Ontario Community Newspapers

Milverton Sun, 5 Apr 1917, p. 2

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Tea is an Every-day Luxury STEADFASTLY REFUSE ‘SUBSTITUTES Black, Mixed or Natural Green. “ea £205 Meat Economy: Use less; once a day is ample if supplemented with legume dishes; milk soups, cheese dishes, attractive bread and cereal and eg when they are rve carefully at the table; it is brite a serve twice pen to send | j, We) Le largely for flavor, itacoien wand excessive | hr, fat is ne expensive meats htetiy for their pro- tein fess value. The cheaper. round, shank; and neck cuts give more for the money. The cheaper cuts chopped fine make a Hamburg steak as quiekly broiled as a Hoxterhouse. red cooking at the lower tanaka will make the toughest cuts tender in oe double- pene ac ised for this in ee casserole ae close-cover- ed stone erock in the stove ove when it is left eas the are or in the fireless cooker when gas or electric stoves are wi _In eater Atal hands: it nite variety through the dattbination of different bles, win Make a little meat go a long way. Spread the Sitey res ee pie eutral-flavored food, eg., Tieish a potpies wit aumplaee, stews vith plenty of sav- ory gravy, served in a ae of rice, mashed potatoes, boiled beans, mac- of a meat purchased. | Fry out the fat not used for the table,| and use for shortening and other pur. aes trimmings and bo and left-overs for Bipaie aalne too area ong {ng and"brollingy which ruins’ bones and trimmings far the soup pot, be- sites wasting hea earnest tri k diet supper is bread and milk with a bit of |° biscuit and jam; thee hild is well fed. may replace meat in the adult Rise cwtenever tha yrles per pric lozel goes below the cost of 1% pound round ive Household Hints. Pictures should be Bae on an rgreeable level with the The lightest weight kitchen utensils make work less tiresome. hen a screw becomes loose, re- move it and fill the hole with bits of sponge packed in tightly. Then re- place ie screw: and it will Hold as| firmly a: Wreialhonne gates nits verbesaties| that'the woody stalks cut back and set in rich soil will make the best bloom- ing pl jants other | box take a heat for roast- |) me. ‘ ‘When a child has the slightest tend-! ency to crooked legs he should have a very special treatment. is bones te too soft, and he needs sie ae iron. He should be taken is fect at SUR ee have salt water oe ig and mi Deer sate ahoald never be shake against a wall. It causes aii fibre “ eak. downwards and Beata gently with a stick or bru: Mats pet like this will, last ie as long. This method is also cleaner and easier. To freshen a skirt ae a become wrinkled and mussed ffor ing otherwise, brush pennies so © that all dust removed, and hang over. a tub of boiling hot water. is thoroughly seeped: it will look like a toler: cleaned gar oid sets ba ne looking for ie. “different buttons in your button | p wire hairpin and straighten it*out; then shape the wire in a circle ing all of one tees of buttons 01 Bin, ‘and hook o1 r, It takes bat a minute and you al- wave have the different kinds right at hanx F ak ates ‘all Cutle Chop rather coarsely eer een 3 of a tin of sal- mon, and mix in an equal bulk * readorumbs, seasoning the lot accord- ing to taste. Then, with the aid of beaten eggs, “form a fairly stiff paste, which can be Nae into scales » and each coated wi ese and browned Wecenioee ing pan with dripping. Creamed Finnan Haddie.—Two cup- fuls of white (or cream) sauce, tablespoonfuls of butter, three eggs, jone tablespoonf two. cup’ tule of fl Heat i “4 a fry- and heat the mi ian laps Codfish-—One cup rice, one milk, one cup shresiled. ‘enlist, ahs tablespoons. duis eggs. rice and mill Redeable boiler until tice is ee a has abs id well-beaten egg yolks, Hine been soaked, and but- When cool add the stiffly beaten whites. Bake and serve with the meld butter Pie Remove the bones and] w But- d potatoes and add 1 fish and small bits of butter. Stesen and bake in a hot oven for ten minutes or until] it is brown. Tipping a Millionaire, The Marquess of Bute, who enlisted early in the war as a private, is now | an officer in the Welsh Regiment. n awusing incident occurred when his lordship was stationed at Bristol, Walking down a side street one after- noon he oe before a shop win- dor bi anted a cup of tea, but the shop dia not look at all invit- , and he hesitated about going in Hils hesitation was noticed by an elder. ly lady, who thought he warited tea but hadn't the money to pay for it! fo | Going up to the eae. she pressed | & half a crown into his hand, bidding nm him to go into the ee washing it. loth shot bi wrung out and passed lightly over the ee are pstool to hold the clothes ie the stool saves Che aay eh keeps the bottom of the basket good tea. Following! her behest, the marquess went into the shop, had a that she had tipped one an the wealth- lest peers in the kingdoi Horrible! Gallant but absent-minded Scot (aur- ing a gas attack)— Crikey ! hat re- minds me, A dilieve a left the gas burnin’ at hame the day a joined up ! In spring, gather up the bones which ave accumulated during the winter and bury them at the roots of t bushes, etc. They make excellent fer- tilizer. PARKER SERVICE n Everywhere ery hecause there is not a bd reason mei: you sh¢ The eectlsaed of our neler it need only be mentioned But the convenience custome Available Everywhere “Parker” Agency neat ould do withont “Parker is 30 well known that here. ice by sual to Hecate any sort can be sent us either by parcels post or express, and returned in the =e mat Saree ecaution is Budy jo teaase ‘So many thii ‘When you think we ee EREE copy on cleaning and dyei ‘3 can be “‘rescned’ cleaning or of this service wt be! carriage char one taken to ae hale sat Ded to of cleaning or dycing, think ee FAREER. oor at a, interesting PARKER'S DYE cht ee 791 YONGE ST. BOS Efetiive tahed to think: ‘out this posi They should bé placed face |W af mournfully; “he Tonos Oe ae j ni and bend each end back after string- Et two | s sorbed | W taste.” cover the bottom C and cover with a top layer of potatoes | mnt |fore resumin tC : that of Mrs. Baw The Bride’s Name; Or, Mae dventikes of Cuipisia Eraser coe passing his hand brow; “why, what’s the waatiee with it?” “Tt doesn’t seem quite so good as it bbe said the lady, affectionately. Es eve ‘There was enough emphasis on the last sentence to send a little it i ie. aid ition. » tt hurried past the wharf; Tf hi 7 that too was deserted, and after a:loy- vba a ‘a miliar, an iettinede door swing auietly back he le. wen’ he Fermoy on ui ust he came to the “Town e cold salt beef, see cursed the i eenicnl Nibletts, now n_his way to London, nas irs. rae a ae in ‘the ing with her di ee _was full. next even-! accepted her as, an S| mental reservations, softly applied a [anakerchiet to to her eyes. “How are you feeling?” demanded $f las Bankes te the ‘volee of ‘one. i tight,” anid Barber shortly. | “That's his pride,” said Mrs, Chui . : eee “THE GLORY THAT “WAS RHEIMS RUINS OF A ONCE BEAUT{FUL AND MAJESTIC SANCTUARY. ired Wrecked Cathedral Revisited by One if Who Had Seen it in All Its Ancient Splendor. I would that every person who pad seen the Cathedral of Rheims before o|1914 could see it again to-day, writes correspondent I would that a tiny portion of the mil- lions in the world who know Rheinis Cathedral but/from history or study, story or picture, could see it to-day. And I pray the French nation may an’t remember anything. He pre-| ais he doesn't know te me, v3 ¢ you?” asked the sures ete e skipper ore it ak the better of it,” said Mrs. Banks, Kindly, as her. quondam sont sad hele re) in. he d 0 be pe continuel). 48 GLORIOUS CITY. s nd camila steep Shel] Welcomes the British (o the Holy City, Peidadinae dati of Islam Faith. |to he two ladies, deftly lgnoring | oe | dad, “The SRE City” of him, made their arrangements for his| 2 ale ie ere Mistress tov eeus: tapuubeeeai ps by theswetorinie ee troops tinder | seid the housekeepers |General Maude, and only those who! he have made a study of the Orient can on it form ways" Tce moral effect of the city from the ‘An authority on eastern affairs say that ‘the defeat two years ago f General Tow nd within miaceiel Een as, a blessing in disguise in ace repens, for had the! Britis heen successful at that time) in storming the ancient — capite (eaioh Hlarosnai-aechid; the ave given grave off in all parts/of the world. _ naturally” October hie cater strategie advantages and said October,” interrupted the ‘trembling marin “There's ” said er your interests,” with a. benevolent | “NO ” bawled the affrighted ‘man. Cc hur ch, | that faith canbe to the sway of King George in Hindusta’ Bagdad is one of. the holiest cities of Islam,'ranking immediately ie to Mecca and to Medina in cla upon the veneration of followers waiting,” | iT date s him all, ee Are for aid Mrs. Banks, decidedly. ae it’s his Jone! liness pt a Be o 3 about it,” ad be- terposed Captain Barber, in a oad in-| neral: Townshend fail and. the British seizure of oly | eared Mes, asker l0-| City, whieh two years ago dear she ade, turning Deen regarded by devout Moslems. fn to the houselceeper ‘the light of a profanation, is no ed by them ‘with sentiments of faction and relief. For they hav jearned of the role: tain played last year in Mecea and of Medina from the paeious and oppressive tyranny of those Turks who are descended from {the mosteruel and savas foes of the rophet, and pation of aia dg Ah8 Yestoration of er! in- dependence as a tho rule of the Grand Sherif of Mecca, a lineal descendant of the founder of 13-| d undecided, and sture na dream to a long discussion on the pos-| sibilities of her wardrobe. ‘Thrice he anit, and thrice te Halse sus. mo. with taeider Bis bes | and Frank thought of ctobee ie said Elizabeth, speaking for the firs time. She looked at Captain Basher and then at her mo was the ook of one oftering to sell a casting, i }lam pridiing onli the old Tadd | eect area ber the Wer males Maral Church looked Ubintshey) and/of the Hedjaz, that is say, the} ghen aE joked down again. Caliph, the greatest dignitary of their “Why not ai double wedding?” she gets has travelled | asked, gently. d Sea port of Jeddah to gee neal Gap ber a. whice wae a rowed lin etate the simiponiow Geel ob rib | Church, and then began to dis-|#nd French warships assembled ilies bnaiNen ear wardinbe : to do him honor and to hail him ing. ‘These Moslems, now that they know ‘@|that Mecca and Medina have been | freed largely through she aid of Great | jBritain, and that these two TAT aces at Tnldimlare waned af the Br9.| faction “henceforth of Great and France from any further hati Eon ia Yareat ‘he Turks, are not only | content, but; relieved, to fecl their sacred city of Bagdad, one of | ithe cradles of their faith, is ee ise in. the protecting hands of the Briti saiios Will CARE just as much care to a | spect their religious prejudices and interests there as in Arabia Happy Arabia. thes ql that they ve nothing to fea ands “the British inthe ee of the profan-) their mosques and shrines at Bagdad: and that these are far safer under British protection than under the Godless rule of the Germanized weeOctober’ 's early,” Elizabeth to obtain Ss opinion upon that, but being that te would forget all bout i a ur’s time, she settled it without: him, so sorry about your _memory,! mn Barber,” said Mrs, Banks, as art. Feli: paver Tornet any.) “You forget yourself, ma'am,” re- tie her vietim,, with unconscious y, and, closing. door be- ‘eturned to the parlor to try , had brought dd ah se ol By ept of its cree CHAPTER XIy. Cruatents of medicine have ng of cleansing the ee How Children Help. squire’s ‘pretty. ey A the. village children, can you tell a Sint dotnin: ist oe ildren te at one another, but: remained silent one ee this analy Blower, while the new carat asked, who and- uld have: ing behind the squire's dough er eevee “Well, Nellie?” the squire’s daugh- asked, smiling approval. fae the ata) obit cies sia, “mother says ‘twill a pinkie crop. Nobody ever did. do is to fitthe gr ou get in a t and do t a best we! ean, any kind of a had cine eral the eler’s. 1 after night for a eae of the. gil t capture of this ee 5 sense of i Ss 31 ing fore Bagdad, conditions have changéd} Ww, down from Mecca } und visit | th ever leave it as it is to-day, this dese- glory, without attem: | eaught eparting mugen by the|mi coronation plac ee ie ne the: oremiah Mang of Gor: 1 aie to Rheims a day or ago to visit the cathedral and preach tenaetied aoete yalle teea te sash wachbex palore since arriving in France: “They - are ever of undying interest. But it was |the cathedral I really wanted to see, Besides, the trenches before Rheims are calm these days, Their Combles two ue ¢ certain fut ad written apprecia- Gothic churches of 5 was one of those I had soiled intimately trom the triple proud position in the his- tory of tones an inherent love of architecture and a reverence for| beauty ingrained within my soul. Beauty in Ruins. Beautiful and marvelous these to -ers.Tise, dominating the plains about! the commonplaces champagne. In See 1014, it was} a busy commercial and manufacturing | town ousing 110,000 _ inhabitant: Now but 18,000 bravely elect to live} here. Their houses are in the main e sped straight for the cathedral and stopped before the three porta of the most beautiful west front thic France, Deep!; reidavesl idee arontate eeenciosatdeais ly and richly carved with Greek and Gothic statues, more intricately _en- iched with lovely, harmonious orna- ss {ment than those, of any building rais. \ed to God's praise in all the wor orld. I entered through tho right portal, curiously, the same I had last passed | eight years ago. Tor the first time in my eet It Files pie a church as my. see, satel is s dalited ae unconnesraed | German horses had mad stable of jit, German soldiers Ss iad @ barn} anda bed of it, si tees pales ate-| hy setting fire to ti they ‘brought with hala as the Hae dered beauty of carving and sculpture | ier the south tower show. eae ins he gray of Germany and the anc blue Yad red of France had~ gti rate each other’s throats there, felt. each | 8 | other’s bayonets, Since the interior fire, the ashes of |stalls have | away. was jot the altar, where Louis i ywned. ey 0} ucts Clovis; Hh pees | upon the hands that se ia ‘To Nie Ho an "lel “store where Joan of Are at the cor nation of ie te “Vu in 1480, he tact, the rail about site by the force of the s = a bss has gouged a two-foot hole” stone floor, The tricolor hangs. in Pauety folds seats cr hea Wreeked. The lovely ioa tose window, a ed len ‘ood | Jagged iebs al sacked by same > d ding oye fe ranted ots er raat Hex wi Wire Fonoe Company, Lidw Hamtions Oats Your “Company’ Be Proud of ** Cake e¢ Roses Flour, it IVE ROSES FLOUR ‘OR BREADS - CAKES-PU DDINGS-PASTRIES:+ vast flower of twelve ole, each | quarter foiled and again subdivided, | its colored medieval glory one of the! most sublime of the is al shattered -wreck, Rue and br a) by a hundred. holes. ie same hag ie era, ath, and. indeed all: the ee Give pines auconET ace? From without the ee cena west | transepts sustain ing fire. [Here aud Giere delete utertel of ‘beauty remains intact, but the gl ous mass of loveliness 1s forever gone. | Standing where the first Archbishop | of Rheims liv e fifth century, | dating itself fro mar- | ire vis SiLiAIS-Of lgeesGniin eon eee residence. ae kingly f France e conan the on oe eee ae caste ae ‘antiquity there collected, | Nothing remains, and: the fire still comes sneer from Beaumont nd Berr | o ste not ogeike biased judgment tisfy one that the bombardment ff Rheims he Geliean ately. a work of 1 intent. an story of the tows ers is, the a) Garaaetaeeatioe Tt ave it on Hh eek word of the Arch- eng him: Toe were a fair mark. The Gesnea enraged at the reverse of jthe Marne, made a stand a bare three kilometres away and intentionally de- |stroyed the most glorious monument 1,| 08 the Middle ge c easy Jenough to maké statements and its | easy enough to deny.’ It is only that ‘which one sees that one really knows. | And I have seen, ler 1 | dill about the: cathedral ware’ the und lovely shops and factories Leecrina. Raia They are in individua was the archi-episcopal was, destroyed u- each mul is as the archiepiscopal alace. For half a mile to the south, aoe a oe of the house of God tories and shops are ‘ 7 Ae raid estoriee, but Rheims cathedral is Rheims cathedral, “One of the Seven Wonders.” | Rheims cathedral had’been respect: ; ed by all the warring perors of ages gone be! by the Germ a practical counterpart i beauty wit ith the interior. Viollet-1 je: Duc has said of it-that “of all the churches in France it combined unit ihe. ae the beauty cla’ med 3 it i in patent “the noble among DIY me churches of my kingdom.” Nichol- s de Son; who reproduced “its sump- ‘ious frontispiece” a engraving, it the seven won- urch whereil a¥t has supremely passed herself,” It was the true exemplification of what lick talker thing» turn out all x Keats meant when he of beauty is & joy forever, its lovelt- ness increases, it can never pass into Srey It was eae wade /pos- pe through the pious subseription all Hepee during hundreds’ of B t was the sacred heritage of all the zeit that loves the lovely. | It was over three centuries in. the build- ars. {and Dovausmont a erlods are but of the! Plies Au) the hardly less beautiful rose ing. And the Germans destroyed all this in a fortnight. ARTIFIC IAL FE FEET The Latest Kind axe Made of Paper Pulp. In spite of the-fact that aa bch lit- tle ibe in as stories of the soaring pric , the uses to whee this rogtetd is nati put are constantly in- sing in number. e have paper furniture, paper cloth, paper silks, and clothe: Now Dr tho is responsible for the artificial leg of paper mache, has brought forward a paper foot, intended to meet the needs of the crippled soldiers, These aa are said to be strong enough to stand ordinary: usage, and they te th gauze, and upon this is poured a ed pulp awhich entirely ‘ills wire gauze.— ence Sronthts FLY OVER 0 OCEAN IN "TWO DAYS. Fokker are? Inventor Lets Loose ie Predictions. Herr Fokker, the builder of one of the most successful i machines used in Austrian armies, predicts an era o} aerial passenger traffic after the war. Speed, he says, is bound to naitee air- raft a Biee vet i ad for reagon the inventor pecieel the suc- cessful operation of aircraft’ on routes between Hurope and the United States which will ran in competition with irae aventc liners. err Fokker believes the first at- tempt ie AY from Europe to New ; York will be made immediately after the war, and asserts the route can be A oy in two days at the outside. He i: the opinion that all technical baintosge! will be e: overcome. ——*+ Making It All Right. An‘old lady who had beon intro- + duced to a doctor who was also, a pro- fessor in @ university felt somewhat puzzled as to how she wotld address the great man. “Shall 1 call a ‘dcotor’ sor’ ?” she as! Bee Just as you wish,” was the re i matter of ‘tact, some people call me an old ts by “Indeed,” she sald, sweetly, “but, then, they are people that know you," or ‘profes- ine iness venture that some is promoting, It may ight, but there is always the possibility hat you and your hard- earned cash-are parting forever, Don’t be in too big a hurry to yest_in a bh Band d tb. Cartens— 10, 20, $0 and 100 Ib. Bags. in its Sixty Years of use no barrel, bag or carton of No coh ever doubts REDPATH quality, ee ught a one has ever oor Sednth sugar. eit ig made in one grade oaly-oite hg “Let Redpath ee (fg Canada Sugar Refining Co., Limited, Montreal, 12

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