West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 30 Nov 1916, p. 2

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11q When it comes to tampering with the enhancer on t at. the best nd.. vice is "don't." So lay: an experi- enced automobile nun. “Many motorists wont to chum no adjustment of the carburetor with any decided clung. of weather." he continua. "They new to think tho eartmretor ought to be adjunct! one It, when the day is dry. mother when it in wet, still mother whon it is hot, and again when it is cold. “Sometimes the owner himself tries to sake the adjustment, and " oth- er times he turns the job over to a - man. What he should do in- stead is either to consult the dealer for the car. or else the local repre- sentative of the carburetor company, if there is one in his town. FAMINE PRICES IN BELGIUM "Now, it in true that the mixture should be rich or lean, according b the kind of weather. But adjustment of the carburetor is the wrong wny to secure the proper mixture. This is rightly and easilydone by the attach- ment for the purpose located on the duh. Make the mixture rich when the motor is cold. When it warms up gradually make the mixture leaner, but keep an eye on it till your engine is hitting evenly. GERMANS STEAL FOOD WHICH PEOPLE SHOULD EAT. The Belgian: Sum-r a Great Deal, But Their spirit Is Yet Unbroken. Now that the pinch is becoming more severe in Germany, living in Br-lgium is more difficult. says the London News. The Belgians In sud.. fering because Germany is making a heavy levy on the food produced in that country. Do Not Tn - The French and Belgian women who are arriving in this country either to join their husbands here or in Paris tell terrible stories of misery since the German occupation. Though the people have to exist on small quantities of food for which they have to pay very high prices, they are bearing their hardships cheer- fully. They are, in fact, fighting their German oppreSsors with a weapon against which the Governor-General of Brussels and the host of German ofricials in the country can do noth- ing. Without wilfully disobeying the Gvrman orders -H scarcely a week elapses without a number of edicts in which the term "il est defendu" Cver- boten") tsreurs---they have adopted an attitude which is more galling to the Germans than actual disobedience. They mock their masters. And the Germans. unable to take action for "Amtsbeleidigung and threaten. Mme. Ronni. who has arrived in London with her family of eight chil- dren, gave to a representative of The Daily News some particulars of life in Brussels under the German yoke. "Ah, monsieur," she said, "we have qtrered much, out the Germans have not been able to break our spirit, though God knows how they have tried. And we await the day with perfect tranquility and confidence when they will be hunted out of our country. Our faith in an allied vie- The farmer of Canada is rightly said to he the backbone of the coun- try, but We wonder if he is taking ad- vantage of the many opportunities to better himself. Year after year there is being perfected labor-saving de- vices and machinery which ultimately cause not only a saving of expense in the management of his farm and the husbanding of his crops, but also makes life easier and more plenar- IN? It has been said the armer does not take advantage of new inventions as quickly as a ,rtanufneturer, and there may be a good reason for this. In the first place, if a manufacturer sees some invention which may be of advantage to him in his business, and has not the ready cash, he can often go to his banker and ask for addition- al credit. explaining what he needs the money for. "What" happins when the carbure- Should he be one ot our tg'.,','":",,',',', i So soon " your death claim papers farmers, he is forced to ave sooth.“ received, a check will at once be buildings not only for himself and‘unt, “mink but it is equally necessary to) Sicknese and death entail heavy ex- huva good barns and stables for his' pense, and ready cash is often hard to stock. This often necessitates a com; secure, but the prompt payment by a siderable capital expenditure, and the, life insurance company means ready usual source of getting this (if he has ; cash. which will enable your estate to not the opital himself), ls by placing' pay your debts. lift your mortgage, a mortgage on his property. Should and, if your policy is large enough, you live. and should the years prove give them something to go on with. profitable, you will no doubt pay off While it will not soften their grief at the mortgage. On the other hand, your loss. it may make you more should there be a-succession of bad kindly remembered and it will cer- erops and should you die, what is to-‘tainly make their path through life come of your wife and family? Lsmoother. The farmer, on the other hand, who has truly made his money by the sweat of his brow, does not as a rule, know much about banking except on a place to deposit his savings in. He seldom asks for credit, and as . re- sult often goes without things which in place of being a luxury are a real necessity. His great sin: has been to build up not only a competence for his old age. but also to lay aside some- thing for his wife and family. TIE FARMER AND LIFE INSURANCE. Life- in Brussels, With Cnrtmretor. can only fume I tory has never been shaken, though we have been kept in ignorance of _ the real course of the military opera- tions. "For example, we never knew of the British and French advance on lthe Somme until the news was con- ‘veyed to us by British and French aviators. How we cheered.' How we shouted: 'Vive la France'. Vive l'Amrleterre'.' The Germans were 'alarmed. Something had to be done. _ And what do you think the Governor- 'General did by way of punishing us? 1 He issued a decree ordering us to go posit?. lci'v - t.- .te._i-i- --i--"' "Troubles are likely to occur from a continual improper mixture of gas and air due to a wrong adjustment of the carburetor. If the owner for- get: the existence of his carburetor and lets it alone to perform its func- tions he is likely to secure the moat satisfactory results from his car. He) will get better performance, greater economy and longer service without the necessity of giving attention of the mechanism. "After some automobile owners have had their cars three or four months, and have pretty well master- ed the art of driving, they begin to get a desire to tinker with the mechan- ism. The carburetor generally tempts them first, because it seems so acces- sible. It is right there before them as they lift the hood, and they try their hand at making adjustments, " though an expert repair man never ldoes a thing unnecessarily to a car- buretor l'Aorleterre'.' The wdei'mem were: It is in a cemetery in France, one W Tame: slow-thin}? :adhtoéie done. of tgose gl',','),'",),',", whichl haze spring: , . m w at uo you t in t e overnor- up uring t e war, an w ere t e 1 General did by way of punishing us? ‘graves are quite new. All around the _ He issued a decree ordering us to go l little crosses bear the names of men; to bed at 7 o'clock!" 1belonging to many British regiments,| . , . and here and there are French names»! ' Pr"." I "Tr . (under which are inscribed the words: 1 We hear of high food prices i.nfier- "Mort pour La France." Two groves‘ many, but they cannot 139 higher yawn open, waiting to receive . the'; than those which the Belgians have ( dead, and close by a group of officers'; lit': Pagan“: Ide. "g, TInd,',,', stand, while the men who have made or W 95 o oo . me. ono gave the graves are in the background ‘ the following prices per kilo, which ', leaning on their spades. A little way, is a little over 2 lhs.: Beef, los; pork, i off an old man and some women a" " 6d; bacon, " 6d; ham, 123 6d; and L busy saving a field of corn, and thei butter ls 4d. - . (Uilirriisr noise of a reaping machine) Two kilos of bread at id a kilo were sounds drowsily on the air. i 7' 71%) kilos of bread at 7d a kilo were allowed to a family of 10 persons per day. - Butter, meat and potatoes cannot be had now. Germany has to be served first from the Belgian sup- plies. What is left is distributed by the Food Committee among the peo- ple. It is "misere Its-bas," said Mme. Bonot. "Are the Germans treating us harshly? Well, no. We think their minds are occupied with serious thoughts just now. They know they are beaten. There are very few sol- diers in Brussels. The Belgian garri- sons have been denuded in order to make good the losses on the Somme. There are no German wounded to be seen in Brussels, but it is known that all the hotels at Spa are full of wounded men." "Now, boys, I want to see if any of you can make a complete sentence out of two words both having the same sound to the ear." First Boy- right." Teacher---"Very good.” Second Boy-lay, Miss Smith, I can beat that. I can make three words of it-Wright, write right." Third Boy (excitedly) - - "Hear this --Writtht, JT/ui, Miss Smith." Teaeher- "Very well, Robert. Let us hear your sentence. Airst. Bor--"Wright write rite right." If you are a modern and progressive farmer you should give this the some consideration as a modern business man. To-day you are the brains of the farm, matters run smoothily un- der your guidance; should you be taken off who is to assume your re- sponsibilities and pay off the mort- gage? Is your wife or children cap- able of taking your place at once, or must someone be hired to take it? If so, this means an additional outlay. The Good Book tells us that " con- tented mind is better than riches," and no doubt your mortgages or other outstanding obligations are a. source of worry to you, but modern business methods has found a way to meet just such worries as yours, and few, if any, of our modern business men have fail- ed to take advantage of it. Every person recognizes the uncer- tainty of life, so. if this is one of your worries in accumulating a fortune, why not make provision against it? It can be done by taking out a policy in one of our Canadian Life Insurance Companies. The moment you par your first premium you have created an estate to the full value of your policy. A life policy is nothing more than a savings account, with pro- tection added. Should you die after the first payment your estate will re- ceive the full value of your policy. end there will be no delay in payment. So soon as Four death clllm pnpers are received, a check will at once be @IHEE Right They Were. DIED (Ili FIELD SAD SCENE WITNESSED IN A FRENCH CEMETERY. Soil of France Covers the Bodies Two Brave Irish "I"....... I-.- _-....-....-'--- It is a fine Hanan) n. ma .0 say my.” pucsungurs are safely removed before being destroyed by Prussian submarines. The above gives an idea g! the safety that most passengers are accorded in tuitroeean.--New York Telegram on, looking strangely incongurous in "io fires the cemetery, and behind it marches a and fur little company of the men belonging heated l to the regiment of the dead officers. 1 trical d They stand around the opened earth ‘all cas like statues, their faces set in an ex- i guarded pression of pain. Some of their eyes; Home are filled with tears, for they knew ',firesafe ‘well and loved their leaders-young, sary pr indeed, they were-merely boys. essentia As in Life. Reverently the bodies are lifted to the grave-there are no coffins here. l The remains are swathed in the or- e dinary brown army blankets, and so After " are lowered into the grave side by 'side, shoulder to shoulder, just as in Const ilife the boys had lain in their rudel a ort ‘shelter in the trenches for many a“; p l l . . I ea, W day and many a night. The chaplains " in th read their respective burial services. 1 dew-old 1“Ashes to ashes and dust to dust."iistic of The soil of France is shoveled into i of cour the graves, and soon the little group ', famous (of mourners melts away. _ _ ', Mv. eit From a greater distance comes the dull roar of guns, and overhead an aeroplane circles like some giant bird. The group of officers by the graveside includes two chaplains, one of the Church of England, and one a Catho- lie priest. They have come to bury two young officers, both Irish, but of a different faith. Presently a lit- tle procession arrives-a motor wag- As the men of the dead officers' regiment march off they gaze up re- verently as they pass by the great crucifix in the centre of the ceme- tery. It is to them not alone a sym- bol of the hope of salvation, but a symbol of the glory and majesty of death when it is suffered for the sake of others. And so the soldiers pass along, more reconciled to the loss of their two young leaders, for they cer- tainly did suffer death bravely and most willingly for the sake of others -for the sake of those at home in the l, country they loved. l Left Careers for War. One of these gallant young officers! was twenty-two, the other but twenty- l one. They lefft Ireland with hearts! overflowing with the joy of life tel with that glorious spirit of youth! which fills the world with a seemingly I never-fading beauty and happiness. One boy left his university, and the other the threshold of a great profes- sion, and they went to the trenches of France, and thy met death ohm. lutely without Nur. One Case in Thousands. And thus are thousands of all ranks dying ovary month! In the cemetery, where the writer stood by the graves of these two boys, he Aunt" in one tiny corner alone ‘eleven white crosses newly erected. lEnch of these crosses bore the name 'iof a young Irish officer, and in but ;one instance alone was the recorded iage more than twenty-five years. These young men came from the North of Ireland and from the South with the furious Irish regiments, the Connaught Rangers, the Dublin Fusil- iers, the tnn'urki11intrs, or the Royal Irish. They professed different creeds. They held different views on politics and public "airs, but they were knitted and welded into one by a common cause. They fought side by side for their country; they died (side by side, and in this little French locmetery, with the great cross, they ilie side by side in their last long i sleep. -ir,i, so to-day do Irishmen rest by all the fieida in the long-stretched battle-lines of Europe. Would. that all those who 5 still may' harbor bitterness SIDE BY SlDE SAFETY FOR PASSENGERS rig machine} Before winter weather sets in, the '. ".touseho.1ders should see that the heat- 'tt comes the ‘ing equipment is fire-safe, that there overhead an I are no cracks in the chimney to allow e giant bird. "parks to enter the attic; that furnace he graveside Oipes are thoroughly clean and at a one of the safe distance from woodwork; that me a Catho- istoves, ranges and stovepipes are in me to bury safe condition and all surrounding l Irish, but ,woodwork protected, and that lamps aently a lit- and lanterns are in good condition. motor wag-l Carelessness with matches caused :ongurous in ‘69 fires last year; overheated stoves it marches a and furnaces, tn; defective and over- :n belonging heated chimneys, pipes, etc., 62; elec- sad oiricers:trical defeees, 55. These causes are spened earth ‘all easily avoided and should be set in an ex- l guarded against in future. and rancor against any of their own countrymen in Ireland might stand for even one moment and read the cross inscriptions in the cemeteries of ', France! These inscriptions wouldl tell of the glorious and eternal union" of brave Protestant and Catholic and Northern and Southern Irish hearts. l Many of CartadaU Fires Are In Dwelling Houses. The fire record for 1915 shows that of 1,625 fires reported, 676 were in the homes of our people. The great majority of these dwelling house fires occur at night, when the lives of the occupants are entianirered, From the 676 homes the greater portion of the families were turned out at night, in wintry weather. In these fires 141 lives were lost. The chief causes of these home fires are: Carelessness in allowing defec- tive chimneys to exist; carelessness in the overheating of stoves and fur- naces; carelessness in the use of matches; ways. After 500 Years' Sleep Balkan Towns Again Developing. I Constanza, the important Rumanian {seaport and fortress on the Black lSea, which has figured so prominent- '; ly in the news of late, is one of those ‘new-old towns that are so character- iistic of the Balkans. The Balkans are, ‘of course, replete with towns once famous in ancient history that are, to- ', day, either little more than villages or Homes should be made reasonably firesafe by taking the simplest neces- sary precautions. Safety First is as essential in the home as at work. "'9' W*b0%6 llvvlv n-Ivn-v -_._'___ "-"er'" ,_ have taken on a wonderful new devel- opment and are expanding, once more, into great and prosperous cities. The long 500 years of "Ottoman sleep," which fell upon most of these places in the thirteenth or fourteenth cen- tury, has now, for some time, been broken, and a general renaissance has, for the last forty or fifty years, everywhere characterized the liber. ated countries SlliillltliliiU8 Indigesiion-the complete cr partial failurc of the digestive proce're"cs- ire- qucntly throws out of gear the sshole machinery of the body. You can't enjoy the vigour and titalitv of good huhh wins your stomach, liver and lmwcis duihcir work regularly and titiiciently. " a digestive tonic and stomachlc remedy, Mother "r2 Syrup is esteemed in ten: thousands of homer, wherever the English language is spoken. If you mic: much or 1i It from disorder: of the stomach. liver or bowels, tryme died of taking " to 30 drops of this famous remedy in water, after meals. for a few days and note its beneficial dials. IS YOUR HOME SAFE? PAINS AFTER ARE SIGNS OF INDIGESTION. WIND IN THE sttBthtM---MmrW, tiEhishoes--cosriPhri" FAMOUS IN HISTORY ASSISTS T QEGESTION carelessness in many other av1.ttrire whim there limes a! much .'me um We told J15“: w bunk. SYRUP MOTHER EATING TORONTO 44115 We will cull him "Bill," but that isn't his real name. We will say his story ends on a farm near Acton, but it really ends somewhere else. Bill's is a typical story; such lives are found by the hundred in Toronto. There should be hundreds of stories like Bill's, ending on the firms in Ontarib. __ - C While Bill was yet a baby his fa- ther died. Two years ago his mother died. It was very sudden, this death of Bill's mother. There were burns looking suspiciously like carbolic acid on her lips, but nobody told Bill what they meant. The next day I distant relative came and took Bill away. She had received a note from his mother and did not inquire about the cause of her death. In his new home Bill found himself retarded as an intruder. His unwill- In his new home Bill found human regarded as an intruder. His unwill- ing foster mother had a brood of her own that was already too large for her to manage, and the family income left much to be desired, even before Bill was added to the load. Poor Bill felt the situation keenly, but he could see no way to fix it. His only other relatives were two brothers who had gone to France with the Princess Pats and disappeared from his life. Bill felt dimly that, if they only knew, these hero brothers of his would help him, but he didn't know ‘how to tind them, and no one else 'seemed to care. Bill's membership in the gang was ‘the only bright spot in his life, but it _inv_olved. a great difficulty. He didn't feel at liberty to swipe cookies at home. With the other boys it was _difrerent: Their homes were their ‘own, and swiping what your own mo- Ither baked for you isn't much of an }offence; but when you are living in another fellow's home, and the other ifellow's mother doesn't love you and doesn't want you there, you don't feel lat liberty to swipe their cookies. Bill (txplained the matter to the gang, and ithey generously agreed to overlook it, but Bill felt himself under a con- fstant and growing obligation. It is no wonder, therefore, that Bill I made his real home on the streets.) There was real life. There was ad-) venture. An empty coal bin in an‘ alley made a dandy pirate den, and) any of the gang could swipe cookies; from home and so keep the larder; supplied. 1 Now, if you go in back of Dago Tony's fruit store, you will find a lit- tle window in the back wall close to the ground. If you look into that window you will find that Dago Tony ....._.,.. ,-- --"'" a has his cellar hung full of bunches of green bananas. When he wants them to ripen he hangs them in the sun in front of his store, but when he wants them to stay green he keeps them down cellar, and that cellar window is unlocked. Bill thought there would be nothing easier than to swipe a bunch of bananas and hang it up in the den, and thus at one stroke pay all his obligations. Tony would never miss just one bunch. Tony is rich. Pe must have in that cellar as much Las a hundred bunches of bananas. (he knew it was vacant. When he, ‘found the bananas, and put the littlest I member of the gang through the third ' idegrec, he readily learned what had lhappened. So Bill and the "knocker,", land Bill's foster mother had a session hvith Judge Boyd of the Juvenile Court. 1 l Bill's relative, thinking she could ithus get rid of him, painted his char-I iacter in lurid colors and demanded "hat he be sent to the reform school. :But she found the Juvenile Court to. ibe a different sort of place than she .had expected. Judge Boyd remembers .well when he was a boy, and he has ihad many years of experience since lthen. He knew that Bill was not ireally bad. His soul is too recently fom the hands of his Maker to be :very much contaminated. If Bill np- ipears bad it is his environment that ls the cause of the trouble, and not (Bill himself. And so the woman found lfrom the trend of the Judge's ques- itions that the tallies had been turn- =led. Instead of being prosecutor' she gwas the defendant. As the guiding (inf1uenee in Bill', "nvironment she lhad failed. There was no penalty. 1thourth, for her faiiurvs, and for Bill's Lsake it WH", (licidtd that, if po.clle, he should hnve another home. When a boy is twelve years old he doesn't spend much time on reflection. When a thing needs doing he does it. And so the morning after Bill found Tony's window unlocked; there was a large bunch of green bananas hanging in the den, and Bill found himself the hero of the gang. The fellows had always supposed that the location of the den was a profound secret. Knockers (police- men), however, have a habit of pok- ing their noses into places where they are not expected, and one of them occasionally looked into the den when we TRUE STORY or I“ The Bis: Brother Movement Is a group of big-hearted mun, each one of whom agrees to look after a fellow like Bill. Their .~.ecn>tary, Mr. Jack Mavuhzm, attends the Court sessionc. It is his particular business to find friends for boys who need to find fri them. There is our of "nature's noblemen" living ll 1th his wire on a farm near Acton. Their rllilrlrcn have grown up and moved away. and so, as they put it. the howi is. “rather going to waste." They lulievr‘ in the religion of love and helpfulness and wanted to put it Into practice. They realise, too, that in this time of national soc-i rifiee it is especially important that' the boyhood of the country should bel saved. These good people, therefore, wrote Mr. Mnughan to learn if ther, could be of service, and thus Bill) found his new home. Bill is making good at Acton. The same enterprising nature that led him to steal the bananas leads him also to take a most lively interest and active boy's part in esutvthing connected with the farm. His new parents find that in him they are “Tim? their youth over again. Only those who hen " BILL." .d the ”awn“. -..._...V - lore taking the raw muteriol of a crim- "mal and diverting it to on honorable lcares-r. They are cheating the Devil land saving Bill's soul. * “J -t..u, ‘Illll luv-us u... - ..__.. i There are many boys, and ttiris,, ,too, in Toronto, whose story, starting, Hike Bill's, have not found such nl 'oropitious ending. Anyone who willI orrite Mr. J. H. Maugham, Sec'y Big', 'Brother Movement, City Hall, To- ironto, will be told specifically where 'their help is most needed. 3 - l run..-” i To be marketed at a price anywhere near the top, these pinto must be car- ;ried through the winter, " least un- till January or February. When one ‘considers the additional cost of gains E made through the winter months when ino green feed is available, one is led ‘to wonder whether it would not be ‘more profitable to have these pigs larger at this time of year. That it ....,-. -- _..._ - _ is more profitable to have the pigs i larger at this time of year. at least s in most cases, is proven by the fact A that the most successful hog raisers see to it that their spring pipe weigh l I at least 110 to 135 pounds by the end) 1 of September. Sho.ild one under- l take to criticise a man with 60 pound ' pigs and tell him that his pigs should , be larger, an argument immediately follows. The average fnimer knows 1 'that his pigs should be larger at this l ‘time of year to be profitable. His l ;problem is how to get them 1artter.r, TWherever small pigs are found at' (this time of years severay shortcom-l j ings can be located in the management I the pigs have had. The first is that inferior, undersized breeding stock has been used, the second is that the Pitts fwere farrowed late in the spring, and ithe third is that they have Cone .through the summer on pasture. but lwith too limited at grain ration. The ',firist essential in raising big. growthy {pigs that can be marketed in the :month of November at a weight of l 175 to 200 pounds, is that big, heavy- ‘boned breeding stock must be used. ‘For some reason or other a pig far-. irowed in March or early in April I always seems to grow faster than one', 'tarrowed in May or Jane. The sec-l; |and essential to rapid growth of the Pitts is that they be burrowed early.' March is the month selected as the imost successful farrowing month by the best hog growers. lt it true that 'yit takes something of a building and i a little care to furrow the pig crop in ‘March, but it pays. In order that ; Pitts may make a rapid growth .'through the summer months they , must have a combination of good pas- , ture and a suitable grain ration. " I has been proven a good many times t that pigs will make rapid growth when running on good pasture and getting ', their grain from a self-feeder. How- .. ever. this has not always proved the .. most eeov.omiol method of making t gains. In the work at thi< Station ; covering sevurul years. good gains ' have been made when growing pigs - were posturing on alfalfa and receiv- - ing a grain ration of 3 pounds per day e 100 pounds live weight of pies.-). K H. Peters, North Dakota Experiment Statin The swiftest dog in the world, the borzoi, or Russian wolfhound, has made record runs thiat show 75 feet ifgsrecond, while the gazelle has shown measured speed of more than AO feet a second. which would give it a speed of 4,800 feet a minute the pace could be kept up. FOR BREADS-CAKES PUDDINGS - PASTRIES Suiftvsl Ihre in the World iTI I? 1 ins Loft over chicken is delicious chop- igs ped fine, creamed Ind enriched with iv- two hard boiled eggs, chopped not lay too fine. IV. A spoonful means that the flour, ent em, should lie us much Ibove the edge of the spoon " the bowl lice be- low it. Eu Sammy-Sliced "usages. four eggs, three tablespoonfull of milk. one tablespoon (level) of butter, salt and pepper to taste. The sliced sausages are warmed in a saucepan end the ex- tra fat poured off. Then pour over the butter, eggs and milk that have been beaten together. Stir until cooks ed like an ordinary omelet. _ “a, -.._t..l. " if A Sweet omeurt.--Sir eggs, six stale macaroons, one tablespoonful a thick whipped (ream, one tablespoon- ful of powdered [tug-r, three table- spoonful of apple jelly, one table- spoonful of butter, one trwbiespoonfu1 of warm water. The eggs are beat- en, then warm water and sugar added. The Ina-moons are crumbled and mix- ed with jelly and whipped cream. Pour the eggs into a hot buttered pan. stir as for ordinary omelet and Just before folding pour the sweet macaroon mix- ture in the center. The omelet is then folded over and served hot, dust- ed with powdered sugar. If desired, whipped cream may be served with it. Things Worth lie-cubering Always brush a carpet with the pile not against it. - . Bait“: of all kinds require one scant quart of milk to one quart of flour. e" A"tr.orough whitewaahintr should be given every cellar nt lets! one: . year. - - __ _ Sandwiches should always be and. as short a time as possible before be- ine used. In using a high stepindder on a polish floor, put sand paper under the ludder'l feet, Eggs are more easily digested when the A bites and yolkcl are thoroughly mixed before cooking. On ironing day when the top of the stow must not be sputtered much of the cooking of the amid-y meal may be donc in the oven. When kitchen towels weir thin Is, two of the same sin one upon the nthnr, machine the edge- toeether, and stitch di-gonnlly um. MW With Ens- iii hm Whi

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