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ee ae to Can and Dry : Fruits and Vegetables (AN AUTHORITATIVE GUIDE FOR HOUSEWIVES WHO ARE CONSERVING SURPLUS FOOD ‘ The Evening World to-day publishes the yirst of a series of articles ©, Meeued by the United States Department of Agriculture explaining can- © ng and drying methods found by experience to be productive of the 4 oo General instructions will be followed by specific rules for | q 9 various kinds of vegetables and fruits. | The Appliances You Will Need ww and vegetables may be Successfully canned with very dimple and cheap appliances. nds of women, girls, and boys year can fruits and vegetables ‘uly with home-made equip- t—in fact, so successfully that iy find a profitable outside market thelr surpias home-canned prod- oteney * Taean almost any frult or veget- see fruit julce—especially for Me use—the conserver needs only: (a) sound fruits or veget- eshiy gathered. () A large metal vessel, with tight- teh er, such as a wash boller’or itted With a false bottum of Jaths or had and partly filled with | ing ler. Ae iene to keep the water boiling. ae Tight-sealing jars and rubber 1 (or cans and a soldering outfit). & — @ KYara or so of cheese cloth. @®, Tho ordinary enamelled pans, ching owls, and other cquipment found th every kitchen to spoil. Evén sugar is not essential. Fruits} The jars must be a and berries can bo canned in plain} bs gt metioally. hot Water, fruit juice of fruit sy rps eet ee ets made from concentrated fruit juice. | crack mes t “THE HOT WATER BATH. Jwith it With a hot water bath outfit the | product A simple home canner made trom | an old wash boller and fitted with | a slat bottom. | bath, The hotter the product when | sealed the less chance that molds and | bacteria from the alr will enter the | Jar, live and cause the canned goods psolutely alte | ealed, The} ina jar or through ms, may Prome.canner can boil (process) the] that the bot product in tne Jar ot ¢fied jars or cans xo that when | phig shrinkage will draw ai finally sealed the contents are reason- | jar if the s at per ably certain to keep. is the s&s cterta by the alr a conserver tried to keep out by sealing w nd all effort and e bottom for the processing | Searts, and vents practically an essential. Its | things th LB} @urpose is to allow tree circulation] heat and of the boiling water around and | pr iN ie jars > prevent is los under the jars and aiso to preven OC eine taeh “ot wane the jars from resting on the metallay cow aside bent lds, if. the ‘pottém right next to the flame, Such | jower lp is dented only slig Dis @ falge bottom can readily be made rs with relly sere ¥ threads | - si ‘ ness where the rubber must out Of pieces of lath or wood or BY ht ST Take no chances with leaks Dending a piece of stil wire netting: | mrery jeaky container must re- BUllsmore convenient will be a wire] processed and sealed absolut tlerht | . basket with small legs and fitted with | before it can be expected to keep. \ ‘ ‘ Pressure cookers, which are I i) 7 han on either endy which stick ve the hot water. This bas- hdte and wt pred HY ‘an excellent false bottom, | "Pon the market in various size Mt the same time enables the | specially well adapted to home can- ft sev nd_at the same time are most ife without trouble to lift sev- n ar x ne n t at ders in or out of the hot water Value for quick and effectual | ‘one tim! preparation of such foods as cereals, vith wusch equipment a clean, airy | beans. ments, which ordinarily yohien and utensils, or a fire and reaire ne cooking. They may be | t% na shady clean. place | Used to advantage three times a day | Sage coors, the housewife will need the year round, and be investment of | only. to follow directions carefully, | tO° Live 2 J a) any erslea | ean ere. fo can and. pre- | kitchen economy as regards time, Cul | serve garden products suc r When the required temperature to sterilize (boll, steam) various prod- ucts is reached, they must he held for the length of time stated in pro- (heating) time tables, and the jars must be seal ir tight iin- ly after the processing, Bince all successful canning ts de- pendent upon sterilization by means hi it 1a most important to apply At heat to make the products Do not let filled jars col before they aro sealed. Seal them tight while they are stil! hot from ‘he y Wheatless Breads, carefully to handh 1 which may bi iL. Hows was Sift the dry ingredients together, ix in the fat and add the liquid CHAPTER III. nti] a soft dough is formed. Roll to tt three fourths inch thick, cut N the morning of tho first day of th. @ cooky cutter, and bake in a the second battle of Ypres, I ppened to be doing some re- pair Work on the section com- mander's automobile. In a by field was an artillery ammu- nition dump, and this the Germans seemed bent upon reaching with their shells, ‘The fire was scattered, hoy ever, and before long it became en- tirely too hot around the car I was ring and 1 was obliged ta find shelter in a bombproof, ‘There was a lull in the fire p fly, and IT een. cluded that It might be ‘safe to resume my 1 had hardly come to the surface, however, when the Germans pened their fire, It seemed best to jotneven. This makes a very good dough for shortcake also. Weuckwreat BREAKFAST CAK This is good, if served hot, Two cups buckwheat flour, % cup short- ening, 2 cups sour milk, 1 teaspoon soda, % teaspoon salt. Mix and bake in @ flat pan so that the cake is about 1 3-2 Inches thick when done, Cut in squares and serve hot like corn bread. WAFFLES OR GRIDDLE CAKES. One and @ haif cups milk, 2 eg 2 tablespoons fat, 2 cups barley fou & teaspoons baking powder, 1 toa- wpooh salt. : ‘ our and| et in the car and speed as far away ‘Cern flour or half corn flour an from the front as Wag po: 1 had hen the section commander caught the dry Ingredients to; Ww ‘ © nuaenad siow'y the milk, beaten egg | eb With me and demanded his car, say- near- S88 ling that he was in a hurry. ‘So I yolk, and melted fat. Beat thoroughly | jitnped out and let him have it. fora minute and fold in stiffly) “"mne are continued and 1 could not ten whites, Cook in hot, well- sed waffle iron or as griddle woo what eyed It would serve to stay’ In Shegrensed gtiddie. [it While I was walking along tl Von on 8 ap we Manis we ce |g about three-quarters of a mile 1 -. he te around throuan 1? id the lines, the firing increased in #904 chopper and used in this form | Wteusity. Mhe nolse fascinated me, Quick breads or cakes, or ground | soeotaclo of a front ih min puen bt Remmey be bought aa such, There was heavy firing all night, oatmeal and ¢orn-flour| ang the next morning I suddenly ( yuffip: 'smelt something like chloride of lime. OATMEAL (GROUNE OATS) AND (Phe stench increased the Ume, " CORN-FLOUR WUFFINS. nd presently my lungs began to feel “Ohne cup milk, 2 1 tablespoon | sore, I bad a hard time breathing, melted fat, 1 cup oatmeal, 1 cup|and com ‘cor-fiour, 4 teaspoons baking pow- |it to see whether the smell was com- der, 1 teaspoon salt. jing from there, chloride of lime being itt the dry ingredients together |used generally for sanitary purpo and’add to the liquid tir In the | But IT saw nothing in the diteh and melted fat Ke in well-greased/|my lungs began to hurt more and mt molds for 25 minutes. |more. Finally I took my ‘bandanna Beotch Oat Wafers see U. 8.jhandkerchiet and tied it over uy Food Leaflet No. 6. jmouth, A few minutes later an : These quick breads must take the munition lorry came tearing down place of much of the yeast bread we the road. It picked moe up and took are accustomed to using. The yeast|me to the railhead, where, with four read we do use should be Victory jothers, 1 was sent’ to a hospital and “Wead. The bakers of this country|treated for gas poisoning. In three now making this Victory bread |days I was sent to England with whieh contains 25 per cent, of wheat |about twelve hundred other men who substitutes, ju: as the bakers in|had been gassed or wounded, France and England are using wheat| ‘That was only one shipload, how- mubatitutes in their yeast bread. |e ‘everal thousands of’ other mone of the bread, for ali wounded and gassed men followed us. containing wheat are pre- Many of thm Were Canadians vf ver ” whose organizations had lost heavily He Was Gassed, Along a Country Road, Without Knowing It & to @ ditch I looked into ro HOME PAGE June 11, 1918 Tuesd ening Word.) Don'T WoRRY \'LL BEAT HIM AT HIS OWN GAME You Foot | IT'S WRITTEN IN SMALL TYPE, ITS A Tower IN THE LEAS WHAT S THAT WELL! HAVE oT To DO DIFFICULTY 00 — DIFFICULTY IN PROVIDING THE MONEY To » HEAR THIS You Boo - “THE LANDLORD May F SHUT OFF HEAT oR HOT gy) WATER IF HAVING DIFFICULTY 1 PROVIDING THEM” snd told bun that f would re~ to my commanding officer ° yoy Walking sea'tor tie'tont. , as - elped, My strat m succeed- CHAPTER WV. ed, and rather than have more fuse the Prench otflcer thought it best to UR work at that time consisted cull off the gendarmes, And on re principally of carrying barbed turning to camp I was given an in- wire to the front through mud Vitation to a canned chicken dinner. column was formed into While Hauling materia night, we hud ‘AVE you ever made barley bis- and slush of which there 4, Sond On Wich ow cults? They are worth trying. (Copyright, MoClure Newspaper Syudicate) ned no end. spateh riders were killed by Two cups barley flour, 2 SYNoOUSLS OF PRECEDING CHAPTE A few Fish a ote the a toa sane it i if t er Pa hh inet t Y% teaspod It, 4 Drilling foF oi tn the foutiglls of the Hockles, Moverta was nut that war way being waged mander ordered me uke up a con- weeks! leave of absenc jespoons fat, % teaspoon salt, unthh Octeer, 1014, wien w vews) Beek about ‘steak aly voy of seven three-ton trucks aud would be given the man who caught ns baking powder, 2-3 cup | eve willl ade, and. Bugland for twenty tons of and of course everybody was huglaud, proceed to H— Sy heiel 2 jo Few ty coal, ‘The drivers of the unit were cookout for him, Every nook os men from ail over the we 1 had yin that part of the coun Canadian, an American, c, ra- nm sear but nobody in the second battle of Ypres, for It Han, an Lnglishman, a S¢ an, a had found, ‘The’ only person time gas had been used Swede, a Welshman and Prench- @ver secon near the road was a peas- nadians. "y were & man, They were all men who had aut ploughing his felds, hg sight, and [ thanked lived well in civilian life, and About a Week after that 1 met a ny stam that J still had # whole eternal stew of bully beef and the S¢ ‘tof the police whuin | knew skin. hardtack made for them a very mo- Well, and he asked me to come with The effects of the gas poisoning uotonous bill of fare Him nest morning to headquarters. 1 were not so easily gotten rid of, The motor truck drivers never lost Was ticre at 6 lock, and wt 6.30 was the fir on the © heart- however. The gure was painful, It @ chance of getting better grub th that sane peasant was marched out consisted for the major part of tak- the army ration, so at the railnead little square behind the eha ing a lot of salt Water and other Where the French were unloading a tu und Ditndfolded. Sentence of emetics so that the system might be merchandise train, sor my mon deat § then read to him, and for cleared of the gases assimilated by louked around for sunething to eat, the ime in my }ife 1 saw a firing tho lungs. ‘The lungs remained cone We found only six tons of coal, whieh Daron gan. de MBs Cyr Ug geated for quite some time, and & we loaded on two of tho lorries, and © Pullet through the heart put an peculiar irritation in the’ throat while the men were doing that f'went ¢H na peasdnt and A» was buried caused me on several occasions tO to the basp commander's vilice to tind BP shal eae ere courh mys t Out about the rest. Wai wa ! Pentex Te paetuad full: uch my gor east re rue Walle + was he first time 1 reatiged fully m ant to be a th tthe sleepy looked over the French ariny supplies, th re 7 for the reason that T Was and soon they found that they could spt tied up in bed in ‘ting position, use aome of them. Th 4 thems ShCuePell IRAs TeMleiee n the ca of time, made selves to @ lot of canned Koo The * fern a, Ans ce very ill-tempered and caused ™M® prospects of getting suuare meat , /'4! & Seg aa fc to use language which I afterward Were too tempting to Ue overlooked fit SERN, DAD Slee 2b) ery The trouble was that the boys were , mt. BANOORS, spate] One day a doctor came to the hos- not satisfied wit nstead of | r sut two patients he taking a few cans they t veral gait at home, L was one Cases, and when I came back a French other man had been officer bad my men lined up and wounded in sixteen places and was & Coup! of gendarmes were going terrible steht. When I saw him first through the lorr looking for th it was belleve at he would die, but Stolen goods within g aya he recovered sumM- TI was not surprised, for I knew my '" $ OF On the roads and getting ciently to stand the transfer from the @Ver-bungry horde too well to think }"') little out of the war but lots of hospital to a place called Hawkhurst, that they would ove k such a 1 Tho other fe near the doctor's home in Kent. chance to get something to eat, But id in the clean air wh ‘The two of us were piven a laree for the sake of appearances [ asked duck shells ali the tine and front room, But T could not stand 80me of the men if there was any- ? ces of being caught by th the sight of my companion In misery, thing wrong, Tho French officer told Machine Bans and anipers So -he was presently taken to anoth me that they were being searched for aviators were also being 6 part of the house. ® stolen goods, That settied it, ‘for I 0 never seemed to ge Knew that they had been found out, few our were better The aero- pital and pick wished to cur of them, The n that respect © sailed about ed the flyers. Here was I in to my knees either in the va were Of course led burt en some of them hit trees The people in that part of the coun- Otherwise the French officer would er obstacles upon landing or try were Very anxiids to they even Rot have gone #0 far us he did, ‘There ff the ground, but the game mfortable as possible, and they @VeN way fine chance for all of us being tvs appealed to me strongly sot permission to take mo to thelr placed under arrest and court mar- ‘ying seemed the very acme homes. One old gentleman of the tialed, I thought the thing over of ire and T had no notion, of name of Hardeastic took me all over quickly, went to one of the lorries, kod the German anti- his place, He was 80 Am having ©) tim: tle ranch tn N After my disearge ewhat of an Sillad iba eeniaee Git ak ita ated at one he gendarm 1 i ana ow Me atteries were, I i then shouted at the other, I asked ous) hur How WHO had given them permission to a ¢ from he how search my lorries aid was told that a g "fish- ing “onions,” as we torm Of shell used hy the foe, adings, w ac e things un- I was a hed t anioal the Fre neh officer had or d it. k Of the co. ve the wport column in ln , «nd In There was nothing else to do now but ct 1 the chances one took In August, we rec ord O try issues with the officer, [ went nd behind the German proceed tp to the over to him and usked by what au- ' ard very Hrtte, nearest » be made over thority he was searching British lor- 1 willing to ¢ 1 chance the country roads. I was section ries without my cons¢ the con- for ', 0 long an I could get Bergeant, and in this ¢ 1 to sent of the British base commander. Nd and had an opportun scout the roads ahead umn That was walking on thin ice, of {1 v indoors at night. The on a motor cycle, theraby gaining the course, The base co:nimanuer Was an + | dpanmnout’ gave aan title of "Phe Human Sign Post.” Engiishman and 1 was a colonial; 1 ¢ fos mad and night work, I A few days later we arrived at doubt very much if he would have ee ovmhly stot fh that Rewant in France, where we spent Kiven me nrotacri« T asked the t ‘Ne ta do anvthing to wet two df ya resting up. Then the con- French oMfcer for his name and ad- away ‘rom them, ee Sioa 4 By Maurice Ketten AND THE TENANT HAS ( No REDRESS? “aaeines The Even ( ) By Unele The Petrified Forests ROM Grand Canyon, Teddy, Trix and Mra. Martin went to Flag stall to view some of the other | wonders wh ) Arizona holds for the tourist. Their first trip to Humphrey's Pek, 13,000 feet above vu level, The dry, desert alr is free from dust and so clear that they could feo for hundreds of miles, much far then than at New York guide pointed out the wall ot Grand Canyon th, 3 home in 50 miles to the direction the Painted Desert, where 1. all the Next morning titled fore ast many Aztec y reached the and in another erala give the soll | rainbow they set ont for the the route leading ruins. Presently famous natural Korge 60 fect onte the trunk of a A transformed into | h bridge, which crosses wide, It was tree but ba he sea rushed forests growing which | an member of the party, in and covered the ere with sand and ailt, ddoneinto rock, Ages passe wore away tha reek until You Nut! WE DON'T MAKE LEASES To PLEASE THE TENANTS | Cousin Eleanor’s Dear Kiddies: vnding to my Little appeal neh or] for funds for the six phang whom we have adopted. . On the day following publication of the pictures of three of them and the of their need and our help, the mall ught $3 from Cousin Peter Mellon Iryan, No. 24> West asth Street. Jane Elizabeth Browne, Hotel No, 109-13 West 4th Street, o contributed $2. Cousin Helen Apple- baum, “§ West 11th Street, Q plodged herself for ten cents @ week and Cousin Hobert A No, 63 story. te American Cousins’ Cousin ated Austin Plae sent bleven cents, Xe who were tn the xt day. » hey dinner During the next few { front tines had theirs the Kather information as t o 12 o'clock | 4p) e Koyal Fi 1 ‘The front was quiet, At t tlafacti« aoe far nos Oh Christmas bve all firing had Jay pody a d to Know exactly how atab shell reminded us that night exclusive a cirele could be invaded ar wes still on. ing World's Kiddie Klub Korner? trunks came to view once more, they a {one knows when this happened, there is a traditi then the currents of swift streams | gy these | star dior up we will soot! have supply the wants of our dear Cousinar® in France, ~ mighty fine drawings and ew: the spirit of the is no spirit whic to-day forefathers to fight for freedom, tho same spirit which cause led nation ‘Tompkinavilie, Bo Lyf you, —— | HAYE.SIG ! THE LANDLORD AGREES ){ Yes, HEAT 1° Rut Re LANDLORD Nay) | 1 DIDN'T . metal RiSHeD TQFURNISH Te TENANT. (| AND ROT WATER SE Ore HEAT OR Moy | \g © THAT! Conducted by Eleanor Schorer be FLAT FoR ANOTHER HEAT ano HoT WATER” cKaND) | WATER OR BOTH IF sonnenanesnseneerter reset tnCeroCTCecweceeCreen YEAR ‘es WHITE HAVING DIFFICULTY a 7 ° . IN PROVIDING THEM Seeing America Harry But) nature haw © no longer wood; ta slab of Not far away were “ t “Twin alaters”. two fine trees |Pansformed them into these beattl- changed into olld stone, .someot tie | ful le of agate, onyx and ame petrified trinks are from seven to | BY8G \ ft “ After Trix and Teddy had gathervil nine ff in diameter and more eH 200 feet long, the ty tin the world, ;08 MAY bite ‘of patriied wood As Lramenter y viyied from beautiful | they could carry they left for Moe | rainbow tints to pure crystal py itiie eae ; : ; ls 6 oe Gs { “Skitiions of years ago! said 6 | Ohccross Renerems (OF reer Sen ee covering many acres, is believed to ~ be a meteor which fell from the sky %® and embedded itself in the earth, No mat Ino nea « Among Ut wa that many years ago a b ped from the heavens Te AAA AAA RANA SS Klub Kolumn {° —eeeeeeeeen ee eee on and Frank Paxton, No. 262 South Sees») ond Avenue, Mount Vernon, renewed % I ts good to see how gencroudly YU) their pledge: of one dollar a month¢ Nd so did Cousin Edith Conklin, No. fast 22d Street, Povoklyn. his ieee very good beginning. If this keeps 9 und hough tow Tam looking forward to somes son ‘ourth of July, Therogy is better understoodkap that which drove oun» It iw sy the Al- to fight the foo to-day, my cousins, as true Americans,» than Cousins Edward] educated in American, schools, read- ers of an American newspaper and members cf our big American Kluy Understand this spirit and will un-<e | doubtedly do good work in the present | | the contest are printed near the foot j [of this column. ub's contest abouts Particulars Cousin Eleanor, —— . THE KIDDIE KLUB. =, he Kiddie Klub is the Klub for me, ” he Klub of joy and the Klub of see, he Klub that ne'er thinks of sorrow, Or even thinks of the coming to= y Nevertheless, iny ambition to get Into waa weil ¢ ss, shea anlar the aviation wervice grew stronger Sie Seatiotbe np aa Bights ete Ln. eee . each day, and every Bit-of informa KiCAt Meal to be lowe Chae Mall ate Cousin Eleanor, so true and proud, \ tion I could secure was welcome. Christinas truce came |! the leader of our crowd. morpiing the came around, and van end with the bark of the riftes, Christmas of 1916 gvery man at the front was looklN® (ia'tug qut-tut-tui-tut uf the machine | aged ente and better food from home which S84, . Suv the feld artillery and the holiday season would bring, The (Ho “heavies” woke up again and ! { ret h intenye bombardment ofcers of the unit were to give us 4 turkey dinner, The day before Chr mas we were paraded and each man ue tying oul che wound the seetor came the ambi son, When daylight ances were busy cars and dying received a pair of socks, a plece Y kood io sugar and three packs of @84 any Were buried on Christuas cigar From some other source M4 : we received a deck of cards and a | /44t afternoon I received two lot- small box of chocolate, Many of the ters from home and two others from boys also received Christmas frends in bogland, which was really from home, but Powe not “ mail. f also received @ very them box about the sae of a Jew- them, lettuce, planted all my seeds Spring in drills from one-half to one PRITSCH, | Written by WILJIAM A, w 233° Smith" fifteen years, No. Street, Brooklyn . MAY CONTEST AWARD WINNER. WAR GARDENS. HAVE d small war garden this year, Seeds were given in my school to the children who wished lu my garden 1 have radishes, muskimelon and carrots, 1 early in the ™ 4 On the same afternoon | ! case and very neatly done up.finch deep and from fourteen to an ni that to met comet curious to Know what it con [eighteen inches apart, After seeds 0 66 docorated by the » Gr ih clgaretics Hee, OFT smoothed down hoe, but not deeds of valor, Wo wer way north a 40 the dinensions a wooden | 5" \ howe ad Le rd of the French lines, but that mad hey bad been sent me by ad te Just then the Kank Who had watoh had a wholesome fear it all rushed u Kas, for they are wick- and carried them shouide: to the and they used to call nearest cafe them tt ite blaok Geviias Sha f y Gu kas, whea ordered e top, | ¢ ' and pulled out ' peas " 4 heavy Knife ow ed and louis for all the ore Tid an ike aw hand seythe for cutting ‘ ace, The ere tn. | . ng to ri the «reat f This knife was carried tn thelr the war, and the ! t e Gur who, crawling pininly that it was t up to the e's Line 1 thelr they were bearing up we [ sto would bounce > the snedyto ask them whett W Gorman t es and without a word anxtous for peace; always t 9 er would. start yes, but with the terms All the Canadians Mked the Gurkas and our allies—the terms of very much, for they were excellent Otherwike they wert a t rs, and we all hated to see them to the last taken away Christmas gvening we had the ture (ho Be VonuBueR, rt made too very garden, and to and certificate World Kitdie Klub, | New York City, hard, W ode Krow in preve t this re to the poilus, w whom J had had to@ iM Tiney must be taken out by the roots. nd the emony ‘nd who bad promised toto” avoid transplanting, the seeds 1 in lorries just as th etten, 1 sat down and | should not be planted too near each trenches and they did finisied the ail of them making on fishes and Jettuce are very appearance, There were about just ds 1 ended the day | productive. Watering Is required ie voviait to # dug! where we Gutiy uniees there is a 4 the French soldiers h uf poker in which Lwon]ehunarb plants should pi cy up with bayonets fixed, the 1 , rs which Was @ lot of Tdbout ten inches deep #0 that grows i decorated, twenty-eight | nber, ing that our pay was only Jing tips just show above the ground, were marched into the sq Aad’ r twenly cents a day There are two kinds of tomato had been formed, ‘This dor hat E had in my poeks | pia running and low, Running '® our own troops marche peace Gtuge of the com- | plants are best ‘ ‘ by a band that wae playing Mar i knew that 1 would Ry WIN] D LYONS, aged ten a considerable #hare | years, No, 7 Bridge Street, New- men had gone through every mat very Htde | port, Re 1 ” can imagine, & tu % 1 back ‘4 - of their comrades sored first nthe in France| JUNE DRAWING AND WRITING , ed to cheer them all « Gurka or Indian CONTEST. As the Brush o4 Ci attene it was funny to see . ‘ ty tlon the French band str pt Litle brown men in camp or ac Subj Fourth of July spirit » Maple Leuf Forever," and followed They were very interest Ten prizes of $1 each will be award~ thia by Old Canada.” ‘Then the 1 1 P Hoftbay cake made | eq Kiddie Klub members—ages from Pienen an trithaa G ' t and Water and teen years Inclusive hands, and later the French general you 1 walk into a Gurka camp | #x, to, fftoon Fide g dr, Meee ike pinned the dec jonas on the Canis t any tine and see some of them | port. os on the spirit of our Giana and kiased cach su 4 circle Making thelp | Bebe esaays on the | 0 cheek, While our kited Mt which, when! Ty awings must be done in black-ny ine march past, When it wis all ove® cooked, bh whatever. ‘They ion GIAGK Gragon the generals again saluted each other aino dra lot of eoffee of the | ft Re aan ne, and the troops sispern d. ‘ihe men} ih 5 about is per and fifty (150) words, Contestanta *? who had been decurgted did bot stew ¢ 23 per cent, coke | heir nar dare * to know what to do with theuseves. ¢ toad to rink at thet, | must state thelr name, address, age number. sy Cousin Eleanor, Bvening No, 63 Park Row, ** Adare HOW TO JOIN THE CLUB AND OBTAIN YOUR PIN. Keginning with ny num. Niaeen sear of age may Fark ember la preaont ay Klub Pin and meraborsbip ‘courdy no. 327 4 ed