Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 13 Feb 1924, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

When Exposed to Aif tea loses Its f!resKne»« and flavor* naif in Jin =»^ GREENMANTLE BY JOHN BUCHAN. (Copyrlffbtcd Thomita Nelson and Son*. LUL> BOSl For tl%at reason is never aold in bulK. Woman's Sphere LIGHT ON LAMPS, liamp chimneys iWll not crack Mar- ly M loott when exposed to sudden changes of temperature if they have been toaghened by the following pro- cess: Put a handful of salt into » kettle of cold water and immerse the new lamp globe â€" or any other glass- wareâ€"in it Bring to a boil slowly j and then boil rapidly for a quarter of I an hour. Remove the kettle from the CHAPTER XXII. â€" (Contd.) card. He had stopped humminir, and ^j^^ water till cold. I fancy it isn't the men who ffet *»« ««ne»n« aloud: j j^ ^^^^ ^^^ wick is given a bath in most out of the world and aru always "He captured Harper's Ferry, with vinegar and allowed to dry thoroughly buoyant and cheerful that mos* fear his nineteen men so true, before its long bath in oil it will re- to die. Rather it is the weak-flngmed ^nd he frightened old Virginny . . ." pay the favor by burning more bright- souls, who go about with dull eyes, " " ! f"' i , . ' ,. .„„u„ that cling most fiercely to life. They i "Say, Major," h« cried, "I believe 'Y and refusing to smoke, have not the joy of being alive which this game of mine is coming out." 1 A hot vinegar bath is also higniy is a kind of earnest of Immortality. . . I was now pretty well mad. The beneficial to old wicks and lamp I know that my thoughtii wero chiefly thought that old Peter had won, that burners. Keep an old pan for the about the jolly things that I had smm we had won beyond our wildest purpose and boil both wicks and burn and done: not regret, but gratitude, drenms, that if we died there were g^, ^|. jga^j Qj^^e a month. The panorama of blue mooni on Iho those coming who would exact the j ^ wicks do not submit kindly to veld unrolled itself before me, and uttermost vengeance, rode my brain ^ ^^^^. ^^^^j^^ In most cases hunter's nights in the bush, the ta.sto like a fever. I sprang on the parapet ' tptoiint* hv divine an un- of food and sleep, the bitter stimulus and waved my hand to Stumm. shout- they will retaliate by giving an un of dawn, the joy of wild adventure, ing defiance. Rifle shots cracked out even flame. Turn the wick just a on the voices of old staynch friends, from behind, and I leaped back just above the tube and remove the charred vild adventure, ing defiance, :, and I leaped back just above tne tuoe ana remove me cnui Hitherto the war had seemed to make, in time for the next shell. ! portion by pinching between the PIPING HOT ON SHIVERY DAYS, do a lot of waiting on that cat, don't a break with all that had gpne beiore, The charge must have been short,; thumb and first finger or shave it off VrRKUEVS Aftm Ewry hhai Ifs the loBgesMatiiiig confecttoB yim cu boy â€"and It's a help to dl- gestfon and a deanser lor the mouth and teeflk Wrlflley** means bcBclltaswcUas plea Whif^ sni.ri> U thfi h«RP of manv Vo"'' I sa'^ One day. 'Oh, I don't but now the war was only part of th.j for it was a bad miss, landing some-, with a match stick. uieklvDreDared dXious disherit ^^'>^' «he answered. 'You see, I've Picture. I thought of my battalion where on tho glacis. The next was To avoid greasy 1 ri iL^rT!L±°?. 'irM\ led Tigo to believe this is where he !!."lAe ?<l<>d fellow? there, "lany of better and crashed on the near p^^^^^^^ Tigo belongs. And for himself.' to 4 tablespoons flour, same amount ,, , " , , '^ „ , „. ., ., fat I Uncle John Tyler walking up the biff and I had .succeeded can be made, according to need: (1) thick, (2) medium, (3) thin. Thick White Sauce â€" 1 cup milk, 3 lamps always be turned below the ~ ' ^^^ "ot pjyg thousand acres of essence- the yielding flowers are under cultivation ... disagree- 1 j^ Crasse, France. That was the bear a charmed life, for he was smoth- i able to handle if they are filled too | Medium W S 1 cup milk 2 table- '''''• 'What'd you do that for?' I asked tremendous fact, and my mood was ercd in dust, but unhurt. He blew the ^ full, since the oil expands in a warm him one day when I caught up with humble gratitude to God, and exultant dust away from his cards very ginger- room and is liable to ooze out at him. 'Doesn't it make you tired and pride. Death was a small price to pay â-  ly and went on playing. the top. lame?' 'Well, Fred,' said he, 'I've got ^o"" 't. As Blenkiron would have said, "Sister Anne," he said, "do you see when lamp tops get loose melt a a pretty heavy load to-day, and old ^ *""^ K°' «°°^ ^^'^^ in the deal. . . .anybody coming?'' j.„„™.h small piece of alum and pour it into Dan's legs are getting old as well as^_Themght^was getting bitter cold, as' ^2>fen^c|^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^,ji„^ .^ ^^^jy ;„ pj^.^ j,, a few minutes. ctly smooth Add milk siovviy, • â€" '^^ " ;^-%;t t" the too of the J'^PPens before dawn. It was frost neatly nside on the soft ground. 1 was ng constantly, heat to boiling "^ "^ When we get to the top of the ^^^ sharpness of it woke determined to break for the open and and cook two or three minutes J"", ^ <=»" ?«-t »" and rest, but he has ^^jj^ h„nger. I got out the remnants "--hance the rifle fire, for if Stumm •poons flour, same amount fat Thin W. S.â€"\ cup milk, 1 table-' spoon flour, same amount fat 1 Melt the fat, add flour and stir till perfectly smooth. Add milk slowly, . stirrin point . „ or until it thickens properly. Salt to keep going clear to the Corners.' ' of "the'food and''wine"'an? we"ha"ci" a went on shooting the control was cer- and pepper to taste. I ^^ ^''"t ^ '"O""" ^hey showed last meal. I remember we pledged each tain death. I caught Blenkiron round This cauce can be used as a base for'^^ '^^^^ ^^'n^ good to animals is like, other as we drank. cream-of-pea s»oup, cream-of-tomato . ""^ ^ '^""'t ^^^ to forget it. | "We have eaten our Passover or asparagus or benn (string) or any- "Mother, now, has never scolded me Feast," said Sandy. "When do you cr'am vegetable soupâ€" a good way to '""<^*' ^^°"t not telling the truth and look for the end?" use left-over vegetables. such things. She's just gone on telling' "After dawn," I said. "Stumm For each person allow: % cup white the middle, scattering his cards to the winds, and jumped over the parapet. "Don't apologize, Sister Anne," Medal for Pigeon. The conferring of a war medal by the British government upon a hom- ing pigeon not only Is a pleasant bit of sentiment but calls new attention api _ . said he. '"The game was as good asjto the services that homing pigeons won. But for God's sake drop me, for have rendered to mankind, In peace as ! .......... . if you wave me like a banner of free-, _,aii „- <„ â„¢a, xhA infiiipnt rpralla i the truth-.f she tells anythmg-and wants daylight, to get the full savor, dom I'll get plugged sure and good." ^".^'f,'" f"-, Jt^' '""'^^^^^ rauce, % cup vegetable stock, salt and "^'"^ * fellow square, and not tattling of his revenge." I My one thought was to get cover for r-ppe'r to taste. ' everything she knows. And so when] Slowly the sky passed from ebony j the next minutes, for I had an instinct ' To make venelable eto'kâ€" Cook ^^® t""*^ to me once in a while about to grey, and black shapes of hill out- [that our vigil was near its end. The V wt-hloB in Km«ll nmniint nf wnti-r such things I know she means it. lined themselves against it. A wind j defences of Erzerum were crumbling r-Tn teSer or me crned veltlbles Then father expects me to pass my' blew down the valley, bringing the like sand-castles, and it was a proof Va *'' 'f"''^'^ °W%^ "^T:^^^ vegetables. ^ business acrid smell of burning, but something I of the tenseness of my nerves that I K i.sh the vegetables through a strain- ^n^v^r It i. He nlv^^ ««« mnrh too of the freshness of morn. It stir- seemed deaf to the sound. Stumm had er v'ith the water in which they were whatever it is Ho never says much thou.rhts in men and wol they cfKiked. Use with an equal amount of about it. But ever since I can re- red strange thoughts in men and woke \ seen us cross the parapet, and he the old morning vigor of the blood : started to sprinkle all the sijj-round thin white sauce for cream soups. member he has gone down to the office ^1,;^^ ^„g ^^^^j. ^ 1,^ „i„e again, jings of the castroL Blenkiron and I Po*oto Chowder (8 servings)â€" 2 c. J"^t about as regular as the sun rises. : por the first time in that long vigil I ' '" ' poiatoes (%-inch cubes), % c. salt ^"^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^ts back he works in; was torn with a sudden regret, pork (small pieces), 3 c. milk, 8 crack- tne garden or does whatever else there| "We must get into the cave before er.s. Brown the salt pork. Add the 3^ to be done. He asked me to help him it is full light," I said. "We had bet>- potatoes and cook in the pork fat ^°^' 8"'^ ^« figured out just what thejter draw lots for the two to go." until done. Add the milk and let garden is worth to us and how much! The choice fell to oi» of the Com- como to the boiling point. Season to time we can afford to spend in it and.panions and Blenkiron. taste. Just before taking from the ^""Z.^^^ exercise helps .f.,»„« „^^ n,« -.»„oi,o,. „..„„i,„,i ™„.^„-_ 1 ve thought about lay like a working-party between the lines caught by machine-guns, taking a pull on ourselves as best we could. Sandy had some kind of cover, but we were on the bare farther slope, and the riflemen on that side might have had us at their mercy. But no shots came from them. As stove add the crackers crushed moder ately fine. that a lot. And ; latter, when I start to do anything, before I ! man to be alive when your friends Creamed <^eiInion (R RPrvinP's^ 1 U ''"O" 't I'â„¢ thinking: 'Father will be come up to count their spoil, I guess „rj!fi,"i!'ro^^ '!.1^".^.!^rM!i disappointed if I don't do this right.' I'm the worst of the lot. I'd prefer, "That's what I mean. Just a lot of '^ yo" don't mind, to stay here. I've "You can count me out," said the i looked east, the hillside, which a lit- ""- "If it's your wish to find a | tie before had been held by our ene c. canned salmon, 2 c. medium white eauce. Separate the salmon into '••"â- â€¢', •â- â€¢""-""-â- â- â€¢ -"^^^^ pieces, removing the skin and bones, talk doesn t amount to a thing Kidsi^.^ li^/to wait quietly on His call. Add to the white sauce, heat, season °°JJ,teven listen; you ve got to shoW|i,ii pj^y ^ g^^ie of Patience to pass to taste, pour over crackers, serve. ' """ Excalloped Onions (6 servings) â€" 8 medium size onions, 2 c. milk, 4 tbsp. butter, % c. cracker or bread crumbs 'em!" I Slice the onions thin. Heat the milk to the boiling point. Add the butter and salt and pepper to season rather highly. Butter and crumb a baking dish and put into it the onions and crumbs in alternate layers. Pour over them the hot milk and bake until on- ions are done. (The onions may be par-boiled a few minutes first If it ia dfsired to modify the flavor.) Creamed Carrots (6 servings) â€" 8 c. carrots (cubes or thin slices), 3 c. medium white sauce. Cook the carrots in boiling water. When the carrots are done there should be no water to throw away. Pour over them the white Rauce, heat and serve. Cereal with Raisins or Dates (C servings) â€" % c. cereal, 4 c. boiling salted water, 1 c. dates or raisins. Pour the cereal into the boiling water in the upper part of the double boiler and crx;k directly over the fire, stir- rmg constantly, until it ceases to iet- tle to tjip bottom. Put over the hot water in the lower part of tho double boiler and cook 2 or 8 hours. Wash the fruit and if the dates are used cut into small pieces. Add to th« cereal about throe-fourths hour before iierving. Serve with cream. "YOU'VE GOT TO SHOW 'EM." Aunt I.aura grew enthusiastic a« POPULAR SUIT STYLE GROWING BOYS. the time.' I He would take no denial, so we FOR: drew again, and the lot fell to Sandy. "If I'm the last to go," he said, "I promise I don't miss. Stumm won't be long in following me." He shook hands with his cheery smile, and he and the Companion slip- ped over the parapet in the final shadows before dawn. Blenkiron spread his Patience cards on a flat rock, and dealt out for the Double Napoleon. He was perfectly calm, and hummed to himself his only tune. For myself I was drinking in mies, was as empty as the desert. And then I saw on the main road a sight which for a second time made me yell like a maniac. Down that glen came a throng of men and galloping limbers â€" a craey, jostling crowd, spreading away beyond the road to the steep slopes, and leaving behind it many black dots to darken the snows. The gate& of the South had yielded and our friends were through them. At that sight I forgot all about our danger. I didn't give a cent for Stumm's shells. I didn't believe he could hit me. The fate which had mercifully preserved us "for the flrst taste of victory would see us through to the end. I remember bundling Blenkiron along the hill to find Sandy. But our news was anticipated. For down our own side-glen came the same broken tumult of men. More; for at their the Interesting fact that homing pige- ons were the foundation of two great fortunes. Before the days of the tele- graph Baron Rothchild used great numbers of pigeons to bring the earl- iest information of the stock market and exchange in London to his Paris banking house; and Paul de Renter, the founder of the great European news agency that corresponds to the Associated Press In America, used carrier pigeons as bis first messengers. After Dishwashing! CAMPANA'S ITALIAN BALM is simply wonderful for keeping the hands beautifully white and soft and smooth. Positively pre- vents redness and chapping. Use it at once after washing dishes, and note the Improvement of your hands. Keep a bottle handy by the kitchen sink. Minard'i Liniment Heals Cuts. In education the whole being must be taken into consideration. It Is not enough to train the hand, the eye, to quicken the perception of the senses, develop the quickness of Intellect, and leave out of consideration the build- ing up of character, the aspirations of the soul. WOMEN CAN DYE ANY GARMENT, DRAPERY Dye or Tint Worn, Faded Things New for 15 cents. my last draught of the hill air. My backs, far up at the throat of the contentment was goinsr. I suddenly pass, I saw horsemenâ€" the horsemen felt bitterly loth to die. j of the pursuit. Old Nicholas had Something of the same kind must. flung his cavalry in. have passed through Blenkiron's head. Sandy was on his feet, with lips He suddenly looked up and asked, j set and his eye abstracted. If his f ase "Sister Anne, Sister Anne, do you see hadn't been burned black by weather anybody coming?" I stood close to the parapet, watch- ing every detail of the landscape as shown by the revealing daybreak. Up on the shoulders of the Palantuken, wrenched out of snowdrifts lipped over the edges of thought he didn't it would have been pale as a dish- clout. A man like him doesn't make up his mind for death and then be g^ven his life again without being his bearings. 1 understand what .Djamond Dyi 'es Don't wonder whether you can dye or tint successfully, because perfect home dyeing Is guaranteed with "Dia- mond Dyes" even it you have never dyed before. Druggists have all col- ors. Directions In each package. IN SOUPS, STEWS, sniTies, savoury dishes, and In hundreds of difierent ways Oxo beef cubes will make food more taity and nutritious. In tins of 4, 10, so uuf lOO. ALWAYS A3X I EDDYS MATCHES so/cfdyoyer 14,000 General Stores d 16,000 Grocers the cliffs. I wondered when they had happened, so I beat him on the wpuld come down as avalanches. There [ shoulders. was a kind of croft on one hillside,! "Man, d'you see?" I cried. "The and from a hut the smoke of break- j Ccasacks ! "rhe Cossacks! God! how fast was beginning to curl. Stumrr.'a 1 '.hey're taking that slope! They're' gunners were awake and apparently j into them now. By Heaven, we'll ride' holding council. Far down on the I with them! We'll get the gun horses!" main road a convoy was moving â€" ij A little knoll prevented Stumm and heard the creak of the wheels two] his men from seeing what was hap- miles away, for the air was deathly' pening farther up the glen, till thej still. . first wave of the rout was on them. Then, as if a spring had been loosed, He had gone on bombarding the- , 4600. Tweed, cheviot, serge, khaki' the world suddenly leaped to a hideous castrol and its environs while thei •he described the meeting that she^„j u^g,^ ^^^.^ ^^^^ materials for this life- With a growl the guns opened world was cracking over his head. The' had just attended. "It was fine! That model. The ample pockets will please' '""""^ *'^ *^* horizon. They were gun team was in the hollow below the| woman has some wonderful ideas ^^^^ ^^' ^^^^ j^^^ ^^^, , ^^^ ,^^.1 especially fierce to the south, where road, and down the hill among thej about training children I should have thgff, I" ''""•f"^ "*"*t as I had never heard it boulders we crawled, Blenkiron as I liked to hear her speak longer." | jhe PaUern Is rut in i Slre^- 8 l'"'^*''.*- ''],*'!. ""'' ^'""'^v' ^?,f ''^^*"^ !"I"^ ** * ^^"^^ *"^ â„¢* ^^'^ * "â„¢P "Humph!" observed lanky, fourteen- ^^ n and 14 vears A 10 vear sizel w»Wâ„¢^'lnn„!.'J **** •""' ^^oked left arm. , • • . »-»» ^M 1?. J » ji "iM iii,« ' ^ years, a lo-year size with fumes and dust i* Tho poor beasts were straining at year-old Fred unexpectedly. I d like requires 4 V; yards of 36-inch material. But my eyes were on the north, their pickeU and sniffing the morning to tpll thiit parents meeting a lew, p^iigrn mailed to any address on From Erzerum city tall tongues of wind, which brought down the thick: ' " ' â-  * " â- â-  at bombardment and babbling cries of a. Before wo reached them [ Dattem itin>,i\ ui nv-.n kuhci. t ntniiiiuti my iiiiii. iiiuuuciicd hordo had swept down i 'Why, I mean," explained Fred" '. *. jeyes and ears, mad with impatienc?. on them, men panting and gasping in painstakingly, "that just telling « kid Mln»rd's Liniment for Dandruff. "".'L j » . n j ' ..», . their flight, many oi them bloody from 1 thing is so doesn't moan much. I; * Lhro^fJlf ^'-^o nnltZ^^^' ^"""a T T""*^"' ,"'"»" ^°"«'-'"K in the first: .....r.n.« iv» 1.-J „ v,„oi..»i „# !...«.«« "Mir-u ADT" through. Tho Russians are round the stages of collapse and death. I saw suppose 1 ve had a bushel of human*. 'HIGH ART. Ifla,,),. The town is burning. Glory to the horses seized by a dozen hands,! irush preached at me and I don t re- ; Uofore ths guests arrive prepare God, we've won. we've won!" and a desperate fight for their pos-l member any of it. But I'll tell you pieces of paper by drawing exactly the' And as I spoke the earth .seemed to session. But as we halted there our, what I do remember: Miss Bates, th* g^^, w„vy Hne upon each. The lino "P^'' besid" me. and I was flung for- eyes were fixed on the battery on the dressmaker, works awful hard, but gj,ould be about four inches long and^^""' "" '*** gravel which covered road above us, for round it was now she never lets Tigc sit on the door- g,,ould be made with ink so that iti "'i''\'''l!],^!râ„¢?r,T^- . , sweeping the van of the retreat, sup begging to come in; she ^e. cannot be erased or changed in any .±.L P':''r^,.r/"ZLV^"r„l,*i!.i"? (To be continued.) right away and opens tho door 'You way. <^"*"»*<" '" ""y.Bmnzemont found myself uninjured, 1, It need not auRirest. or resemble,! g„^, Blenkiron rubbing the dust out. â€" •>.- OUR FREE BOOKLET =» any object. Number the papers and of hi.i eyes and arranging a disordered #„:.,.„„„.„» r pass one of them, with a pencil, toi lor arguraeni. Sarcasm ia a very poor substitut* Our little book describes our work anl j ^^^ object that you can use tho wavy ^Smslnfma ^.nt: o'nX/or of "ths ! »- " " P"^ «' ^« .•»-.-'"«• "T"- Skin, Hcalp, Hair, Hands and Com- plexion. For over 30 yearn wn havs been suocnssfuily treating Bcisma, PImplea, Blnckhasds and other skin and irslp troubln* by mall. W» r*- iBovs flopfrfluoux Hair, MoIm, Wsrts, ttiO; forever, by Rlectrolyais. Write HI8COTT INSTITUTE <1D Cellsgs >t. â-  Toronto IMUt No. •â€" 'M. papers may be turned into any po- sition. Allow about five minutos to tho amatour artists; at the end of the tlmo collect the papers. Tho person who has drawn the cleverest picture is the winner and secures some appro- priate prire. The drawings should bo placed on view so that ovoryons can onjoy them. Toronto Properties Agriculture will progress as fast as we dare to take on new and improved .Methods of farming. Wo specialize In ManufacturiuB and Store Properties, Dwelling Houses,, _,. i » » # « i » and City and Su'jurban nulldlKg ixjts. I ""* "â- *•' ""' **' •" '"* comes not Aro you contemplating buying lo j '" ^^ court-room but when in contact Toronto, or have you lands hero for with the citlten. saloT Why not avail yourself of our serTlcoT II0IIN8 LIMITED Kent Bldg. IM Yongo St, Toronto To Women Who Do Their Own Work: Suppo8«t you could save six minutes every day in washing pots and pansâ€" two minutes after every meaL In a month, this would amount to a saving of three hoiurs of this disagreeable but necessary work. This saving can be made by using SMP enameled kitchen utensils, as their smooth sanitary sorfaee will not absorb diH or grease. Mo scraping, scourinff or polishing is needed when you uae Diamond or Pearl Wiut- Soap, water and a dish towel ia all you need. Ask f (W S|IP<S»<«<^WARE "A Fme* mf Pore Jain and m tf sart o/ StMl** Three flnlshea: Pearl Ware, two eoata of poarly rnj enamel taisido and out. Diamond Ware, three coats, llKht Mne and white ontaldo, white lining. Onrstal Ware, three coata, pure white inaide and oat, with Royal Bloa cdfios. J^HEIT MeTAI PlM)OOCr8Xofr.Srt "4 .MOIJJTRdAL ATOKONIOâ€" V^inHifikX*' \E0HOHTON/vANC0UVER ''CAi.OARV^ IM Don't think people judge yoar gen- erosity by the amount of advice yoa give away. '^t Every }tfarJiYare Store \

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy