Between Cousins; OR, A DECLARATION OF WAR. Vi CHAt'TEK v.â€" (Cont'd). j grown cool from the strength of sheer mered Fenolla, much embarrassed by 'ii<''K"''t''>n' t,. . u- .1 i .1,,.. her new role and utterly unable to' Was this boar actually daring to Thc-e f a wh.spor nlnoad hat in.>y ^_iuii., nuu uiuriy unjiiic 10 ,.,.,, v,.,_ ,„ > „_„„,,â„¢;„„ r«.,,-_ Kerrell means to advise thr But it will n.>! J^> on like that. This thinit'n « fftm»ni> hamUf." "Then your father is cnntt to " "Father is poiing to do nothing: he's » Sreat one for keeping .viiet, but I'm ni't made that way. .Vs sure as I'm a Christian the law. whether it's made for the poor folk as well us for the rich. I'll not be con- tent with a mere compensation â€" should they grant it â€" I'll have no peace till the iron tools are (tone. - • Mr. Company WESTERN FARMERS CALL FOR LABOR express the renl Kvmivithu wKi.Vi nt <^'"ll her to account, presiiminff, may- I^*^'"''';." means to advise srsllt of the ^u.re'r^r'had'^ veiled un l-, on the stren,^},. <!f their relation- to refuse compensat.on. on the. .Mound I'm iToinc to h.-\ve a try at I'm mighty curious to see r.R.VIN KU'EMNt; K.MMDLY BUT MEN AUE SC'.VKCE. > Cutiinij Will Commence .\'-iout August 20 â€" Patriotism OenianHs Con- servatio.T of Crop lIT"-" .-.IV"""!., shipâ€" that relationship which even the "f culpable shouldr carelessness â€" but 1 1 The gravity of th.' situation in re- ''°YoX'"r''bit" easier ''now \dam ' red^hVerdrir'hirbrown'beard'.' "so shouldn't just counsel him to try that g^rd to' the harvestinB of Ontario's aren't you?" asked'john, bending 'yet *'''^'^ '" ^'"'^ *° *''''' "^'•" ^^''^''y pl" its,' trick lower. "What is it you are feeling?" ""^^""^'^'"'""tly proclaimed? At the (To be continued.) C- SHIPBUILDING IN CANADA. I •It's joy and gladness I'm feeling,! thought her head instinctively went John. Since the morning 1 jaist liel"^;.,. , . . n » v .i, here and • m thanfu' " I •""' have not told me vet whether Fenella' looked at' her father with yur hands hurt you?" .she resumed a startled question in her eye.s. Clear- 'i"")\y «'"' » ''"'f '"ft-'ly- '"'";« ?•?"',â- „ „. ^ „. „..,, „ •„ o„ ly Adam's mind was wandering Was """, ''"»'? f''"'^'' }". '^'-''.'P ^^"^ 'â- <^"' object _ 50 \Sooden Steamers Will Be in Ser- this the final delirium? ' , "^.'I'i'' T'L''*'",'" i'''?';: â- vice Within Year. "Have you not heard yet?" said! Maybe they do, but I ve no room in ] ^, , , ^ , , the crippled man with a momentary '"•-' '" '^^^ the pain; its all filled up, Fifty wooden steamers of a unl- â- â- • • ' • • - â- with the linger against those who are foip, ^^j^e of twenty-five hundred tons '*^"And who is at f'lulf" ' ''"' '"' ''""'''''' ^° ^\^ ocean-going ton- that'the"help of"25,0()0 mon"wouirbe "Mr Berrell, in the first line; and nage of C:umda within the next twelve ,,^^i,,^ ^^ ^^^j^^ ^^^ j^,.^^^^ ^,^^^ months. The fir.st of them will be j^g jj^gg ^j,jg y^^^. strength in his whisper. "Bessie's safe, and the boy's a fine one. Ah, but the .Mmighty hi good!" To Fenella's consternation, she abruptly became aware of the sting of tears in her eyelids. .She was too new to the moral atmosphere of sick- ro<ims to be able to bear with equani- mity the sight of genuine resigna- tion, or not to stagger at the sound of (idd's praises spoken by those maimed and invisible lips. The (|uite new set of sensations which, from her first sti'p into this room, had claimed her, threatened for a moment to break down her self-control. John, hearing a .suppressed sob, looked at her in alarm, and seeing her discomposure crops serves but to illustrate more clearly the seriousness of the call of the farmers of the western prairies for some .'iO,000 men from the eastern provinces to help garner the grain in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta this season. The Canadian Northern Railway whose (1,000 miles of line in the three prairie provinces serve the most pro- ductive areas, have already announced next to him, the whole Company as it monms. j ne ni.si oi mem w... uc ,ts i^^^g ^j^jg y^^^ ^-^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^^ .stands." .launched this fall and on the others gentatives of the Federal government The deepening of his frown made it ' good progress is reported. , the three provincial governments and evident that a fiercer anger h;;<l chas-. The ships are those which are be- the leading railways have conferred "Tou'me'In'abJurthe tools-' i in.' huilt for the British Government ,t Winnipeg, and announced that "I mean a"Kru°the godkss want of '^I'^'f %:''T' ALuTJrT''^rl 'f'^^^^-^^^^^^ from Ontario and conscience, The iron has been con- ^1""'^'°"* ^«/"^''„ ^'^""^ ''^"^'y , f^^ the other eastern provinces would be trary to the law for years, but because '" y"''ds on the Pacific coast, and the welcomed in the west this vear. the steel and the copper costs some , others at Atlantic or lake ports. From As everyone knows, agriciilture is at shillings more, men's lives are allow- five to nine months is the time re- the ba.se of ouf Canadian prosperity ed to take their Hiance. And what quired for completion. Simultaneous- ^nd if only for this domestic reason' whJ ca rth^mse v^s frTtoTs"shTuld l";; ^^'^^ '""''t- f fr' '^TT'''^'' '^' •'''^-^' «»>-â- " ^^ --ed. But - r. â€" â- --.^ , -. """,,'"' 'ntmsei\ts oirtciors snouia jj^g various ship building plants are this venr thi> u,v,„:.n.,=„ ,v,;n;«„= ^qualf'th^Us^^et-ti;^^. '''-' ""^ i rU.^e'^^e!:f Ji^;:;i'^ ^^^l^^W ^ ^^ocked^ with orders to their full ca- (^LgC; t^'lorldlT^l ^.TnoZ ^ I<^»>ic Conditions Which Prevail IF THE TONGUES OF YOURSHOES COULD SPEAK, THEY WOULD SAY USE btish It gives the same nourishment to the leather that the skin gets when on the animal's back. Black, Tan, Toney Red and Dark Brown. 10c. per tin. "TAKE CARE OF YOUR SHOES." ELECTRICAL HOME LIFE. "You're feeling the closeness, may be," he said quickly. "You can look in ajrain presently, but meanwhile you'll he the better for a mouthful of air, I'm thinking. Duncan will take you out." .At that Fenella drew her fingers! away from the bed, and, a little da/.ed, ' followed the broad-shouldered figure which moved before her towaids the! door. Her eyes, grown used to the! half-light, vaguely took in another i figureâ€" that of some old female re- lative of the house, acting as a scratch sickinirse, and stirring something in a bowl, as well as a few of the rustic I details of the room; the small bits of i carpet upon the uneven flagstones,! the plain deal chairs and dressers. . have six silk gowns instead of five. | P"''t>' 'O"" the coming year. /Ibqul the ousa DO.ME.STIC SCIENCE AT HO.ME Seventh Lesson â€" Fats and Oils. Fats and oils form the second class ' of the cows from which the milk Also, she took with her an undecided "^ ^leat and energy giving foods. One obtained. American continent and especially ' Canada, for their supply. The North ' American wheat crop this year be- ' longs to all the world with the excep- tion of the Teutons and their allies, and because of this it is imperative that the grain yield be conserved. I STOMAarMEDICINES ARE DANGEROUS the Homes of Sweden. impression of a good deal of bright crockery, and a more pronounced one of that same methi^dical tidiness which had struck her outside. ' Upon a broad slab of slate stone, which flanked the door in guise of a seat, she -at down with a deep-drawn breath. It took her some m<.ment3 to become quite calm again, an<i dur- ing thrjse moments she forgot that she was not alone; or rather the presence of Duncan along, ide, silent and im- movable, did not seem to her im|)oit- ant enough to rank as an intrusion. SOCTOBS NOW ADVISE MAOITEUA Ju.st how claniferous It Is to IndlKirlin- Inatcly dosp the Htomach with cIruBN und medicines Ih often not realized until too 'f their functions is to lubricate the Milk taken directly from the cow ^J,^*^ J,' 8omrHpe.iar'!;!rxturror''t"k? intestinal tract. and permitted to stand for a period of. tublets of sodii. pepHln. bismuth, etc.. af- They produce twice as much energy time has fat globules on the top. ' l^ll-,^"-"!;".-. inlurem untii. '.'.erha'i^ 1^% as carbohydrates, and for this reason These globules, which are lighter than ufterward. when it l« found that xaHtrlc ' trade by inferior dairy butter. The , bulletin for which Mr. George H. in Barr, Chief of the Dairy Division, is responsible, in concise terms describes the whole process of butter making, It is a generally acknowledged fact tells the utensils that should be used that we have never made proper use and how they shoufd be used, gives of electricity in this country. In The the results of experiments with the World's Work, for July, Mr. James | separator as regards temperature and Armstrong predicts the early dawn variations in speed, deals with the" of the British electric age. He cites care of cream in cooling and prepar- Sweden as an example of the part ipg for churning and in pasteurizing, which electricity is playing in the des- gives expert counsel as to salting and tiny of the world. working and points to the advisability The city of Stockholm is as cold a of attractive packing in parchment city in winter as one could wish to paper. He also points out the re- find; but although Sweden produces quirements of the law in branding or not an ounce of coal its citizens are marking and supplies practical hints as warm and snug as if they lived in on care of the utensils. Finally, he the tropics. Electricity supplies the tells in terse terms how to get the solution of the problem. The Stock- ; best results in farm dairy work. Both holm householder does not burn coal the bulletin and a blue print of the in the grate of his room, and strive to plan for a dairy that is given can be profit from a modicum of heat which had free by application to the Dairy is radiated into the room, while most Commissioner or to the Publications the people in coM climates consume water, rise to the top and form what f^^^^J^^^y^ the^«i.H'Si\vaiiV'StlK'retH"a"e ' °^ '* escapes up the chimney. Neither Branch, Department of Agriculture, does he dive into the depths of the Ottawa. , . . .. , • . u , throiiKh the Klotnuch walls. R irom two and one-half to three times , is called cream. Cream is wholesome then unavuilln^: it is in the early sitaReg the amount of fat that persons in and palatable for the fat it contains ' ,TaX'iem.e.'*'etc.I''IUru7r'rx."^^^^^^^^ warm clinftites would consume. Butter is made from cream by the ty of the Ktomach urul fermentation of Fats are classified or separated into ' process of beating or churning. This f'"J"' 'â- "':',•â- ," "* "'•',' i'i<''"utli.n should be »„., ,i: f. II r I 1 1 .-1 . •â- ..L .-^^1 /• . II .!„- ( . 'aKfh I>ru)r« ami inedlcinesi are unHUlt- two <li.-tinct classesâ€" fixed and volatile action causes the little fat gloliules lo ; ,|,|e und often dunKerousâ€" they have oils. All fats used in the preparn- break and then to coagulate into a "<«'« or no in(iu.i„e ui.im the harmful ,; ., ... 1 I . /...J II I i! ' I- 1 j aild. and that Ih why doiturs are dla- tlon and cooking of food are called hx- I solid mass. curdlnK them and aiUlslnK sufferer* ,, . , , , , ed oils. By this term is meant that ' Animal Fats. from litdlRestlon and sionm. h tmulile to Having mopped her eyes and re.^tor- ij,.. ,,^ „ "' , . i „i „ . • . , â- ^"""'" , ^ , ... ' K<'t rid of the dnnKeroun add und keep ed her pocket-handkerchief she was , ^ "" evaporation takes place Animal fats heated to the bo-.ling the food .-..ntentH bland and sweet by "* - '*- .... .; . . ... tukliiK a little |iure blxuiated maKne«la In.sten.l Itlsuruted .Maicne.sia Is an ab- solutely jiuie antl-neld which can be Fomewhat Uken aback, on raising her ''"''"'^ the process of heating and; point burn or carbonize, thereby show- head, to find that he was looking at cooking with the fat. Fixed oils, j jng numerous particles (black) in the her with an expres.^ion that was tiot in w'hile they clo not evaporate when fat. This is unfit to use as a cooking the sympathetic; in fact. barely heated to a high temperature, become [ a ent for food friendly. At the same moment, she ; dissociated or decomposed; that is, their chemical construction breaks down or separates after the boiling point is reached. caught sight of the sling in which his left arm resteil and of the rags tied round .several fingers of his right hand, and abruptly rememliered that he too was a sulTeier, though a minor one. "I haven't inquired about y<vur hands yet. the emotion she had felt when speak ing to Adam, and with a point of con- descension discernitile in her tone; for she was. by this time, composed enough to remember the part she had meant to play. "Do thev hurt you much?" Duncan uttered the fragment of a not very pleasant laugh readily uhluined from any druK Htore. It Ih absolutely harinleHx. In iiraotUiilly tuHteleHK and a leaHiioonful taken in a Utile warm or cold water iifler mealH. will UHUally be found uulte KUfflilent to Olive Oil. Olive oil is the most palatable und '',"*'">"'>â- neutralize e.xieKKivc acidity of . , ,, ^, ., ^ •^,. . fp. the Htiimach and prevent all iiosslblllty siest of all the oils to digest. the uf the food fermentliiK. Volatile Oils. Volatile oils, upon reaching the boil- she bc^an, with none of; ing point, are transformed into a gas 'called virgin f)r vapor. For instance, if the es- sential oil of turpentine is heated in a proper vessel by chemists to IlOO de- grees Fahr.. it ceases to be a liiiuid and becomes a gas, which, upon cool- ing, leturns to the liquid form without lo.ss of volume or weight . This experiment is dangerous and ea: genuine olive oil is almost without flavor. The oil is mad-' in four grades. The first pressing from the olives is oil. The second grade ' Things That Were Thought Out-of- is good and the third fair; the fourth is sometimes known as refuse oil. No- thing cnn ecjual olive oil as a cooking mcilium. Cottonseed Oil. Cottonseed oil to-day is a great im- NO LONGER OBSOLETE. Date .Are Iking Revived. In spite of the fact that this is a machine and petrol war, it is remark- able how old things that seemed obso- lete keep bobbing up. Who, for in cellar to stoke up the furnace. Hi3| last duty on retiring for the night is < ' to move a small handle or switch â€" i button if you like â€" which sends a cur- rent of electricity circulating through \ the wire coil enclosing a cold water ] tank. As the water becomes heated, ! up it is sent coursing through the i pipes laid throughout the house, and ; the constant circulation preserves an ' equable temperature from hall to roof. Upon rising in the morning the ' householiler .shuts off the current â€" ! the water has been heated sufficiently ' to last the house during the daytime j when the energy is required for a I thousand and one other purposes for the benefit of the community. How is such a system possible? The Swedish engineers have been busy. ! The torrential rivers and mountain streams have been harnessed to turn huge turbines linked up with ponder- ' ous generators which, in their rapid revolution, turn out current as readily â-º7 >>* :". ' "; -• ..f:^ •What necessity is there to inquire should be performed only by labora- about my hamls? Is it not enough that you shoulii have been so gracious to stand for tvto minutes beside your father's cousin's bed? â€" for he is that, you know." Fenella met his openly defiant fclance with one of hurt astonishment. This adilress was not at all what she hiul expected. She had indeed guessed that Duncan was not a particularly amialde character, a fact she deilijccd principally from the almo.st churlish salutations he was wont to bestow Upon Julia and herself when they met in the road; for though there had never been a time when ; know him by sight, the changed with him had hitherto been pretty well confined to "good murn- ing" and "good evenings." In her ignoiance of the real man, she had un- avoidably expected him to be both tory experts and chemists. It is given here only as an example for a proper explanation. | Oil of cloves, cinnamon, bitter almonds, lemon, patchouli and bergn- 1 mot are a few of the best known of | the Volatile oils. Composition of Fat. are called hydrocarbons, com- iprovement upon the oil of a few years stance, would have thought that the| T^ !'„V"^^Z"llZril7 "m' ^'i"'" ago. The pl^ocesses are now perfect- ; seeming o.itworn weap.m. the^grena^l ^Zi'':^^:^^ t'^ZtS ed whereby the oil is produced ab- ! after which the solutciv colorless and tasteless. It is were named, would be one of the suc- Fats an ideal medium for frying or short- ening, and it is much preferred to the various kinds of animal fat. ClaHsilicalion of .\nimal Fain. liecf fat is known as suet. Sheep fat is called tallow. Pig or hog fat is commonly known a.- lard. Uncooked cesses of the war? Or that the old bayonet would be much use against machine-gun fire? One must go still further back for armor; yet there has been a distinct movement in favor of a return to it. .\nd it is a fact that the steel caps our men have been provided with have he did not comniercia Words ex- , fats are called suets. Fat that comes posed of carbon united with oxygen from the cooking of meat, such as saved tens of thousands of lives roasting or boiling, is culled drippings. Then the sword was supposed to be Vegetable Fats. These embody oils produced from vegetables, such as corn oil or peanut oil. ('oin or peanut wila are particu- larly desirable for cooking purposes because they give a delightful flavor Other tallow and hyiliogeii. They contain in their composition various fatty acids and glycerine. From decomposol fats the glycerine is obtained. Milk Fats. The minute globules of fat that afe suspended in milk give it its clean V hile color. The jiroportion of fat in I and texture to the cooked food, milk varies from two and eight-tenths j vegetable oils are bayberry. pleased and fluttered liy her errand to eight per cent. This variation i.s i f rom the bayberry, also penny tallow of t<i-day. The astonishment at per- due to the age, condition and feeding I and oil from dilTeienl grains ceiving that this was apparently not the <nHe causerl her to look at him for the first lime attentively. Look-' ing thus, she tliscovercd, firstly, that and fill with crushed and sweetened peaches or other fruit. Cucumber Salad. â€" Peel and cut in thin slices one medium-sized cucum- ber. Sprinkle with salt and then put in a cool place for one hour. Uin.se The Ideal Meal. | into hot popover pans. Bake in a Variety in the making of a nienii is "loderatc oven for thirty-five minutes, he was very big, (luite as tall as llertie ns necessary as the food itself. One or her father, only with ever so many would 3n(ni tire of beef and be unable more inches to his shoublers. She to partake of a sufficient amount for also supposed that he ought to be con- riutriment if it were the only protein sidered good-looking or with a pleas- furnished for thirty days, anter expression on bis face, had s<imo n . c i _i i i u e .. chances of being so, for his black eves, ^"^'''f' ''""l'. veal, pork, poultry, fish, even filled as they now were with <â- ""»'"<' "'"' the legumes give one a i and cover with chopped ice to make it gloom, showed finely under his level wide scope when planning the daily crisp. Lay on shredded lettuce and brows, and his white teeth flashed out balanced menu. P<datoes, rice, hominy | serve with the following: One tea- In brilliant contrast to the short, dark and barley furnish carbohydrates or spoonful of sugar, one-half teaspoon- board, who.se brown smouldered at tho starches. ful of salt, one-half teaspoonful of Fat from the meal, cream in the i mustard, one-half teaspoonful of milk and butter eaten upon bread also ' paprika, two tablespoonfuls of vine- perform their mission in the body and ' gar. lilend to a smooth paste and are necessary for its upkeep in sup- ^ stir in six tablespoonfuls of sour plying energy and hilirication. I cream. Serve. Sugar and sugars such as arc found i Corn Pudding. obsolete. Yet we not only read of a naval fight where there was boarding, but it was followed by a cutlass fight, for all the world as in Nelson's Fleet in the brave days of old. After all, it does not do to scrap things too soon. Tht'y may come in very serviceable hy-and-by, and even save the situation. And, in spite ofi machines and general frightfulness, ! the man himself is the most import- j is to be preferred to dairy butter ant instrument, both of war and peace. fringes into a rudder tint. "Did you not knock your head against the door beam?" he asked, with that same flavor of. bitterness v/hich she had noted in his first whis- per. "What do you mean?" â- J mean that I never expected to see in the fresh and dried fruits are class- Miss Fenella stoop so low as to bend ed as carbohydrates. Succulent vege- her head beneath our humble door. It's tablet and salads supply the nece;:8ary "'^' '-" """ ' 'â- " 'â- " mineral salts. when we're supposed to bo cm ou denth-beds that we become worth tak- ing notice of, is it not?'' "It's then that my duty seems to point the way," answered Fenella, we" PAY CASH FOR Old False Teeth Gold and Ila-.inuTn mailed to Canadian Iteflnlng Co., Imperial Bank Hldg., YoDte ai J (Jneen Mts., Toronto. -One cupful of corn scraped from cob, one cupful of milk, eight tablespoonfuls of flour. Place in a saucepan and blend the corn milk and flour. Bring to a boil and coo;< for one minute. Cool and add one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of Therefore a portion of meat or a Bubslitute for it, potatoes or their equiv.ilent and one green vegetable, ! fin^i^'cuV "parsiev,'"one-quarter tea- salad, brea.l and butter and a dessert spoonful of paprika, one-half tea- supply an Ideal meal. spoonful of grate.l onion, yolk of one egg. Mix thoroughly and fold in the stiffly beaten vvliiti' of one egg and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Pour into a th(n<uighly greased baking dish and set in a pan of warm water. Hake from Three (iood Kecipe.s. IVarh Popovers.â€" One egg,^ fill cup with milk, one cupful of flour, one- fourth teaspofinful of salt. Place in a deep howl and beat for five minutes for ♦•vir.ty-five minutes. Serve I with a Dover egg beater. Then pour ; the dish with cream sauce. I Increasing the fertility of the soil is the most important problem before the majority of farmers to-day. power-house, maybe for scores of miles, to the city to be <listributed among the rWidents, who are called upon merely to move a small switch in their homes in order to receive the full benefits which the "juice" can extend. I Meals can be quickly and conven- I iently cooked, the house brilliantly lighted, and as much heat as desired obtained â€" all by pressing a button. 1 And the cost, owing to the extensive scale upon which current is generated. is but a fraction of the expense which would be entailed were coal or any of the other familiar mediums, gaseous and solid, employed for such purposes. « I Proper Metho<ls of Buttermaking. I Few people trouble themselves about the reason that creamery butter but by way of introduction to Bulletin No. ; 63 of the Dairy and CoUl Storage [ Branch, Ottawa, Dairy Commissioner 1 Ruddick furnishes an explanation. In- j cidentally he also points out that a j good deal of damage is done to the ' y\ RE you realiy *^ saving money by neglecting to re-fkingle that bam roof? Ycu know that each additional patch leaccna the Value of j-our building. You know er.ch wideainc Irak mwuK rotting, looAeninff ahinglc* and eaily decay. Ycu Imow that only by Pedlaruina your roof ccn yoa (at _ anduring (rrrdom from repair and rot. Pudlar'a **G*orFo" Shmglea bring yon the durability and wearing lujitiet or aletl at a price, when l.id. about that of a good wooden ahincle roof. A Pedlarijed roof will last for lenaratioiK, pro- tecting you at all lini« from tha danger of liahtMing and fire TKo "Ri-htRool' Book- let " " .. teliinij vou all about ateel ahmgles and how to lay them, la free. Write to-day. IDE PEDUB PEOPLE LhuiJed (EstaDUnbed isei) Executive Ofiice* uuJ Factor ieal OSHAWA. ONT, Branch^* t Montreal Ottawn Toronto Loudou Winnipeg fc:-.. : - r . -y ?:E::3 2 and 5 lb. Cartonsâ€" 10, 20, 50 and 100 lb. Lags. was a favorite name among the long-forgolten food products of half a century ago, just as it is among the live on.s of to-day. Only exceptional quality can explain such permanent popularity. "Let Redpath Sweeten it. '* 2 Made in one grade only â€" the highest !