Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 31 May 1923, p. 2

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® WRIGLEYS There scemed to be superflnity of servants. The old fellow said that food was ready, and without more ado we went into the diningâ€"roomâ€"another vast chamber with rough stone walls above the paneliinyâ€"and found some ecold meats on a table beside a big fire. The servant presently brought in a ham omelette, and on that ang the cold stuff we dined. 1 remember there was nothing to drink but water. It puzlâ€" ed me how Stumm kept his great body going on the very moderate amount of food he ate. He was th» type you expect to swill beer by the bucket and put away a pie at a sitting. ‘ its front. The door was opened by an old fellow who took a long time aKout It and got well cursed for his slowâ€" ness. Inside the place was very noble and ancient. Stumm switched on the electric, light, and there was a great hall with black tarnished portraits of men and women in oldâ€"fashioned clothes, and mighty horns of deer on the walls. ‘ There scemed to be sunerfAnite af We hadn‘t far to go. We climbed a little hill and on the top of it stopped at the door of a big black castle. It looked enormous in the winter night, with not a light showing anywhere on Presently we stopped, and Stumm it had led the way out. The train must have country boon specially halted for him, for it freely a was a oncâ€"horse little place whose for it. name 1 could not make out. The staâ€" I had to tionmaster was waiting, bowing and 1 was t? saluting, and outside was a motorâ€"car The fac with big headlights. Next minute we and I de were sliding through dark woods a new t where the snow lay far deeper than didn‘t li in the north. There was a mild frost and guz in the air, and the tires slipped andrhaglpier. skidded at the corners. | e w (Copyrighted Thomas Nelson and CHAPTER VLâ€"(Cont‘d.) | the old m: The winter evening closed in, and 1 should be i saw &at we had come out of the hills the evening and were in a flat country. Sometimes go to bed a big sweep of river showed, and, lookâ€" "but see 3 Ing out at one station, I saw a funny seven shar; church with a thing like an onion on Ever sin the top of its sprre. It might almost had the un have been a mosque, judging from the ing in a pr pictures 1 remen%)ered of mosques. I this great wished to heaven 1 had given geoâ€" could, and graphy more attention in my time. he wanted. When we had finished, he rang for ALWAYS ASK FOP Tmst 8y nays and steamships use EDDY Matckes, becauuse of their efficiency and economy MATCHES â€" The leading hotels.clabs EDDYS The Consumer‘s Conflidence in "CALADA" Confidence IS8UE Ne. 21â€"Â¥4. GREENMANTLE TA A. Is the Keynote of Our Succesg *ty BY JOHN BUCHAN. 1 inb @ApielIP Mss siintulfihiciadia i/ hi = Ti 3 ts 5is c here was _ But it wasn‘t. I soon saw the difâ€" It pu=zlâ€"| ference. There had never been a woâ€" eat body man‘s hand in that place. It was th» amount room of a man who gnd a fashion for type you®frippery, who had a perverted taste cket and for soft delicate things. It was the complement to his bluff brutality. I rang for began to see the queer other side to my ==â€"â€"â€"~ host, that evil side which gossip had spoken of as not unknown in the Gerâ€" man army. The room seemed a horâ€" ribly unwholesome place, and I was " more than ever afraid of Stumm. | | _ The hearthrug was a wonderful old | Persian thing, all faint greens and | pinks. As he stood on it he looked unâ€" | commonly like a bull in a chinaâ€"shop. | He seemed to bask in the comfort of {it, and sniffed like a satisfied animal. | Then he sat down at an escritoire, unâ€" locked a drawer and took out some | papers. | ar o o e e c e m Aeceg. Wt L did some savage thinking. I knew they would not let me out of their sight | till they saw me in Holland, and, once | there, there would be no possibility of t "I am willing," I said. "But how do 1 reach Egypt?" "You will travel by Holland and London. Here is your route," and he took a paper from his pocket. "Your passports are ready and will be given wwems Lp sk es e Tu t ro n mt itifinen c 4 ho t AT asked. "That remains to be seen. Probably you will go to the Blue Nile. Riza, the man you will meet, will direct you. Egypt is a nest of our agents who work peacefully under the nose of the English Secret Service." put orders or in the last necessity. It is your badge as an accredited agent of the German Crown." I tt:‘ok the card and the envelope and ‘"We will now settle your business, friend Brandt," he said. "You will go to Egypt and there take your orders from one whose name and gdâ€" dress are in this envelope. This card," and he lifted a square picce of grey pasteboard with a big stamp at the corner and some code words stencilled on it, "will be your passport. You will show it to the man you seek. Keep it jv:l‘lnusly. and never use it save under utes past eight. Everywhere on little tables and in cabinets was a profusion of nicknacks, and there was some beautiful embroidery framed _ on screens. At first sight you would have said it was a woman‘s drawingâ€"room. ’ We went up a staircase to a room at the end of a long corridor. Stumm locked the door behind him and laid the key on a table. That room took my breath away, it was so uncxpected. In place of the grim bareness of downâ€" stairs here was a place all luxury and color and light. It was very f;rge, but low in the ceiling, and the walls were full of little recesses with staâ€" tues in them. A thick grey carpet of velvet pile covered the floor, and the chairs were low and soft and upholâ€" stered like a lady‘s boudoir. A pleasâ€" ant fire burned on the hearth and there was a flavor of scent in the air, something like incense or burnt sanâ€" dalwood. A French clock on the manâ€" telpiece told me that it was ten minâ€" t them in'fi'nry‘ Bo;k;t-vb‘(;ok‘vv‘ [tel ‘"Where do I go after Egypt?" I 1.3 1 was there as a friend and colleague. The fact is, I was afraid of Stumm, and I don‘t mind admitting it. He was a new thing in my experience and I didn‘t like it. If only he had drunk and guzzled a bit I should have been | _ I forget if 1 mentioned that part of the damage I got at Loos was a shrapâ€" BU nel bullet low down at the back of CHAN. my neck., The wound had healed well \enough, but ad pains there on a Nelson and Sons, Ltd.) , cold 5ay. His fingers found the place ‘the old man and told him that we 4nd it hurt like hell. f should be in the study for the rest of , There is a very narrow line between the evening. "You can lock up and dgspair and black rage. I had about go to bed when you like," he said, E!Â¥Cn up the game, but the sudden "but see you have coffee ready at ache of my shoulder gave me purpose seven sharp in the morning." \again. He must have seen the rage Ever since I entered that house I i" MY ¢yes, for his own became cruel. had the uncomfortable feeling of beâ€": _ "The weascl would like to bite," he ing in a prison. Here was I alone in Cried. "But the poor weasel has found this great place with a fellow who its master. Stand still, vermin. Smile, could, and would, wring my neck if 100k pleasant, or I will make pulp o’f; he wanted. Berlin and all the rest of YOu. Do you dare to frown at me?", it had seemed comparatively open‘ 1 Shut my teeth and said never a country; I had felt that I could move WOrd. I was choking in my throat freely and at the worst make a bolt And could not have uttered a syllable for it. But here I was trapped, and if I had tried. bea t c yr I had to tell myself every minute that _ Then he let me go, grinning like an y ept m eyes on the fire, while I CHERRY aAND CooSEBERRY PRESERVES: Use equal quantitiee of cherrics (which have been pitted) and gooseâ€" berries and to each pound of fruit use threeâ€"quarters of a pound of sugar. Make a thick syrup by adding a small quantity of water to the sugar, cook the gooseberries in the syrup until they are clear, then add the chorriecs and cook twenty minutes longer, CHERRY CONSERVE is made of the red sour cherries thus: Cook three and oneâ€"half pounds of cherries (pitâ€" ted) for fifteen minutes, then add two and oneâ€"half pounds of sugar which has toen heated in the oven, oneâ€" quarter pourd of secded raisins, and the juice and pulp of three oranges,. | GoosERrERRY CONSERVE requires four pints of gooseberries, three pints of sugar, one cupful of seeded raisins and one orange. Make a heavy +yrup of the sugar and a little water, cookâ€" ing until the syrup will spin a thread; add the gooscberries, raisins, the pulp and juice of the orange and the shin, finely chopped. Cook until thick, pour into hot glasses and seal. J Her judgment your guideâ€" Twenty or forty or sixty years old, It comes to the same when the tale is all told! It comes to the same when the tale is all told! Her love is your treasure, Her beauty your pride, Her will is your pleasure, Hair brown or silver, black, auburn, Eyes blue or hazel, coy, winsome, or bold, It comes to the same when the tale is all told! She likes pretty dresses, She likes to be shy, She likes your caresses When no one is byâ€" Twenty or forty or sixty years old, It comes to the same when the tale is all told! | Her waist the most neatâ€" Twenty or forty or sixty years old, It comes to the same when the tale is all told! is all told! Her eyes are the brightest, Her kisses most sweet, Her touch is the lightest, Twenty or forty or sixty years old. It comes to the same when the taie is My only chance was to keep him from getting to grips, for he could have squeezed in my ribs in two seeâ€" onds. I fancied I was lighter on my legs than him, and I had a good eye. Black Monty at Kimberley had taught me to fight a bit, but there is no art on earth which can prevent a big man in a narrow space from sooner or later CAN I was expecting him and dodged the attack. I was quite calm now, but pretty hopeless. The man had a gorâ€" illa‘s reach and could give me at least a couple of stone. He wasn‘t soft cither, but looked as hard as granite. I was only just from hosvital and abâ€" surdly out of training. He would cerâ€" tainly kill me if he could, and I saw nothing to prevent him.‘ "God in Heaven," he said quietly. "I am going to kill you," and he flung himself on me like a mountain. For a second he did not realize what had happened, for 1 don‘t suppose any one had dared to lift a hand to him since he was a child. He blinked at me mildly. Then his face grew red as fire. I shut my teeth and said never a word. I was choking in my throat and could not have uttered a syllable if I had tried. Then he let me go, grinning like an ape. I stepped back a pace and gave him my left between the eyes. | _ His ugly sneering face was close ‘above mine. Then he put out his hands and gripped my shoulders as he had done tg;_flrst afternoon. o e | Auiabnirtrdab w 4 Busivnbnlifiiitâ€"dediica Bicmntyliid t 8 4nd 24. | Those moments were some of the up to him. He wasn‘t a coward by a worst I ever spent. I was absolutely long chalk, but he was a bully, and and utterly bafflied, like a rat in a| had never been struck in his life. He trap. There seemed nothing for it was getting struck now in real earnest but to go back to London andg tell Sir and he didn‘t like it. He had lost his Walter the game was up. And that bearings and was growing as mad as was about as bitter as death. !a hatter. He saw my face and laughed. ’ I kept half an eye on the clock. I __"Does your heart fail you, my little was hopeful now, and was looking for Dutchman? You funk the English?) the right kind of chance. The risk 1 will tell you one thing for your comâ€" was that I might tire sooner than him fort. There is nothing in the world and be at his mercy. to be feared except me. Fail, and you| Then I learned a truth I have never‘ have cause to shiver. Play me false forgotten. If you are fighm}fi a man and flgu had far hegter never have who means to kill you, he will be apt been born." !to down you unless you mean to kill His ugly sneering face was close him too. Stumm did not know any above mine. Then he put out his rules to this game, and I forgot to hands and gripped my shoulders as he allow for that. Suddenly, when I was had done the first afternoon. ‘ watching his eyes, he launched a I forget if I mentioned that part of mighty kick at my stomach. If he the damage I got at Loos was a shrapâ€" hag ot me, this yarn would have had nel bullet low down at the back of an a%ru t ending. But by the mercy my neck. The wound had healed well of God P was moving sideways w.hen enough, but I had pains there on a he let out, and his heavy boot just col’('i giu{. Hi‘s‘ finge‘r"s found the place grazed my left thigh. We o 'rttinlg back. When I left this house cornering a lesser one. That was the would have no chance of giving them danger. the slip. And yet I was well on my| Backwards and forwards we padâ€" way to the East, the Danube could ded on the soft carpet. He had no noâ€" not be fifty miles off, and that waly,tion of guardirg himself, and I got in ran the road to Constantinople. It a good few blows. Then I saw a tfll'lecr was a fairly desperate position. If I thing. Every time I hit him he blinkâ€" tried to get away Stumm would preâ€"!ed and seemed to pause. I guessed vent me, and the odds were that I|the reason for that. He had gone would go to join Peter in some inâ€" through life keeping the crown of the fernal prisonâ€"camp. | causeway, and nobody had ever stood Those moments were some of the up to him. He wasn‘t a coward by a worst I ever spent. I was absolutely long chalk, but he was a bully, and and utterly bafflied, like a rat in a had never been struck in his life. He trap. There seemed nothing for it was getting struck now in real earnest but to go back to London amfte_ll Sir and he didn‘t like it. He had lost his NNING AND PRESERVING. TIE SIIVER WEDDING. or gold, Woman‘s Sphere TO PRESERVE STRAWBERRIES, make &A syrup of oneâ€"quarter of water and seven pounds of sugar and cook in an open kettle until a candy thermometer registers 266 deg. F. _ Add eight pounds of berries (washed and stemâ€" med) and cook slowly, just at the boiling point. Stop the cooking when the thermometer registers 210 deg.f WHEN RHUBARB Is CANNED by the coldâ€"water process, the success of this method, "it is claimed, depends not alone upon careful work in canning, | but in the storage. The jars should be wrapped in paper in order to keep out the light, then placed on shelves in a dark, cool place and left undisturbâ€" ~ed until used. The coldâ€"water pro~f cess of canning rhubatbh consists in filling sterilized cans with the fresh fruit, cut in cubes, then pouring in fresh, cold water until every particle of air is excluded. The cans may then be sealed. For the filling proâ€", cess some housewives set the cans under the faucet, allowing the water to run in until its own weight expels all air bubbles, while others prefer to| plunge the can in a pail of water for a short time. Whichever method is used, every crevice should be filled with water, with no room for theJ tiniest airâ€"bubble. i AsPARACUS should be canned as soon as possible after gathering. If allowâ€" ed to stand for more than a few hours after being cut, the delicate flavor is destroyed and it is more difficult to keep. The stalks should be cleaned and any hard portions removed. They may be canned whole or cut into halfâ€" inch pieces, depending upon the form in which the vegetable is to be served. Blanche the prepared asparagus in boiling water for three of four min-i utes, cold dip, then pack in jars, cover with water, and add one teaspoonfulf of salt to each quart jar. Then adjust covers loosely, place in a waterâ€"bath and boil two hours or in a steam presâ€" sure cooker (ten pounds pressure} | for oneâ€"half hour. Remove and tighten the covers while they are hot. | Toronto‘s Largest Radio- étore. 104 King St. . . Toronto, Ont. RADIO Cook until the mixture is as thick as marmalade, pour into glasses and seal. I stepped out of the room, locked the door behind me; and started out on the second stage of my travels. (To be continued.) I nicked up the key and unlocked the door. In one of the gilded mirâ€" rors I smoothed my hair and tidied vn my clothes. My anger had comâ€" pletely gone and I had no particular illâ€"will left against Stumm. He was a man of remarkable qualities, which would have brought him to the highest distinetion in the Stone Age. But for all that he and his kind were back numbers. Minard‘s Liniment for Coughs & Colds Then at last he gave me my chance. He half tripped over a little table and his face stuck forward. J got him on the point of the chin, and put everyl in ies ounce of weight.I possessed behind the| ~~~ blow. He crumpled up in a heap and pour rolled over, upsetting a lamp and skim knocking a big China jar in two. His into head, 1 remember, lay under the escriâ€" but â€" toire from which he had taken my\! day ys. passport. _ f % e e o He began to snort new and his breath came heavily. "You infernal cad," I said in good round English, "I‘m going to knock the stuffing out of you," but he didn‘t know what I was saying. > I got a wonderful power from this new cold rage of mine. I felt I couldn‘t tire, and I danced round and dotted his face till it was streaming with blood. His bulky padded chest was no good to me, so I couldn‘t try for the mark. It was the {\lace where most of the shrapnel had lodged, and for a second I was sick with pain and stumbled. Then I was on my feet again but with a new feeling in my bloo@. I had to smash Stumm or never sleep in my bed again. i 9 is | » SETS aNo *ADlo SUPPLIES. Price List mailed on request. Gibson Radio Supply VNIAKIU ARCH TORONTO ; when you want to use the articles in the fall, all you have to do is to break the seal, shake out the furs, | hang them in the open air for a little while, and they are ready for use. iA YOUR WINTER FURS. L' If you haveâ€"only one or two pieces of fur to pack away, and have no |provision for taking care of these, get / a clean pasteboard suit box. You can | get one of these in a good heavy qualâ€" [ ity at a store or a tailoring establighâ€" | ment for five or ten cents. Clean your ‘furs. Lay into the box; sprinkle with | powdered tobacco. Put the cover on | the box and paste a strip of paper | tightly over the opening. This will prevent any wandering insect crawlâ€" ing up under, and feeding on your ; valuables. meats makes a very deiig-ll-tfu‘irchange. To make maple ice cream, use two eggs, twoâ€"thirds cup maple syrup, half cup of milk, one and oneâ€"half cups cream. Beat the yolks of the eggs until very light. Add the hot maple syrup and the milk and stir and ecok over hot water until the mixture thickens. ‘Then pour over the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs and cool. When cold, add the cream, pour into the freezer and freeze. A cup of nut Sn etague is Loiigs c on uouis t Indelible ink stains ;or;x;t;mes yield to a treatment of strong salt water, and then a washing with ammonia. THE HORRID INK STAIN. Ink stains are removed in various ways, depending upon the nature of the ink. Buttermilk or sour milk is excellent, changing the liquid as often as it becomes stained. Another method is to take a solution of peroxide of hydrogen, and soak the ink stains in this. Lemon and salt are also good for use on white material. Sometimes colored garments can be freed from ink stains by applying kerosene. | But they added more pipe, running it under the floor behind the range. At one end of the range a pipe came up through the floor, extending up by the warming oven high enough so the wash boiler would slip under it. By turning a little wheel on an angle valve the boiler was filled without lifting a bit of water. At the other end of the range another pipe came up through the floor to the reservoir. A small hole was drilled in top of reserâ€" voir in such a way as not to interfere with the cover. The pipe extended over from the back with an angle valve to fill the reservoir. | The cost of fixtures and pipes was about $2.75, the men doing their own plumbing. | THE HANDIEST THING IN MY HOME. The handiest thing in my home was put in this winter by my husband and son. We already bad the windmill and water piped to the house, and stored in a threeâ€"barrel storage tank placed in the room above the kitchen and had water at the sink. pour into shallow pans to cool and skim while cooling. When cold pack into jars and allow to stand unsealed, but covered with a cloth, for four days. Put rubber and lid in position, not tight. If using a hotâ€"water bath outfit, sterilize twenty minutes; if usâ€" ing a waterâ€"seal outfit, or a five pound steamâ€"pressure outfit, or a pressureâ€"cooker outfit, sterilize for fifteen minutes. Remove jars, tighten covers, invert to cool and test for leaks. Wrap jars with paper to preâ€" vent bleaching and store in a crol, dark clace. I MAPLE ICE CREAM. of him. uon HeX0 L oo o ET CR Es e wn his mistakes, and speak to him of his good qualities. Then note how that man will strive with all his might to live up to the good opinion you have se vT pplomrtecuanteiaptet ie drin Ex alssccieAiver is se f â€"Then do the clouds like gilver flags bas shut my cookery book so that now Stream out above the tattered crags, I bhaven‘t the faintest idea what it is | And black and silver all the coast I‘m cooking." | Marsbals its hunched and rocky host, ~~oâ€"â€"â€"â€"fprmmmmmm. And headlands striding somberly The best way to be contented with Buttrees the land against the sea, your lot is to build a house on it. | â€"The darkened land, the brightening roommucuge { waveâ€" There is more scope in marriage fyr| And moonlight slants through Meriin‘s the affectionate, brainless woman than | cave. for the selfâ€"confident, brainy one.â€"| *â€"V. Sackville Wes; Dr. Josiah Oldfield. I tE ow Mrs. Newlywedâ€""Oh, Jack, you left the kitchen door open, and the draught bas shut my cookery book so that now I haven‘t the faintest idea what it is I‘m cooking." Like Some Other Art. "She‘s as pretty as a picture." "Can‘t agree with you in that she has a fine frame." |_ The office boy glanced at him, but remained silent. "Didn‘t you hear me*" | snapped the visitor. 1150 Bay Street Flowering a n d Decorative Shrubs, Boxwoods, _ Ever. greens, Climbing Vines, etc. All imported stock. ROSEBUSKES "Now, I ask you," rétorted the boy, as he crossed his legs on the desk, "does it look like it ?" " Of course I heard you," answ the boy, scornfully. ‘"Then why the dickens didn‘t tell me if the boss‘s in ?" Minard‘s Liniment 'for Corn; and Warts the visitor Words Unnecessary. "Is the boss in?" asked the visitor. "The office boy, with his chair tiitâ€" ed back and his legs stretched out on a desk, made no reply. Overlook a man‘s MA But he who knows and knows that he knows is wise. Follow him. He who knows but knows not that he knows is asleop. Awake him. He who knows not and knows that he knows not is a simpleton. Teach him. He who knows not and knows not that he knows not is a fool. Shun him. Write for Catalogue ). SPENCE asked if the boss was in," said Up in the Air. wclknega. forget Toronto , Answered thatâ€"but you Our doubts are traitors And imake us lose the good wo oft might win By fearlng to attemypt "What do you';ue;; 'by invitin to ride b_ehingl such ar animal*?" "Well," repited the minister, mildiy, "It was lucky that this time there were no bones broken. But I always like to Lave a doctor with me when 1 drive that horge." Ten minutes later the horse bolted, upset the carrlage, and spilled both men. The doctor rose to his foet and felt himself over to see whether he was injured. Then he turned angrily towards the clergyman. A country minister was driving a spirited horse througnh a village when hbe overtook the local doctor a&nd ofâ€" fered him a Hft. Nn oubiink hi Inbaltiadties sssca When color‘s absence gives escape To the deeper spirit of the shape. What time the meanest brick and stone Take on a beauty not their own, And past the flaw of builded wood Shines the intention whole and good, And all the little homes of man Rise to a dimmer, nobler EDan : The following year the twins were married on the same day, and Tom never knew he had courted both the gisters. Yet there are still men who think that women cannot keep a seo ret! Rachel, who had taken the precau tion to move her engagement ring to i another finger, said she could not acâ€" cept him until he had seen the family She would like to know him at least six months longer before she decided Women Can Keep Secrets. Arriving home, Rache! told her s ter about her adventure, Cynthia | warmed up to the idea, and on the day | that Tom arrived she it was who wmet ‘him at the station. Rachel went out for the day. ’ The following summer Cyhthia end | Tom spent many delightful Gays toâ€" | gather. "Don‘t be extravagant," she replied. That evening Tom was introduced to Rachel, who bad aitered the style of her hair by havihg it bobbed ; but even then the resemblance was remarkable, Rachel rarely spoke. At first she gave him a blank stare and appeared shy and nervous. Tom was completely deâ€" ceived. "Exactly; in ficl, p.oplo‘znunwut tell us apart." "I could," lLe replied, confident‘y. "I could tell you if there were forty like "Have you met my twin sister, Rachel?" Cynthia asked, one day. "No; I have not had the pleasuro, I hear she is like you," he replied. From the beginring, Rache] bad in tended to land this young man for Cynthia, but before the holiday was over the young man proposed to her Rachel had brought Cynthic‘s box her own being out of repair. "Yes," she said, without a blush "My name is Cynthia." "What is your Christian nam asked on one occasion. "I know gtna__wlth *C," because I saw it o. Rachel and ber mother decided to stay at a boardingâ€"house on the sor front. Rachel soon made friends with another guest, . a pleasantâ€"looking young fellow. They did not mooet at meal times, as Mrs. Mâ€"â€" had taken & private room; but in the afternoons Rachel was free, and she and Tom used to go for walks together. Soon he was "head over ears" in love. The twins usually Spent their ho}i days together, but one symmer, as their mother was "run down," it was decided tirt Rachel should accompany her to the seaside, while Cynthia re mained at home. Cynthia had plenty 0'_;0,"_';‘... nu, friends, she had not recelved an offer of marriage, Now, Rachel was the nico: girl. Conâ€" sequently she had a steady flow of adâ€" mirers. _ When she reached twenty, she had received three proposals and had accepted a fourth. Assisted by Her Sister. It had always been the sisters‘ wish to be wed on the same day, but though ine iwins were exactly alike, and bad it not been for the fact that Cyn» thia remembered that ber name was not Reachel, and vice versa, it is prob. able that outsiders would have been quite unable to distinguish one from the other. "What a lovély name!" be murmuy Acclidents Will Happen A TALE OF Twins mean by inviting me Rachel were â€"â€"Bhakespeara O on your 16 .'A. wlÂ¥ W wi W rel may be us should be larg Garde Tuly 15 20 Lo dish or f!l“)‘ fo tables. pl By cor of the rip may be i thus mal ductive : the t quiring a con for developms« eonly once du average kitch has shown th crops is hoth and, althoug may be in a : Iater maturin theless, appri and Septembe planted in early pea On the Don tion at Lenna lettuce wi in autum green pea time of â€" bects and in at the spaces LATE PLANTING 0 hi Homeâ€"Made Hog t A f1 hate whi ted or lettuce rroat the Tho: pla ho# OW 11 thes t arrot i he a d ul

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