oyster in a slice of ba- con and sprinkle them with bread crumbs and chopped parsley. Put them on skewers and grill for four minutes over a hot fire. Place the oysters on slices of bread fried in butter, and serve very hot. Biro with Cheese and Tomato. ..- Cook one-half cup of rice in three cups of cold water, heating it quick- ly and letting it boil fire minutes. Drain, rise in cold water, and drain again. Add one cup of Mme.- u) Puree, three-quarters of a cup of water or broth, one-half tea-spoon- ful of salt, and a, little chopped green pepper. Cook until tender and then add one-half cup of grated cheese and two tablespoonfuls of butter, mixing them in with a fork. Apples in Dressing Gown.--Make a puff paste and cut into pieces large enough to hold an apple com- fortably. Cut the apples in half, peel them, and cut the core out of each. making quite a large hole. Fill the center with sugar. cinna, mun. and strawberry. raspberry, or quince jam. Arrange the apples with pastry beneath them and over them (like individual pies). and bake the”! in the oven as you would I. me. Dainty Dishes. , Ham Cream Cakes-it, one- quarter of a pound of flour into a bowl, season it with pepper and ‘celery salt, and rub in two ounces of butter. 'Next mix in the yolk of 'two eggs', two tablespoonfuls of cream. and oneithird of a teaspoon- ful of baking powder. When it is mixed to a stiff paste roll it out very thin on a board and cut into small round pieces. Prick the piec- es and bake in a hot oven until they are light brown. When the bis- cuits are. cool split them through the middle and spread with a paste made of whipped cream and finely chopped ham, seasoned with pepper and a very little powdered mixed spices. The cakes may be served cold or heated in the oven before, using. i, Cfi'iiiiiiii] Goes furthest for the money Just what you need “to: a hard dsy’s Worr-a loft-uh. ing cup of _ LIPTON 'S Washing Clothes ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO A Blessing to Newfoundland and North Atitotie F'ishertuen. The number of liveg which hare been lost during tho part )0.“ through orllisions with im-hm-gs hum the frozen north ha, rmonlvd in no uncertain llltllult‘t' tho extent of this foe npuu the high seas. The bergs have how sighted in muthoru latitudes which hitherto have been regarded. a'r' beyond their teach. The popular mind has been riveted upon the subject by the number of accidents; but. a“ a matter of fact, scientists lv,tve been aware of their numbers and movements for tears. So far as recent records go, last year icebergs have not liven sightvd so far south as in former sea-Suits. Some years ago one huge berg 4'on- Do not press fhuanels or woolens when they are too damp, lest the hot iron turn the moisture into steam and the Woolen; hcome felted. 8 toH0 minutes. Homm‘o clothes from the boiler to a tub. Add a pail of cold water and wring. Rinse in blueing water. Wring. Starch. Remove from line, dampen and fold. Do not hang Woulenx out in from» ing or very cold weather. Do not hang woolens too close to a fire, as the extreme change in temperature will shrink or felt them. Boil white clothes in clean, snap; water. Water should be cold when clothes are put in the boiler. Boil B to_10 Inmates. liemuve clothes Wash Woolens in lukewarm water. Be sure that all water used in the washing of wouleus is of the same temperature as the first wan-r into which they are put. It is tlw change in temperature which causes Woul- ens to felt and mat together. Put into this water the clothes rinsed from the tub in which they were soaked. If a tub is used, rub clothes on washbuard, or if a wash- ing machine is used, washabout 10 or 15 minutes. Whenever the water becomes dirty, pr'epare fresh suds. Clothes ca mot be made clean in dirty water. . Put water on to hint. Make soup solution by shaving one bar \v'wh'nq sun in two or three nunrm of cold water. Beat gradually un- tu an) 15 dissolved (about one hour). Rinse clothes from the water in which they have soaked. Pour warm water into a tub or washing machine. Add soap so- lution or soap to make a good suds. The lows :- A good plan is to soak the clothes overnight. To do this, wet the gar- ment to be soaked, rub the soiled part with soup or soap solution and fold that part in, Fold and roll each garment tseperately. It is well to put the less soiled clothes in one tub and those which are much soiled into another tub. Cover the clothes with warm soapy water. Do nut soak Mac-kings, colored clothes or Woolens. linen, body, linen,' hndkerchiefs (these should be soaked, walled and boiled separately if used by those having colds). soiled towels and clothes. stockings, colored clothes, woolens. THE VALUE OF ICEBr,RGtil. TIM: lipep and clan touch The new French Premier ARIS'I‘ID E BRIAN " . ne morning proceed fol tron-n rivers come into contact with the water they break off in huge masses. some solid blocks tneasurig a quarter of a. mile in length. and representing a dead. weight of several milion tons. When the winter breaks and the currents set fiercely southward these bergs are marshalled in line, and sail ' "IF" the a't'ttg CEYLON TM a Iithe best fiamoredangmost economical Teainthe Baa iiElijlrlij]r)iii is one of the choicest lug“: ever refined-with a standard of purity that few sugmcan boast. Try it in your home. Take "St. Lawrence" Granulated in one scoop -and any other sugu’ in the other. Look n "St. Law- I _ “l J perfert crystals-its p)all pure, white sparkle-- "ll its even grain. Test it point by point, 3nd you will m that " LAWRENCE SUGAI IEFINEIIES LIMITED, . MONT-EAL Take l Smplul ot "eh--- Side By Side Absolutely Best Analysi. shows. "St. Lawn-ego: Granulated“ to t Pure Cane Sugar with no impurities wt “Moot every de,aler sell! St. Lawn-nee Sugar." new". of high Holt baring lull SaladJad new. only. olthebcu . this deoumpns- farther and far- grea'. steamship r the mort part " "You black dat. grass green it an excellent breeding-ground foe the ood, herring, and other nukes able fish. The detritus munitio- I. estxuttial nutrimont for there ad" bio denizens of the deep. A perspicncious mung nun, put- ing where an old colored man “I busy setting fire to the dead gun in a moaduw. accosted him thot "Don't do that, Uncle Eh, don't do that?" "Why so; sch, why no!" "You will make that meadow in black as you are." "Never mind dat. ssh, never mind dat! Dat grass will all grow out tsn' be A. green as you is!" Sugar Send Post Card EELS BUYS AND od Post Card today for particularl. 74 St. Antoine St., Montreal, Cin. Ltltt the "Best Ever" h tn I clan by ttwr-tttq “on running. the man My built. the mm! "tiafata- “its. at hum“. MAXXEEES " Truth - [EH SP: - 1R'Ai'lGf? substitutes. "-va Absolutely Pure at"-tUgt hare’l‘ in the paper. " Donn Miss This H if

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy