tL«'iib.'«ap:>vr7Mw»~Mc»«Ji.;'«i»>M«)M«r * Hotel Del Coronado Coronado Beach, California Near San Uiego POLO, MOTORING. TENNIS, BAY AND SIJUF HATHING. FISHING AND BOATING. 18- Hole Golf Course Hotel is eqiiipi)ed throughout with Automatic Sprinkler System. AMERICAN PLAN Manager JOHN J. HERNAN, the GET THIS REM.VRKABLE WAR PICTURE OK BEOBIPT OF 70c Morifv (inl. i, we will forwani to anv ii<1(lrr.«s In i 'anada. oni ^Miil »;lrrlut; kiii i.lclinr' "VICTOKIOUB OBABQB OF TRX CAITAOZAirS AT THE BATn.E OF OOUKCELBTTE." hlle uf pUture itii:i:4 liK'lieH BZAOT mSFBODUOTIOir from uiiKinul oil paintlns l<>< E I' GHitlan. donn In lilne colom of oil Picture ptirtravK vividly the heroic rliarge of the Canadians, and brilliant hand-to-hand action. We lire now almost through with our third edition of thia reriiinkable phture. (Jel one while <<here !â- yet time This 1b an exceptl"imll> hw offer dlreot from publisher to vou â€" HAJIKIHOTON k BABKBTT. PnbUsh«r> of KUtorlcal, P»tTlotlo and BcUflons Flotaraa, Bo 46 St. Alasander 8tr««t, Montreal, Qua.. Bapt. W. DOMESTIC SCIENCE AT HOME Nineteenth Lesson â€" Cooking of Meats. Boiling, braising, sttamir.g, grilling, ^ Only the choicest, lendeiest and most pioiling, sauteing, roasting and bak- delicate cuts are suitable for cooking ing are the various terms used to de- by this method. The strong heat i»- note the methods employed in cooking 1 «tantly coagulates the albumen 5y '"^"'?-. i searing it, thus retaining all its ju c's Boiling ;« a term used to denote aland flavor. That this method .nay process of cooking meat by boiling in be successful it is \ery necessary '.hat w-ater. Two methods are used in the meat be turned every fcAr mo- this process, namely, cooking meat is rnents. This also insures it being in soup, second as in stewing. j cooked evenly. Boiling as in Soup Pan Broiling: This is another ! Themeatisplucedincoldwaterand '"''thod of cooking the fine cuts of brought slowly to a boil. It is then meat when it is not possible to broil 'cooked for timenecessary to obUin the them. Broiled meat is mor.- health- ! nutriment in the broth cr liquid, 'u' and , , , . I usually three-quarters of an hour f or ! other form of cooked meat, each pound of meat. j To I'an Broil also less wasteful than any Cloth Weavers Wanted Wanted experienced weavers for plain and fancy woolen clotlis and blankets. Good wagfes. Steady work. Apply, Employment Office THE BARRYMORE CLOTH CO., 1179 King Street West, LIMITED Toronto i^ Between Cousins; OR, A DECl-ARATION OF WAR J Boiling 38 in .Stewing Plunge the meat into boiling water. This causes the albumen to form a coating over the surface of the meat, thus protecting the juices. It is a well-known fact that the albumen in the meat coagulates upon the appli- cation of heat. The meat is then cook- ed until it is tender. Time allowance is about thirty-five minutes to the pound. Correct Method of Boiling Meat Place the meat in a saucepan of boil- ing water and then keep the water boiling rapidly for five minutes after the meat is added. Then place the saucepan in a position where it will cook just below the boiling point for' the required length of time. Con- ' .stant and rapid boiling will cause the albumen in the meat to Imrden; there- fore no amount of cooking afterward | will soften the fiber. It will only , cause the meat to fall apart wit*-'>ut ; being tender. It is important to keep the .sauce- pan closely-covered. This will pre- vent the delicate aroma from evapor- ating. Braising : Meat is placet, in a hot saucepan ami turned frequently. It is cooked in its own juices in a close- ly coverted saucepan. ! Steaming: Cooking meat by placing Heat an iron frying pan red hot, then place in it the meat. Turn it constantly until cooked. When using gas range for broiling always place one quart of boiling water and one tablespoonful of salt in the dripping pan. This will prevent the fat from catching fire: it will also facilitate the easy removal of this fat, which when cold, can be lifted with a knife or spatula. Meat when broiling always puffs slightly. This is partly due to the quick searing of the surface. As the meat cooks this disappears, so that if you press the meat slightly with a knife and it does not feel spongy it is then ready to serve. Do not overcook meat. It loses all nutritive value as a food if it is cooked until hard and dry. RoHKting and Baking of Meats Roasting or grilling is done before open fire, ;h meat being turned fre- quently, so that all sides may bo cook- ed alike. The meat is basted with its own fat. This method of cooking meat is used daily in Europe, but not much used in this country. When a piece of meat is large it is roasted. Meat cooked in an oven by radiated heat is frequently called in this country "roasting." It is well known and needs little description It Is hard to break the ch;5lins of haWt. It took one man six months to stop saying "Gee Whiz." Perhaps habit has kept you ordering "the same tea as before" when you had Intended to buy Red Rose. This will be a reminder. So next time you will order Red Rose. You will be pleased, we are sure. Kept Good by the Sealed Package annoyance, I think; since, even if he wins the suit, Ardloch will no longer be a possible place for him. The company won't drop Berrell â€" I've got that from a safe quarterâ€" and trust him for finding some way of closing the quarry gates against his detract- or." "You think he will have to go away?" asked Fenella, startled. CH.APTER XI.â€" (Cont'd). "Of cour.se you would fancy," he said, in a suddenly .softened tone; "of course you could not know what you were saying. Tell the truth .Miss Fenella, did you say this of yourself, or because of father?" ,. , . "Your father certainly did mention '"^ot regret. t„ me " \ But surely it woubl hurt you to ^ ..II .;..u. .1 •. ._.i i-> leave vour country, Duncan?" rts, it hort in steam bath or steamer. Grilling: Cooking meat over a hot j When baking meat always use a wire (iro on u grill made for this purpose. rack to lift the meat from the bottom Broiling: A very hot fire is neces- : of the pan. This will insure even, sary for this mode of cooking meat. ' cooking. j "And is the thing likely lo happen ? ; _^_____________^_^________^_^^.^_^^^_^^.^,^.^______ I "More likely with every day that ' - t â€" â€" ^ | passes," said Duncan, gazing away severe reprimand from Albert, but to-] it's only justice. His temper is hot,' with unblinking eyes over the mys- day his mind was otherwise occupied, no doubt, but I know that hia heart terious shimmer of the loch. "Oh, bother that just now!" he cut, is sound." Fenella looked at him perplexed, short Julia's astonished reply. "I've! "But when on earth has Duncan told conscious of a quite unexpected feel-, to be off again by daylight to-morrow, you all this?" inquired Julia, staring "And where would you go to?" "The worl'l'.s big enough. Miss I'Vnelhi, but it's Canada I'd try for "That's all right, then," and Duncan, '"^•J.^ y""^ '^',T;'^'> •""?""> h„ seemed to draw a rather deep breath.! ^ '"'"> « ' .^ «. " '^^^'^ ?/^.^" "I thought It would be that. Let's T'T V" '""' /-n r i.ln â-º!,» never talk of this again. Miss Fenella,! «"'f»^v.'>'*'>'H'-e still fixed upon the if you want us to be friends, that's ' ''^,''' •"« '^"%'":?'.''^ ^'^^ , \ 'V (q sav " I "^ut nose and thii'k, snort heard, "Of'course I want that, Duncan,"' standing out .sharply from the ' 'â- Fenella ha.stened to say, in* reply to ! ground of unreal-looking hills the un.spokeii point of interrogation. In her heart Fenella, (irimed as she wub with Duncan's view uf the case, could not but wish him victory in tlie struggle, though she did so with an uneasy feeling of di.sloyalty towards Julia, whose chances of .some day be- coming .Mrs. Berrell seemed to be steadily growing. "He's trying the boycotting trick now," explained Duncan wrathfully, in answer to her in(|uiry; "wanting to keep me out of the crewi* by keeping me out of the good claims. It's come to this, that any crew with me in it is bound to get the poorest claim in the quarry. Every time the list comes round he hopes to see me dropped by the others. Hut he doesn't know our people. They don't turn their backs ea.'^^ily upon one of their own kind. So far, they have stuck to me all riglit, which of course makes him all the angrier. To hear him talk, you would think I was a red revolutionist, when all I want is my own rights, without touching his. He'd hunt me out of the country in a moment, if he (•(,uld." "But I'm not one to be hunted. If ever I do leave the old country, it will be by my own free will, and not by that or atvy other man." "But surely you are not thinking of that ?" asked Fenella, astonished. "Not just now. I couldn't leave father. But father once gone, it's a plan I've thought of at times, â€" if a thing I'm thinking of were to happen." '"i'll^ touching the shortness of the = i remaining way, it seemed to be tacitly Make Your Own Bread Save jour Money Enjoy good Health lJoiin>»«tlc f.'oiioniy Is guliig to win Die War a«alnj<t tha Hun. Hunltatlvp hoin« inethoilH of food pre- paration will will the war uKalnst (11b- •aae. Victory In both liistancfs l.t asnurcd Ijy ubIiiB tica '•Canuck" Bread Fi/lixer Four loaf size $2.75 Eight loaf size $3.25 Th« "iTttnuck" Is quick, clean, efflrlniit and •conunilcal. Buy from your local iJeaJer. or ordi-r from us direct, all clmrncs |)al(1. E. T. WRIGHT CO., LIMITED HAMILTON, CANADA. you J<now, and there's something else , with wide and rather startled eyes at , I want to talk out with yi>u. I saw her sister. i Berrell just before coming in, Julia."! "At the cottage, when I'm visiting; "Yes," snid Julia placidly, in no h's father, and sometimes, too, I have way disturbed in the poin'edness of met him on the road," said Fenella, the address. She was growing used strong in her new boldness, by this time to having the manager; "But surelyâ€"" began Julia, when back' regarde<l as her private property. Albert in'.erposed. "He's getting wild at Duncan M'Don- "''^'^ «"' «" '^""^ ?''";''"^ ^'"^^ nell. The pigheade.lness of that f el- ! ?»" «"''"- '» ''^^â- <-' """^^ f"*''"''' ^^"^ low is bevond words. Nothing will i . . • .l o vt -m induce him to give up the prosecution « «" »^ ^"IJ!"^ '*'« savage? Now, if Duncan, how would it be if you had aming the savage? Now, if you asked him as a personal favor to If the book I have on my .shelf speaks ^-a.rout that blasting accident, you y-^Vs^' ion "ryrhTk ^ true. It must be a splendid land â€" Know. would d > if" a land where a stout heart and a pair "Oh, yes, something would induce^.,, j '";â- , , , . „„^ „ .„:. of strong anna can do almost any- him," spoke up Fenella, upon some p ',/ • v|"*^, """i """w. »•»'" troTig thing, and where a man isn't looked i-udilen impulse of boldness. "Let Mr down upon for using these arms." ! Berrell grant full compensation to "I suppose I ought to be going! Adam, and let him advise thj company home," said Fenella, after a silence, to give the steel tools, and Duncan during which she had been turning will drop the pro.secution at once. He over this new idea in her mind. i to'd me .so himself." .She got up ra'her in a hurry as she| Albert looked at his sister in a pass- said it, looking about her with as-, ing surpri.se. tonished eyes. Really, she had noi "The s'.eel tools will come in time, idea that it was as late as thi'?. no doubt, but Berrell can't give the "The basket's over-heavy for you,' compen.sation now without making Miss Fenella," interposed Duncan, as 'himself ridiculous; he has too loudly she stooped for it; "you'll let me carry i declared that none was due." it for you as far as the road, anyway." t "Well, he shouldn't have declared it. It ended by his no' only carrying jf„r it certainly is due, and he will the basket as well as his tool-bag, biitj pinke himself much more ridiculou»-by also helping her over the broken | sticking to his declaration than by grounil. As she steadied herself by j simply acknowledging tha.t he had his broad hand, what more natural m.„it. „ nii.stake." than that in her mind a comparison i ••Fenella!" reproachfully ejaculated should irisc b.,'wcen these toil-worn | juHa fo,. the criticisms levelled at her fingers and a.iother hand in which hers had lately lain in frequent greet- ing. Oh, what a diflference! what a difference! The road reached, Fenella put out her hand for the basket decisively, be- ing half afraid that he would offer to carry it to the Rectory door. But he yielded it I'p w'lhout demur; and thmigh ncithiiig nas snid bevond a re- "Right or wrong, he's got to be up- held," pronounced Albert, planting his claret-gla.ss decisively ujion the table. "He represents authority, and Iha' is enough â€" or anyway, it'.s got to be en- ough for the present," he added, as understood between them that the es- though in answer to the socialist with- ncknowledged suitor seemed person- ally mortifying even to her good na- ture. M:;'^r:^:;7^hink!:"he's''^ t^ ^^ --f-^. -'"'> ^^at, Julia! and it but he B in the wrong, all the same, i Fenella, in her turn taken by surprise. "It would be no more than grati- tude, surely, considering the trouble you've taken over his father. What do you say ? Are you inclined to try •your hand?" "Really, Bertie," she objected, "I think that would be getting into far closer touch with the family than we at all wish to be." But .'\lbert only laughed, serenely confident. "I don't say it isn't, but it's a choice of evils, as I ta^ce it. Duncan has got to be muzzled, and apparently no one else can do it. Fenella has started the rolo of Angel of Mercy, she may as well add that of Angel of Peace." "Yes, yes," agreed Johir; "that's the very thing! I have noticed that Duncan is very attentive to what Fenella says." "It would save Berrell a world of would save Duncan more thjin mere capade of the evening need not neces- sarily be pressed upon the notice of the family CHAPTER XII. Ever since Ella's days, "dressing for dinner" had remained an institution at the Rectory. So had the retire- ment of the ladies after dessert, even though that des.sert itself might con- sist of three bananas ana six biscuits, just as the "dressing" might be re- presented by a change of blouse, or a laco collar of the vllost quality pro- duced by Oban spring sales. In this respect, John alone, having been given ' how. No doubt it't my own fault.' up as hopeless, enjoyed immunity. I •"The fault of his devilish temper, Other relics of Ella's sway likewise! r.-dher." "The whole vindictivenes.'i survived, such as the <.isheH known as' of the Gael secpis to be packed into "entries," the glass troughs, and the that young man." in him, who, though marvellously adaptable to circumstances, was al- ways there, quietly biding his time. "Mr. Berrell is the man in power, and Duncan is the man in revolt, and, as the world stands now, the only way to escape anarchy is to back up Power. That's why I say that Duncan has got to bo muzzled. He's becoming a nuisance, that young man. Fath-^r, can't you have a go at him? (Christian charity and forbearance, and all that sort of thing, you know." John sighed a little wearily, "I have spoken to him, Bertie; but \K doesn't seem to reach him, some- /•'a/nouj HoUl Many People Make a B-Line for the Walker House (The House of Plenty) at Boon as thev arrive In Toronto. The meals, the service a&d the home-like appolatroente constitute the magnet that diawB them there. Noon Dinner 60c. Evening Dinner 75c. THE WALKER HOUSE Toronto' I Fanunu Hot* I \ TORONTO, CANADA RatM Reasonable Geo. Wright * Co., Props. 8â€" » » The Jordan Valley In t<3tliMit;ni Otiisi li a txiiitifiil, fntUi' ' ilttrl:t t&il till wj.'it ts InvKtliats. Huf str»il hir.tn ire koyLw tliers, bicnii. tktlr keon bt-.btu tarcsliSt trili Hum that ^nvntsent will ptip tilf ntiins fron tt« isitjTil Uientu ill Uit vtiui of tbi \nt 'rilii. to uy r.otiili( g| ttt bij crcps ibtt }tt| tin fruti'.t. . rrlwi \m; UnM My, . 'Ask Bi fof HtMntIa laftnutttn, abM> h!«i»((M. 1. 1. SMITH Colo. liallM «(Qi«l,I.| Ail,;, I' .loi Piailk SrsUa iMa istrn. u. r. uu., OiuiM. la." embroidered doyleys which she herself had laboriously copied from those at the Flpiacopal table. In Albert's and Julia's hands these small but eloquent trifles were not likely to fall into dishonour; and it was only la'ely that Fenella had <lis- covered in herself a certain impatience regarding them, and hail come to the conclusion that they were rather foolish than otherwise, and, at any rate, quite superfluous. To-day she had astonished Julia by a remark as to whether it would not be be'ter to have only one dinner-dish and plenty of it, instead of the mere pickings of three. "Dinner would he ever so much quicker to eat that way," she argued. On any other day, Fonelli's revolu- tionary remark would infalliblv have produced u discussion, us well as a 'Oh, Bertie, n»l He's not vindictive. It's not for himself he is fighting, you must remember, it's really for his father, who has lost his work â€" who is old and blind, and needs the money. It breaks Dunran'.s heart to see him wanting anything." Fenella stopped, flushed up to the temples with the eagerness of her de- fence, nor losing any of the glow under the astonished glances bent upon her. The attention around was inconvenient, but to have kept silence now would have struck her as coward- ly. This speaking up for Duncan seemed in some way to be an astone- ment for that other piece of cowardice, that day upon the bank. It was her fa'.ber who came to her aid. "You are in the right, Fenella. It's not vengeance that Duncan looks for, FIELD CASHIERS AND PAYMASTERS IN FRANCE CASH DOMINION EXPRESS FOREIGN CHEQUES THE BEST WAY TO SEND MONEY TO THE BOYS IN THE TRENCHES "I am pretty sure there won't b« room for both him and Berrell in the place. So if you really take any in- terest in the fellow, Fenella, it would be as well to see what you can do." "Very well. I will try," said Fenella, after a moment's thought; "but I don't know w^hether he will listen to me." 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