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Durham Review (1897), 11 May 1916, p. 6

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LQ +Q ter glic ed made gut t ed to fritter 4 larder, you it. They‘r cial" in one are a comn ta une plac ever half | steam al M K Dainty â€" Dishes. Cherry and Cheese Salad.â€"Arrange individual slices of cream cheese on let‘uce leaves. _ Surround with canâ€" noed white cherries in which the stone has hbeen replaced by peanut. _ Put spoorful mayonnaise dressing on each cheese slice and garnish with marasâ€" chine cherry. A little cherry juice added to dressing adds to its favor. Mushrooms.â€"Just let them simmer gen‘ly in browned butter until thoâ€" rugh!y cooked. _ The flavor and sucâ€" ces of the mushrooms depends upon the slowness of the process. If you use a chafing dish, turn the flame down to low, or if it is electrically, fittsd use lower power. At least a halfâ€"hour is required in cooking. I New Dessert.â€"Take a pint of rhuâ€", barb, ut it into inch long pieces, then cover with a cupful of sugar. Let| this stand for an hour. _ Now have a large pudding pant at hand, into which you can put the rhubarb, a pint} »f bread crumbs and a cupful of| raisins in layers. _ Add a halfâ€"cupâ€" ful of hot water. A final layer of read crumbs should be added to the op. and the whole cooked in the over ‘or 406 minutes. _ Cover the top of the lick during the first halfâ€"hour of bakâ€" ng Serve with whipped cream. (Cre med Asparagus.â€"Tie the bunch p with a soft string, cut off thei ecessary part, and cook, for at least C iwinutes in salted water. _ Have endy a fow slices of crustless toastâ€" bread Dip these in the asparagus iquor. then bu‘ter well and arrange n a platter. _ Drain the asparagus nd placg it on the toast, _ Now make goodl cream sauce, using a cupful ‘ milk,. a teaspoonful of flour and 2 â€" hen servi Crumb m There‘s a Subtle Charm 'g "SALADA" This flavour is unique and never found in cheap, ordinary teas. Let us mail you a sample. Black, Mixed or Green. Al you can ev ev‘re a Si ted m About the il House _ |H ind in n Minute in small about an iAp these in the as en bu‘ter well and ter. _ Drain the as it on the toast. _ N« ream sauce, using : a teaspoonful of flou nful of butter and se he simolest of dishes UT m ncay mo« hou SUC pl Id m it about the delicious flavour of. th p m ding.â€"One cup rolled all cup water to moistâ€" i‘k, one eag, oneâ€"fourth > sugar as needed. Kind 1 will determine amount ood combination is rich crumbs and part rolled ppte fritters are casily ny fruit frittors. Just 1 fruit up into very n add them to the batâ€" should be ecut up into ith batter, then cookâ€" i« of this kind should ined on paper. after m the pan of fat. If stay ttle ith Or te h curren UY D stee bes )ld °d salce or c Dishes.â€"Did tritters. whe milk may be add uch as for corm o to the trouble roll each fritter L y pta N fine 1 Nav a frit n th rVIT himself c irmechair ribbed mutton without injuring the dish. remove them, Never boil dish towels with washâ€" at (about oneâ€" ing powders or soda in aluminum utenâ€" on with skewâ€" sils, _ It will leave a blackened mark. project two or Clean aluminum with paste preparâ€" ps in dripping ed for it, or rub blackened scorched h pepper and surfaces with mineral wool. yâ€"five minutes, _ Half a cupful of milk put in a dishâ€" h two tableâ€" tub full of hot water will serve as a n cup hot watâ€" substitute for soap. It softens the n skewers and water, does not roughen the hands, in pan. _ In and brightens dishes, cleaning off all in circle on greases, and leaving no scum in the peas or vegeâ€" pan. then add to h salt, pepper with paprika and seasonin dishes. but add water AUY th ty is oven; This will In e the r with Add ngpan ut ream vege illow ake, mall oneâ€" @rv move the pe th of 7 C it Germany has already passed a law making it a punishable offense for an unauthorized person to wear a nursâ€" ing uniform or badge. In the far north of the Russian Emâ€" pire lives a race of people who do not know who the Russians are and who do not know that there is a war. Count Zeppelin has given orders that on his death his body shall be conveyed to its last resting place in one of the machines with which his name is associated. It is authoritatively estimated that more than 2,000,000 women and girls have come into the labor market since the begining of the war. tront has a wine a day For damp places round a sink, or similar place, paint over with tar. Give two coats, letting the first dry thoroughly before applying the secâ€" ond. _ Then paint with a distéemper. Strip off the paper from the damp place take a sheet of brown paper, blacklead it on one side, and place that side against the wall. Then cover with the wallpaper. The damp will not strike through. rlaster can egsily be removed, and a roll may be kept in the workâ€"basket for this purpose. This device is much more practical than the silver or gold fingerâ€"shields. To renovate hat bands when stained by sweat dissolve 1% ozs., of white castile soap in 4 ozs. of alcohol and 1 oz. each of sulphuric ether and amâ€" monia; apply with a sponge or tooth brush, rub smartly, rinse out with clear rain water. This is equally good to renovate any cloth with fast color. To prevent the finger from becomâ€" ing pricked when hemming or emâ€" broidery put a small piece of surâ€" geon‘s adhesive plaster over it. This After cooking a new laid egg it very often gets cold through standing. When this occurs put the egg into a cup or small basin and pour some hot (not boiling) water over the egg. You will then find the egg as nice as when freshly boiled. All the left over pieces of bread, should be wrapped carefully in a flour bag, or a sack. _ Hang this where the air can reach it. It serves to keep the bread free from mold. And you always have it at hand when you want to put it through the meat chopâ€" per for bread crumbs, bread puddings, cutlets, etc. | Never boil dish towels with washâ€" ing powders or soda in aluminum utenâ€" sils. _ It will leave a blackened mark. Clean aluminum with paste preparâ€" ed for it, or rub blackened scorched An old flourâ€"sifter that has lost its value as a sieve makes an excellent eggâ€"boiler, as the eggs may all be placed in the water at once, and also removed at onge when done. When a baking dish gets burned in using it should not be scraped; simply put a â€" little water and ashes in it and the burned surface will come off easily without injuring the dish. If vegetables are wilted they should not be pared or prepared in any way until they have been revived in water. The wilted surface makes waste in the preparation. Coarse salt and water is the best cleanser for wicker furniture and sumâ€" mer matting. Use astrong brush, and be sure to dry the articles thorâ€" oughly. While ironing it is a good plan to get a clean brick (a white one if posâ€" sible) as a stand. _ The iron will reâ€" tain heat much longer than if an open iron stand be used. Instead of grating cheese or thei rind of a lemon, pare it off carcfully| and put it through the meat chopper.| Mix the batter cakes in a wide-‘ mouth pitcher. _ It is easier to pour the batter cakes than it is to dip, them. ! Soak nuts in hot water before cracking and the nuts will be much more likely to come out whole. If roses are starved and otherwise neglected they are more apt to be atâ€" tacked by insects and other pests. U When the furniture looks sticky or smeary too much furniture polish has been used. Helpful Hints. Alechol will dissolve medicine stains. Paper bags make very good coverâ€" ing for jars with food in them. Paint stains on the carpet can be dissolved with spirits of turpentine. _ Dark calicoes should be ironed on the wrong side with irons that are not too hot. rde , hot : ipant t SCIENCE NOTEsS Usefui Hints and General Informaâ€" iion for the Busy Housewife ag to the British consul at each French soldier at the an allowance of one pint of strong a gale may be blowâ€" breath of wind is felt by the of a balloon. haven‘ aboard |_"So am I, uncommonly glad. But Isce hereâ€"before we go farther, there ‘is one thing I want to straighten out. |\ You think I blame you for what has happened ?" ( _ "I don‘t. _ I blame myself." | _ "Then you‘ll oblige me by taking |that saddle off your back and strapâ€" |ping it on to mine. 1 know well enâ€" ‘ough who‘s to blame. In the first place, Val B. Montague, for not knowâ€" ing enough to sack a sulky halfâ€"bred ringmaster, without going out of his way to rile the brute by telling him wholesome and unnccessary truthsâ€" in the second place the said ringmasâ€" ter for stealing the Seaâ€"Horse, kidâ€" t napping the lady I am speaking to, and then bolting to a Yankee orangeâ€"ship when the fog gave him the chanceâ€"in the third place, Val B. Montague again, for being such a downy, unâ€" fledged fool as to allow a man who threatened revenge to steal a march on him. _ There, I‘ve loca‘ed th: blame exactly. The thing stands just so.‘ You‘re not on in this scene." , "I piled your ship up," said Mona. | "Of course you did! But not till! that scoundrelâ€"frightened at the proâ€" bable consequences of his act of piracy, I dare sayâ€"had profited by the chance of having met an orange ship in the fog, and has deserted with my boat to her. _ He was the only man on board| who knew anything about navigation, and he left you to find your way back without him. _ I‘d wring his neck with ; pleasure, if I could get hold of him;! but I think you did very well." I _ "Her forefoot is crumpled up," said ‘Montague; "but the diver reports that | it will not take more than a fortnight to pitt her all right again for the sea. Still a delay of a fortnight is someâ€" | what embarrassing, because Val B. Montague‘s Amâ€"rican Cireus Combinaâ€" tion is billed to appear in Funchall Maderia, exactly a fortnight from toâ€" morrow. But I don‘t repineâ€"you understand clearly, Ihope, that Val B. Montague does not repine?" "I am glad that the westerly gale did not come," said Mona. "Yes," said Montague. "This venâ€" ture represents my capital and a bit over, and I was fool enough to comâ€" promise on insurance. If the Seaâ€" Horse had gone to the bottom, Val B. Montague would have had to begin life over againâ€"from the bottom." "I1 recognize that you‘ve been a brick," said Mona warmly. "I have very nearly ruined you, and you haven‘t even scolded me. _ If the wesâ€" terly gale had come, and the Seaâ€" Horse had broken up on the Ring Rock and gone to the bottom, it would have meant ruin to you, wouldn‘t it?" "Is the damage very serious?" she asked. Mona helped herself to salad. She and Montague were lunching together in the Cafe Marquez de Pombal, the diningâ€"room of which overlooked the port or Ponta Delgada. The Seaâ€" Horse had been brought safely into harbor that morning. "It is only by the special favor of the elements," said Val B. Montague impressively, "that we have been able to do it. I am told that a whole week without a westerly gale is almost unâ€" precedented at this time of the year." "Missy Mona, the boat am launched, and the stars am chining. Itink there is a breeze coming.‘ "I do not believe anything that you have said," was Elsa‘s answer. A voice from above shouted down the companion. "You don‘t believe that I am sorry, that I would not have said a word of all this to you if I had known," she cried pas jonately; and then, as she noted the fixed look of scorn on Elsa‘s| face, she added: "You think that 1/ did know! You think that!" | Mona shuddered, and her brown eyes were wide with a real distress. Elsa drew back from her touch. "I think," she said, coldly, "that you are a finished actress." CHAPTER XILâ€"(Cont‘d.) ‘short, the deckâ€"hands hesitated, and "Dead! Your father is dead!" reâ€" Sambe came and told me what was beâ€" peated the girl, with a scared face. Ing done, "Of course I did not know. _ And I. Montague gave her a sharp look. have been saying all these things| "No," he said quietly. "You haven‘t about him. to you! Oh, what a brute, told me that. What did you do?" you must think me!" She came close} "Nothing," said Mona. to Elsa and tried to put her arm about "Prpj hte!;ed"" her, saying coftly: "I am so sorry, 1‘ g. * ; 4 would give anything to be able to| “Not"m the least. I was in a bad unsay all I have said in the last t@mPer. few minutes. â€" But T ‘did not know.! "And wanted a short cruise to put You believe me, don‘t you? You don't!y(’u right again?" think I could be so utterly heartâ€"| "I thought you needed a lesson, and Still THE CABLEMAN: 9+ AN EXCITING PRESENTâ€"DAY ROMANCE BY WEATHERBY CHESNEY CHAPTER XII ONTARIO ARC TORONTO ! "Lord, no! I‘m a fool, but not ‘quite a madman. _ She‘s insured up | to about half her value. I daresay 1 shall get a hundred out of the Com: ‘panies, _ Then there‘s the advertiseâ€" Iment. _ That should be worth a lot." | "What advertisement?" | _ Montague looked pained. | _ "I‘m disappointed in you," he said. |"You‘ve been with me for two years, ;and you‘ve had the opportunity of studying my business methods, and ‘yet you fail to see that your advenâ€" ‘ture in ths Seaâ€"Horse will give _ a chance for a bit of real good adverâ€" ‘tising. _ Trust me to know how to use it. I‘ve written up the tale of your heroism in my best style, and the newspapers of every place we perâ€" form at will print it as a sensation from real life. The populace will: flock to the cireus just to see you, and | we shall turn money away. _ You‘ll reet" | _ Mona smiled doubtfully. ‘ _ "Suppose we leave that. out of the calculation," she said. _ "You put your gwross loss at five hundred, net four hundred, if the insurance people pay| according to your estimate. Then if I were to give you a cheque for £450, there would be a margin?" | "Oh, yes." "Then I shall write my cheque fo: that amount." Montague burst out laughing. "And I shall cash itâ€"where?" h« asked. "At the Bank of Friendship, ch? Excellent! But my dear young lady, I don‘t know in wha‘ city of this prosaie world the paying counter of that bank is to be found." "Try Lloyd‘s in London," said Mona quietly. _ "If you send my cheque through to them. I think you will find "Is the Seaâ€"Horse entirely uninsurâ€" ed?" "Counting repairs, lo:s of profits on ""i performances, wages to the members £06; of the Combination during enforced The idlenessâ€"say five hnudred pounds. ly t Not so had as it might have been!" ; x,., Val B. Montague followed her lead with alacrity. He had apologized handsomely, but it did not amuse him to labor the apology more than was necessary. "Of course it‘s peace," said Mona with a smile. _ "Now tell me what you reckon that your loss will amount to." He held out his hand and the girl took it. "You‘re a good sort, Val." she said. "I‘m a Yankee cireus man with an uncommonly hot temper," said Monâ€" tague, laughing. "But 1 once put in a year or two in a Boston academy where they charged extra for manâ€" ners; and if 1 do sometimes so far forâ€" get myself, under provocation, as to be rude to a lady, I flatter myself I know what‘s the right thing to do afterwards. _ Is it peace?" 1‘ ‘"Very well," he said, "I‘ll start in straight! I‘ll tell you that so far from blaming you for your fit of temper, Val B. Montague has the sense to see that he is to blame there too. I was rude to you in the morning, and it served me properly to be taught a lesâ€" son. _ Verney gave me some straight talk about that, the impudent scounâ€" drel! But of course he was right, and so were you. Shall we cry quits, cut the loss, and start afresh?" | Val B. Montague looked up with a smile. "So?" said Montague, and was silent Mona waited for a minute. "Suppose you tell me a few home truths," she said presently. "Tell me what you think of me. _ I‘ll take it meekly, becauseâ€"well, because I deâ€" serve it." "I thought you needed a lesson, and that a scare would do you good; and I thought that when the lesson had gone far enough, Sambo and the others would obey me and bring the schooner back. I got more than 1 barâ€" gained for myself in the educational line, but I went into the experiment with my eyes open." _ The war in Europe has cut off the supply of platinum. In December this heaviest of metals reached the unprecedented price of one hundred dollars an ounceâ€"four times the price in 1908, and more than four times the value of an ounce of gold. The warring nations have forbidden their citizens to export platinum, because it is used in making munitions, and the consequent shortage has greatly inconvenienced manufacturers of fine jewelry and of electrical, photograâ€" phic, (f;ntal and surgical supplies. In Germany many manufacturers have already substituted where they can an alloy of rhodium and palladium, two other metals of the platinum family, instead of platinum wire, ow own manufacturers of electrical supâ€" plies are using for the leadâ€"in wires in electric lamps wire made of nickelâ€" chromium, metallic tungsten or molybâ€" denum. For the ignition points of spark plugs they are using tungsten and for the resistance wires of elecâ€" More Than Four Times the Value of Gold. It is the aggressors who ought to make the first proposals for peace. Why should we make overtures to a country which has broken every conâ€" vention and committed every atrocity ? â€"Mr. Walsh, British Labor M. P. Boys may be governed a great deal by kindness and gentle methods, and by appealing to their better feelings. Butâ€"deeds must second words when needful or words will be laughed at. â€"Dr. Arnold. Men‘s destiny is towards progress. He cannot progress if he does not cultivate his mind. That has to be watered and cared for just as a plant. â€"Petér Keary. The sincere man struggles incessantâ€" ly to gain the victory over himself.â€" Napoleon. Dante saw devils where I see none. I see good only. I have never known a very bad man who had not someâ€" thing very good about him.â€"Wm. Blake. Life is but a light dream, which soon vanishes. _ To live is to suffer. Commercial relations between the: countries of the world are among| the most powerful factors for the preâ€" servation of peace.â€"Mr. W. T. Stubb5.| | _ "Why won‘t you tell what your busiâ€" ness was?" asged Montague excitedly. "Great Jehu! don‘t you seeâ€"?" "I won‘t tell," said Mona, "because that young Cableâ€"man, Scarborough, tried to bully me into doing so. J don‘t enjoy being bullied, as you have found out. _ Now, let‘s go on. I tell |you toâ€"day I have come into a forâ€" | tune. It is known that Carrington had turned my money into diamonds. All may, by the exertion of a litâ€" tle foreâ€"thought and a little outlay, protect their families from want.â€" Bishop Potter. It is often necessary and kind rathâ€" er to write letters that amount to noâ€" thing than not to write at all.â€" Goethe. Ambition breaks the ties of blood and forgets the obligations of manâ€" hood.â€"Sir Walter Scott. "Or of overâ€"excitement," said Mona. "Yes, his death was natural, in a sense. But the person who caused the overâ€"excitement would be morally if not legally, responsible for his death." "Well, that person wasn‘t you." ‘"What evidence have you of that?" (To be continued.) "He died a natural death," said Montague hoarsely. "The Portuguese doctor said that an aortic aneurism had burst, probably as the result of overâ€"exertion." ‘land of San Miguel, and I have a row with you one morning because I want leave of absence which you won‘t give me. I take the absence without the leave and say it is beâ€" cause Ihave private business to atâ€" tend to. _ Next morning the man is found dead, and I admit, when I am asked, that I saw him and spoke to him. _ But I have refused to say what my private business was, or whether it was with him at all. So far is that right?" Do not think that I got them from him on that night, and that they are the price of his life?" £ Presently he came back to the table and sat down. "Well?" said Mone. "I don‘t like it; honestly, I don‘t," he said gravely. "What do you mean?" "Well, I meanâ€"Jehashaphat! I don‘t know what I do mean! But I don‘t like it." & "I‘ll tell you what you mean," said Mona quietly. "You know that when I joined you I hadn‘t five pounds of my own, and you know that I had sworn to find a man who had robbed me of £20,000. I find him here, in this isâ€" THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY. PRICELESS PLATINUM As we moved along there came an ominous scuttling through the air. Even a short apprenticeship under German fire gives a certain amount of knowledge of their direction. We drew closer to the lee of some partâ€" ly â€" destroyed building _ Something whizzed past us and landed against a pile of bricks and mortar not 25 feet away. Suddenly there was a great buzzing overhead. Like a flock of birds 26 British aeroplanes were going over the German lines to raid a concentraâ€" tion depot. Fritz endeavored to form a curtain fire through which the airâ€" men could not pass, but they never wavered, and had ‘disappeared long before the small, puffy clouds had melted away. We had got to another part of the line, when one of the members of the German bomb family arrived near the top of the sandbags and lobbed a large piece of mud into a fryingâ€"pan in which a soldier was preparing some bacon. The culinary artist disgustâ€" edly put away a paper he had been reading and forked the piece of mud out of the pan, and then resumed his reading. "It is paradise compared to what it was last winter," said our trench escort. Even with the footboards running along the bottom of the trenches there were stretches where the chalky yelâ€" lowish mud oozed through. _ His lurkingâ€"place was pointed out to me through the periscope. The sandbags in front of where he lay in wait were badly torn by British bulâ€" lets. The very periscope through which I was looking at his lair and at the bodies which for months had been lying in "No Man‘s Land" beâ€" tween the trenches had been puncturâ€" ed by a sniper‘s bullet. It was hard to realize that across this narrow neck of shellâ€"torn soil, dotted with the dead, was the firstâ€"line _ German trench. ' 1 was told to peer through a periâ€" scope. There was a terrific "Bang!" {which temporarily dulled the chorus lof the overhead noises. My ears rang. I paused looking through the periâ€" tscope to extract a large amount of earth from inside my collar. My coat had been sprinkled with small pieces of metal. The Tommy standing nearâ€" by caught my eye and grinned. He was the epitome of the British fightâ€" ing man as he calmly stood there, clutching his rifle perhaps a bit tightâ€" er, but with a quietly humorous exâ€" pression on his face. i Trying to Pot a Sniper. } There was another loud explosion and still more mud and metal flew through the air. A fairâ€"haired Tommy didn‘t even take a cup from his lips. The most intense face in that part of . the trench was that of a soldier tryâ€"| ing to pot a bothersome sniper. I reflected over what an American, At this point the German line was separated from the British first line trench by about the width of, say, Piccadilly. One man of the party was to be taken to this point. We drew lots to see who would go, and I was lucky and won. We were in the trenches at the Hohenzollern Redoubt, Much was happening overhead. "You may need the mask only once in forty times," said the officer in charge of the party, "but that once may mean life or death." We were equipped with gas masks and packages of field dressings. "Keep your head down" has become as much a part of trench vernacular as ‘"Watch your step" has become asâ€" sociated with travelling. A correâ€" spondent writes in the London Daily News: A Newspaper Correspondent Tells Some Interesting Experiences. STIRRING SCENES IN FRONT LINE TRENCHES. "Silver .Gioss" Aeroplanes at Work. COOL IN DANGER Imparts a Sense of Confidence and Ease to the Carrier. | _A cane imparts as sense of confiâ€" | dence and ease to its carrier. _ Beâ€" fore the age of boomerangs bows and , arrows, firearms and steel, a cane (or cudgel) in the hand was often a matter of life and death when a citâ€" , izen of the canyons was attacked by an enemy. . He who could ply his knotted stick with the best skill was probably the political boss of those days. _ A certain remnant of this priâ€" mitive instinct exists toâ€"dav. "It certainly ought to be," replied the gentlemanâ€"farmer. _ "I have out all the money I had into it." Rich, "Is this land rich*" asked the pr pective purchaser, cautiously. Some biologists trace the origin of the walkingâ€"stick back even farther than cavedom. In the arborial stage certain animals were aceustomed to the feel of wood and dependend on trees for sudden ascension from danâ€" ger. â€" The ape found it easier to walk on his hind legs with a bowed stick in his front paws. _ Whether there is any connection between these fac‘s and the present use of the cane is, of course, highly theoretical. More Blouses, Lingerie and _ Skirtsâ€"more Table Linenâ€" more Sheets and Pillow Cases â€" more Curtains â€"are starched with "Silver Gloss", | The London Morning Post‘s correâ€" llpondont on the Italian front writes: The hills of Carso might well be callâ€" ied hills of death. The main charaeâ€" teristics _ of _ this _ army, whose \achievement is sometimes wrongly considered slow or too careful, is that ‘it has never given up an inch of ground conquered on a front of more than 600 kilometres. Each shell as it bursts scatters the rocks in a thousâ€" and splinters, deadly as bullets. This The Austrians have concentrated about a million men in front of the sector of Gorizia and on the Carso. The next offensive will be one of the greatest battles of the war. Mardships and Perils of Italian l" Troops in Carso. is one reason why the Italian losses are so heavy. Many corps have been living for months under these terrible conditions. It made me shudder to see many soldiers, exhausted by fatigue, asleep leaning against a trench parapet, with mangled remains unspeakably horrible sticking out in many places. "As it cleared away I saw the sucâ€" cess of my lucky shot. I forgot where I was, jumped ‘1p, and shouted and waved my hat, and hardly knew I was being fired at. It was one of the keenest feelings of enjoyment 1 have ever experienced." "The German is a brave fighter, but a dirty one," was the way he ox» pressed it. "And don‘t forget, the British soldier has a good many scores to pay off, and he means to do it." I talked with an airman who had run the gauntlet of German fre. "It was my good fortune to smash up a Cerman supply base," he said when I pressed him, "I had a risky time of it getting over the spot where I dropped the bomb, but I was se eager to wreck the Boche depot 1 quite forgot some of my own dangers, The right moment came, and I let hew go. I looked down to see what would happen. There was a muffled roar, and a cloud of smoke and dust arose. who is an officer in the British Army, told me during my visit to the trenches. THE HILLS OF DEATH VALUE OF A CANE ood mares and the bottle. or Ind., U.8 A. a ple Do Not Use h Rppe Toni

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