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Durham Review (1897), 6 Apr 1916, p. 6

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6 Uf 8J To this add onk cracker crumbs, salt and pepper ion. Mold and I twenty minutes, Beef‘s Heart, Wash heart wel! inside to taste. sized boilod potat together and 2 butter. Fill hear Yay rest on top. a little water and roast one and one dressing may be ferred. A Delightful Garden round salt po is impossible not roll this j a thin strip inch thick, and cut into wider than th and sasbout th Keep \the tr more naste as up together ; as to make t] the straws w bundlos of 8i rings with a o ter and cut c threeâ€"quarter | rings and stra takin@ great break or even very slow ove brown _ color, straws through gently, as they and consequent course, the rif and the straws a doily and nite, Lc ® 0 2C qvoF Vrow! Cheesg Straws.â€"Beat one ounce butter until quite soft and then w into it one and a half ounces of f] and one ounce grated cheese. Seq with salt and pepper and bring the richt consistency of a rather 5 dough by adding enough yolk of e Generally one yolk is about right these proportions; but, of course, : §KG Of OONG Yane wewcte . par This makes fi Scalloped C ing dish and . of eold cooked Grate oneâ€"hal very li.'wly ar cheese. Make sauce and ar ll)‘er:< n the SaAUCcc spread b Wel! them for a Cheese _ Fritters beaten with pepper little milk. Grate cheese, add to it t] piece of butter and an hour 2 0 OeR AAETMAECE two tablespoonfuls of rice in one pint| of milk until nearly cooked, then add one cunce of butter and a pinch of salt. _ Mix together and put into a buttered pie dish, sprinkle half an ounece of finely grated cheese on top and bake in a moderate oven for half â€" mm RiGurere Savory two table Cuban Sandwiches. from the bread, do lay between the sl crisp fresh lettuce lez salad dressing, then mild cheese, and las very thin slices of di cumber, Dishes With Cheese. Toasted Cheese Sandwiches.â€"Make Plain bread and butter sandwiches eut thinly and with very thin shayâ€" ings of cheese between, then melt a tablespoonful of butter (if not for fasting fare, bacon fat or bacon dripâ€" ping is better) and toast the sandâ€" wiches until a nice even brown; drain well, sprinkle with pepper and salt and serve hot. n‘vft care not to let them br even bend, and bake in a ow oven until a pale fawny color. _ Whern passing â€" the hrough the rings, handle very as they are extremely brittle sequently easily broken. Of the rings are nokt aegaamkLin1 Misc ‘"s and and grin add one rumbs, pepper t d and b: cut out the arter inch cut d straws in an Freat care na cZss vary considerably, so it ssible to be quite exact. Do this paste, but press out until strip about a quarter of an ick. Trim the edges straivht into little rods or straws no han the thicknesgs of the paste ut three or four inches long. . ‘he trimmings and as much‘ ite as you may require, knead ther and press out again so ake the rings through which ws will be passed in little of six or seven, Cut the th x one nmt a haelw .w _" ""Se â€" Fritters.â€"One °gg â€" well n with pepper and salt and a milk. Grate three ounces of *,. add to it the mixture with a of butter and a little more milk. butter some patty pans, fill nearly full and bake in the oven out 10 minutes. Serve very hot. | nakes five fritters. I loped Cabbage.â€"Butter a bakâ€" sh and chop finely four cupfuls s 1 . J Dilé bot~ _ e * Quality Unchallenged for Twentyâ€"three Years, _ "SALADA®" in pp. 3 pr _ OV fabvage in the spot. Wash with in the baking dish with the! Vegetables which ; pread beween each layer, (o.| ground should be put i top with the grated cheese CoOking, those which tly, put a crust of the bread. &round should be plun dotting it over with little| &r. butter. Bake in a moderate! _A slice of bread pu "! the top is a good brown. _ or cookie Jar will pre Straws.â€"Beat one ounce of tents. You have prob; ntil quite soft and then work Klass of water which ne and 2 half ounces of flour same way by the bak ounce grated cheese, Season! Hard cheesn is w.. k i4 o ind beof oneâ€"half Haneous Dishes â€"Take â€" one PC nd oneâ€"fourth p grind together u _ can hbe d up log " 200C Peonte the Can you tell a moderate 0y the rings, handle very a quick one? Hora is the coo are extremely brittle Place a teaspoonful of flour ly easily broken. _ Of oven on a pan. If it burns w @s are not essential count 12 the oven is quick. If can be served laid on while you count 30 the heat up log cabin fashion, derate. | _ When you are ironing round neous Dishes. or luncheon clothes, place a i ‘ake one pound of heavy flanel or a bath towel | oneâ€"fourth pound of board; then lay the linen so t ind together until fine. threads are parallel and at rig © CEg, one pound of !es to the board. If placed a dash of cinnamon, Wway the iron will naturally n to taste and one on. the way the threads of the lir bake in the oven for : woven, thus savimw a .:; characterizes the Flavor of a â€"half hours substituted, h lettuce leaves About the H ousehold and a half inch cutâ€" the centres with a : ecutter. Lay both s out again so ; through which passed in little even. Cut the ungreased tin to let them d bake in a pale fawny Dassing â€" the { a rather stiff h yolkAof egg. Pudding.â€"Simmer s.â€"Cut the crusts _ not butter, then slices first some at or bacon dripâ€" toast the sandâ€" ven brown; drain pepper and salt course, the d, then add‘ Bureau scarfs a pinch of @asily and are , spread with "Father," â€" said the "What‘s an optimist ?" "An optimist, my s( who tries so hard to be you feel sorry to see himself." woven, thus saving a amount of wear and tear ens. Embroidered pieces s be ironed on the wrong goods. for to yl,_== _ _ °C hib Vaid?" _5‘0{1’- #e! 25v "s, t i ‘{ rixLAZ i'what C ;1' |fathe U WE woul TS downright scandalous, the number of 20 pound tins I buy, towa: But, as Mother says, we use it for ‘most everything, + tural ‘‘Nothing else tastes quite so good on all kinds of Hot Scart Bread, Johnny Cake and Criddle Cakes, g never ""Mother uses it for all her cookingâ€"for Cookies, Cakes, a que: Cingerbread and Pies, nesrr=viile,. _ ed it "And I am almost ashamed to mention the ez -.r‘-.\ ney w quantity of ‘Crown Brand‘ and bread that my tm _ him. youngsters consume. This syrup certainly is was mt "I h a favorite in my home‘", ' Mmutf F no diff The 20 pound tin t3 con venient and sconomical for home t ) 4 § y use, although you can ##t "Crown Brand‘ lrl. 2. S and 1o 3 Jt ‘_a” pound ting and 3 pound glags Jat®, _ Ask your dealar, M | Tt‘ saying THE CaNADA STARCH co. LIMIiTED ~pu0s. ... / "I d« MonTtrcaL, _ caromar, BRaNTroRD, â€" rort wiruiam. | u’ say th Makers of "I.;1, Whit"" Corn § »ufâ€"[,‘fl'r-w': Corn l S'n I 919 d ch=" Stipey Gloss Lawn y Starch, \CBlIT 4yz $ now ? .”' Messudt "Yes, M e n rey cheese usually offered them as a diet. The bacon works wonderfully, and does not crumble and dry up â€"like cheese does. from the application of a cloth with hot water, and laid across place that is giving trouble. Patent leather shoes should be c fully wiped off with a soft cloth w they are removed, and then a drops of oil should be rubbed them. This Wwill koar tha Lt _ CC OTHRY C Capee nds UoF nce U . yay ;. . _ 3CLe o any space, water will | later, when he j"i“‘"',! it at 1 m get in and the pudding will get heavy, motive was not that. y t.| _ To string beans perfectly, wash “Do you know what it wa them, plunge them into boiling wat.: "Yes. c. ®r, let them stand for three minutes| He got up and paced th s and drain, then svery particle of 2&8Ain. After all, the thing r. string will come off. be told, and his delay had r s|_ Automobile or other kinds of grease !t Casier or shown him any ge f| will come off washable materials if a Of saying a hard thing. _ R e small piece of butter is rubbed into Was not as other girls; she wa n the spot. Wash with soap and rinse. and would hear the truth e| _ Vegetables which grow below the flinching. He owed to her â€"| ground should be put in cold water for nOt to fence with the necess , cooking, those which grow above the longer. He would say strai .‘ ground should be plunged in hot wat. what had to be said. , | er. "You know that there are |__A slice of bread put into the cake Wwho do not hold the view ; or cookie jar will preserve the conâ€" about your father‘s innonce ?" ] _tents. You have probably noticed the "Why do you say that?" sh glass of water which is used in the quickly, same way by the baker. "Because what I am going [ Hard cheese is more digestible if you is only plausible if it is , grated. Certain people can cat cheese the light of that fact." prepared in this way, who cannot diâ€"‘ She looked at him coldly. gest it in any other form. "What fact?" she asked, *T The young should be not only enâ€" father was guilty? ?3 that wh couraged to save out of their small mean?" allowances â€" or earnings, but they _ "That there are people who | should also be taught how and when that he was guilty," he said to spend. EP en "° cookle jJar will preserve the conâ€" tents. You have probably noticed the glass of water which is used in the same way by the baker. Hard cheese is more digestible if grated. Certain people can eat cheese prepared in this way, who cannot diâ€" gost it in ANV Affarm #.... CookIng, those which grow abov ground should be plunged in hot er. A slice of bread put into the or cookie jar will preserve the tents. You have probably notice gluss of water whink a."_ _‘ C Automobile or will come off wa small piece of } the spnot â€" Wack â€" Sm PHUUR icher Aauae â€" ~ *‘ Tly. TNL blve them a richer flavor. * meli? _ When making a boiled pudding be ‘Phil .d'd not know sure that the vessel is full to the Of the cireus tr(.m'pei top. If there is any space, water will . ""e." when he Jmm'.! get in and the pudding will get heavy, mcztwe was not that, To string beans perfectly, wash “Do you know wha them, plunge them into boiling wat.| ‘"Yes. er, let them stand for three minutes H'e got up and ; and drain, then every particle of 4&8ain. Affie';_,""; ,th' string will come off. DC HoMF ant s Always use tools h absorh rater than s Ammonia water, i for cleaning white p | it perfectly without . [ _A bit of butter put _the apples before t will give them a ric When making a bo sure that the vessel top. If there is any s get in and the puddino The PBE COTT UHTEE UUCBâ€" spoons of sugar, stir these into milk and add rice and stir until mixture thickens. Remove from fire and let cool. Whip two whites of eggs, add one teaspoon of either lemon or vanâ€" dlla to custard and mix whites lightly through custard. Tapioca custard can be made in same way only do not cook tapioca. Soak small cup of pearl tapioca over night, then &o ahead as with boiled rice, you tell a moderate oven from c one? Hore is the cook‘s test: a teaspoonful of flour in the n a pan. If it burns while you ® it â€" . 1 Boiled Rice Custard.â€"To about two cups boiling salted water add three tablespoons of well washed rice, let boil about twenyâ€"five minutes. When rice is cooked remove from fire, add cold water and drain. Put large cup of milk in double boiler to warm, beat yolks of two °ggs, add three teaâ€" spoons of sugar, stir these into milk and add rice and stir until mixture thickens, Remove from fire and let neast s Warke l Nn 42 A Pessimist‘s oil should be ;-t;i)-l)ed into s will keep the leather soft, ‘"> tne linen so that the raralle!l and at right angâ€" oard. If placed in this _ will naturally move in threads of the linen are saving a considerable ar and tear on your lin red pieces should always the wrong side ‘roning round doillies hes, place a piece of a bath towel on the oys 1. nutter put into the top s before they are bal them a richer flavor. shoes pinch immediate e or other kinds of grease C washable materials if a of butter is rubbed into ash with soap and rinse. which grow below the d be put in cold water for Houshold Hints quick. If it huvr;\s the heat is mo. son, is fs of scrim do not soil quite pretty,. tools in cleaning which than scatter the dust. cracking a soft cloth when can be ", ISs a man cheerful that View. small â€" boy rap with fresh not so surfeited e commonplace ustard.â€"To about two Ited water add three well washed rice, let should be care , instead of ‘ paint, will it dulling. then a fe\; )e â€" obtained a cloth wet of the you the 17 CCR M himself, to swell plunder. _ It sour many believe it, . the girl herself. I in some ways she a girl from whom nbdish d 1. fh i :/ who had fled had tak with him for his own taken the orphan‘s i; with the intention of I if by its means he coul« from TUMEEâ€"DOL almiwt.. top of baked ly round in the books. â€"It that..." Again he stopped. eyes fixed on him with h out of their depths, "Go on," she salt . un "No. firm‘s as found in that â€"" soap, clean s rmadiints it SC0°°0C Margaret Ryan‘s inheritance were turned into ready money," | Srurborough stopped. He had exâ€" pected that the thing would be hard to say; but now, with Elsa‘s eyes widening with a growing apprehen-; sion, he found it almost impossible, _ "The money was taken to try to stave off the disaster ?" she said. | "No. It had not been added to the , firm‘s assets, N Heeas se 2l t i4 1 y _ "That there are people who bolieve 1, that he was guilty," he said. {_‘"OB,.I know that‘" she said scornâ€" ,»"fully. "Why, we have been living here | for two years in San Miguel under the false name of Page, if not because _ there are fools who think my father | was a scoundre]? We will take their existence for granted. o on, please."| "When the affairs of Carrington and | Varney were investignted.” Searborâ€"| ough went on, "it was found that the| partners, or whichever of them was | the guilty man, must have known for | a long time that the failure was ineviâ€"‘ table; and yet it was only within a‘ period of six weeks before the crash came that the securitios which repreâ€" 1 sented Margaret Ryan‘s inheritance were turned into ready weawn.. 1 I "It was "Was it Phil Varney? not hate him, though his ruined her ?" "I believe it â€" A faint smile face, and she like a sneer: "Still," said E thing, unless her strong one." "I fancy she is girl. Besides, she Montague was noi had known l}im 0 her father‘s stock lieved he was to b Ange and outht by selling her trinkets. A month after she landed, Val B. Monâ€" tague saw her ride, and asked her to join the troupe he was getting up to tour the Atlantic Islands. She did so." "It was an extraordinary thing to do," said Elsa. I "Made up her mind to make her ’ living. There was one accomplishment in which she excelled, and she resoivâ€" _ed to put it to account. She became a _ ridingâ€"mistress." , "In London?" I "No, in Boston. A man who had known her father kept a big ridingâ€" school there. He happened to be in England on a holiday, and he offered her a post in his school. She had a‘ few pounds of her allowance left, and she made up the money for her pasâ€" sage and outfit by selling her trinkets. ; A month after she landed, Val B. Monâ€" tague saw her ride, and asked her to I join the troupe he was getting up to j tour the Atlantic Ixlands @n. iC L Scarborough _2 °Pn of paying it back, eans he could save his firm ~but simply and solely foy _ swell his crimeâ€"gaine| It sounds inovradiklo +. . | Scarborough paused, had made no sign or m he was speaking, aske; _ _"It had gone?" "Every penny of it, "Poor girl! â€" How s loathed the Varneys! do ?" she said. "Tel] me quickâ€" believed that the partner ed had taken this money or his own use, He haq orphan‘s inheritence, not Hesu®d c12 00 m F E EEVUIEETE € six weeks before the crash the securitios which repreâ€" irgaret Ryan‘s inheritance uipreniy stt ol s 18 tn} Foue " . ms, erimeâ€"gained nds incredible, !y; and amongst them I have told you that 6 is a ftrange girl, n one tould xpect S not that," l know what it was?" | | up and paced the ruom" ter all, the thing had to| d his delay had not made| shown him any gentle wuy’ a hard thing. â€" But Elsa, Oth(‘!' wiule : sls as 22g2 "It was found thnf‘t‘he hichever of them was , must hfz\'e known for CHAPTER vII. (c THE CABLEMAN [ smile flickered over Elsa‘s she asked him something iss ed. He saw Elsa‘s with horror looking SHe 1s not a very ordinary les, she had a reason. And was not a stranger â€" She l}im out West as one of ‘s stockmen, and she beâ€" as to be trusted." aid Elsa, "it was a mad s her reason was a very )+ she is not ; _ penny of it, I am told." girl! _ How she must have he Varneys! What did she °~V_you believe it?" . He did not answer, She ot know of the existence nearly a minute, and the ; tr(?l)'pe t“_l th"“‘. mMenths | broken only by their deep e _)mncu.! it at Rio. Iler,‘Th(.,, she laughed softly, t that. o e !borough thought that laug ow what it was? | most â€" desolate â€" sound he ; heard. aned > wanad 41 â€" it was." AN EXCITING PRESENTâ€"DAy ROMANCE PY WEATHERBY CHEsSNCy Sh()nk thne view you do innonce ?" he said.| that?" she nsked am going to n-ll'she ls; she was brave, he truth without d to her courage the necessity any e of it was | was believed ed. "That my that what you his head grave straight m;.t 18 re d, and Elsa, who movement whilst ed quickly: So she did father had DC Og m OSmITeVE; IL, "I saw eight dented or pierced hel.â€" thv'stree(. -Thls !_ Varney nodded. "That‘s natural," . mets toâ€"day," he writes, "the wear. during a rainsto: he said. "Poor Rirl, this is a rough / ers of which suffered no worse ip.| SNIS named it th (time for her! And for you too, old Jury than slight scalp wounds, mlda,l" the longâ€"closed ‘man," he added quietly. "I think J some escaped entirely. _ All would lard table dance !Ciin understand what you are feeling. have been killed if they wore ordip.| ridden thing, wh | What difference will this make to ary khaki caps. One helmet had been| and the cues fle | you?" dented eight times by falling shrap.| Two blocks Aawa) | _ Varney‘s question meant to ask / nel,. while a jagged â€" twoâ€"inch hole, ploded and killed ;what difference the knowledge tha; marked the entry of a shell fragment| had femained sb father was an unpunished criminal which caused a flesh wound. ’h"“"{‘- arms and | ’W°“ld make in Scarborough‘s feelings| "Another bore a deep fissure made] @ll directions and towards the daughter. It was a naâ€"/ by the butt of a German rifle during| Blood still can 1 tural question perhaps, but luckily| the handâ€"toâ€"hand fighting in the cap-,""‘"th and, like th Scarborough misunderstood . it, It/ tured trench. The wearer of the helâ€" the fairy tale "f" never even occurred to him that sach) men was not even stunned and he} it seems to say : ‘I a question would be But, so he answer.! was able to kill his antagonist. a time a young, } ed it readily. He thought that Var-f Helmets dented by shrapne! are mmanemmeromenmeremntrmmesemmeeemes ney was asking about Elsa, not about / unknown to the wearer. Several him. * | had been cut through by pieces of ?OHN "I hope that in the end it will make‘ shell, but the net effect was no great. 3 ‘9,‘ no difference," he said. [er than a smart blow across the skull * o Varney shot a puzzled look at him, with a club." 9 3 § Z saying: nmmtmmncnct mm Wce nanee aowe., t E z3 "I don‘t quite see. Do you mean tol "What an awful cold your husbhand | AA m ay ‘that it /does make a ma&..__._L, NN# L | _ Varney‘s question meant to ask ’what difference the knowledge tha; "father was an unpunished crimina] would make in Scarborough‘s feelings towards the daughter. It was a naâ€" tural question perhaps, but luckily! Scarborough misunderstood | it. It ) never even occurred to him that sach| a question would be But, so he answeyr./ ed it readily. He thought that Vm--f ney was asking about Elsa, not about Â¥aA people ont‘d.) EOV OHETHH: 210 isked hate you now!" | | And then, in a passion ) tell she threw herself into a id in .covered her face with her 4 apns c u2 Oe T 3 ML. S1F2 WA .s*\vill be sensible enough to see that questions will be put, and that she‘l gf have to answer for her movements ?" | "Yes," said Varney.â€" _ "Ang she‘s ~| sensible enough to have forgotten that 8 fantastic vow business long ago. It ,| was a only a piece of girlish froth in I:the beginning, nothing more than a . burst of natural tempor, expressed in a romantically violent way. _f course she soon dropped it." i "Probably," agreed Scarborough, "But I want to talk to her." "Oh, all right. IPH intreduce you, How is the daughter taking things ?" "Bravely," said Searborough, _ "Did she know the truth about hep father ?" "No." ’ "You told her?" ‘ Yes, but she didn‘t believe it." Varney nodded. "That‘s natural," 1 he said. "Poor Rirl, this is a rough . time for her! And for you too, old ,w man," he added quietly. "I think J ; can understand what you are feeling, : } What difference SWOV :this moals . L | __‘"What for?" aske | "You are not going | to suspect her of m [ "No,." _ "Then what do you [ ~"I want to know or spoke to Richmon terday. I want to k private business whi fuse to perform las interview with the m; bed her. Is «ho tha thing. I m who, so far person to s wards 1 sh; Delgada. I Bi()n;; (!e ]a / _ "Richmond Carrig | said Scarborough sin | "Murdered?" _ "I don‘t know, but :) "The diamonds ?" "Oh, I suppose so hour to spare ?" "Yes. If I am in t minutes before my j gins it will do,. Wh me fopr?" | _ "Well?" asked Phil y‘Scarborough returned 4 [las to the Cabla Graii. She difference was an | _ Then she stopped, and with an imâ€" ,’perious gesture pointed to the door, "Go!" she said. ' t-b}lsa!)’ | â€"‘"Go! I asked for your help; but 1 | will do without it. You believe il} of . my father, whom I loved more dearly than anyone in the world"â€"and then | in a lower tone, she added:â€""til} you came, and I thought I had found one | whom I could love more!" | He went to take her in his arms,| but she shrank back from him. | "Go!" she cried. "CGot I thisp v| told. wamonds ?" _ she askedâ€""diamonds which he had bought with that girl‘s money! You say that, Horace?" "I say that that is the story 1 was ’ll‘ll »» "You say diamonds ?" which he h: want you to London _ Mr, Ca large sum in dian them in his poss able that he wou! a motive. There the world who w With a ery the Elsa rose and fa, P 107 CCC e0 mmself to answeor, [or to let me help her. Shall we start ? "I don‘t know what I believe. But,, h{‘,”' machine is in the shed.‘ t f if it is true, it gives us what has been‘ h arney understood now, and Te meking hithertoâ€"a motive for the tB@t he had made a mistake, It was murderâ€"if murder has been done." ;the' girl, not the man, to \\:hom tlilw "It #ives, that, oven thoush 3t is,‘ne“ knowledge made adlfl'exem-e.. e not true," said Elsa quickly. "She he., W28 Slad that Sra.rborougp had missâ€" lieved 't' w2 s ‘.'1 i ...§_‘ She b€â€"/ed the point of his question, and ht" reved it, and she vowed revenge. ‘honored his friend for not understandâ€" Again Searborough had to forcc‘ing him. Varney had learned in a himself to say : rough school lately, and he knew that "I do not mean that. I don‘t think in the world‘s eyes, his thought would that Margaret Ryan is the muderess. be counted the natural one; and he But it is known that before he left know too, how to respect a man to| London _ Mr, Carrington invesced a whom that thought did not even occur. large sum in diamonds. If he retained| "You mean to heln har ns‘ GL. them in his nencaemaimen oo hy ND . . ‘ refuses to speak to | _ "Horace," cried Elsa, sudden! there was a note of heartâ€"bre grief in her voice, "Do you helie this?" _ He forced himself to answer, "I don‘t know what I pelieve. if it is true, it gives us what has lacking hithertoâ€"a motive |for murderâ€"if murder has been don "It gives that, even though not true," said Elsa quickly, "She Heved 16. and ‘cha onus q °0n Is i "Do you believe because she knew no quicker way of earning the money she would need; she joined Val. B. Montague, because with him she could begin her scarch at once, and earn money as she went. She had heard that the object of her"‘ pursuit was hiding in one of the is-, lands of the Atlantie." 1 "Horace," cried Elsa, suddenly, and / there was a note of heartâ€"breaking | grief in her voice, "Do you believe all | this 2" TL10IMm last night was with the man who had a Is she the sort of girl 1 msible enough to see | t you to help me probe this am going first io that girl, ‘ar as we know, was the last ) see him alive; and after. shall go with you to Ponda I want to be Introduced to ho Ts o al strange things. She vow of vengeance, di live years of her | should take so longâ€" and punishing the ms ed her. She became : not going to be 1 want la Mar _ O mean that. I don‘t think Margaret Ryan is the murderess, it is known that before he loft lon _ Mr. Carrington invesced a ‘ sum in diamonds. If he retained in his possession, as it is probâ€" that he would, they would supply ies c BE L0 L BSS Py 9 "~ 70 you want with her o know whether she s Richmond Carington y . Do you mean to’ "What make a difference has 1e CHAPTER vjj asked Phil Varney, '\vhen.‘.f}m‘"l e o o eurly scl h returned from the Chine.| Emperor Vhl!lam.. Cable Station. | _ The order is aimed d Carrington is dead ..’ganc‘e of young men ar rough simply. ‘ |earning high wages in d 2" * 'IT‘he order recites that know, but it looks like if»| P°ceipt of swollen war nonds ?2" [in many Ansse hok en 1d who will murder for I a cry that was almost a e and faced him. say that my father had :# of murder are asked Varney ‘) [Mis is a rough l for you too, old fetly. "I think 1 t you are feoling, ill this make to hy . . 5 qImer she saw i mond Carington yesâ€"| o know whether the | which made her reâ€"! A Na 30 Poa Ens ate There are plenty of men vengeance, dedicated the next ) ces, It 18 observe 0 Lne cireus tvs'enty"pm Aode i my performance be.| °%°" lighting the.n What do you want papgr money, whic °S ol her lifeâ€"if the task ake so longâ€"to tracking down shing the man who had ruinâ€" She became a ridingâ€"mistross she knew no quicker way of the money she would need; d Val. B. Montague, because she could begin her scarch} ind earn money as she went." heard that the object of her" vas hiding in one of the isâ€"| @& passion of sobbinge in the cireus Swer. She waited for , and the silence was their deep breathing. 95 C a soitly, and Scarâ€" that laugh was the sound he had ever Have vyou ass enough | 10 a chair, and ‘r hands. than a ssed in course quickly you?" | 0| _ "What an awful cold your e|has. IHe coughs and sneezes ltime." "He does, but it ami , baby splendidly." 1 think I took a fantasti s an robâ€" who that ETEE ED ucl!l L it is probâ€" less," was what he said wuld supply | _ "Oh, yes," said Scar of men in they rode off together, for less. | The rode to the pineâ€"g lost a sob, passed within a few h |of the Caldeira de Mo had those turned aside to see the "diamonds â€" Richard Carrington had n that girl‘s| The Caldeira lay in a ace?" 1’ pression in the hillside, f ory I was extinet crater, and thev TORONTO 9 + poup plates" is what the British | soldiers at the front call the helmets with which they are now equipped as a protection against shrapnel. They are of steel and painted grey. In j appearance they resembles an invertâ€"| /ed bow!l and are far from ornamental, | They afford protection to the neck and cars as well as the head. A British corresponde their efficacy in reduci as proven in the recent for the recovery of the trench" north of the Y Canal. An !or until his charge ha (21st year. "Soup plates soldiers at the with which the; a protection ag British â€"A rmy‘ | _ As this class of youth has not deâ€" 1 sisted from its practices after repeat. [ed warnings, the commanding general | decrees that persons under 21 years of \age must henceforth "make such | economical use of their wagres as acâ€" | cords with the gravity of the time, \must adequately support their deâ€" :pendonts and must deposit in the savâ€" ings bank their surplus earnings," or they will not be allowed further â€" to collect their wages, Instead, _ their money will be handed over to a duly | appointed trustee, who will withhold | such amount as he sees fit for deposit in a savings bank until after the war € 0C ".'\'oung' Germans Threatened _ Who and a t Squander Their Earnings, of a } warâ€"s _ Compulsory saving has been intrnâ€"‘ha],‘a, | duced on a small scale in at least one Herp ,‘«listrict of Germany. This is revealed |Jif, ;, [in an order issued by â€" the military "Of {#ommander of the district of Cauas) | .. UA 1 t# MUNITION WORKERS WARNED sOUP 3 rock d SVE 1ORA 4 3. _ nA to heip her, none the U to the very spot where these jless," was what he said. |two sorgeantâ€"majors were in observaâ€" | "Oh, yes," said Scarborough, and tion. The French gunners ceased firâ€" / they rode off together, ing until this message came over the | _The rode to the pineâ€"grower‘s house 1@l¢Phone: "The guns are in position, passed within a few hundred yarqs| GO aheadâ€"you may fire, aim at us, |of the Caldeira de Morte, and the COmmandant, go on, fire." The comâ€" turned aside to see the place where M@ndant hositated to give the order, Richard Carrington had met his death,| PUt the German battery must be silenâ€" | _ The Caldeira lay in a shallow de. %*4,. and finally the threcâ€"inchers ]: pression in the hillside, formed by an Struck up again, destroying the batâ€" extinct crater, and they had to leaye‘ tery and annihilating the farm with their bicycles to get to it. There was | the two sergeantâ€"majors. a narrow fissure in the lip of the cratâ€" Souchon tells a similar story of er through which the warm, shallow 4 lieutenant posted in a tower a few stream from the Caldeira made its | hundred meters from | the German way to the lower levtls. The path and | trenches, from where he telephoned the stream occupied the whole of this| t9 the French artillery tha nasibiomws M3 mmesece 9 12 & Ins 88 | my‘s New | Head Pieces rave Efficacious. I in reducing c the recent stiff LATE HELMETS Wrefmany. . This is revealed er issued by the military r of the district of Cassel, an early schooling place of (To be Continued) ‘ecent stiff fighting [ the "internationa} the Â¥Ypresâ€"Comines it amuses the ent testific # easualtie *ly, and he knew that es, his thought would natural one; and he o respect a man to ht did not even occur. husband all the attained his "7’.21 tmu‘\uu:u. ‘}'u::t; l | 5 1| OHiy t y 8\ 1 07‘ C me b ~l5 V 2 Z 2 3 | ?“ _;» s QO @ gh l Remco busily writing. In another cellar are | ** far h: the clerks, bookkeepers and kitche», | named T Of course, the officials must eat, and which e | so a kitchen is absolutely necessary, “lThesn an 8/ "Despite this montonous existence, .-her_n aft | the officials of Gorizia abound in good ; .flMrlcan ‘ sh: humor. They laugh, joke and sings in,';)'.::r' of t ts | the candle light and take their sity2.| "8¢ marr ag tion philosophica”_\'. | ey | _ "The Italians bombard the city day ! .. In and night. Of the 2500 houses and| The pu i.) buildings in the city not one has 954_‘(" % “'“}.9 1,, caped damage. _ All the church edifices *"Kings. y q have been wrecked and 12 hours of by a brig darkness makes Gorizia, like the damâ€" tl?e follom ,| ned, lightless, black city of Maupasâ€" kln.‘: on ca ; | sant‘s novel. | Shlrk-fng; é‘ "While I was in the city only four Smoâ€"king; 1, big shells fell. One 80.5â€"centimetre lea'nest‘, T ; shell exploded in front of a coffee Drinâ€"king; | house, making a big hole the width of most garru .| the street. This was filled with water | .| during a rainstorm, and the inhabit â€"| .|ants named it the "Lake of Shells !". "I want || In the longâ€"closed coffee house the bilâ€" longâ€"winded fiard table daneed like some spirit. lady who 1 |ridden thing, while the billard balis entire lect? Jand the cues flew in all directions, preciate m; Two blocks away another shelj ex. â€" community, !ploded and killed many residenis who . â€" "That‘s . had remained above ground. Their, "Most of y« ,heads, arms and legs were thrown in hitt I has 1. their sleep by the howling of wild beasts, so the present inhabitants of | Gorizia are kept awake by the incesâ€" sant explosion of shells. They have all gone back to a primitive mode of living. Occnsifmall.\' a woman is seen in the street who has ventured out to obtain some food. Not only the citiâ€" zens, but all the officials of the city have ‘buried‘ themseives in the earth, They occupy the cellars under the public bulidings. ‘The Winaminn J ty TV , turn, But there is now a new ; Gorizia, It is Gorizia underground, Every man, woman and child lives in a celâ€" lar, very much like the early Chris tians lived in the catcombs. And as the early Christians were aroused in their sleep by the howling of wild beasts, so the present inhabitants of Gorltla are: kept snmmilcn hae she on.. e cejaral.. qco0y _ ~C~" APRWAH OJ . "" 6 P00 ATeDIme KEPVICE, anadcirys life in the wrecked city. of her descendants altogether "Of the 30,000 inhabitants of & for King and country. 1 Gorizia," he says, "only a few hundâ€" 490, two other grandsons, no red remain. ‘These live, eat and sleep Were in the Navy, in cellars. There is no longer any! _ Many other similar records life above ground. Every day more 3"¢ all equally remarkable in shells explode in the city and every . Way, There is, for example, a day some of the old inhabitants ye. named Smith, of Norwichk, whi turn. But there is now a new "Nine soldier brothers serving; CGorizia., | Mr. and Mrs. Bresnahan; of De It is Gorizia underground. Every bave cight sons in the Army, n man, woman and child lives in acel. YROM are now at the front. DCw MENCAE d 1 1 en mushed with the words: "I hea the steps of Germans who are coming up the stairs. Believe nothing more that is said to you over the wire. 1 have my revolver, and shall never be taken alive," Nothing has ever been since heard from this officer, pondent of ity of Hew French thr;-;m- the Germans to Four young artillery men of the} contingent of 1913 passed nlong the ‘ Avenue Trudaine, in Paris, on the ; | way to the station. A pretty womnn’ on the arm of her husband stopped | on the sidewalk and cried: *"Poor hoys. Good luck to you," while a tear rolled down her cheek. One of ; ;thfl artilleryman saluted, then lool;" off his cap, twirled it in the air and a ‘cried: "Come now, my dear lady, , [jusé a little smile please." | _ Two sergeantâ€"majors chosen from t a number of volunteers left the r French trenches near the Vesleâ€" for C an abandoned farm, where, climbing l to the garret, they were able to disâ€" t cover the situation of German batâ€" o vories that wore causing considerable r losses to the French troops. The ,,, French _ threeâ€"inchers soon â€"foreed > we who ar rews." Well toward the beginning is the reply of a soldier marching through Paris, to a news vendor who offered him the latest extra, saying: "Here, my brave boy, is the latest news." "News?" replied the soldier. "It is we who are goingy to make the , Volume Appeats Containing Words of I Dying Heross. â€" = i "‘The first published â€" collections of, ‘heroic words and actions of the war | on the Francoâ€"Belgizn frontâ€" has} appeared in France in a volume off 1300 pages, edited by Paul Souchon.| | There are remarks of soldiers leaV-, ing for the front, in battle and in‘ the trenches, ancedotes of gonerals | and other officers, the talk of the| woundod, and the words of dying} heroes. * ‘ Well toward the hevinning is thail «i‘ the officials of the city ed‘ themseives in the earth, ipy the cellars under the lidings. _ ‘The Director of as a desk and a mattres Next to him is the desk th officer, wash bowl, table ~ °7 ‘he e€ity only four . _ One 80.5â€"centimetre in front of a coffee a big hole the width of is was filled with water torm, and the inhabitâ€" the "Lake of Shells 1" ed coffee house the hil_ 10,000, Gorizia @ many residents v} bove ground. Their | legs were thrown in d the street ran red. be seen in the red the drop of blood in the king‘s daughter, ‘I, too, was once upon Ts Cmy not one has es All the church edifice ced and 12 hours o sorizia, like the dam ack city of Maupas Few Hundred 1 T ogany, special correâ€" the Berliner Tageblatt f some prominence, tells has just made to the ity of Gorizia, near the r. Jn graphic style writes a description of RECORDS ARE KEPT. + in + AFnGiToC MOTMIERS, rench gunners ceased firâ€" s message came over the s * oak R * k # One idow Given â€" Seventeer ‘The guns are in position, ne _“ T llu w en EPORKâ€"MEDICATL â€"Go ome case. (On thing for old by ; hes, anecdotes of â€" officers, the tall and the words « e PFrench troops. The eeâ€"inchers soon forced to change their posiâ€" very spot where these majors were in observaâ€" comparative] y hool inspectors with the buildâ€" re in one corner young woman VINC@ any of these d R CcomMPOoUxD, > SHIPPING PEYER person !" existence )e small #ize bottle _brood maures; ucts all druggists and Agents wanted *e== se Reduced to "M« but and _1 waunt to thank longâ€"winded orator 1 lady who had stayed entire lecture, "You preciate my efforts t community," "That‘s al> rinhs C mn ORR DCE | ‘"Kings." The prize was c by a bright youth, who ps the following:â€""Th most king on earth is Worâ€"kiny; th Shirkâ€"ing; u very â€" pleasar Smoâ€"king; the wittiest, Joâ€": leanest, Thinâ€"king; the t Drinâ€"king; the slyest, Winâ€":; most garrulous, Talâ€"kine " ‘"Maybe not. trifie billious The pupils in to write origi ; "ave eight sons in the Army, most of ’_ whom are now at the front. .1 Yet another splendid record â€" has ,* been created by Mrs, Williams, of , Plumstead. Herself the daughter of |a soldier and the wife of one who fought through the Indian â€" Mutiny, | Mrs. Williams is the mother of six | soldier sons, four of whom have risen ‘trom the ranks to be commissioned | officers. The amazing natare of such [a record as this in the case of a single family can only be quite fully and rightly appreciated by old army men, | who know how difficult it is for enâ€" listed men, without birth op influence, to attain to this high honor. No won. der King George, when he heard of it, sent the proud mother ; speocial letter of congratulatfon, The above are al! magnificont | ox amples taken from the present war; but the record in this diroction, 0 TB HS HOLORI arniÂ¥tnunmen L. . L ove cannot dik I had wasn Not Alwars S ols sc 9e Om ARerrny eE being the head of the {amily with the most members in the fighting serâ€" vices. Sixteen of her grandsons arc in the army and navy, and the husâ€" bands of four of hor granddaughters are on active service, making twonty of her descendants altogether fight ing for King and country. In addiâ€" tion, two other grandsons, now dead, . _ Another patriotie â€" mother, Mrs [ Jones, of Kyverdale Road, tSamford , Hill, gave her three triplet sons and \a fourth son to the army. The triplet brothers, who are so much alike that it is impossible for strangers to disâ€" tinguish between them, enlisted a few days after the declaration of war, and their proud mother soon afterwards received a letter of praise and conâ€" gratulation from the King, Then, there is Mrs. Potter, a Portsâ€" mouth widow, aged eightyâ€"three, who has been awarded a prize locally for 1. 201 "u% 2 - _ ’ "C6 laken irom the the record in this as actual numbers elieved to have h Pavies, of Church Streeton, Salop. This good lady, herself the widow of a soldier, has given now fewer than seventeen sons to the army, of whom fourteen were actually on active serâ€" vice with the Colors on Beptember 15 1914, six weeks only after the outâ€" break of the war. Sons for King and Country, There would never have been any need to introduce compulsory military service in Great Britain if every Brit. ish mother had followed, to the best of her ability, the example of Mrs. "But the Italians are paying for this wanton slaughter of the civil population, for out there beyond the Gorizia bridge they are having heavy losses. _ The battle changes from day to day, and just now Oslavia is the centre point of atack. And those residents of Gorizia who live and eat and sleep in their cellars no longer fear that the Italians will ever suc. 10 ®IX doges of EuUaranteed to 4 un the blood. & harness *haps C Gradually the merciful rain is oblitâ€" crating all its traces. all _ right," our audience rought my wasting the ck as She Was Bus, is in a schoo original | com The prize wa to thank you in breaking through." Bui Al Kings r brothers sel-\"ink}'-‘;'l-lile rs, Bresnuhn!, of Deptford, SPOK®‘g ATRIOTIC MOTHERS. 1901 thirty alâ€"king 18, for example, a family L9 ay £04 de Flonrishing to Me 11 she re : slipped knitting . time." ecmed en!ighu CG 50. _ Best SP0HN B is the nose . and Akses cured, kept from ol} en I "Nin"‘l‘p‘f‘ Lnne , UMAA, mer RUUTAQE nt king king: the thirstiest cure a said nice Powe to AWaAu plied be Apâ€" this hich has the old his ts rfu hom U there their (3 Ho

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