West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 13 Jun 1918, p. 2

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The answer was obvious. It did not matter a picayune to any one what became of him. _ What had he ever done to make his life worth while to any one? _ He had never done any particular harm, that was true; but neither )}ad’ heh dom;'t anythp.rtictugar good . t is the positive things that count, when a man stands before the gdgmentmt; and that is where onte stood on the night M;;J:ry ;nmo back frl:)m Cannes by lt‘%e al og eter, with her eyes sparkling an her cheeks flushed as if she lug come straight from Eden. \ Everything considered, _ Monte should have been glad at the revelaâ€" tion Beatrice made to him. If Peter were in love with Marjory and she with Peterâ€"why, it solved his own problem, by the simple process of eliâ€" mination, neatly and with despatch. All that remained for him to do was to remove himself from the awkwmi& triangle as soon as possible. T must leave Marjory free, and Peter would look=after the rest. _ No doubt a divorce on the grounds of desertion could be easily arranged; and thus, by that one stroke, they two would be made happy, and hoâ€"well, what the devil was to become of him ? a lot of things." Impulsively the girl placed her hand on Monte‘s arm. "As an old friend of hers, Â¥ou'll use your influence to help Peter?" "T‘ll do what I can." "Then I‘m so glad I told you." "Yes," agreed Monte. _ "I suppose it is just as well for me to know." h is * * at stakeâ€"what else could I do?" "And she, knowing that, refused to come to him ?" "Fate brought us to her." "Then," exelaimed Monte, "what are you doing here?" She stopped and faced him. â€" It was evident that he was sincere. "You menâ€"all men are so stupid at ti‘mes!" she cried, with a little "Even though Peter commanded me not toâ€"even though I knew he would never forgive me if he learned." "You women are so wonderful," breathed Monte. "With Peter‘s futureâ€"with his life "Ferhaps we‘d better turn back," she said uneasily. He felt like a cad. _ He turned inâ€" stantly . "If only now he recovers his eyes." "He says there‘s hope." "It all depends upon her," she said. "Upon th{aewoman?” "Upon this one woman." "If she realized itâ€"" "She does," broke in Beatrice. "I made her realize it. I went to her and told her." "You did that ?" 1 ienge He was stupid at first. _ He did not get the connection. Then, as she turned her dark eyes full urm him, the blood leaped to his cheeks. _ He was marriedâ€"that was what she was trying to tell him. He had a wife, and so presumably knew what love was. For her to assume anything else, for him to admit anything eise, was impossible. She turned quickly. It was as if he said that was the mistake. "After all, that‘s just love, isn‘t it ? There can‘t be any halfway about it, can there ?" "I wonder." "Youâ€"you wondgr; Mr. Covingâ€" ton ?" "He loved so hard, with all there was in him, as he does everything," she explained. s "I suppose that was the trouble," he nodded. CHAPYTER XIX.â€"â€"(Cont‘d.» "You‘ve been very good to Peter," she said. "I‘ve wanted a chance to tell you so." "You don‘s know what he‘s been through," she frowned. _ "Even he doesn‘t know. _ When I came to him there was so little of him left. l’l‘ never forget the first sight I had of him in the hospital. _ Thin and white and blind, he lay there as though He shook his head slowly. "I‘ll have to admit it." "Why, he‘s with her now," she a1ughed. _ "That‘s why I stayed at ome toâ€"day." | Monte held his breath for a second,‘ nd then he said:â€" "You mean, the woman Peter loves â€"â€"is Marjory Stockton?" | She raised her head in swift chalâ€" CHAPTER Xx. aying Like a Man er. I thought you must ed it from her." 0," he admitted; "I didn‘t." u‘ve had your eyes closed." it," he nodded; "I‘ve had osed:. Why, that expains (Copyright) |_For many years before becoming a farmer‘s wife, I was one of fAifty | teachers in a large school whose head | teacher was a woman of remarkable | executive ability. _ Methodical, orderâ€" |ly, statistical, she demanded that each [ teacher provide for her use and guid-! | ance a general outline of work for ltho term, a general program of work) | for each week, and a detailed program | of the work for each day. * These daily schedules must be elastic to alâ€"] |low of seizing unforeseen opportunâ€" Ities or for unexpected occurrences,. l My first few weeks at housekeeping were a horrible tangle till I bethought me to apply to my housework the same method of preparing a program, so to speak, of the proposed or necessary activities of the day, and it has meant untold comfort, pleasuré ..J' gase in the Aceohiplishment of the day‘s dutâ€" les, It requires thought, planning mi“hdneut to make things dovetail to advantage, and like the school program, it must have sufficient elasâ€" ticlty to admit of being altered more 'i Vegetables have different characterâ€" | istics. _ For instance green vegetables / are valuable mainly because they conâ€" tain substances which purify the blood and assist digestion. Roots and tubers are heat and energyâ€"giving foods. All fl vegetables supply bulk and all contain Aa considerable amount of water in |which are the salts so valuable to ihealth. We are still within the seaâ€" «on when we need the properties of | the ,roots and tubers. It will be |some time before the fresh vegetables ?are on the market. _ Let us clean up | the one kind before we begin to use | the other. | _ The first and most immediate need | is to release wheat for overseas. Every | potato, carrot and onion that we eat is ‘helping towards that end. Don‘t neâ€" |glect to be in the vegetableâ€"cating | ranks. | How many families have boiled poâ€" tatoes day in and day out? It is safe to guess that only about five per cent. of the women in Canada cook potatoes habitually in more than two ways. One of the simplest and easiest of dishos to prepare is riced potatoes. If the housewife is boiling them, anyâ€" way, she might as well vary them_by putting them through a potato ricer or coarse strainer. _ Then they will be flaky, light and delicious. Here are some other recipes that One harried housewife moaned the other day: "I never want to see an onion again as long as I live. We are sick of them.," | USE VEGETABLES AND SAVE WHEAT. ‘ The patriotism of Madame Houseâ€"\ might be used to advantage. There wife is measured these days by the is nothing new â€" or elaborate about kind of meals she prepares for her them but so few people think of tryâ€" | family. _ The youngest child will take| ing them out. | what is put before him, provided the! Potato Border.â€"Place a greased ‘food is well cooked. _ There is no-]mould on platter. _ Build around l.t a | thing in the menu that lends itself to wall of hot mashed potatoes, using more variety or constant use than dolnine potatoes, three and oneâ€"half | vegetables. _ Twice a day vegetables| inches high by one inch deep. Smooth | can be used in one form or another, if’and crease with case knife. _ Remove | they are judiciously handled by the| mould. _ Fill with creamed leftâ€"over !hOUSéWife. 'meat ar fich and rahaot in avan ha. "How many ways have you tried to cook them?" she was asked. "Oh I always fry them." â€" No wonler sho was sick of them. _ Every vegetable can be cooked in a vai iety of ways and it is poor policy on the part of the hcusewife to tire her iamily wich reâ€" petition. She may use the same vegeâ€" table nearly every day and by a freâ€" quent change in the manner of cookâ€" ing or serving she may achieve conâ€" stant variety. She trusted him because she did not fear him; she did not fear him beâ€" cause there was nothing in him to fear. It was not that fie was more decent than other men. it was merely because he was less of a man. Why, she had run even from Peterâ€"good, honest, conscientious Peter, with the heart and soul and the nerve of a man. Peter had sent her scurrying before him because of the great love he dared to have for her. Peter challengâ€" ed her to take up life with himâ€" to buck New York with him. _ This was after he had waded in himself with and she had nothing to fear from him had, ducked eve in that way. _ She was safe with him.!hood. â€" Like an She dared even come with him to ¢#â€"| iron, instead of i cape those from whom there might be he had sidestepr some possible danger. . Until now he in agony, and be had been rather proud of thisâ€"as if it ep gie next boat were some honor. _ She had trusted had turned tail him as she would not trust cther men.| seen Teddy, and It had made him throw back his shou!â€") thought was saf dersâ€"dense fool that he was! fthe cost after t} He had been densely stupid from the fAirst, as Beatrice had informed him. Any man of the world ought to have suspected something when, at the first sight of Peter, she ran away. She had never run from him. Women run only when there is danger of capture, He dodged Peter this evening to escape their usual afterâ€"dinner talk, and went to his room. _ He was there now, with his face white and tense. System as a Housekeeping Aid. w."> S AbBbouTt id _| or less as occasion demands. _ An inâ€"| 3 Ing a; terruption, a fire slower than we had“g fifty expected, a telephone visit may disarâ€" | I headq "Ange _ our well laid plans, but some;é kable | YA3> if we have it written down in tabâ€"| 8 rdep. | Vlated form it is a little easier than if | 3 j i 66 & each | °_4 anxiously thinking, "what was | Euidâ€"| it I was planning to do next?" or to 5 £ for have to say, "Dear me, I intended to| B wory | 40 5o and so but I forgot." | § am | I find a school slate hung on the wall & flm ! with pencil hung beside it the easiest & io aLâ€"| place on which to jot my daily pro-!E rtun.| £ram. Of course, the general plan of | § eg, | routine duties changes little from day E 77â€" "e day, but I have found it well to have | & ping it ‘put down in writing," especin]lyJE mghtifor the guidance of hired help someâ€"| & same | what u,folloga: After breakfast: 1,' R so tOfclur table; 2, put sittingâ€"room in‘ & ssary order; 8, do chamber work; 4, wash | § reant | dishes; 5, prepare vegetables, etc. iE se Ini The daily program must be more & d\t-‘ specific, indicating what must be done: E ining | while something else is doing, for it is , -_=- . retail | this fitting of duties into their proper . & chool | niches which lightens and shortens la-:g elasâ€"| bor and makes the difference between ; § more | efficiency and slovenliness. â€" l Phe | Duchess Potatoes.â€"To two cups hot riced potatoes, add two tablespoons butter substitute, oneâ€"half teaspoon salt and yolks of two eggs slightly Ibeaten. Shape in form of cone or | _ Potatoes a la Hollandaise.â€"Wash, |pare, soak and cut potatoes in oneâ€" fourth inch slices. Cut in cubes. Cover three cups potato with white | stock, cook until soft and drain. Cream ‘four tablespoons butter substitute, ‘add one tablespoon lemon juice, oneâ€" half teaspoon salt and a few grains of cayenne. Add the potatoes, cook three minutes and add oneâ€"half tableâ€" spoon finely chopped parsley. With the aid of vegetables it is quite possible to have an entire dinner in one dishâ€"a dinner that is wholesome, nutritious and very palatable. How many people are familiar with fish chowder? _ Here is the recipe; it is enough for a family of five: 1% pounds fish (use moderateâ€"priced variâ€" ties such as cod, haddock or flatâ€"fish), 0 potatoes, peeled and cut in small pieces, 1 onion, sliced, 2 cups carrots cut in pieces, 3 cups milk, pepper, 1 tablespoon fat, 1%4 tablespoons cornâ€" starch. _ Cook vegetables until tender. wdd fat, mix cornstarch with oneâ€" half eup of the cold milk and stir in the liquid in the pot to thicken. _ Add the rest of the milk and the fish which has been removed from the bone and cut in small pieces. Cook unâ€" til the fish is tender, about 10 miâ€" nutes. _ Serve hot. ' Escalloped Potatoes.â€"â€"Wash, pare, soak and cut four potatoes in oneâ€" |fourth inch slices. Put a layer in ‘baking dish, sprinkle with salt and pepper dredge with cornmel or flour |and dot over with oneâ€"half tablespoon |of butter substitute. Repeat. Add hot milk until it may be seen #hrough : top layer. _ Bake one and oneâ€"fourth ‘hours or until potato is soft. any desired shape. â€" Brush over with beaten egg diluted with one teaspoon water and brown in hot oven. Potato Border.â€"Place a greased mould on platter. _ Build around it a wall of hot mashed potatoes, using nine potatoes, three and oneâ€"half inches high by one inch deep. Smooth and crease with case knife. _ Remove mould. _ Fill with creamed leftâ€"over meat or fish and reheat in oven beâ€" fore serving. 1 | _ Monte, in s#ite of his ancestry, had Jogged along, dodging the responsibilâ€" |itiesâ€"the responsibilities that Peter | Noyes rushedm;orward to meet. _ He had ducked even love, even fatherâ€" ‘hood. _ Like any quitter on the gridâ€" | iron, instead of tackling low and hars, he had sidestepped. He had seen Chic in agony, and because of that had takâ€" en the next boat for Marseilles. He ture of him hung in the Covington he saw that even then she had within house in Philadelphia. The painting her all that she now had. â€" That clear, revealed steelâ€"gray eyesand, even beâ€" white forehead had been there then; low the beard of respectability, a the black arched brows, the thin, mouth that in many ways was like straight nose, and the mobile lips. He |\ Peter‘s. _ Montague Sears Covington caught his breath as he thought of '-â€"thnt was his name; the name that those lips. Her eyes, tooâ€"but no, a |had been handed down to Monte. The Change had taken place there. He \ man had shouldered a rifle, fought his had always thought of her eyes as | way across deserts and over mounâ€" coldâ€"as impenetrable. They were |tain paths, had risked his life a dozen not that now. Once or twice he | times a day to reach unknown El Dorâ€" thoughthe had seen into them a little ado of the West. He had done this Tay n Once or twice he thought he | partly for a womanâ€"a slip of a girl had glimpsed gentle, fIUtterlng figures in New York whom he left behind to in them: Once or twice they had been wait for him, though she begged to like windows in a longâ€"closed house, \go. That was Monte‘s grandmother. %‘ffienlfm {]}'f'g es T2 mad e Cike se | _ Monte, in s#it s ed w owers. It made him dizzy en ty .1,,,,,“’;.3.i’fn.',"?hfi"ffffii{’..’&?fl now to remember those moments. Technically, he must desert her. He must make that supreme sacrifice. At the moment when he stood ready to challenge the world for herâ€"at the moment when his heart within him burned to face for her all the dangers from which he had runâ€"at that point he must relinquish even this privilege, and with smiling lips pose before the world and before her as a quitter. He must not even use the deserter‘s preâ€" rogative of running. â€" He must leave her cheerfully and jauntilyâ€"as the naked fists, manâ€"fashioned. That was what gave Peter his rreight. That right was what she feared. Monte had a frnndfathet who in fortyâ€"nine crossed the plains. A picâ€" had turned tail and run. _ He had seen Teddy, and had run to what he thought was safe cover. If he paid the cost after that, whose the fault? The least he could do now was to pay the cost like a man. | :.:lllllllllllllllllllll i apr |8 /E B k i i‘ . on Hp € s CT$S : * /s 4 Fc | § The trains t ! = â€" If there was j 5 HOUSE [5 Th every tow (§ Td hustle like | '5' S‘And ta’ko or | , tray 1 -' g }lllt ongnlfig |& I wouldn‘t min |§ _. Or mud, or: t R If there was j | & HOUSE | § In every tow i The Wa [ & â€"â€" â€"The Hou f 'E,' T« s â€" Geo. Wright 4 ! !.llllllllllll-nnnnn-- a i The Walker House 3 E The House of Plenty > 5 Toronto & g Geo. Wright & Co., Proprietors g gl"l""l"||"|l||"||"l""""l|u"""""é, Use a brush dipped in whiting to shine up your bookcase doors, mirâ€" rors and cut glass, Polish with newsâ€" paper. Some of the California Indians store their corn supply in willow basâ€" kets, which are as large as the rooms of a modern house. One million women in Kngland are working in munition plants. Two bunâ€" dred and fifty thousands are engaged in agriculture. Potatoes at home make more wheat for the Allied Armies}-\it is your fight. To Prevent Fading. The delicate shades of colored linâ€" ens can be kept from fading by using plenty of pulverized borax in the waâ€" ter in which they are washed and ringed. Sndfi It isn‘t the task of the fewâ€" The pick of the brave and the strong; It‘s he and it‘s I and it‘s you Must drive the good vessel along. Will you save? WfAl you work? Will you fight? Are you ready to take off your coat? Are you ving the State? Are you ;fiflng your weightâ€" Are you pulling your weight in the boat? |_ _ He was ready now to face the world | with her. _ He was eager to do that. | Neither heights nor depths held any ‘terrors for him. _ He envied Chicâ€" ‘he envied even poor mad Hamilton. The billows are heaving behind, The breakers are foaming before; We need all the strength we car findâ€" Fach ounce you can put to the oar. Are you doing the best that you can To keep the old galley afloat? Are you power or freight? Are you pulling your weightâ€" Are you pulling_your weight in . the boat? _ He paced his room. In another week or two, if he had kept on,â€"if Peter had not come,â€"he might have been admitted farther into that house. He | squared his shoulders. If he fought for his own even nowâ€"if, man against Monte set his jaws. If, through Peter, he could bring her happiness, then that was all the reward he could ask. _ Here was a man who loved her, who would be good to her and fight hard for her. _ He was just the sort of man he could trust her to. A knock at his door made him turn on his heels. 1 "Who‘s that?" he demanded. "It‘s Iâ€"Noyes," came the answer. "Have you gone to bed yet?" (To be continued.) Which was precisely the opportunâ€" ity now offered. _ He had been considâ€" ering this sacrifice from his own perâ€" sona% point of view. _ He had looked upon it as merely a personal punishâ€" ment. _ But, afterâ€"all, it was_for her. alone. _ Peter played no part in it whatever. _ Neither did he gimself. It was for herâ€"for her! If he could only be given another chance to do something for Marjoryâ€" something that would bite into him, something that would twist his body and maul him! _ If he could not face some serious physical danger for her, then some great sacrificeâ€" careâ€"free ass known to her and to the world as just Monte. _ & He had known her for over a deâ€" cade. _ As a schoo&girl he had seen her at Chic‘s, and now ten years later he saw that even then she had within would be joyous, 3 And I wouldn‘t give a hoot For all the inconveniâ€" ence of The trains that poke so slow, If there was just one WALKER HOUSE Th every town I go. I‘d hustle like the dickens, And take orders by the ton. Say, trav‘ then would be }ult one big round of solid fun. I wouldn‘t mind the rain or sleet, Or mud, or frost or snow * If there was just one WAL&ER HOUSE In every town I go. Pull Your Weight. Then there was just one WALKER HOUSE In towns along my routes . :*> TORONTO JIngr@am‘s i _ Milliwéeda Créearmâ€" The Antiâ€"Loafing Law, also bearing upon our warâ€"time food production, has likewise been enforced. _ Magisâ€" trates have seized the opportunity of dealing with loafers, tramps and "sports" by putting them to work on the farms. "Nonâ€"essential" industries have been interpreted by some Magisâ€" trates into more or less definite groups Enforcement of the Canada Food Board‘s regulations as to food conâ€" servation has been placed in the hands of the police machinery of the municiâ€" palities and of the different Provinces throughout the Dominion. t Food Control Corner soft and clean. P t am ‘The refined way to banish oiliness and shininess of nose and forchead induced by persâ€" piration, is to apply a light You are young but once but you can be youthful always if you care for your complexion properly. DailyuseofIngram‘s Milkweed Cream prevents blemishes, overcomes pimples and other eruptions. Since 1885 its distinctive therapeuâ€" tic quality has been giving hzeath to the skin and youthful color to the complexion. It WeR Si i idA ds a id A 100 Divides your stock and dxey stay where you put them. T\ fence that seryes you for al tle. Can‘t rast, eageor b P. d?wn.] Skmn'}ll An:“wgna:har. Elsch ?:.(x’:t t.l:('“ml’ held with J.'.' eeriess lock, nil pa vily van e strongest, serviceable farm fence made and hlfl‘, guaranteed. e Sck l gtun rog °‘TMT°° of all kinds of fencing for farms, ranches, ks, cometerios, lawns, {»m yards, ornamental fencing and gates. See the ess iine at your local lers. Agents wanted in open territory at your druggist‘s is Ingram‘s Zodenta for the teeth. touch of Ingram‘s Velveola Souveraine Face Powder. It also conceals the minor blemâ€" ishes. Included in thecomplete ishes. Included inthecomplete lineofIngram‘s toilet products The war garden is to be popular in London in 1918. Reports just receivâ€" ed show that 6,014 gardens were startâ€" ed in one week. and r»n who had> no better excuse than employment in said questionable industries have been ordered to get into more useful occupations. In Winnipeg a great change has been observed in the streets since this law went into effect. The idlers and loafers have disappeared. Great Britain is to allot ten pounds of sugar per head of the household to private fruit growers this season for preserving fruit. We supply cans, pay express charges and remit daily. Our price next week fortyâ€"ecight cents Cream Wanted Milkweed Cream Soap Borated Talcum _ . Completion Tablets . SWEET OR CHURNING CREAM The Pesriless Porfection Fence FRED‘K F.INGRAM CO. WINDSOR, CAN. 250 (93} The cuckoo, as is well known, lays its eggs in another bird‘s nest, and, to make the deception surer, it takes away one of the other bird‘s ergs. Animais are conscious of théir deceit, as is shown by the fact that they try to act secretly and noiselessly; they show a sense of guilt if detected; they take precautions in advance to avoid discovery; in some cases they mantâ€" fest regret and repentance. Thus, bees which steal hesitate often beâ€" fore and after their exploits, as if they feared punishment. A naturalist described how his monâ€" key committed theft. While he preâ€" tended to sleep the animal regardéed him with hesitation, and stopped every time his master moved or seemâ€" ed on the point of awakening. France has declined by 80 per cent., cattle by 16 per cent., sheep by 85 per cent., and pigs by 41 per cent. The best potato can be spoiled by 2 poor cook. _ Legend has it that a famous king in history tested cach sconk hbefore hiring him by asking him to beil a porate, Tricks of Animal Humbugs. In military stables horses are known to have pretended to be lame in order to avoid going to a military exercise. A chimpanzee had been fed on cake when -iz. After his recovâ€" ery he often feifned céughing in orâ€" der to procure dainties. l "In December, 1916, a chap from | the 7th Battalion and myself got out |of the camp at Giesen and made for | the Holland frontier by Munster. We had to go through Westphalia, one of it,he most mountainous parts of Gerâ€" | many, and, after wandering about lfor nine days in snow up to our ;wnistn, we had to give ourselves up. IThe snow was so deep that we could not keep to the roads and kept wanâ€" |dering into fields and falling into streams. We used to travel by night and sleep in the woods by day. ! Ran From Farm. ~ "In March, 1917, we volunteered for work, and were went to a farm at Prath, a little south of Coblenz. The people there were very decent to us, but.we only stayed two days, and thengtent it out of the window durâ€" ing the night. We made a bit of notse and wakened the people, and all the dogs in the village were after us beâ€" fore we had gone a hundred yards. We got away all right, crossed the Rhine in a boat that night, crossed the Moselle two days later by the public ferry, and after a pretty hard trip made the frontier at Aachen, We ~got lost on the last lap, and walked right into the frontier guard. Saw Dutch Guards. "The next morning when we were brought out of the guardâ€"room we could*see the Dutch sentries, who waved their hands to us. Say, it nearly broke my heart to see that, We did three weeks in jail and were sent to Meschede, where we started digging a tunnel out of the camp. After working at that for six weeks, we had just completed it, one of our own men and a senior sergeant at that, gave us away to the Germans, Well, we were ‘jugged‘ again and sent to Soitau command, and now I am here." Tried to Escape. "I made several attempts to get out of the country and was either caught or the weather was too bad. In July, 1915, I got away from a ‘kommando‘ near Wiesbaden, . and made for Switzerland, but only had a map torn out of a notebook and watch chain compass. I was only a few days out when a forester caught me with my boots off. He had a raâ€" ther nastyâ€"looking rifie, so I did not carry on any farther. thousands of their wounded coming in from Armentieres, and they did look wrecks. German wounded would ask us for soup. That‘s the state of affairs, and yet they try to ‘kid‘ the people they are winning. What a hope! In some of their big cities I have been asked by their women and childrenâ€" for bread. Just imagine civilians in England asking German prisoners for bread. "We have eaten very little of Gerâ€" man camp food since 1915. We have always relied on our parcels. I have often had a bit of bread and dripping for all three meals rather than touch that horrible soup. Oh, the soup! I actually saw a dead dog being taken into the kitchen to be put in the prisoners‘ soup. That‘s absolutely true. "I am at last in a civilized country after a long wait and many disapâ€" pointments," writes Corp. A. F. Lawâ€" erton, a member of the 15th Battalion, taken prisoner by the Germans at St. Julien, who is now at The Hague, in a letter to a friend in Toronto. "The last three weeks I spent in the Soltau Main Camp were absolutely miserâ€" able. The place is full of vermin and rats and filthy dirty. I don‘t think we had four good nights‘ sleep out of twentyâ€"four 1 was there. ESCAPE OF A 1915 WAR PRISONER Since 1913 the number of horses in Corp. Lawerton, Now in Holland, Made Several Attempis and Enâ€" dured Much Suffering. FEARED THE HORRIBLE SOUP IN GERMAN PRISON. "Whilst I was at Acchen I saw wi BA V« stoo« then or th reas« the s On while stumps | one man them aft is as mu They has engines : pieces, ei pensive . made stum; stump shoul ligh place ep i1 eg __ _ Mothers ar department. is as a means of . letter, Write â€" stamped and a are; Spain, Denmark, N ope: Argent small Repub! sphere . some Bale ? made witho arge se f. Address al Woodbine Ave. t W D sX u006 l‘.'o pay the u{l.. e Aoityts much you Tose figK ANY who has sold weys, and pot or, betrer still The Parmers who direct to us , then fermers general store. 13 CHURCH Stump Pulle h 4 Ihey The

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