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Durham Review (1897), 10 Jun 1920, p. 2

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of the roots. mental enough flowers and sh ing rh it. ha thu whubaro Meringueâ€"Stew one pint of rhubarb stalks or bake it as above. While very hot remove it from the fire and add one tablespoonful of butâ€" ter and a few drops of vanilla, or eggs very | the rhubarb le when the : of su butte with erun earried ¢ eradicate the hous th tha Worth Every Cent of greater val is spread fres weekly, the la of its Co5¢f ===â€"â€"= Black, Green Ol' Mixed # # 6 ® ing the fy stage. The chief trouble} here is that during the busy season| the men find this one of the easiest things to negloct. Still, if they realize} that a greatly increased number of; files is the peralty for their noglect.! they may be able to find the time.| As for the garbago, anything which, will not be cater at once by hogs or| chickens should be sither buried or‘ burved. VDishwater and wash witer thrown r:peatedly hwhc“ ‘:’"t has enough o ig er vin~â€"i%â€" to lfi‘&l flies. 3_:0 It is impossible to provide sany other mean‘s.of wm‘ fov it, o Follqeriqtif mnakerhiit drain at +] "SALADAR‘ ) /o. w e M s y zy _ "*° éq; s 7 % k > y 7 Olw Tt ~3 half xd P aiiAbou! ve Healthâ€"C iv in an » Mer zhiing the Fly ht : Wh L.T +F‘O W €a Th Or 12 a@A p.A ) th idding dish, cover ubarb, then more e the rhubarb and ed. Have the top ‘over and bake in B yoliks O% whip them ie whites o tilizer when it s can be done exposed to the a before reachâ€" » chief trouble leadly So toilets. The fairly simple, wildren in the apreading of ore and more 1€, re rema and o empt gs to a nfuls of help to enemy, sauce ( servâ€" ve pot urn 1 1 unt f1 Serve into f the them fr 0 or | Do You Know ' That water in which a bit of cream of tartar has been dissolved makes a i good bleach for handkerchiefs? Wash ‘them first, then try this. i That the best way to sew buttons on \ very sheer fabrics is to baste lawn ‘or a bit of tape to the under side? ‘ In sewing the buttop, take the stitches :thruugh both the material and the lawn, cutting the lawn away close to | the butten after it has been sewed in ! nlace. has proved very satisfactory. An ordinary board is cut as long as the kitchen window is wide, so that the window can be closed on it for the purpose of holding it in place. A pipe, bent up on the kitchen side with a large funnel at the top, & on the outside so that it hole in the top of a co The m breeding There es germs, v phoid, d runs through the board t the window. The dishw poured into the funnel . breeding place is the outâ€"door toilet. There especially are found the disease germs, which flies carry, such as tyâ€" phoid, darrhoea, dysentery and so forth. If some sort of sewer system can be instalied in the house, that is, of course, the best remedy, and surely anything so essential to the health and comfort of the family is of as much importance as improved farm machinâ€" ery. Where an indoor toilet is imâ€" possible, the outhouse should be built so that it is fly proof and can be freâ€" quently cleaned. A chemical toilet, which is comparatively incxpensive and thoroughly satisfactory, can be installed in the house. In the sumâ€" mer. it can be moved ouft of doors if That a red rubber sponge that you can buy at any fiveâ€"andâ€"tenâ€"cent store is a wonderful wall paper cleaner? It also does fine work in cleaning picture frames, painted walls, and woodwork. That if you sew much, two thimbles ave better than one? You know how the index finger of the left hand soon becomes rough by the needle pricking through. Welk you can prevent this by using one thimble on this finger, and the other, in the usual way, on the second finger of the right hand. light Are running home to rest, f Where the sun broods like a great mother bird, Red in the low. red West. And then are folded close the little lights, Then fall the wide, bright wings On a grey nost of couds, where shadâ€" ows hide Their mystic fAutterings. Broad bands of rose and gold flare up and out Across a cloudâ€"filled sky. And stretch with feathery edge against the grey, Like great wings lifted high. "I want some shoeâ€"strings, some hair pins, a pair of gloves and & tooth brush," the woman said. "I have to catch a train, and have but a few The "Yes, madam‘!" the floorâ€"walker reâ€" sponded briskly. "That‘s the benuty of a department storeâ€"get anything you want, right under the one roof! Take elevator to eleventh floor, shoe department, eight alsles to the righs from the main passageway, for shoeâ€" strings; hairpins in notions departâ€" ment, east side of basement, three alsles beyond hardware; gloves in woâ€" men‘s wear, fifth floor of annex, reached by passageway over stregt; toothbrush in drugs and toilet articles department, on balcony, reached by moving stairway, which you will find on your right as you pass the founâ€" tain in the florist shop in the centre of the main floor." Sealed Packets Only. Never Sold in Bulk. By building two canals, one 45 and the other 30 miles long and utilizing a river, the Italian Government is planning to connect Milan with the Adriatic Sea. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physicians n 16 ht which flis dlarrhoea Convenient Store ellow, fluitering rays of Sunset. ind bent down t will enter a vered barrel, that is set in water can be with fewer of the screen z one of the »l, far erough I can dry out. ort is a great ‘ng the warm . anrerous I owe to music the happiest of my | childhood memories. That farâ€"off past, when I recall it, finds its most natural| setting in our little provincial dining‘ rocin, with windows opening on the: village main street. There I see again my father, half smiling, half grave, seated on a high stcol and playing the harmonium. ‘The peaceful room was filled with the droning melodies of church hywmns. I sat on a cushion at his fect. I followed the movements of his legs and arms. 1 never stirred and never spoke a word. I listened, my breath trembling} under the. thunderous sounds as it would have ~trembled under the roar of a tempest. _ My father paid no attention to my emoâ€" tions. He played for his own pleasure, confiding the hidden feelings of hs soul to the instrument only, which reâ€" peated them in its own language, comprehended by no one except himâ€" selfâ€"and me. For I understood the harmonium. 1 regarded it as a living creature, loved it with an exclusive, juvenile passion and now and then caressed its keys as if I were caressing my mother‘s hands. My tenth year reâ€" mains in my memory as one long reâ€" ligious chant sung to heaven. . That is the age of innocent mysticism. That little organ took on in my mind a sort of sanctity. I approached it with devotion and nothing in the world could have induced me to play it myâ€" seif, so strong was the sense of my unworthiness to do so. f 4 UH UHW EMBw OWP PRCs POmUee OnCt i | _ The day when they came to take boy?" | the harmonium away I fled the house.‘ 1 didn‘t dare to tell the truth, It ‘I wandered along the roads, like a| was my most intimate secret. They | dog which has lost its owner. I talked| would have !aughed at my story, I |aloud. I threw myself on my knees stammered: _ \and prayed. I kept away from pasâ€"| â€""Nothing. I don‘t know." sersâ€"by lest in my fury I should inâ€"! But Mme. Leger insisted. | sult them. When I relurned home at| *"Come, tell us. We won‘t harm |nightfall and. seating myself at the you. We shan‘t tell your parents on \table, saw only the empty place, and | you." |then on the wall the marks of a vanâ€"| So I lied. Looking at her, I murâ€" |ished form, my, wrath against men| mured: \was appeased. Miscrable, exhausted,} "It wasâ€"it wasâ€"because of Mile. ‘I put my head in my hands and sobâ€"| Blanche." MLL . catater aond Ife wife ewmiled I grew up, became more reasonable and had fewer unreflecting impulses or spontancous enthusiasms. But my heart kept its old love, which conâ€" founded in its tenderness my father, the music and the harmonium. You can imagine what a drama it was in my existence (I was then twelve years old) when my parents sold the instruâ€" ment. Why did they part with it? I don‘t know to this day. I always avoided speaking about this event for fear of appearing ridiculous in their eyes, and also in order to leave them under the illusion that they had never done anything to make me suffer. I suppose that some immediate need of money had constrained them to sacrifice the superfluous to the necesâ€" sary, and to accept the offer made them by M. Leger, the notary of the region, who lived in a beautiful house on the edge of the little town. * No consolation ever turned my thoughts from the departed instruâ€" ment. In the night I awoke with a start, as if I heard its mysterious voices vibrating about me. I jumped out of bed and went downstairs in my bare feet. I beiieved with all my soul that a miracle had brought it back to its accustomed place. I tipâ€" toed into the dining reom, touching the chairs and the mantelpiece. It must be there. But no, the space it had formerly occupied was still vacâ€" bed There are 550,000 more men ‘h"“‘thuslr;sticall}{al‘mut.h friend. women in Canadd. " } "Smiler‘is a *fde'*bpt-imist," he said. More than five million people @P<) "If he failed in business, he‘d thank plied for work at the Employment Exâ€"| Providence he fd hisâ€" health; if he changes of England last year, and | failed in health he‘d thank Providence 1,137,875 were placed in suitable postâ€" | h‘e_’haa his busifiess; and if he failed tions. & in both, he‘d givia cheery laugh and The raising of stags for thef( horns‘“y, "Oh, well, what use is the one is a curious Chinese industry, the | without the otherÂ¥%" The raising is a curious horns being « and used in t cina. When a man walks a mile he;takes on an average 2263 steps, but when he rides a bicycle with an average gear he covers a mile with an equvaâ€" lent of only 627 ateps. x In 1919, 7,6%5 new books and 969 new editions were published in the United States, in all 8,5904. Britain‘s output amounted to 7,327 new books and 1,295 new editfons, in all 8,622, or twenivâ€"eight more than the States. China exports tea‘ in solid lumps, like bricks, for consumption in Tibet and Siberia. ‘The teadeaves are pulâ€" verized, mixed with water, and mouldâ€" ed into hard cakes. The bricks weigh about 51b. each, In this form tea can Le asestad avariand more easily. as it China exports le like bricks, for con and Siberia. ‘The verized, mixed with ed into hard cakes. about 51b. each, In be carrled overland occupies mgch less occupies much less space. A The cost of the Prince of Wales‘ Canadian â€" tour â€" $25,000 â€" is modest compared with the expenditure inâ€" tolved in some previous Royal jourâ€" neys. King George‘s v‘sit to India cost nearly $1,250,000; whilst the Opâ€" hir trip cost $800,000,. King Edward‘s visit, as Prince of Wales, to India, in 18975, cost $1,500,000, Tallocing in some Counimes 18 a useful art. In Samoa, when a woman is married several tattcoo marks are placed on her, and both in Fiji and Samoa the birth of each child is reâ€" gistered in this way on the mother‘s hand. At Tahiti serious crimes are punished by tattooing a mark upon the forehead of the delinguent. Many a man will "indorse" a candiâ€" date‘s character who would not indorse his note. Never allow silver to stand over night without washing. e THE LIE By Ren Facts and Figures. 12 Bizet 5 of stags for the‘z‘ horns Chinese industry, the cut while soft each year the manufacture of mediâ€" Here is a Liitle Story Fragrant® With Youth‘ul Sentiment, Its Author is One of the Most Distingu shed Frenchmen of Lotters of the Present. den walks, and and tell her misery. But For me she w social speak world One Sunday evening an extra0roiâ€" nary thing happened. While 1 was prowling, as usual, outside the garâ€" den walls I heard music. I listened. I ran to the gate. They were playâ€" ing the harmonium. I was sure of it. My heart couldn‘t be deceivcld. ult s BB sa 000000 /00 w A familiar air floated toward me from behind the tufted trees, thick with the shadows of the â€" starless night. Was it the harmonium? Was it my childhood? They spoke to me. They had heard the sound of my footâ€" steps. They knew that I was there. The sounds grew softer and more apâ€" pealing: They seemed to entreat me to enter. I guessed that. I felt it. I heard nothing any longer but that appeal. _ ¢ us s w 4 d ol $ 1 c‘ambered over the bars of the gate. Without knowing how, I found myself on a broad pathway. I walked straight ahead, without hesitation, The gravel erunched. _A _dog barked furiously. A door of the house openâ€" cd. A shadow appeared in the doorâ€" way. I continued to advance,. Someâ€" cne cried, "Who goes there?" i I stopped for & moment and then advapnced further. The voice repeated: "Who goes there? Answer, or WH fire!" I said nothing. There was a sharp report. A bullet whistled by me. In spite of myself I gave a loud ery. Then I lost consciousness. . > I came to myself in a large, blue room. I was stretched on a lounge. It was warm. A bright light cast its golden rays over me. Three faces were close to mine. I recognized Mile. Blanche. I was in M. Leger‘s house. He looked at me and said: "What did you come here for, my So I lied. Looking at her, I murâ€" mured : "It wasâ€"it wasâ€"because of Mile. Blanche." The notary and his wife smiled. Mile. Blanche blushed a little. "Rascal!" said M. Legor, jokingly, tapping me on the cheek. _ _ P EAdEv e (oone es io‘ o Bm And as the father and mother withâ€" drew silently, accepting my explanaâ€" tion, the young girl bent over my foreâ€" head and gave me a kiss, so sweet and so tender that I thought I should faint 184. wfl'hfip’k. you, thank you," I sighed, because I hadn‘t then learned to say, "I Jove you.".. ... . cep Minard‘g Liniment in the house. A Real "Cheerio." A man was talking to another en I mounted aga Bob Long Say: ""My overalis and shirts are roomy 1 ud’rrfu.'crl iblr, and mado expeâ€" cially for farmers. 1 designed them with theidea that you might want to stretch your arms and legs occasionally," will outweer any other make of Glove on the market, because they are made by skilled workâ€" men from the strongest glove lecther obtainable, BOB LONG BRANDS known from Coast to Coust . R. G. LONG & Co., Limited Sunday evening an _e_xtmordi val is 1 ns o'?-" ;“',,, iP m« 4 \u:l V&, _ it 2 3 5.A Nerin uiess %" Insist on gotting Bob Long Brands from your deaierâ€" they will save you morey N I AMI _ rurvwes as »â€"â€" (The End.) n to my bedroom Frost. One of the oddest methods adopted for the protection of fruit trees against frost is to distribute through the orâ€" chard paper bags filled with shavings that have been soaRed in fuel oil. This can be dore in a hurry in case of emergency, the stuff being roady in advance. The bags are set on fireâ€"Jjust touched off with a matchâ€"and clouds of smoke spread through the orchard, serving as a blanket. Buy Guarding Orchards From e ol t Thrift Stamps means the same attractive stylesâ€"the same easy comfort â€"the game sound economyâ€"that Fleet Foot means in the city. Have two or three pairs of Fleet Footâ€"brown ones for work about the farmâ€"white ones when work is over and pleasure begins. You can have several pairs of Fleet Foot for the price of one pair of leather shoes. ‘There are styles and sizes for men, women fi and children â€"for weekâ€"day and Sundayâ€" NB for work and holiday time. INTING becomes necessary as your property increases in value, and as property was never so valuable as today there is a greater need than ever for that kind of paint which actually preserves the surface and thus saves the entire house. €g 43 tss Excusn" PORyiiche l}AINT 30% Pure White Zing 100% Pure Paint because it combines permanence, covering capacity and cconomy. If Bâ€"H "English Paint" was dearer than it is, it would still be the most economical â€"the shorter would still be the most economical â€"the shorter life of other cheaper brands makes them more exâ€" pensive in the end. Mn coe ieA on s / 4 _ It contains the famous Brandram‘s Genuine B.B. finslyâ€"ground white leadâ€"70%â€"to which is put 30% of pure zincâ€"a guaranteed formula that no other paint can boast. To this mixture is added fine turpentine and linseed oil from the Bâ€"H mills, which is of a quality in keeping with the other ingredients. When you use Bâ€"H Paint you will notice its "body" and brillianceâ€"you will compare the extreme covering capacity with other brandsâ€"the permanence you will be able to prove by other exâ€" teriors painted with Bâ€"H paint year: ago. This spring, to make a real job of it, use Look for the"Bâ€"H dealer in your terâ€" ritory. The Eâ€"H Sign hangs outside his store. > On The Farm Ask your dealer for Fleet Foot P hss Psnndb agesâ€"A004* IEERNECC I 1 * CALICE KING, Acting ReSistrar MEDICINE EDULA i42.2N Mining, Chemical, Civil, Mechanical ard Llectrical ENGINEERING ouniNMEg SCROOL | HAVICATION SCEPOL Jsty and August Pccember to April cHOOL OFr COMMERCE BANKINCS QUEEN‘S Kingeton, " Part of the Arts course may be covercd by correspondence EDUCATION 3. o quborg i is Pr: en tA eey 94 .0 Te l scaage => 4** As we retwnmed from eveni at the chateau, writes a wor worker who was with the France, the captain paused at of my billet to inspect my qua: desired to know whether I v fortabiy housed. Vv;‘Yot; see I have a good and even a dressing case, proudily. S *The capitain sniffed whore does this equh from, Miss Câ€"â€"â€"*" "Cows, swine, hor he exclaimed. "By J vou can‘t stand this! â€"I led him into the h the next door to mine, "Oh, I don‘t mind them! Th préetty good sleepers except l "But this frightfs! sime!l!" as we stepped back into "® "You can‘t stand it‘" "But, Capt. M.â€"â€", really,. mind it nearly so much asPoj might. I took care of my o when I was a little girl." "Well, you don‘t have to t of these domes«tic animals," decidedly. t | her molher was busy ano & | Anquisitive . so trenbleson iquutions becowme that fus mother said : ' "Run away and play, Jest | as 4 cam be asd si k in the ® Fean went away for a to® ‘l'rm she exntered the rou: dlooking vyory woebegone .ws :ker head in both basds. "Why, whai is the in fsked her mother. "I‘m sick," replied the tot "Where do you you fee} sic the mother in alarm. "Why, 1 guess I‘m «ick in gain," answered Jean. After two days I began to (h captain hbad forgotten, but th ness of madame and the smile: engaging son, aged four year the atmosphere more bearah the third day, however, while tossing a medicine ball with ; my boys, the captain appeared ly and announced that 1 was t Of course, 1 could only tha and nhov orders. so 1 climhed â€" youngest was helping me i things into a small wardrobe i exclaimed,; "O sis, let‘s see th "See what, HMarry*" "Why, that Auffyâ€"rufiles gow I took out my one bit of ! dinner frock that I ‘had betrâ€" ed enough to bring to Franc sharp young eyes had discove the very back of my trumk. 1 out and held it up, and even . who were working on the wires stopped long enough to it "O bays but doesn‘t that 1 remind me of home and my exclaimed Harry. "I‘ll say it‘s some rag," "Say, sister, won‘t you wear We‘d love to see you all do it.** "It‘s against the rule for ma civics, but maybe 1 can dress for fun sometime," 1 answer replaced the gown and went my hasty packing. An bour and five minutes af ceived the captain‘s orders, m; ings were sottled in my new bi I was batk in the recreation ings were 1 was bas camp. . A return‘ fNem my migouy ui; a onefl%l_wgi men. said a little i "I!l enks told me you had an aw proigty dress." Would it be too trouble to show it to Shorty a~« "No, indeed, Red," 1 replied lt and take a look at my gorgeos They accepted my invitation » u.uhins.,u-vnk the dinnes {r0« : pPily trunk; but 4kcy examined serious eUmiration, and Red b~ sudden tears to nty gyes who touched the fabric geritly and sai mother used to wear soft, silky â€"» I knew that Red‘s mother hs since he left home. They were the first of ma: asked to see my "party dress ing after evening 1 displayed / boys who brought me home, | never had the courage :0 exs! even for w few ijinates my @ gtout uniform for (le‘r\'flt"yfm‘ so I did not keep my halftpro:®‘ masquerade in it sometime | q guard biliet, Jt has never been wor is too wida for the pre and the bodice needs all At it reproachfully, th must be made over befo: gervice. Then with gratl @( ber how many d ing it, and how ries of gay times were invoked b and how many 1 good times to « were bulided on its laco and c‘if has served n serves an hon A mosquite has twontyâ€"iwo teeth, all of which mey be seen @*ough ® microccope. s A PARTY DRESS IN FRANCE ce. Then with z: hpw many dear l t, ard how mary of gay times at h« i invoked by its how many happy times to come : bailded on the naa and ehiffon. : nc lean‘s was neve toc x4 ivening n n Ma : a Q & o o o & m t %Â¥ . & w t wa wa vo wn ©oO mE El I Soil Foertilit Cconferceonc (F] Ontario Ag Imprs Prominen|! Important Don‘t Fora tb GUELP Temnis MJNE 16 bMeaches the cl require so m» with your star so much desin lutely W OJ rgw n

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