Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-09-05, Page 3
WHEN MILK SOURS £S and with melted hut lev or cr-eam. 1 ICINGA 4 ’ ■?’ FABj^S AND HOMES WANTED IMMEDIATELY ! I I of \ ,KING OF PAIN &> ,I T" / '’ . . United. States is going ahead with oles per' edn- per square one-sixth, A WEEKLY TONIC by Dr. M. M. Lappin Delicious Energizing . Health-Insuring brunettes, BICYCLE AWD TIBE BAHRAIN? T The provisional 'directors are John iveg in personal or' -particular quar- Worley Givin's, CbaYles John Fred- ' rels.”—Charles A. Board. CUTOUTS BRIGHTEN UP KITCHEN AND BATHROOM dying a baby a middle name isn't of grdat Importance, it’s the family name that ruins him. • o ~Z——~~ .any -will “produce, deal in, store, pro cess and' market farm-and natural products.’’ It-? will also carry oh busi- nnnri n Tri n I minvr, n< n x aIi AH Ann ABOUT TIME . .. .. HmilL. bunch. of i'.aki.ye.eX.ldmCt. you cry? ' ~ • You will be. sneezed at by and by. Here's a perfectly stunning iuea .f kitchen or Dan Thomas;' Hollywood , corres- ' . .pendent, attributes .this gag to Mae Wdst".”The actress was. telling a' -friend about her experiences at the ■San Diego Faift ; Small Tin 35c, L^rgo Tin 60c, Extra Largo Bottl e 75c SeoHdc Turner Ltd., Newcastle-updnTync, Eng. Distributed in Canada by McGillivray Broi?. Limited, Toronto,. ,53. . For quick relief from the itching Of pihiples, mosquito or ^othcr insect bites, eczema, rashes and other skin eruptions, apply Dr. Dennis’ pure,' cooling, liguid, antiseptic D, D. D. Prescription. Forty • years’ world-widesuCdesS. Penetrates the «. skifi, soothing' rind healing the inflamed ■ tissues. No fuss — no muss. Clear, grease* less and stainless—dries'up almost imme diately. Trv D. D. D. Prescription. Stops. ■ the most intense itching instantly.-A Boe ' trial bottle, at any-drug store, is guaran- . teedto prove it—or money back. D. D. D. ■ is made by the owners of Italian Balm., A Ql’TURTCN’lTY! '^onieone selected,, m will buy cottager® f Hut garden, ’for. . $i5. Particulars, stamp. Elgarsdalfi j Goatery, Aylmer, 1 Ontario. - responsible:, yocng man TO R represent us in district. Permanent and godd remuneration. ' Heintzman Footwear, 73 Adelaide . St, W./Toronto. STOPS ITCHING In One Minute D. D D. Prescription Speeds Relief * * * Note: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an author of several works. He' is wilt ing to deal with your problems and give you 'the benefit of -his wide ex perience. Questions regarding prob, lems of EVERYDAY -LIVING should be-addressed to: Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room 42.1, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto, Ontario. Enclose a (3c) Stamped, addressed enyejope' for re^ ply. • ' ' • ‘ The orchestra • 'was silent for d/cYCLES $10 . VI’; AUTOMOb/lE tires. i>$2 up, transportation- paid. . Free catalogue. 1’eerless, 195 Dundas West, ‘roronto. ■ x ' . . A , RHEUMATISM 1 Pour Minar<Ts. into.a vatm . di»h- .Rub liniment gently in; M then-apply it iccorSing to( 9 directions » . and soon you'll get relief! MONTHLY PRIZE CONTESTS , , For Artists and Authors ' i , 'T’HERE is one requisiteAbat appjies to every type contest entry, be it an advertising statement, limerick last line,-descriptive letter, or a skietch................... , . That is SINCERITY. . - “ Send a 3e stamped return 'envelope for full .information ' regarding our Monthly Service for-Artists artd Authors, or send $^.'00 for a yearly subscription. Sample sheet for 10c. G1FF BAKER, 39 LEE AVENUE,,TORONTO,;ONT. 1 I I ncss ais' manufacturers, warehousers, cold storage operators, importers and exporters. The class was studying -magne- .. tlsm: "•. ~ ..............: , Teacher:Robert, .hoW many natural magnets are there? • . Student; Tyvo, sir. - . ' , . Tea'cher (surprised)': And will you please .illume' them? [ S^fcn't; Blonds sir. . " *'■■'■ w ■. j ■. • ■ Friend’: Did' .you. enjoy your trip to Venice? ; .Mrs. Newrich" No, .when. T got there the. Wretched place was tlood- awhile: ,. Conductor (leaning down to <®p’eak to the violinist): 1 say', what key was that youjwere playing: in? VidlKl/lt: Skeleton key. Conductor: What .do you mean? • -Violinist:' Fits anything. Mr; apd Mrs. Thompson were re turning home one moonlight' night after, a strenuous day’s shopping:- Wife (exclaiming suddenly): Oh, John, what- a. lovely moon! John (absent minde'dly): .Yes, how much is it1? A local man lost Jii.; lawn "mower: early this summer, but found it y.es- . ^terday while cleaning up his lawn, /afte’r having received a warning to j do so immediately from the .city au- -’---thorit-iesr--=-------------------—-------------- Beggar: It Isn’t “that^Um afraid to work, ma’am, but there ain’t, much doing now in my particular line': Ladyof’the House:* Why, what are ■you? Beggar:$A window -’ box weeder, ■ c. ma’am.' ' ' ‘ Ttit boUBl. __ Despite Fie attention the particu lar homemaker pays to keeping the. milk supply down-to aetjua] require Recipe. For Cucumber Cream ments during th© hot weather, a-cer- . .. . ... . . j amount of sour milk is -apt. to 1 accumulate. Fortunately, little,, of this good food is wasted, for most people' understand . that/ in- tlib natural, pro cess of souring, caused by the action of harmless bacteria on the milk,sug- _ar, npne of Vhe high food value ot the milk is lost, and ’although the Soured milk is n!?t palatable -to drink, it can be ad.vantageusly used to make ebflage- -.cheese and delicious cakes., or' .cookies. . . .„ ' - \ COTTAGE. CHEES& ', ? Heat one., quart (or . more) of ■un tainted sour mrik" over hot vyatqr ,tp. a ieinpeiature of about .100--degrees* E-, cr until it .separates' into,-cu.Vds/ tainer and ,add four ounces- of best' iinfl wh'ey. Strain, .without squeez- ’• ■ ‘ ' in™» tb'rouglr a-double Cheese cl.oth, ________ _ _______ _______r ]aTg-eJ Put curd dn.to bowl,. lirix. well and-sea- aucepan. of cold waterH and bring soil' with- sajt .and pepper. . Moisten sim- with melted butter'or cr-eam. Chill, two One quart of miik ’yields one “cup pt —Hints For The Girl .Who' Blushes Tew Easily And Is Self-Conscious About It. No girl ivho values Her looks should miss making use of cucum-. -’.bers while they are in season. The i fresh-cut surface of ’ a cucumber by itself is cooling’ and beautifying to . I tlie ■ slii-n,. t ; • ■’ •. ■ ■■ ■ ■■" I Here is an -excellent cucumber ./cream you dan. make a home. . "| Cut twQj cucumbers into fairly -•j thi-n-. slices,, without' peeling' .them/ I’uL tbchi into'an earthenware con-. olive oil: ... ■ " “C-outatner- -nr -a- A'n'■-outstanding _____ at tne Canadian National Exhibition ' this year will be. the appearances every afternoon and evening of'Rudy Vai-' •lee and his orchestra, together with an elaborate. flopr»sho.w.‘The building,, --wh-i^h--‘-ferimejrry--hau-sad the,, ^atio-na-l ■ Motor Show,- has been converted into a" huge '-'ballTroom. which will accommodate 1,800 couples. Vallee,. „sho..wjn,--.AKpA/E.,„„.vv.iiL_als.o^^bj»a^Lca.sL his regular Thursday' nighft pro gram's over - NBC from the bjdll- -room’.- - ^ugaredat. a-..scound.r.el—w7ith-mpney.- and the world will swallow him with, —PQt~~-a—~gurgre!.~~~-~—1 ■ -~'f -- Neighbor: Yoitr boy seems to. be pretty small for his age, doesn’t lie? Man: Oh, no. Most of .the boys^ of ■his age are just overgrown .boobies. It takes only one-fortieth of a sec- cond to \vink the .ey<?, which makes this the quickest known way to any trouble. ' ■ WHAT IS YOUR STANDARD? What is your standard? Every thing in life depends on that. Consider aft. .extract from a letter which. lies on m? desk before ime now.) It comes from a young njan twenty-four years of age. He writes: “My people have always, been faith-- fiil. to. the church. Until now our ded^l cons have: all beep . older men, / but recently another young, man, about •thirty, and myself—I am twenty-four, were elected deacons. An older man in the congregation thinks we ought, not to have been".put on trie Board.* Now he is trying to stir up trouble. 1 have aways believed him to be a. good Christian, although he is very ,A.aTi'OJiv-jantL,dae^n<it--do_s.ojuej!thjhgs-- that we would do. He'says ■ we are not fit to be deacons—yet 1 .have never, known anything but the, Christian life. What would you say or do. ifiyou were in my place?’’ , . There is always something to be said in favor of older men on Church Boards because.of the mature exper ience of age. But 1 have seen. (Jhurch Boards going to “dry rot? for want of'some young blo^d. ' ' As for the old fellow who thinks these young fellows- ought not to be ,on the Board, he shc/uld remember, that their election was the voice of _the_dwacli—ai:-^f-4>h-6--gwern.iiig_bad-y- T>t .-We ~Churob, arid -be: content , to very slowly to the boil. Theft sim- very slowly, tor. t._ hours. s.. • Now strain the mixture through cheesecloth, weigh- it, and to every three ounces of. the-s,“rained cream,, add half , an ounce' nf white : wa-x, one* ounce of .anoline,'.arid a quarter of an ounce of. sperriiaceti. Heat, the mixture agains so that -tli—ingredie nts - mix -and - blend,—Re move the containex from', the sauce pan and beat till cold', adding while beating 12 drops rof simple; tincture of benzoin -tp every ounce of the' creain. Pj'ess .into,clean poma.de pots, and it is ready to use. I Many girls suffer a lot. ■ from j flushing, and the more they suffer, v the more' they blush. 1 Now flushing is often’ due to acid ity. A large amount of meat should be avoided, also fried food and pas try.- It is a good plan to take a . small dose of milk of magnesia be fore erich meal. Drink lots of water, ■ too. , Green powder disguises redness of the skin very' well 'and, should be. used where necessary. -..Much_can..be_done.byme.ntalef-. ' fort to avoid the habit Of flushing. Try to ‘avoid, thinking of yourself when «in the! company of others. Instead of wondering what they are thinking of you, try to interet your self in the conversation and in the people with whom you are . talking. ’, - Listen with interest to what they say. Soon you will be quite at ease. l _ _j._S.till, more ixriportant' is'to realize that, embarrassing as flushing / ‘at ■-times™irmy^be-,"~rt---iB^--considered-—-by-. many to be a pretty trait . The skin should be’ treated with much <Hie same care as the skin of your faee. Apply almond.oil or olive oil plentifully. Then rub on pow dered toilet oatmeal until;, it absorbs the surplus oil arid rolls off (in littl©,. . balls. •; ■ ’ " ' ' . ■ I '■ •cheese. Serve with crackers or use' for salads • or sand'wichcs. ■ . ’ ' - \ SPICE CAKE ' • ^/'cii'p butter - 2'Cup-s’i)i:©-w» ,s.ugai.- '■ 2 eggs or 1 .cgg' andai2 egg yolks- % cup sour milk. " 2%' cup j flour , £• .. .1.. teaspoon "soda/ ___~ - Iteaspooh Baking Powder 1 teaspoon cinnamon y2 teaspoon cloves ■ i/2 teaspoon nutmeg • ' 1/4, teaspoon..salt . , Cream shortening. Add sugar grad ually and cream well together. Add w-;elL beaten . eggs. Sift the dry inr gredients together.^and add,alternate ly With sour milk. Bake in buttered pan in a moderate oven (350 degrees. ■ F.) for about 40 minutes. / , . ... /ICING.' Beat. 2 egg whites until StilL Grad- ually«add 1 cup -of brown \sugar. Spread’', over cake, batter. Sprinkle with broken walnuts and bake, as . above directed. , SUGAR COOKIES ; 1 cup butter 2 cups brown or white sugar •2 eggs .... cup sour milk . - 4 cups pastry flour .2 teaspoon^ “baking1 powder , teaspoon soda • ■' % teaspoon salt' .' B -i ' 1 teaspoon vanilla or lemon extract Cream butter and sugar. Add well- beaten eggs and flavouring. Beat "tUoroughiy. Add milk and sifted dry ^ingriedMnts”al’t!ernately.;’;^-Form~into- roll. Chill and slice, or chill'/dough,. roll and cut witTi~eodkie Uutter?'"Bake on biitteXed baking sheet, in moderate .oven .(375 degrees F.) until delicate ly browned—about ■ 10 ‘ minutes. 1 I CHOCOLATE “COOKIE’S , ' ' Tq “Sugar Cookies’? add 2. squares unsweetened chocolate, melted or •2/3 cup cocoa. Bake at 350 degrees F. ' ... - ’ 1 • £ ■ CWr ETTE } _________/ Made CarefuL Study Grciwisig'Old Process exciainied; “Mae...—- ,.. . ....... -71 • ."Wb'y didn’t you leave?" asked her friend. - “Oh; 1 couldn’t do that,”- returned Mae, “a citizen' owes something to her public.” / ----i— \ / Our £uess is that in these trying ' J times the seiisiblh . girl who has __gtgatfy. dpap 1 oyment is not going to be very keen on saying *<yes” to the! unemployed ,bu,t< still enthusiastibr • wooer; ■ ■ • . - ■ - . ■ <' A plumber worked and his helper stood looking on. Tin's was .the help er’s first day: / Helper: Say, do you charge for jny . time? • . , Plumber. Certainly, idiot. '"“'T^'fill"iirThe~'fiour"'tlieplTiihT^r“ ■ been looking at the finished job with -a lighted candle. Wit-heringly.be 'saiduifc. ■■■■ - , . PluWber:. Here, if yoq’ve-got to be:6o’darned conscientious, blow the candle out. /' Some men remind us of the pret zel. They just get we,U started in one direction when they turn toward Something else. ’ ' /?>■ -—— — ..., ■■■' i "A- ■ . • ’ There is a pest for almost every thing a farmer . produces, says the Farmers’ Advocate. - If „ it isn’t warbles on. cafitle and . bots on ...horsesl- it' is ‘ worms iVr -pigs-, sheep aiid' poultry, or bugs on potatoes, jriaggbts on cabbage, scaSs tfh apples hnd^rnpt ori oats: 'men axl^pt false standards and- think themselves .to be a gr-eat deal ’better than they are. Indeed there are few' men who ar© able to form a true estimate of themselves. Didn’t Saint i’aul counsel the Rom.ans “Not to ‘ think more highly of themselves than ■ •they ought to think?” In every church there are those who t do ttrafiT—Urifortttnately, thei*er-are-of=-- ten those, who encourage them. But what we need, not only. in church, but everywhere, is to have a true es timate of ours^es. A true estimate of ourselves will save-us from mock modesty. It will also pi-event us from developing-’-an aggressive and over bearing spirit; Determine your standard. Fix-your '-idea-l~elea-Nywn-y-oui'“mind—and-make-- for that. T^liat will determine char acter. And,-in. the end, it is charact er that 'counts. Not what a man pro fesses. Andrew^ liversalt / Farm Service Notice Of Incorporation Published By London Concenj / '(* TORONTO, — Notice of. incorpora tion of the London ‘Farm Service Company, Limited, is published in the 1 current, issue of the Ontario Gazette. | Capitalized at $300,000t the conip- I.......... I I ■ 1 I a I I ft \ . ................., w ', j T Wheat flour imported iiCto^North China is now und'er.'the regulations , of the Chinese Goverhirient Testing Bureau and must pass severe testq befor© the Chinese customs authorit ies will allow its release. The clauses imposing obligations' on Canadian ex porters of flour are .aS folows: Standards by which wheat liOur -is to --bo tested-— (a) 4o“ be-' -whitg^or-- yelldwisth with no unusual or] unnat ural smell;-nor. mouldy im condition, and to be free of parasitic growths. (b) Contents to- be free of- the following,, foreign substances—lime-^ stone powder, chalk, alum,, copper sulphate, and anything injurious to health'.; poisonous seeds - and > flour- front' .vHieat. already sprouted, and -oit-her-stb.-reh-y—bubstanaesr——----- - (c) The portion of the flour - ample Which remains after the sample has been passed, by sifting through a 42-mesh sieve, - must not exceed 0.2 per cent of the whole sample. (A 42- sieve is one having 42 1 timeter <or 1,764 ,-hole centimeter—roughly ' oydr of a square inch). , , ' (dt) - ffroisture rfitist not.exceed 15 per,'cent. / . -(e) Coarse fibre must not exceed % per cent. . „(f) Ash must not exceed 1 ’per cent. , . ' . -. The Testing' Burdau must, abide/by the foregoing rules in order to fix th-e .grade of wheat flour, which is- ..a,sriunder: .... .........................,... ............... .. Grade” Colour » Coarse fibre % Ash No. 1 Pure white under .2 under >05 1 No. 2 White, . ... unde?.35 Jukd.er_.075 No.'3 Grayish white under .6, .under .1 To date, says the Canadian Trade Qommissioper at Tientsin^ as far aS can be ascertained,.those regulations apply to n.o other porf in China but Tientsin and Tsingtao in North ' ■'iina. crick R^ss, Eleanor Jean Andrew, Mary Agnes Waden. Henrietta Mario , Briggs, Kciinebh 'Winegarden I Lilyan Wallis. " / “Never lose sight of grand objec,- Infesting Areas Of Southern. Ontario.— Poisoned Bran Bait. Being Applied. . '. An unusual cutworm infestation is. occuring. in, certain parts of southern Ontario. Reports of- damage so- far -hav;e-~eome~-t-o—ha-nd-f-Fom—nea-r-—Wei— laceburg, St. Thomas and. Harrow. In the Wallaceburg-district, saysiGeo. ,M. Stirrett, Dominion Entomological Laboratory,, Chatham, Ontario, , the cutworms are leaving grain and clqv- ■ er fields and migrating into sugair- beet fields, corn fields or ^adjacent Crops. In the Harrow' district they have b’een reported on' garden truck. So far, the -most injury, has occurred to sugar-beets. In several fields -a few of the outer rows of beet plants have .been stripped of their leaves ..and ifi some cas.es even- the crown has been eaten.-The larvae feed mostly at night and remain under clods . of earth at. the base of the' plants in thp. daytiihe. On dull days some feed ing occurs.- .... | From reports already received, It is thought . that, the, insect is present in' great numbers in many sections. There is no cause for alarm, how ever, as dll .that' is. needed is the prompt application of the proper con trol measure which is the application of poisoned bran to the fields where the. cutworms are feeding .or to the rows of sugar-beets or other crops. Poisoned bran bait is made by mix- ing bran —’ 25 lbs.;_/Paris Green y-' i^lb.p and molasses — 1 qt.; to'which d,s.™added,_..enou.gh_iwatej^to.._m mixture moist and crumbly; - butTridt/ wet. It generally requires about 2% gallons of water fdr each 25 lbs. of bran. All ingredients,, should be thor oughly mixed. The bait is then thin ly spread on the soil along the sugar beet rov?s or broadcast over the fields where the cutworms are feeding. The bait must.be applied./lfi the evening so that it Wi1T.be moist and attractive ich the’ cutworms are active. They will not' eat-drie-irout. bait. In- broad casting, 25. lbs. ' of bran, will . treat from one to one and a half acres, but. when applied - to .rows of plants zgi-p;a.~:~ATT-Uiat'-;'is n-eeded .js a s-mal 1_ -th^-p-la-nU -r-dw£. '■/-- • If the cutworms are very abundant, crops such as sugar-beet's should be1 protected by a„ dusty furrow, as is' used in. armyworm .control; Plough a deep furrow .around the field from which' the "cutworms are'migrating, keeping the land-side of the furrow toward the crop to be' protected. Af ter' the' furrow .is ploughed, a log should" ber di a gg e d; ‘ b’a dkTUn d. fbr'tlT "iil" it until a good dust much is obtained. The larvae, are upiible to make their way. up the. ^teep dusty siaTsoftlie furrow. If the worms are'very'ffmn- "erous, holes could be dug-in the ,bot- ,-tom pf the fur.row at short intervals. The worms will fall into these where thej’ may be killed. Worms also can bb killed as they enter the- furrow. "F^sp e p/iTs 6 n eTfiTan~ba'i t^ it jP'dR'C- « ; y^wultrv and livestock. must bt? ke-pt Sawax from ”tbe areas where poisoned bait^hs used as they will readily eat it. Nature is helping considerably in the control of -tbis cutworm as tiiaiiy 'of the cutworm« are parasited by a I body- of the cutworm 'and kill it. Where crops are beingi .destroyed^ however, a farmer .cannot wait tor Nature’s slower remedy, but should I apply poisoned bait promptly, 1 -liathroom: info- -Simplyr buy—a-lba-g.- of--ab.o.ut _1~5‘ qjgkZ iou£s?-iir-g.ay. bbi orsrWtf; beg: are ' permanently finished, and 'come -with stickuTm on .the back, and they’re even washable. For the bath room there are ■ entrancing gay leap ing.fish, coral, -sea-horses and waves, or lilies om-silver .lily pads,-And for the kitchen .the e are amusing pot and pan- sets. And equally lovely things for nurseries,-bars, closets or niostrinyroo'm. ’ ^*Man .whs’arrested in, Toronto be cause he bop-owed a marriage certi ficate in. order to secure a relief ^as °a married man. It’ so4easy -tq tell a nialTied man by the subdued look "in his eye. . . «.■ ■ .. .(Z --'-~B>X-er^ise---^piiom£LejS_ strength, is -the reward of, activity. “America is ’coming through” bj^ ■sheer force of its ■ own momentum!' and the richness of its gifts.” .— Sir Josiah Stamp, A magistrate who three years ago condemned two men and two women to lour months’ imprisonment for • W,. the,J«yae of wtucg Jives in the kissing in a public place in Genoa has again passed a heavy sentence on a p^ir' of ■ lovers. Caught-kissing each other with prolonged action, each ' has been, condemned to .three months’ imprisonment. - Winnipeg Free/Press There is, at perhaps |his minute, in a deep chair on a verandah at Ldkewbod, New Jdrsey., a figure with-. • iii four years of a century,: who^ looks ; like' Raineses stripped of-'his mummy like” cloths, galvanized into life-, and set . upright in a ' rocking chair. —rHTS“l'on-geVft^^ —*~ reasons why .there have been , more word's than his billions written about John D. -Rockefeller, .Senior, who; arrived at millionairedom so young that men now nearly eighty have beard him ’called the world’s richesfi--- man since they Were boys. He is ho 1 .. longer the' world’s only billionaire,. haying -been joined on that eminence by Henry of.the jibiquitous Ford. He , is no longer among the masters 'of- -y- finance, having been in retirement - for twenty-four , years; his last fin-, ancial triumph having been -to show Judge Landis, yes, even Czar Kene-- saw. Mountain JLafldis, that he would have to get up much earie? in the morning if he hoped successfully to fine John D. Rockefeller. : After getting the Landis fine set aside—that was, in 1911 — John p. ___ retired, to eschew all worry, e£t ‘bread jand, milk, drink three Charts of water daily, and play golf. He was, thqn 72 and looked, to quote Ida M. Tarbell:' “ths oldest1 living man in the world—a . living mum my:” That . quotation! irom . Miss “Tar- ‘ • 'bell is really the text 'of this article^ It means that 72, when most men • *' still look reasonably, young, Rocke-’ ^Rer^0Qkefi^U4eas.U,^ __- bider than fiis age. Her-was ready .. 'fof the grave' then. But instead of going to -the grave, he brought the fixed habits of his life, frugality and regularity,' into perhaps the most In tense concentration ever witnessed,, upon the mere feat of keeping alive.. .Where older -men have reached 96 by natural ’ strength of constitution, Rockefeller has reached tbis age by a deliberate process of cultivating . longevity. , ’ • ■ J pians -lu peiru 4nuufuuv,vy« u.ui- 74*, . - ...xi2w:mayy;...ab:d^^ first-"sfaefis". ,pavy«‘.means a greater sta^f, arid a greater staff means greater expense, • and greater expense- means greater taxation. •• ■' ' . ' • . , . 1. . . . Classified Advertising ■ ■,. ■ ■________________ -1._______;___;--------------- ' •I Time is an unfortunate disposit- | ion .n 'a man . to attend much fnore -;to; tire faults,, of -iris.. companions^ ' which offend him, than to their per fections. whith please him.—Greville. - . • / ■ ' . I _ : / J; ’ .. .. L Issue No. ‘35 — ’35 .. ■..’...................... 1 19 . i '