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UIGH LIGHTS OF HISTORY— - Dorchester Mass. i} That is one | ason why it is e & \'Cbol\' y better. 2y FEATURES. i~28 E) HE ESTABLISHMENT OF “THE {CONNECTICUT SETTLEMENTS | ANGERED THE PEQUOTS, A Pow - | ERFULTRIBE OF INDIANS LIVING IN THAT REGION, AND THEY BE* a2 = LARMED BY THE HOSTIL! Boxes in Odd and Useful Gui BY LYDIA LE BARONY WALKER. great help (o home- | various other uses mere or less famil- e tainers come in init ”m:’\‘ lar to which wooden boxes oan bs put wood and | 10 €Ke out furniture and furnishings -and-one | Aleo the ‘beoxes can be Lnocked apart of theseand used as kindling. tiney Painted Tin Jardiaieres, jxes | One of the old-time usex for tin cans who | was us substitute flower pots. Mest of uk have sesn geranfums and other old tomate cans in some window in & | cabtn or kitchen. and envied the pers on who could make them grow o ell! Whila we may not follow the | example -exactly tin containers into really geod-100k- ing flower pol holders. The paper other tin container (with smooth turned rims) shéuld Be soaked and ecraped off. Give the tin two or thrée | | which covers the coffee, tea, sirup or | | | coats of paint. T | ean be stenciled on lnv- whole n some design the outside, and surface varnishéd with a waterproo! varnish. Merely striping the cans, that is, putting a line of a contrasting color about % inch from the top and boiton edges, gives a déc- orative finish to Euch homemade jar- dinieres. When tin cans are uspd for flower pots, théy must hive holes pierced in the bottom circle of tin as drain vents, but when the containers are used as flower pot holders these holes should not be niade. Uhiform Céomtalsers. Jardineres are among the many usts to which tin containers can be put. Palnting them white and stenoil- ing names of ingredients oh them is favorite use. A uniformity in cereal and other osntalners for foodstufts cah "e had at no cost except the lit- tle paint needed to cover them Boxés ax Partitio There are even more uses for paper boxes in the home than for either of the two other kinds mentioned. Oneé friend ukes them 1o form partitiand of aifterent sixes in her top bureau drawer. She gluss thin cretonne on the inside of the boxes ¥6 they look decorative and dminty. Tha depth must be uniferm in the drawer. She carefully cuts down too high sides but ag the eretonns is glued over the edgés on to thd outer sidf of the this cutling is noét discovered she tells you i Vor Variens Uses. has very long boxes for long box runs the wholé of the back of her drawer. A in and rain shade came in that. She overed the top of thé box inside and boses. out with cretonne, and under this zlued a strip of the material along | the back, thus forming a hinge for | the cover, Her bast gloves are safe | each pair of the gloves in white tissué paper. A sQuare box, uncovered, is for handkefohiefs; an oblong oné s for short gloves, a lohger oblong box tor chains, a wider one, of the same length, is for neckiear, ete. Needless to say, her bureau drawer | is never out of order. ATTITUDE OF THE PEQUOTS, THE CONNBCTICUT SETTLERS, vlants fourishing and flowering tn we can convert old | “|in this box. especially as she wraps | m FORCE OF SOLDIERS WAS SENT TO MELP THEM FROM MASSACHUSETTS AND “f Sk 2 NOT WAITING TO BF ATTACKED, || TOGETHER THEY MAR: |GAN TO LOOK FOR THE CHANCE ’ CHED | |HOLD OF THE ENEMY AND KILLED NEARLY FOUR [0 ATTACK THE WHITE MEN. ;fi’;fl;’:m{“‘mm AWAY TO MAKE WAR ON | |NUNDRED OF TMEM — ONLY PivE PEQUITS THE PEQETS . T } Color Cut-Out I RED RIDING-HOOD. A Cruel Wolf. [3 End of Quarrel. | When common danger doth atiand Al private quarrely quickly and, ¢ Peter Rabbir The quarreling e Billy Mink and Bhadow the Weasel, had disap- peared as It by magio. One instant they had been snarling at each other and looking as If at any second they | might spring at each other's th and the next Instant they had disap It wie almoat unbellevable N 637 THE UNITED FORCES OF MASSA- CHUSKETTS AND CONNECTICUT, WiTH THE AID oF oMbk INDIANS WHO HATRD THF PEQUOTS MADE A SURPRISE ATTACK ON THE STRONG - ESCAPED T0 WARN THEREST OF THE TRIBE BEDTIME STORIES /% IN A SWAMP NOT FAR FROM NEW HAVEN, WHERE THEY WERE SOON SURRGUNDED BY THE COLONISTS AND IN THE BATTLE THAT FOLLOWED THE LAST OF | THE PEQUOTS WERE KI 1T WAS A BLooDv Bus® WHITE MEN PEACE FOR A LONG TIME . ! BY THORNTON w. D. “C, WEDNESDAY, TANUARY' 28 1925. - ~—By J. CARROLL MANSFIEED ~ NG PEQuOTS FORTIF) N B \\ !/ A\ Shrirre s TRl 1ED THEMSELVES [ [ D 'S BUT IT BROUGHT THE IMERROW ~ MAINE AND NEW HAMPSHIRE | Bistory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, KITCHENER | VARIATIONS—Kitchin, Kitchen, Kitch- iner, RACIAL ORIGIN—English. BOURGE—AnN ocoupation BURGESS Here 1% a group of family sufciently demoeratic in ori eatisfy anybody, though one of wae borne by a celebrated peer who lost his life You can't always in the st the ap| ently obvious source of a family 1 ! | pearea. | | Peter began to wonder if he had been | D s P Ba i cess Yau |astesp and dreamed that he eaw \5:; :v ?‘Xl‘\ _\‘ ame of Kitchener | those two cousins quarreliy e e o i i rubbed his eves. And then, en- SAARIGRD - (A ADaLkife & | ing to look up, he gaw ‘Terror the T et e ] | "\;.i'.“.'"l:,'fu Just divappearing over (he'f medieval days when famil | | he banks of the Laughing Brook | ‘“rv';jh:"““h.';:r'::k,‘:- 51:,".,' Kkitchiner,” | | appeared as aesertad as if no living | A was, a8 might be supposed, one who | | | thing ha@ ever been there. It was NEasy | Nag’ charge of or worked e | |still hard for Petér to bellave that he | R RED A LITTLE AND | kitchen of one or the ot | liad Reen Billy Mink and Shadow the BEQAN TO RUN FASTER | many cantles and pala | Weasel quarreling there. Then, as e S - and nobility. In those {suddenly as they had disappeared,|instant the rule of eafety first. 1[gof BO0 EF A0SR0 both abpeared again ish Terror had caught Shadow the f yr ™0 GO0 LH0 10 % | wuddenly popped into v ‘easel. Yes, sir, 1 do. 1 have some | gitf TATIEE taan | | nearer Petér than he had been for whom 1 don’'t réally of the cities must weemed to have forgott any harm. But Shadow the W ©f. The hamaes Kiteh Shadotw the Weasel, for he came run-|is different. 1 don't know of one|oome from an eri ning along the bank, looking into|good thing about that fellow His | Kechen,” meaning every little hole just as he had been | greatest pleasure in life seems to be (Copyright, 1 |dolng when Peter first saw him. to others kills just for the looking up Laughing Br pleasure of 8- *: | Peter saw Shadow the Weasel g Peter shiy % littie. and ‘began on his way as if nothing had | happened was ®hankful that Shadow was going up the Laughing | Brook i for that was taking him far- | ther away It bad enough to ]h Billy Mink 0 near, but it how #lad 1'll ba to see dear would have heen worze tb v lithe" Red Riding-hood,” thouglit the |Shadow in Billy Mink's pla ald grandmother, as she wenht to an-|was more li ewer the knhook at the door, thinking | Laughing Brook. m her favorite grandehild was outside. | ter's hiding place, which was a little She stopped to take her blg red back of the Laughing Brook In a shaw! off a nail and wrapped it few minutes both Billy and Shadow around her shoulders, for there was |disappéared. — Peter dréew a long a chilly wind blowing, in spite of the |breath of velief. “1 guess th waid Peter ! when those fellows may coma back get away from bLere the but 1 wich 1 could dlsap- Summer weather. Bhe opened the door and there stead of her little grandchild, was—a big gray wolf. He was the biggest|The sooner 1 animal she had ever seen. better. M Before she could shut the door he|Dear the they can: Of courso, had gobbled her up. Then he went|™ith fhat white coat of his, '::w‘m{ over to the bed and, after hunting|the Weasel would have uo rt:l r: (:v around until he found one of the old In Relling out of sight = But lady's nightgowns and caps and put- (B Minl managed to hide »o auic | tifg it on. crawled into bed to wait ¥ on’t understan ks ; dine. | hid behind something or |for the coming of little Red Riding- | ¢ B#h B0 FOM Y e quickly o 5 singing | T 4idn’t see hin Pretty soon We heard her singing (! (JINL S0€ | merrily as she camé up the path to| ,ynage 1o keep out of trouble. her Erandmothers cottage. Then she | GIUME (eir quarrel, thes sw Ter: that (Copyrig] Brown Sugar Macaroons, | Beat the white of an egg ver® suft. | |a8a véry gradually one cupful ef| light brown sugar, ohe-fourth tea- | spoonful of salt and one-half a cupful | of chopped nuts. Beat all m.pu\tr‘ well and drop from (he end of & tea: spoon on a well buttersd baking| sheet two inches apart uto Show Standard of the World All This Week N NS THAT ¢ (0D PRODLY NI MADE 1 CONTAINED | t xoads i [l Do you know h really fresh? Thereare twenty- five to thirty dif- ferent grades of cocoa beans, but il Baker's Cocoa is made of high- grade beans only. Walter Baker&Co.Ltd. | ESTABLISHED 1780 Mondreal Can. | @OOXLET OF CHOICE RECIPES SENT FRET, | | Snowdrift is fresh—fresh, as you use the word to describe 2 new laid egg. It is swees—what you mean when you say “sweet” cream. | Many 2 woman has told us that she has used shortening of.one kind or another all her lifc and never realized, until she tried Snowdrift, that fat could be so sweet and fresh. Snowdrift—for making cake, biscuit and pastry and for frying ow much nicer cooking fat is when it is | Of coures, he | under some- | der those two feilows in ror tite Goshawk the instant he came | *Geoma in," invited the wolr, making | {1* Gop 0 F (14 BEOT Sr ey his volce ‘sound ks much like her|giani o get to ba on the watch for grandmothar's as postible I1ted | ganger. | guess they are never abs fas the latch and sent-minded, as I was the other day. | Great CADILLAC [to run lipperty-lippe {100king behind him | pected 1o see | bounding after (Coprrigh, 192 lipperty-lipperty-1ip, Fr;nch l-'n'adr Parsnips. Minced Beef and Eggs lip he ran, and kept | Teel one-half a chop it he half ex- | it fine, then fry it brown in ow the Weasel |one ing tablespoonful of butter. | | Add one-half a tablespoonful of flour, | f. W. Rurgest) | stir over the fire for a few minutes put in about one and one-half oun of minced beaf free from skin | sinews, molsten with one-half a cup- Cut some raw ips in pieces|ful of stock, season with salt and | similar In size and shape to potatoes ntly for 20 min prepared for French frying. Drop ¢ in the center into boiling water and they time can be {Fry tn deep fat or you would potatoes bagin 10 ba tender and season with salt difter | salted and | or v i = of vloth. | on the minced vegetabie -oil like | gravy r Drain ofi paper | xarnish and par ther med cgar, trim “Don’t worry, my dear” T was an important social occasion the younger girl had been planning on for a long time. And now, just a week or so before the big event, that old throat irritation -came back again and threatened to ruin her party. She was completely upset over it all. ) Her older friend knew what to do, how- ever. And everything turned out all right. £ * * It isn’t necessary to let sore throat throw you out of step with work or play. Guard against this trotible by taking the sim- ple precaution of using Listerine, . the safe anti- septic, as a preventive for “throat irritations and the more serious ills that so often follow. Have Listerine handy al- ways in your bathroom. Tt is the ideal, safe antiseptic. Its dozens of different uses are fully described in the circular that comes around each bottle.—Lambert Phar- 1macalCompany, Saint Louis, ; | | WOMAN’S PAGE. riend here , in No.|. No. 18 tells what he beliaved in. S50 YOU HAVE BEEN OVER TO SMITHS' = | HEAR THEY GOT TWO LITTLE Twiny SISTERS AT THEIR HOUSE THIS MORNING — | SUPPOSE ONE OF THEM IS To BE | NAMED APTER MRS. SMITH WHAT ARE THEY GOIMG NO, THEY AIN'T GOT N GIRL NAMES , —MR. 5MITH § CALLEP THEM. o THUNDER ANPV/Z LIGHTNING AS 300N As HE 2 HEARD ABOUT THEM | / é“dl - COPYRIGHT-19€8 HORIZONTAL | VERTICAL [SOLUTION T© 1 A MARTYREP PRESIPENT Z- A STATUE. 7 -TO WED 3-TO FIND FAULT 8 - TO LOITER 9 - A RECEPTACLE for _aL 11 - APJUTANT- GENERAL (AB) 12 - NEGATIVE 13 - EDITOR (AB) l 4 - CREDIT (AB) 5- AN EYFE 6 - RECLINING 8 - SOUTHERN STATE (AB) 10 - NEGATIVE, 14 - PONALD (AB) 15 - A PONKEY, A COMMON VERS 15 -SAME AS ) 16 - OBSOLETE (AB) 18 - INTEGRITY. NEW. A richly decorated caddy filled with Tetley's. Keeps this perfect tea perfect. And costs no more! Ask for it. Orange Peroe Tea Makes good tea a certainty LISTERINE Throat Tablets, containing the antisetic oils of Listerine, are now available. W hile we frankly admit that 00 tablet or candy lozenge con correct' halitosis. the Listerine antiseptic oils in these tablets are very valuable as arelief for throat irritations — 25 cen