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Flesherton Advance, 5 Sep 1918, p. 6

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v'JMewAi.-^. . % Ke <ref known to disappoint the Most Critical Tastes 'â€" ' ^â- â€¢â€¢w^iw^-nr- A • T--^-"* A Tea-pot Test is better than a page of Advertisement. b44i Blackâ€" Green or Mixed . . • Scaled Packets Only. Art hu r Stanwood P ier ttepyrlsbl Iluugbluo llioriln C'onipaor by ipeclKl arransemrnt nith Tbo«.>AJIa Tar*at« CHAl'TKR XVlI.-(Cont' .) .real criniinal was to be run down, it Th.y wore interrupted with start! '''""'•J '" »" likelihood be (lone only HiK - uddiTiness. He hiid just turned • into a street of small phops when hn heard some di.^itance iiwnya teriificd 'cry for help followed liy a shot. As he rail in the direction of the sounds, he saw two men emerge I'loni a lijjht- ' cd doorway half a block ah^^ad, dash 1 across the street, and dart r^iund a coiiuT. .Icrry jjave ihase; passing: cm the full run the lighted d thrrxifrh information furnished by Have. And nothinj; rould be more improbable than that Dave should elect to remain in the neiKhborhood, however certain of .Jerry's loyally. Jerry resolved that the moment he was off duty that niijht he would hast- en to the Scanlans' rooms and if, as he hoped, he should lind Dave chere, he would compel him to tell the full WAK-TIMt: CAKli Ol The careful housewife looks well »fter hyr linens at all times, but in periods like the pieseiit when they ran scarcely be replaced for love or money it certainly behooves us all to redouble our vifcilance in this direc- tion. First let us sec how certain condi- tions shorten the usefulness of such things as sheets, pillowslips, table .'lolhs, napkins and towels. Much R-ear comes from launderinK when by Triction the dirt is rubbed out. Vifjor )us rubbintf. such as is necessary when linen is badly soiled, wears it out aiuch faster than when only partially soiled. Hence it is economy to wash it before the flr.st named condition is reached. A gentle rubbing preserves the fabric longer than a vigorous one. Strong washing fluids cause disinte- gration of the threads and should be ivoided even though they facilitate :leansing. The careful housewife understands, too, how the wind can injure articles ^•hile hanging on the line to dry. An ^our in a stiff wind will shorten the period of u.sefulness more than a month's wear. The rays sf the sun Bnd a gentle breeze are harmless, but avoid allowing the clothes to flaji in the wind. This not only whip:; out hem.s, but actually breaks threads and docs much damage to any fabric. Hemstitching should be mended a? soon a.^i the first thread gives yay. U is then easily repaired so the break will scarcely be noticed. Neglected it means a bad place. Each week the pieces should be gone over carefully and the tiniest break mended. Darn linen pieces back and forth with ravelings or threads drawn from the best parts of old linen. This becomes Invisible after laundering. Don't leave it un- til a patch is retiuired. A patch is unsightly while a darn is not. A well darned table cloth, towel or napkin will wea-- twice as long as a neglected oiii- and look none the worse for thp s! tcheg. Fold linen pieces differently from time to time to •void wear in the same'*VlaceR . Turn pillow slip.'* before slits come In them . Rip the bottom ends and resew with the corner.? as fir.st made half way along the sides. This brings the wear in a fresh place. Bingle width sheets must have a scam in the middle if turned, but neatly' folded in a flat seam thi.s will not look badly, or the centre may be over- banded. The sides will have to be narrowly hemmed hut that is a trifl- ing matter in war time. I .So far nothing has been said of un-| derwear, but care will result in a sav- ing here also. As suggested, wash- ing before a garment becomes badly •oiled saves wear, even though it inoans more pieces. Watch for breaks and mend them before they be- come large. Dry all colored clothes In the .shade to prevent fading. | norsKnoi.D linkn. .Sometin-.cs an ugly tear c»n be meiiiled .-o it does not show. To do this follow a thread in cutting out the p:.rt to be rcmovi-rl, mitre the corners and use tiny st.tches and thread of the color of the goods. A plain mate- : rial can be so mended as to almost de- fy detection. If new goods must be used to repair that which has been worn, the new may be placed in the strong sunshine for a few hours, or nioic if neces.sary, to bring it to the same shade as the garment This method will do away with the ditTer- ence in appearance and renders the patch less conspicuous. As patriotic "iti/.ens we will each endeavor to save every bit of cotton and wool goods by using carefully what We have on hand, thus helping to conserve the amounts needed for war purposes. A search of attics and store rooms would probably bring to light a good many articles still usable. Fortunate indeed is the housewife who has a stock of house- hold linens to last until the close of the war. 1 know of no more discour- aging task than an attempt to buy new at the present time. What Not To Can. Our canning problem needs to be reduced to a very sound common-sense basis this year and only those pro- ducts canned which cannot be better kept in some other way. During the furiouij canning cam- paigns of the past few days, I have found parsnips, carrots, onions, cab- bage, sweet potatoes and even Irish potatoes canned â€" all of which is sheer nonsense as each of these could have been kept as effectively in a much simpler way. Stone jars of small size with stone covers or with paper or cloth covers pasted on, can be used for preserves in which the sugar acts as a pre- servative or for any type of pickle in which vinegar and spices act as pre- serving agents. These containers are out of the question for fruit or vegetables which are not preserved or pickled. It is wasteful to put into large con- tainers any sort of preserve or reli.sh that is used in small quantities only, since there is sure to be waste when the product .stands long unsealed and is used frequently. Glazed earthenware jars are good for putting down egge in water glass. They should be furnished with tight covers to prevent the solution from becoming dense through evaporation. Every housewife should study the ways and means for the storage of root crops, such as trenhces for cab- bage and turnips, which are kept from freezing by alternate layers of straw and earth. Sweet potatoes can he stored In baskets in a warm attic. Navy beans and lima beans and other legumes it would be wiser to store dry than to attempt to can. 111! run the lighted doorway ,., „., , ., *;„ from which the fuKitives had .-ome. h.' ; ''^"l^ "[ ^^^ """'" ' ' gl.-wiii'd inside, but saw nothing except' ^^ *"'"«6 o clock his tour of duly; an apparently empty grocer's shop. fn'^eJ; and he reported at the station He turned the corner and was exult- ^Mi-^*- The sergeant at the deak , ant at (inding his men again in sight. 8f<^eted him with interest. j I This was to be the fir.st important, the' '"Do you know a fellow namedj first exciting arrest that he had made Scanlan- David Scanlan?" the ser- ! sine.' joining the force. lie felt ex- geant asked. I hilarated and confident. He was fast "Yes," Jerry answered with a aink- im his feet, a.s Sheehan had said, and ing of the heart. "Why?" he (iid not doubt his ability to run the 1 "Sheehan brought him In a few mi-' iriminaU down. ' nutes af^r the murder to-night.' Before gaining the next cross-street Found him running just three blocks one of them was lagging. The other away from Walsh's store. All out of turncyi the corner; Jerry rapidly over- breath and not able to account for! hauleji the second of the fugitives, himself. He said he knew you and who ran more and more weakly. And you'd vouch for him. Just the same,' at last Jerry's hand fell heavily upon i they're still at it, giving him the third him. 'degree." ' "I (fidn't do the shooting, honest to! "I've known Scanlan for years; I (I'od I didn't do the shooting!" The was brought up with him; we worked man gasped the words, almost in col-' together in the Purroy Mills. He's lapse . ; been down on his luck for the last year ' Jerry swung him round and looked â€" but the idea of his murdering any with dismay into his face. ; oneâ€" it's absurd. What do they "Dave!" (think they've got against him any-, For an instant he held him; then he way ?" i gave him a .<!hove and ran round the i "Sheehan savs he's been traveling corner in pursuit of the other fugitive. ' with a bad gang, and his behavior was But the man had disappeared; Jerry mighty suspicious. And being in raced for two blocks, looked down the neighborhood of the murder at cross-streets, and searched alieyways, just that moment â€" running away from to no purpo.se. He hastened back it â€" they seem to think he knows to the store that had been the scene something." | of the crime. In the doorway stood, "I guess I'll go up and have a look three women, frightened, awe-struck, at him," said Jerry; and slowly he as- afraid to enter. From within came cended the stairs to the top floor of| the sound of weeping; Jerry went in the building. His thought was that' and saw a white-haired, kindly-look- he might perhaps be allowed to take' ing man behind the counter bending over the questioning of Dave, and' over ^ome one invisible ,some one who then, if left to deal with him alone,' was sobbing in the low, monotonous might draw from him all the facts key of utter grief. Drawing a little which the merciless persistence of nearer, Jerry saw the woman; she Sheehan and the lieutenant would pro- wore a dressing-gown; her hair was bat)ly wrest from him otherwise. And unbound; she knelt beside the body Jerry had some idea that if Dave con- of a man who had been shot through fessed to him he would be able to the head. The woman loofed up, and help him. at the sight of Jerry she got to her; As he drew near the top of the feet. She was a comely woman of stairs, he heard Dave's voice raised hi middle age; the tears rained down her desperation: "Can't you go away and cheeks; she cried to him imploringly, let me sleep? I've told you all I've got "My husband hadn't an enemy in the to tell, and I'm played out; for God's world! Who could have done it!" And sake, let me sleep." then she cast herself down again he-] "I wouldn't mind a bed myself," side the body and gave way to a said Sheehan. "But we're not going fresh burst of sobs. | to let up on you till you've made a On being releaso<i by Jerry, Dave clean breast of it." again started to run; he had taken the "Not till you've told us all you know first turn that he came to and had about how that man Walsh was kill- run promptly into the arms of a ed," affirmed the lieutenant, policeman. The policeman was| "I've told you I don't know a thing Shee<ian; he looked Dave over deliber- ] about it," cried Dave. j ntely. j By that time Jerry had reached the] "I've seen you before," he sai<l. , top of the stairs; the voices had come "Why are you running through the | to him through an open transom. He, Food Control Comer The (Ji'.iiHda Food Board, makes the following statement: I '"Recent announcements that the ; food situation over.'iea has been reli«K j ed by the spec!;\l efforts of Canada 'and the United States are being in- I terpreted in some quarters as indlcat- ; ing that special food production and ; conservation efforts no longer are I necessary. "All optimistic report.s relative to the easing of our .Allies' food posi- j tion are based on the assumption thatj the utmost effort to maintain and to i increase production, and also to con- 1 serve food, will lie continued on this j continent as well as oversea. "Fortunately, there ha-i been an un- i usually large grain crop in the United' States, leaving a .surplus over present : consumption which, with the available' surplus from Canada, and with con- j tinued conservation in both countries,' should meet our Allies' import re-| quirements from North .\merica this year. The large supply of food f or | live stock, which also seems assured in the United States, will be reflected in increased production of pork and,; to a lesser extent, of beef also. ! "Hopeful though recent develop-; ments in the food situation have been, it will not be safe until enor-! mous wheat reserves have been ac- ' cumulated on both sides of the At- lantic, and such reserves are not yet in sight. A comparative crop fail- ure on this continent next year would,' in the absence of hold-over re.-erves, ' make our AUie.^' position almost as desperate as it was last winter. ! "Canadians cannot afford to relax ' in food production or food conserva-' tion because all that can be grown or saved will be needed. Nothing could be more dangerous than to as- sume that our po.sition is yet safe. The Food Board wishes to emphasize j especially the necessity for the utmost effort to save this year's harvest from waste or loss. The responsibility! resting upon city and town men to' see that the farmers have sufficient help to bring in the crops is still pressing, and must not be ignored." As an additional sugar conservation measure, the Food Board has ordered j that, until further notice, manufac- turers of canned fruits for sale must not use more than an average of twenty-five pounds of sugar to one hundred pounds of prepared fruit. The Order is now effective. It does not apply to jams, jellies, or mar- malade. pvSA^ '«.< \ R.O.LONOeCO.UMiTU)! ' TORONTO CANADA A Song of the Air. This is the song of the Plane â€" The creaking shrieking plane, - The throbbing, sobbing plane, And the moaning, groaning wires â€" The ciigiine â€" 'missing again! One cylinder never Yires! Hey, ho! for the Plane! This is the song of the Man â€" The driving, striving man. The chosen, frozen manâ€" The pilot, the man at the wheel, Whose limit is all that he can. And beyond, if the need is read! Hey, ho! for the' Man! This is the song of the Gun â€" The muttering, stuttering gun, The maddening gladdening gun â€" That chuckles with evil glee At the last, long dri'^-e or the Hun,- With its end in eternity! Hey, ho! for the Gun! This is the song of the Air â€" The lifting, drifting air. The eddying, steadying air, The wine of its liimtless space â€" May it nerve us at last to dare Even death with undaunted face! Hey, ho! for the Air! â€""Observer," Royal Flying Corps, Insects as Aeronauts. According to Lieut. Depret Cliio. of the French Army, who Is a naturalist as -well as a flying man. many insects follow captive balloons in their as- cent. He has seen flies ko as high as 2,970 feet, after which they die. Grasshoppers cling to the basket of the balloon until the air becomes too rarefied for them, when they let go and fall. He says the swallows have a glorious time catching these in- sects. streets at such a clip?" "I was in a hurry to get homo," Dave answered. "What have you been doing?" ".lust out seeing some friends." "Where do you live?" "On Burke Street." "If you're in a hurry to get home, why were you running away from Burke Street?" "Away from it?" "Yes. It's back in that direction." stepped to the door and knocked upon I it; the lieutenant opened it, and Dave: and Jerry faced each other. There ! was a moment of silence during! which Jerry looked steadily into! Dave's eyes and Dave stood haggard and motionless. "Lieutenant," Jerry said, "I'd like to have a word with you about this man ." The lieutenant came out into the hall and closed the door behind him. CONCERNING PASCAL. Famous French Mathematician In- vented Many Modern Conveniences. When HIaise Pascal, the" fanKHis Trench mathemaHclun, was sixteen jrearu old, he wrote a treiitlso on conic •ectlons. His sister, Jacqueline, at twelve years of age, was the author of a hook of poems. In the French Ideal. Mmo. Duclaux tells of the fur- Iher triumphs of those wonderful children of the seventeenth century. Etieiiiie Pascal, their father, being eompromiKed In a rising against the Chancellor Keguier, fled from ParlH In 1688, leaving his children In the idiarge of a faithful hoiisekeoper. Hut tlio children wore already personages. Jacqueline, about twelve years of ago, meeting Cardinal do KIcheMeu oiio day. asked her falhor'H pardon so prettily In verwo that Ulclielleu not only recalled liln; to Paris but soon afterwards gave him the Important post of adjutant to the Intendant of Normandy and senl hliu to Ruuen In 1039. Impressed Into the busliii^Ks of his father's oflice at Rouen, young Pa.scal, at sixteen years of age, conceived the Idea of a mechanical ready reckoner. Indei.endont of tlui will, and energetl- lally Kiivo himself to this Invention, which icciii)|pd him f<ir more than two yc.-K. Ho dovlsnd llfty different ni'.'ii i â-  .'iTirt perHonnlly miiiiaged the viirk <i:' llie nrtlsiinH who wore mukliig tb'> iniuliines. Soi.ie oiio lias happily ! . ' 'iim "tlio knight errant of L(..',.i : - -^aiKlcrlng hither and thither In search of questlona worthy of Ills stool." The calculating machine of Pascal is the ancestor Of all our modern mul- tipllcators, the little boxes that hand out I'hango on the counters of shops, the mechanical computators of taxi- cabs and the mathematical machines used in .scieniflc laboratories. Later, PiiRcal d("slgned or perfected the bar- ometur, the hydraulic press, the wheel- barr<iw, the omnibus and the dray. "I guess I must have got turjied He and Jerry talked in low tones, round somehow." | "I know Scanlan," Jerry said. "He's ' "What's happened to excite you so? an old friend of mine. He might tell; Why should you be in S'.ch a hurry to me things he wouldn't tell ;iny one; get home that you run until you're else. What would you say to my | near rejuiy to drop?" j questioning him?" | "Well, I â€" I run a good deal for the; "You can come in with us aiul ask! exercise." I him any questions you like" said the i Sheehan took a grip of Dave's left lieutenant. ! arm and passed a hand over him,' "I tliink I'd get more out of him if<| searching for a weapon. he and I were alone." "I've seen you at Tony Lapatka's ; The lieutenant considered a mo- 1 place more than once," ho remarked, ment. I "Your conduct is suspicious. I'll | "You wait here; I'll see how he| take you along to the station house meets the idea," he said; and he re-! and give you a chance to tell a turned into the room. straighter story there than you've been giving me." CllAITER XVIII. what, Then Jerry "heard him say :^- I "Officer Donohue tells me lie knows j you from the ground up, and says if he is allowed to (luestioff^ou he's sure _^ , , , . . , , you'll make a clean breast of it. Shall Overwhelmed in spirit, Jerry left ^e have him come in?" I the store soon after midnight. The | Jerry listened eagerly for the ans-l widow had been led upstairs to her ^cr. When it came, it startled him. apartment over the shop; two detec- , "Oh, I might as well tell vou the lives had made a careful study of the truth. I was with the follow that premises, the medical examiner had ^\\^\ the shooting. Hut 1 didn't know come and gone, and finally the body he was going to do it, I didn't dream had been borne away. Jerry, who ^f itâ€" and that's Goil's truth, every had been standing guard all the while,; Canada's Cold Storage Stocks Canada's cold storage stocks of pro- visions, though large when measured in pounds, comprise but a very small fraction of the amounts required overseas. Canadian Companies re- porting to the Cost of Living Brancli of the Department of Labor, held on ' Juno 1st, the following stocks in stor- age:â€" Butter, 1,089,260 pounds; 'cheese, •2,100,098 pounds; beef, fresh and pickled, 17,20.1,9.18 pounds; pork, fresh and pickled, 29,4.')8,903 pounds; bacon, hams ami smoked meats, Ki,- ! 113,967 pounds. How shall these stocks compare with the British ro- quirements may be under.stood by not- ing how long they would last as the ' f^ouroo of total supply hi Great Brit- ' ain. The amounts niontioneil would ' suppl.v Britain's recpiirements as fol- low-': iiutter, 21 hours; cheese, 2V4 .days, beef, 2 1-5 days; pork, W/» days; bacon, ham and smoked meat.i, f) 3-4 dayn. was free to resume his interrupted task. The sight of the unoffending slain and of the grief-stricken wife caused him to lament bitterly his failure to capture the murderer. That Dave was the guilty man was to Jerry ab- solutely unthinkable, but that Dave had been a witness and in some degree a partner to the crime there was little room to doubt. .And Jerry, as he WH]i>. '1 and pondered, was perplexed as to what he ought to do. He did not in the least regret having let Dave go; it was the other fellow, the really guilty one, that it had been hii; busi- ness to catch. And anyway he couldn't word The lieutenant opened the door triumi.hantly. "Come on in, Dono- hue," he said. And then as Jerry en- tered, he turned to Dave and spoki' persuasively, "Now just get it olT your chest. What's the uhole story?" (To be continued.) Young Men on the Farm Who Cannot Go to War CANADA Must Have Greater Agricultural Production. CANADA Needs Men Trained in the Best Agricultural Practices. YOU will be of gi-eater value to your country and to yourself If you acquire all available informatio.n re- grarding your business as a farmer. You can oblain this information during the Fail and Winter months at the Ontario :^jricultural College Guelph THE COLLEGE TERM.â€" The College opens September 20th and closes April 12th. ThIsJs convenient for most farm boys, as the hardest work of the summer Is completed before the com- mencement of the term and students can return ts their h.->mes for the spring leedlnor COURSES.â€" The Two- Year Course Is partlcul.irly designed for young men Intending to be good practical farmers. It in- cludea studies which are of practical value In all the work of th" farm. The Four-Year Course tor the degree of B.S.A. Is a two- year continuation of the two-year course. EXPENSES. â€" In order to encourage young mei to attend the college, the fees are fixed at the lowest poaslble figure. Do vd J4.00 per week; Tuition Fee, 120.00 per yeaj. Public School Kducatlon Is sutJlclent for admission. COLLEGE OPENS SKPTEMBER 20TH ^ Write tor a Calendar giving full particulars Q. C. CREELMAN, B.S.A.. LL.D.. Preslcif.it Vi ^ Stuffed Calf's Heart If the price of roast beef unit veal is hijih try stuffeil calf's heart with vegetables. Wash the heart, remove the veins, arteries and any clotted blooJ, and stuff with dressinR, con- he simply couldn't hnve arrested Dave sistinK of '/i cup of flaked hominy, \i his oldest and best friend. That is cup bread crumbs, 2 level teaspoons ' !l'!,"!.:!'.l\..!^l',?.^''l.*"..!'i'""'''Vi.^'^^.,'!!.'!'of ^ f»t. l-S tcaspoonful of salt. cayenne pepper and a few drops of onion juice mixed with U cup of hot water or stock. Skewer or sew.dicdKe coii.Hciencc was not easy, lie knew that he had now done what ho had lioped and believed he never should do -violated the oath that he had tak>- en when he was sworn into the ser- with Hour and fry slightly in fat, ad- ' vice. lie .said to himself defiantely dint? to the fat one atalk of celery, 4 that it wa.s the only decent thins to slices of carrot, 2 slices of turiup, 1 . have done. Yet becau.se he had done i.jt ^f h^y leaf, 2 dove.s ',2 teaspoon' the only decent lhm.ir he (luestioned if j,f pepper porn. Turn occasionally \ he was, after all, the ri^rht kind of' until well browned. Put a bit of fat 1 "Who reaps. "- spojl;.^ s(iw.s â€"who Ptrsirtn Proverb. listens man for the police force. The ripht ... â-  â-  , ,. r 1 . . 1 kind of policeman would have arrested "" **i*" *"''• »'•'' ' '^ "'I''* "'^ ''"' ^K»''« Dave, even if he had been his brother. , or wnler and cook in the oveu alowly Now Jerry recognized the ciimplifa- ' for two hours. Serve with carrots lions resulting from his act. If the, and turnips. :ni[iiir: Bungalow Model, $450.00 THE outward bj.iuty that distinguishes i> Williams New Scale Plaro Is an index of its Intrinsic worth. ideals are buiit into every one of the.-.ts famous instruments â€" ideals of craftsmansMp that make fo." the most enduring quality. THE WILLIAMS PIANO CO., UMITED, OSIIAWA, ONT, Canada's Oldest and Largest Piano M.ikers m. jiiiiii iiniii7~ 7 iMn liiiimnninnrjiiiarjrrL. t N

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