West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 May 1935, p. 2

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}* W e hes 54 + The other mused as if turning the suggestion over in his mind, . "Ab, Miss Norval, a charming type!" he exclaimed at last as if all the time he had been merely dwelling on her charm, "And we might have worked together, you for your Miss Norval and 1 for my chairs, but now it is too late." He spoke with a tone of inexpressible melancholy. "We are both of in the hands of that devil. A glimmer of hope kindled in Adâ€" am‘s mind. "I‘ll do anything I car to help you even now," he proposed, "if you‘ll only put me in the way of finding Miss Norval" "But you come too late, Senor," he resumed. "A few months ago you and I might have worked together, with this Senor Norval. Together we might have outwitted your Mr. Perâ€" kin. But now I fear he das his grip on us both. I wish it might not have been, for, believe me, 1 like you, Benor Meriston," He seemed to take a delight in English with its foreign accept and its queer turns of speech. It was as If, after spending long days of silenceo, de had at last found an aunditor, kept away from the cold master of yours! Alone I might have persuaded the absurd Norval to do business, and alone I should not have been Wragged into all these so dismal Engâ€" lish crimes," "YOouUu CcOME Too LATE" "*.nat can I do for Senor Meris ton*" asked Montada considerately, as if he might have helped. "I want to find Miss Norval." "The Senor is unlucky. Indeed we are both unlucky. It would have been delightful to have shared my soliâ€" tude. Think of it, Senor, for a whole month I have lived like a hermit in this so dismal spot, and all because your absurd friend Norval will not accept a good price for his chairs. Could you but have persuaded him a month ago all would assuredly have been so different, 1 should have been at my ease among the vineyards and the olives, curling my stiff toes in the sun and drinking a good wine inâ€" stead of your so horrible beer. Ab, 1 should have done better to have grating as soon as it touches moisture. That means that Aspirin starts "taking hold"" . . . eases even a bad heod:cle. neuritis or rheumatic pain almost instantly. And Aspirin is safe. Doctors prescribe it. For Aspirin does not harm the heart. Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made in Canada and all druggists have it,‘ Adam, in his private hours experiâ€" ments with shortâ€"wave wireless, Wulking homeward, Adam is nearly tun down by a large swift car,. Me calls on Priscilla Norval. Her father recounts the history of five nntiaue chairs he possesses. o Adam is extremely puzzled over the connection _ of Corville Perkin and Montada who wants the antique chaire. ‘Then Priscilla is spirited away. e attemptse to track the thieves and reaches an old _ warehouse. Adam enters the building while the gir} watches the door. Suddenly he hecrs footsteps. This Name* Means Extra Fast Relief From Pain 3 aazf esr ( cooLl He was silent after this long halfâ€" ‘/ t, n l vengeful, halfâ€"pathetic harangue, "I \¢ REFRESHING would have done better to have , \â€"# E* , made my bargain â€" with Valada monte," he remarked at leng‘, O O t | _ "You know where Valdamonte is?" ”*#4#0&““%”%44“6%’”%“%**0“" "Do I <â€" know, my friend? Do 1 i 4 know? Valdamonte is where I put o him, and you ask me if I know where that is. But if I were free I would make my peace with Valdaâ€" monte. That is why your Mr. Perkin e 3 take care I am not able to return, as * f I wish to do when things get too hot, 3 to Spain once more, He think to himâ€" self that I go straight to Valdamonte i By FAREMAN WELLS g and join forces with him. He think * & | perhaps that I who have turned the t P a o i o i t 4 44 h 2R 4A 4 P o +o4 44i n m o n n n on in bisis‘y . |k,y on Valdamonte might be able sYNOPSIS He bas cheated me as he cheats evâ€" to unturn it, and then your funny .rfidf.': ;o."mn'nms' m l':rmor‘. son | erybody. A little while ago he was Norval hand over his chairs, and C a solicitor, makes a brave j i but unsuccessful attempt to thwart here, in this room, and I tell him :(r. Co;v.,l,l.le rorkin‘ is _out. of the three thieves in a bagâ€"snatching raid | I kill myself if he do not get me out bunt, eh? rm buh( was luI"n from the hands of a|of here. Believe me, he laugh and he| Adam‘s brain was recording the day‘s takings of her fatners shop ""*|say that will not make him wear information that Valdamonte was in e attempts to track the thieves ano| any mournng. He does not wish to Spain, probably vented this informaâ€" ::-fi:‘:'m :n .ufl:‘"wu::fix:sc.“. Ad'u‘;r; deter me, you see, and if it were not tion from assuming even a fraction watches the door. Suddenly he hears for that I should kill myself now," | of the importance he would have asâ€" eotsteps. « * eribed to it a week ago. It was The man turns out to be Adam+ Can‘t you give me an idea of lnxA;:i:yorTCo;’vlllo’l'erlll'l‘. f where she is likely to be? I‘d do anyâ€" :;eadily °:“l“nl‘ ll‘°";° '°r:“mt th‘“t in m, in his private hours @XP®"! |thing to help you in return After overwhelmingly important matter ments with shortâ€"wave wireless. * w:m". ho.:."r"". Adam is pearly | All it would be better to stand your of recovering Scylla this] man could in . Rpor Ap L ) e trial for whatever the police have , ‘“’tl:’lp M“}"' ‘“‘g "‘,‘il °“Py ':"“ l::::t + ; |against you than stay cooped up CO°UW4 was Mr. Corvilie Perkin F lv?:‘:.n:ro:::'cr::f:-m:n‘: &':olo;“:og" ::“ here," i::l:.h Somel:o;‘l lll)e k:nus}t“ ‘orlc.;l the Adam is extremely puzzle ver es u out 0 r. Perkin. s min nâ€" connection _ of Corville Perkin and But if I do not stay cooped up j der the soothing flow of th othel:"s Montada who wants the antique chairs.| up here, if I give myself up I leave e Then Priscilla is spirited away. your Mr. Perkin to secure the chairs quaintly foreign speech was working wewies I havre : k is properly almost for the first time "yYou cOME ToO LATE" t bave.rieked so much for. . Thatâ€" i* ~saat day. "Well, if you don‘t mind," is 4 certain, for I should be unable to » "*.nat can I do for Senor Meris drag him into the dock with me. He he said, as casually as if he were ton*" asked Montada considerately, | pas peen too clever for that. He excusing hl.z.nself from attendance at is if he might have helped. _ thinks it good that Montada should, 4 P&"!Y, "I must be going, If you "I want to find Miss Norval. what you call, carry the baby, and ; CA°MOt help me I must try some «"Tho Gomo« ts unineky Indéed WBebeo soows ols sr o oo amod Cl other source. « & | td P a i i i t i a 4 44 9% 444AAA P o +4 v4%00R m ORA N rrirtarsy‘ty . ' sYNOPSIS He has cheated me as he cheats evâ€" 'A‘d,u: ollermlc.u:. a t:rmofl b“n' erybody. A little while ago he was article to a solicitor, makes a rave j but unsuccessful attempt to thwart here, in this room, and 1 tell bim three thieves in a bagâ€"snatching raid | I kill myself if he do not get me out The bag was torn from the hands of a|of here. Believe me, he laugh and he | Adam _ Meriston, a farmer‘s son, articled to a solicitor, makes a brave but unsuccessful attempt to thwart three thieves in a bagâ€"snatching‘ raid ‘The bag was torn from the hands of a girl who explains that it contains the day‘s takings of her father‘s shop. Get tim of 12 tablets or economical bottle of 24 or m 100 at any druggist‘s. S e 2/ o x £=2P ADVYZ 72 N m 4 #Â¥ a 2 ‘* N ( =s NR nancte /4 /A y ofi 8 OR I/ \ R *3 DOES NOT HARM C THE HEART Demand and Get *A S P I R | N "Yes, though he stand there boldâ€" ly and laugh when I say I shoot him. ‘You shoot me, you fool," he say coldly, ‘and who will ever get you out of here? You‘ll hang for it, and the Valdamonte chairs will stay where they are until they rot.‘ "Ab, yes, Your Mr. Perkin use me and hbe use my money, he is so clever, and I get into what you call deeper water all the time. I have sat here day after day, and I have wantâ€" ed to die, I have wanted to kill myâ€" self. Zor hours I have thought about it, the clean bullet smashing through the weary brain. I could never have resisted, only it seemed so to meet the desires of your Mr. Perkin, That, I suppose, is why he leave me a reâ€" volver all the time, mo sitting dere with my bhand on a revolver, my finger on the trigger, and wanting so to be at rest, But I tell myself always that with the Valdamonte chairs, to lay hands on them at his leisure, and to have no one left in the world who ‘ could say: ‘Here, my friend, you pay me my share, or I turn witness for the police.‘ No one to be afraid of, for he is afraid of me is Mr. Perkin. "My friend, I will not deceive you, |I should not. That is not my affair that they kidnap Miss Norval, No doubt they offer to return her for a ransome, for the chairs, eh? That is & thing I do not wish to contemplate, but what can you or I do? Certainly it does not please me that your Mr. Perkin take this step without my knowledge. He is clearly playing what you call his own hand, eh? Such men are false even to their asâ€" sociates, Would you believe it, I had money, much money, when I first came to see your Mr. Perkin, I should have been content then to go back to warm Spain. But we all want to get a little more do we want? and it often leads to our destruction, When you are just on edge : : : wlpnyoucnn'tmdth,chfldn;’: noise :: :; when mdnn. you is a <burden : :: when you are irriâ€" ham‘s Vequnble Compouiel, 99 our l' * ous of 100 women report benefit. It will give you just the extra enâ€" ergy you need. Life will seem worth Don‘t endure another day withous the help this medicine can give.: Ges a bottle from your druggist today. what indeed?" Montada‘s voice had dropped almost to a whisper, "If I could get out of here and put you in possession of the five crooked chairs, woud you be able in exchange to help me to find Miss Norval?" "But surely those chairs are not worth all this. They are beautiful, I know, and they are doubtless rare, or unique, but what can there be about them for a man to risk his libâ€" erty for?" "But if I do not stay cooped up up here, if I give myself up I leave your Mr. Perkin to secure the chairs I dave risked so much for. That is certain, for I should be unable to drag him into the dock with me. He has been too clever for that. He thinks it good that Montada should, what you call, carry the baby, and he should have the gains. But while I am free, if you can call this freeâ€" dom, I have just a chance to get even with him. He knows that, and 1 think it frightens him a little, I get even with him and he do not handle the chairs, eh?" QUIVERIN G say that will not make him wear any mournng. He does not wish to deter me, you see, and if it were not for that I should kill myself now." where she is likely to be? I‘d do anyâ€" thing to help you in return. After all it would be better to stand your »“Ah.r my young lrignd, Meriston, NERVE S The real essence of this question, however, lies in the confession of the correspondent,. She admits that in spite of being an excellent copybook writer, once she was away from the arbitrary influence of that system, she reverted, probably gradually, to an individual style of writing. In It will be obvious that educationâ€" al authorities cannot take every angle of things into their considerâ€" ation. Their task, in regard to writâ€" ing, is to teach the rudiments of it, and for this reason, they have to adopt a standard style. It is maniâ€" festly impracticable to attempt to teach hundreds of pupils to take bu: a single school, and yet allow them all to use their own systems. It is the same with teaching peoâ€" ple to write as it is in all other branches of learning. We must go from the simple to the complex. My correspondent says: "If writing is so characteristic of the individua!, why do the schools insist that the pupils imitate a copybook pattern? &« . «& I myself was an excelleyt copyâ€" book writer, but as soon as I was not forced to write in that way, I stopâ€" ped and wrote in any old way. I must add that most of my friends who were also excellent copybook stylists at school, now write no betâ€" ter than I do". A very interesting question comes to me in the mail, and because it is of considerable bearing on the posâ€" sibilities of character reading from handwriting, I am dealing with it in this article. Bribing Child With Cent Proves Costly Doctors said he would lave strangled had it stayed there much longer. But Adwm moved, and moved quickly, He swallowed the cent. He was rushed to hospital in Bridgewater, where an Xâ€"ray examination, locatâ€" ed the coin stuck in his throat. A delicate cperation removed it. "Ah, no, Senor Meriston," came Montada‘s even reply. _ "You would leave me to throw in your lot with Mr. Perkin. Together you think you can get hold of the chairs and set free the lady, And as for silly old Montada, he may blow out his braing in the darkness. I must dethin you even if there seems as yet no way in which you and I can work together, _ Do not move, I beg you, while I think this problem out." CHESTER, N.S.,â€"They gave Willis Corkum‘s fourâ€"year old son a cent to bribeâ€"him to sleep, but it‘s going to cost a lot more than that. "And he is right, is he not? He is logical is Mr. Perkin. You cannot argue against him,. But all the time he is working behind my back to get the chairs himself, while he keeps me cooped up here, helpless. It is a sad business, ¢h? And yet I cannot bear to think of Mr. Corville Perkin safe and wealtiy, and me, Montada, with a bullet hole right through my foolish head. So I hang on and wait. Perhaps â€" who knows?" (To be continued) Would YOU like to have YOUR character analysed from _ YOUR handwriting? This well â€" known Graphologist can help you as he has helped so many others. And he may be able to help you to know your friends better. Send specimens of the handwriting you wish to .be analysed, stating birthdate in each case. Send 10¢ coin for each .speciâ€" men, and enclose with a 3¢ stamped addressed envelope, to: Geoffrey St. Clair, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, Ont. All letters are conâ€" fidential and will be answered as quickly as possible. In spite of various systems and styles of writing, we all ultimately express our own individual style and in doing so, present a picture of our characters. It is because of this that a character reading of yourself from your handwriting can be so definiteâ€" ly helpful to you. Graphologists maintain, and prove the truth of their claims by the acâ€" curate character delineations they make, that handwriting is the hallâ€" mark of the individual‘s character; that people write in a certain way because their characters and natures are of a certain type, and they posâ€" sess certain definite characteristics. Does age count its treasures By joys passed from mind, Or do youth‘s bright memories, Only, make life kind? Don‘t feel that you must do someâ€" thing. If you do not know the right thing to do, it is likely a kindness on your part to do nothing, as other wise harm may result from your efâ€" forts. Remember that speed is selâ€" dom necessary, and that untrained, however well meaning, hands do barm, are talking. There is nothing urgent about getting & person home or putâ€" ting him to bed if he has a fainting spell. He is usually much better to remain where he is for a time, Any extra effort caused by movement may be the straw which breaks the camel‘s back of a weakened heart, Don‘t rush to the medicine chest for & laxative when you have a pain in your stomach. The one time you should never take a laxative is when there is a pain in the abdomen, To do so is simply to court disaster, beâ€" cause under some conditions, the laxative may be a stick of dynamite. This is the case when it is an acuteâ€" ly inflamed appendix which has causâ€" ed the pain. Don‘t insist on giving advice unâ€" less you are sure you know what you Some people have what appears to be an uncontrollable urge to invesâ€" tigate things by sticking their fingers into them. Don‘t put your fingers inâ€" to cuts. Do not poke at your own eyes and ears of anyone else, Fingers carry germs, and infection must be feared. Except in these rare cases, don‘t rush, for if you do, you only jar the patient with sudden turns and quick stops, and at the same time, you may injure someone else. Don‘t rush, but don‘t delay. Minutes seldom do, but halfâ€"hours do. Did you ever wonder why ambulâ€" ances rush around the way they do in most cities, with sirens blowing, dodging in and out of trafic? And have you read in the paper how the injured person was "rushed" to the hospital in a motor car? Once in a long while speed is necessary to save life, but only once in a while do minutes count. We understand that, to secure reâ€" sults it is much better. to.teach what to do rather than to emphasize what not to do. This jis an qceasion, howâ€" ever, when we will disregard what we agree to be sound pedagogy beâ€" cause we do not know how to present our subject other than as a series of warnings, or Don‘ts. Now, you say, forget you. . Even if they could, Would the deaf forget the Larks above the wood? Seek no meadow‘s green. Cherish not one longing For glad April‘s scene? Should the blind forget the Look of starry skies? l}ugt the lark, in winter Now you say, forget youâ€" . . . Why would that be wise? Forgetting DON‘T The objection is frequently heard that gardens and flowers cost too much or that they take too much time, The truth is that it is not so much a matter of money or time as it is of desire and disposition. If we are disposed to have gardens and flowers and really desire to have atâ€" tractive home surroundings, we will have them no matter how busy we may be. Information as to suitable varieties for planting may be obâ€" tained from your local Horticultural Society or from the Ontario Agriculâ€" tural College. The cost in any event need be only trifing and the amount spent on the nursery stock necessary to improve the average home will be found one of the finest investments that can be made. It wili pay great dividends in satisfaction and will inâ€" crease the value of your home. Your individual efforts in making your home more attractive will imâ€" [ We are influenced to a greater exâ€" tent than we realize by our surâ€" roundings. Childen are particularly sensitive in this regard. Surely a home in and around which fowers are grown is a better place to bring up children than a home where no attention whatever is paid to these friends of the plant kingdom, As the twig is bent the tree is inclined, is an old saying and very applicable in connection with the training of childâ€" ren. If children are taught to love flowers and to become familiar with them, their hearts will be filled with love for these things which leave less room in their hearts and minds for the things that hurt and destroy, Further, the progressiveness and thrift of a commodity or a municiâ€" pality are often reflected in its apâ€" pearance and the best advertising that any community can do is to preâ€" went a pleasing, inviting appearance to the world â€" an appearance of prosperity and industry, reflected by wellâ€"planted and we!llâ€"kept public and private gounds. I The season approaches when evâ€" ery homeâ€"owner in Simcoe and the surrounding villages of Norfolk County should be giving thought to the beautification _ of his premises and thus to the improvement in apâ€" pearance of his community. While horticultural work has enjoyed a treâ€" mendous boom in _ Norfolk in the last few years, there remains plenty of room for further ~development. Every unimproved or unplanted home can be made more attractive by the judicious use of trees, shrubs, flowers and wellâ€"kept grass, The old saying that a home is not a home until it is planted very well emphaâ€" sizes the necessity and wisdom of planting. BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME BROWN LABEL â€" 33 % Ib. ORANGE PEKOE â€" 40¢ 4 Ib. AND SURROUNDINGS fogether with an empty RIT package (or | P*® l“ml.!ti!ohnA.HumCo.Ld._..,‘m Caledonia Rd., Toronto, | 2. Send as many as you wish; contest closes l%tjmb.lns. 3. 1 izes will be awarded cn the "dfiwtjth)udcu.wm will be final, Whether you win a pair of silk stockings or mnwfllmflwdlenu_.!-::‘u;g of ».our famous bookletâ€"‘ P ha “l'&tllllhkin". HOW TO WiIN 1. Write a short statement (nnderiowo«h) mwhyy_g?lp(*ml?y!-nfludu it contains a it contains a rmmd ingredient that makes the color sesk in deeper, set faster and lace guaranteed $1.00 valueâ€"will be given as prizes to 1,000 entrants. There are dozens of reasons why you will prefer RIT. RIT comes in 33 basic brilliant colors, from which can bepéodnoedoversodthenewmhrinm FAST CoLORs witkout solLing 1 Onl Hrofimchicudvmu'et RIT is the "“’I‘"‘ tint or dyeâ€"casier and surerâ€"far superior to ordimryl"_nutfnqg dyes" because prove your street and thus have a part in beautifying your community, Incidentally you will have helped to make a more beautiful Canada,â€"The Norfolk Observer, 60y Tone i . O tipaimetd . 1,( izes will be awarded cn the rilice of te Jriem, mc en te oo win a ngs or ot, wey:i‘;l mil‘:o”dl entrants (n':d harge,.our famous bookletâ€"‘"‘The A.BC, f Home Rug Making", I I ’ Sn Oe 14 | words . Are You Sluggish ? To Throw Of â€"Stealing Impurities, enjoy a or two o-dnmw:e%- , set faster and last scored waler, casâ€" ler to measure: T2" PC MTCERCTEY won‘t sift out ef TINTS and DYEs Rit is a convenieat _ 4 _ __NC JWStâ€" as we do, and also had pyorrhea. And one must shudder painfully to think of having toothache in a land where the onty possible remedy was to summon a neighbor and have him knock the decayed tooth out of your head with a pointed stone! _ EDC e CHu ho finds â€" evidence to the contrary, These oldâ€"timers, who lived on coarse, tough foods all their lives, had cavities in plenty, suffered from toothache justâ€" as we do. and alen according to some modern theoriste, because of that fact be had healthy teeth, However, Dr. E. B. Renaud, proâ€" fessor of anthorphology at Denver University, has been looking at the skulls of ancient clig dwellers in Mesa Verde National Park, and he mmax®. Coykcc The hardy cave dweller never had modern â€" delica from, merly poor people were allowed to collect firewood in the woods of a neighbouring manor, both for per. sonal use and for sale, and they often carried a hook or a crook with which to bring down withered and rotten boughs. A much more farâ€"fetched explanâ€" ation is that the phrase implies ‘"foully, like a thief," or "righteousâ€" ly, like a bishop," the hook being the instrument used by footpads to lay hold of unwary travellers, and the crook being the bishop‘s crozier. It has even been claimed, since the phrase is found in use by Thomâ€" as Rymer, a writer of the time, that it was the Great Fire of London, in 1666, which originated the phrase, and that Hook and Crook â€" (or Croke) were a firm of lawyers, famed as assessors and valuers, who did much legal work arising thereâ€" F._ Various explanations of the origin of the phrase "by hook or crook" have been urged; but the simplest, and probably the best, is that forâ€" merly poor people were allowed to Twelve thousand pats per hour are formed, stamped with a design and packed in a tin by the "butter pat" champion of Cadby Hall, Lonâ€" don. No machine has yet been found to equal her dexterity. â€" Tobacco is said to have been inâ€" troduced into China from Luzon (Phillipines) in 15380. The Chinese became so excessively fond of it that the last Ming Emperor (1628â€" 1648) forbade its use. pilots whose average gross earnings from pilotage in 1983 were £1,000 or more. The best paid were those classified as Cingque Ports pilots. Their gross earnings averaged £1,â€" 027. Pilots of the River Thames earn about £760. or infraâ€"red light The action apâ€" parently is similar to that of the photoâ€"electric cell, but the mechanicâ€" ism by which the charge is produc» Certain types of diamonds generâ€" ate el_octricaity_ _when exposed to red Railways in Britain run nearly twice as many trains (passenger and freight) per mile of route track as the German lines, more than twice as many as the French, and five time as many as on railways in the United States. One hundred and fiftyâ€"five of the clergy of the Church of Engâ€" land are eighty years old or more; 1,400 are over seventy years of age, and 391 over seventyâ€"five. window, alighted on the steering whee!, and finally, after a few secâ€" onds, settled on the vacant seat next to the driver. Britain‘s thriftiest countries are Lancashire and Ceshire. Last year their inhabitants saved nearly £21,â€" 500,000 throught the Nation! Savâ€" ings Movement, an average of £3 13s. 6d. per head. A woman was motoring down a narrow country lane in Yorkshire when a white hen fluttered out of the hedge and flew in through the ed a breakdown in factories. Aroused from a nap by firemen whe told her that her house was on fire, Mrs. Nettie Nelson, of Oakâ€" land, California, advised them to put it out and dropped off to sleep A flock of crows which perched on the electric power cables servâ€" ing the city of Heijo, in Korea, caused a shortâ€"cireuit which put out all the lights in the town, stopped tramways, closed cinemas, and causâ€" Medical science has reduced the mortality rate about One per cent. a year for the last thirty years, and, as a result, 600,000 more persons are alive today than would be if public health conditions of 1900 exâ€" isted. During a whirlwind at Shanghai a sixâ€"foot snake fell from the c:ouds into one of the principal streets of the foreign quarter of the city A worried householder ecnmbed a Japanese imountain at dawn, deterâ€" mined to comm‘c suicide, kut was so overwhelmed by the bq.g.:y of the sunrise that he changed his mind. nardy cave dweller of old had modern delicacies like creamed chicken and jce . He gnawed his meat Ooff the and ate unhulled grainâ€"and. Thank Your Dentist Who Said It First ? are 142 Port of London _ Renaud, proâ€" EY at Denver looking at the ; dwellers â€" in Park, and he the _ contrary, 10 llvg on ill their lives, suffered from do, and also rot thi us Metho: scrape a thick sli saited wi ing d *% cup mayon horseâ€"radish. § with salt. Spre with the mayo place a tomato Method: Bi flour, add sal grains of cayer eook over hot ened stir in th ped peanuts an into baking dis and bake in m grees Fabhr.) fo Baked F. Three tabl tablespoons A enne, 3 cups RAaked salmon. hardâ€"cooked crumbs. Method; Cu es Mix flour, and sprinkle « ening, add oni until meat is boiling water «r and cook fe rice ring. itter Two pounfi tablespoons powder, 1 te spoons shortel sliced, 1 teas and one als« marshmaliow brown them : butter, prunes, Iy, and thick ar whites ; filling is a ring « Iwo ogg apple butter 2 tablespoo t”o “ teas raw prunes, egg whites, shell. Method : dients, beat into first drop by s Berve with or on the chicken. One cup . cups flour, der, %% teas milk. pout flour a rour noodies W a Method W ADD TH Tomato M Chickent Appl

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