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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-8-24, Page 2gAREER IIF ARM in0 EVENTS ...„1,N TILE LIFE OF TUE EAT .444.44.:CE-$E. • SAILOR. Aft Vanug would they permit him andhi crew ef white, men to put off from the Ea -welling in tlie steamer' e boats on Toge's eiders. JUsTIEIED. For four hours' the Naniwa lay at a, tri,onee away irtrIVI the treeeport . while Togo' tried to hrieg the Chin- Altegg tete to Terme, le the end the Jap- eorisi A(Miral Togo of all Janet, great men, )s the sliest Japanese at it bee been eaidby ft ' who bare lived in the ens - ',the know at first ham the Japeriesie eharaeter igner may now, 3C . writer :in the New his ens that aeide aleal aepeet of wunnde over ito the old fih ente any fo cetattng to York Son. front tile. pm in 3-xic(ivrn batt Tsushima is at 'S t anese etinimander fired a shot through the hull of the transpert and he sank with ell on board. 7/r gt time Togo's action threaten - to involve hie country in national difficulties, but sIllISCquen gaUn justified 11.iin eerved thiameh tits e war, „y rest ef WAR WITH RUSSIA. the 'war with Ruesia for apan Lad beeu preparing • years, ,seeined ieevitable leen, Togo -was aneele rice - admire. in eomniand of the entire DarY Of the' island empire. Re as - towel ei nilhaetel Satwna gt- sembled his fleet at the great uaval ing seirearai 61.16 as we see on the be of Sasebo; then en February 0, wide fer nu 'ases tied kakemonos, terrnyints, der griening war ina'slts the anedern con(litione, ^hanged and bewitdered ,ode has been the an- ef. Baebialo,_ and his tniarterdeek. of Lis flagshi ris' like the lives of $ he eats ,order O RETVRN.' depat tare i1e'.e fleet Under his e uand oto Port! ..\..ethor, and the it ginnLn of the great straggle wtb Russia, this admiral 'of a modes OCCt •Ivf steel, veiled Lis 'i to the. 'Minesit end there, ueder the shadow of an eightaiach gn Ineceeh in his cabin lie addressed thew. On the table before him lay the "three and a half inches of horpe."—the short aagger hara- kiri. which in the ode of the eatnurais the last recourse lefeat. Togo made no r the uneheathed dagger, sve aU aleaek the en. "From abet vetya.e ;no rturL" Th scanty Kegoshi Lend of Salsa 184'7. Satan therrnost 'lent o p, has been fabe the land of WAS bent a 0 family fighters Ms father W43 a mai aretail of the Lord a sat,,unra under the oJd feudal regime; bis mother we, !daughter of 4uuiUrh A. few days after he ehild had been horn the 'WA him to the shrine a the ruardian god of the elan, laid him upon the altar and, after the old eastern, dedicated the infant to "the defenee of the Land of the Gods and to the service of tho Prince." STERN SCHOOLING. The boy's schooling was that of youths of the fighting elan of Kagoshima. Archery, the nee gun and sword, rigorous training o tho body and the development -of the mind threugh readin•• of the classics, these were the Oreenta of his training. Above all else, after the old code, he was taught abso- lute ee1f-effaeement, the control of all passions and the ability to maintain silence. At, the age of 16 be became a sailor an the single warship owned by the Lord of 'Sat- een/a, and at 21 he was a petty of- ficer aboard the little cruiser Kee- aga, one of the infants of the Im- perial navy just then in process of building. FIRST AVAIL IC War -`' • diplomatic, negottattoes tileeia bad been broken off fore a formal declaration of t' been made, Togo sent par to COIIV€1,7 transporte o tps to Corea, lied on the ebraary S Le launched flotilla at the -ansee- ". shire in Fort Ar- t._ v after the little \cdrnha1 eopvti the vestment ea Ar our from the '-oa ide and QI1 April 33, after leanbardmeota of the forts by Tego's fleet, Viee-Admiral Ma- rron made the fatal eally which re - et' in the loss of the first, class atihp Petropavlo-tek through with a etring of floating which the wily Japanese em -milder had steuug in his ad - BARRED LETTERS FROM 110M \Hee iong weeks 4ff. reversed by botr;bvdment en'land fertificatiens th nn gain made aehowing Tiger's Tail on August after a, running light had at beaten to the support of t d batteries. This ended the 4mpaig3 of ma, and Togo w -1111I01) t CIO eerione war the Tht fleet under Rozi sky was despatehed fro sin October lath, and after nany vieissitudvs sailed up tureugh 1).na Strnit tOWIlrii the nu not distract my ailed y sending me letters ninle 1 am eommand of toe fleet,'" Togo te to his wife during the niontlis rain in which the fleet under amend was preparing for the onfliet with the Reserans a, So be devoted himsei etly to the business in hand and hid his fleet in the Corean port of Ma.sanpho upon the approach of the blundering Russians, ready t dart out and annihilate them in his good time. THE GREAT VICTORY, On the morning of May trn 1905, (intact with the Russian fleet was established by Togo's scouts. Al 1.55 'clock that afternoon, when the two fleets were less than five miles apart, Togo hoisted this me.s- sago on the signal halyards of the Mikasa : "The fate of the empire depends upon this battle. Let ev- ery man do his best." Then the two fleets engaged. In less than forty-five minutes be 'Russians were overwhelmed, but it Ivas not until tWO days after- ward that -the last of the Russian ships, •except three which limped into Manila, were either destroyed or captured. During the first min- utes. of the fight, when shells mere spattering about the Mikasa, Togo refused -to leave the place he had chosen there, and it was not until several of his officers had begun to drag hint to the conning tower that he agreed to shut himself in behind etoel. After the battle his return to Japan was made a triumph such as the island empire hest never wit- nessed. He was made a count by imperial decree and head of the naval staff. wn in of the ember, in the Japan • of go Tho youngster's first engagement tame when, in the Enmoto rebel- lion of 1868, which was all of a Isart with the civil wars of the Re- storation, he helped serve a 'gun aboard Dlle of the primitive war- shipa the defences of the Lord of Enmoto. In 1871 he was sent to England by the • Govern- ment along with thirteen young men to learn the craft of modern warfare. He spent seven years there in a military school near Portsmouth and in the Thames Nautical Training College and re- turned aboard the warship Iliyei, which had just been completed in an English shipyard for the Japan- ese navy. ' In 1887, when Count Saigo, powerful man of the south, quarrel- led with the still weak Government of the Emperor, and the Satsuma rebellion followed Togo fought on the side of Saigo because he was a Satsuma. man and all his loyalty was of the old feudal order of per- sonal allegiance.Saigo 'saes de- feated and killed,' but Togo lived S or ISTROik I ie drinks -.51101.11(1, never be, taken by • FS I those C1) N osed to a hot sun. The R VALuAB LE T CI( best beverages are tea and eeffee. NE or T ARE I:St-ALLY SEVERE COITUS. eovery is Result of Clothes and (airing Cob and, Ammonia. Beat. collapse s not usually a severe condition, The patient sud- denly turns giddy and falls; his e'kin is moist and cool; bis breath - mg hurried but never stertorous; Ins pulse small and soft; his pupils dilated his temperature remains at or falls below the normal, while there is no complete loss a con- sciouseess as a rule. Recovery gradually ensues, says the London Lancet, when the pa- tient is taken into the shade'hiS elothes are lOGSCPed, Coid water is dashed on his head and ammonia held to his nostrils. Far different, however, is it with heatstroke. This may be either direct or in- direct, In direct heatstroke o onstreke the attack =ay occur more than one form. In one form the persons affected are mostly more or leas- uptrained to eevere exertion as. for instance, young soldiers eewly arrived in a hot arentry and iraueenstomed to the fatigue of masehiag, It, is esneeial- le- liaely to affeet, them when the air i$ moist, so that the skin action be- et roes diminiebed Violent head- aehe is firet voraplained ef ; the mar(h, however, is till continued, until the patient at leogth falls down in venvalsions, with teeth firmly eleuebed, • aosening Water INSENSIBILITY ABSOLUTE. Ir a second fon) the sebteet, treaming with perspiratioa, be- teadily paler, with blood. eyes, ewollea veins, respira- eliallow end oniet, until he to the ground, Coneeiouseese as a rale entirely lost, and 1 orrus if the patient he re- p:diluents .tsa free re- PROPEL BOATS BY BUBBLES. Australian Tfas New Deriee for .41,ir Power of -Vessels. Inventer Schroeder, an Austral- ian, has devised a system of pro- pelling boats by air bubbles. His idea is to force air through a sys- tem of holes in the,bottom of the 'vessel, which are so arranged that there is practically an air cushion between the bottom and the Water. Only small engine power is requir- to become chief of the Emperor's ed, as the invent,er does not rely . defenders on the sea. on the forcible expulsion of air for . WAR WITH CHINA. Togo came suddenly into the eye a the whole, world at the outbreak of 'the war bet,ween Japan and ff his.motive power, but on the lilting poiver of the air bubbles them- selves. By shutting off the air from some of the ItoleS near the stern, the bow can be made. td rise So that a) third form the patient bes exceeditigly thirsty without ,,of fatigue- and suddenly own ne a comatose state. In rth varety the soldier, for ple, after a leng marelt in the sun is seized with a reeking head - which becomes more and ore agonizing. Great intolerance to light itets in and unconseieus. s follotr-S, 11 the patient recov- s the, inteuse pain in the head may not disappear for weeks. In eases of indireets heat stroke the patient is attacked indoors. The „mperature may run to 110 de- grees, and in ease of death re- mains high for some time thereaf- ter„ To consider the various theories advaneed as to the causation of beat stroke, there is first the calorie the- ery, whieh attributes the attack to the action of intense heat per se. It is suppoied that the intensity of the heat disturbs the regular ac- tion ef the heat regulating eentres of the body. To this, however, it must be objected that stokers of the steamships in the Red Sea are scarcely even affected by the TIEAurit ObServaliall of Regulations Results in Low Death nate. rIcalth coedit -fees in Australia Smugglers Require a are better than in any other eoun- of Ingenuity and Brass -Bound try of the globe if the low death Impudence. SIVINDEING TI1E ti STATES C USTOMS. TED °lie year from 51,040,030 to S.202,- 00T0'Itis did not mean that imy lose opium was brougnt tat.it was being smuggled. Quantities of the drug eame in hidden in bloolat of coat in the etekeholds of tratis-Paeific ,eteam- combination sphoiiptthes.lrAegaiseetts twheeresleixiptreakeatnei frinn the Coal, and dropped everhoard wrtit floats attached, }letting imare came eat by night, and picked them rate of 10,9:1 a thousand a year may up be accepted as an index, says the Twenty-four years ago the 'writer .a. n immense cargo of opium was' has steadily been deelinie- dieting two b ptiai(s)sexcle,wfolrrotlikie Cfl,rst time through once nrout,ht ent p t s 1,, the laf5t twent1:-tivo Years ..'and now than hall r"110' t' <1°1 t 1,111i Customs. :t • but less atiodoVietNge(Al NtophrrotridEthecoe;pess.E. t s , He had 1 e i 0 Puget Sound hid Medical Record. The death rate from tuberculosis den in -arge balks of timber, bored is lese thau 9 per cent. of the total 441 -aught). -$N11••podletpr SsheedaN'20.1$1 4C1101III:'"1,1 Coffins are &ways looked upon. Citaantbsa,ni3vp.1;thibilsualeAlr beyr paeni..3•ereriottabegel to coaviuee, the officials that he was ith suspicion by the- Customs. eoutitse wince compiles its statiet aat a smuggler' and a' payment °I Some time ago, a lead casket, ae- ties in an equally accurate man- four4uty coloilllaoffsneawndFAfilgfthesheeseatdsd---ie saddle was le.lnindlie,earneledst mhoyuiszorge7agreIatives In New South Wales the notifie- -allvtgt,waarsodte_refirayrAidairdre. rent nowa-!:it'nNwa rIta,rka.nd iTnisTste(ainit,ipl°0',citiests nee. aton Qf cases -`4 PairemiarY and °^1S The Customs Rouses in New being opened. To their discomfit - throat tuberculosis has been coin- s" postny for over ten years. The York, Boston, and other big Amer..: ure it was fonnd to oonta,in houses in fent ports, -are regular inquisitions. ettrese. wens end ceilings elt wince eesee oeeur are sprayed with To deal with women, who aisle the dat at Linn moment an inspector floors s °hifil sf e (ft° ont1:1 osl‘Pn'ocil3c' etst °.setTs ectsBe(ela.eil:se' ee<i1)11.te12:1(e'lreea(let:e11:11e's;eil OQt movementse, rt; atkeenlyef:t7,°ntn4, e.141sa'' thdng (1"'k';' orrosive subihnate. oort ereo itane -eremet. Beruearner- The effectiveness of the edueat lace• but their hair was Pl'Qbed, ed farther, and found silk; and e 3 tional campaien is show), by tbe 'wi. 4;ara°m-ls or ath" Prev'atts 1 -see* enough to steel- era hp, inetthat open air eleepiug marcs o general then in any ether country, There is scarcely a dwelling house constructed nowadays in Anetralia, even a loberer'e cottage, wbielt is not provided with a suitablo 'veran- dah for 00door-sleeping. There is 'sTtrecaliltktsleo r eox&e:tr°prtat bt 1111 eg:P1(4' e "11 Ortlinance.8 to prevent the cP11- tarninailun of milk and other feed stars are well observed. In shops where fresh meat is offered for 'oVet'vaitteirs erlilinstaQimugftr5o':eo" d shents rthe front dindows and walls for the purpose of catching dust. All large eities, like Sydney'Meltioarne Adelaide, and others, have tubereUlosis sana- toria and also a large windier of berdi sca,f, or ehroaie rases, The Greene onpare favorably with shall - vale Sanatorium, near will ecMelbourne, ar institutions in Europe and A Gratifying progrese has been matte in isolating chronic and mos particularly open eases of tuber- tulosis. In New South Wales, Vie- 3 WOO, and SOutb Australia it is estimated that at least 50 per cent. of these eases have been placed in hospitals and a good proportion of the remainder under supervision. The health ofileials believe that on- ly a few years will elapse before every ease of pulmonary and throat taberculesis will be trader such COD. trot as to reduce the danger lir trraunnslpiitting the infection to a min - in ones are eenteeled in the t ,- ust OIQARS RUBY BRAND, The moderu %muggier mut b udowed with a- coMbinatien of int units' 4.4t1 brass-bouud helmet- enee, "Anythirig to declare," asked the officer ef a smartly-tire:seed first- • - inzAcncAL REci,p17,s, Fig Layer Cake,---Ceeam etwar and oue,third butter tilf light, add three, eg,gs without separating, 'beating' e minutes betwen adding first two 4, and ten mitortee atez att- tliog the last egg; ag,ii tea'bilvoik class passenger, who arrn " vanilla and one-balroupNft other day in New York on a big ,tence nvo eups, Roar with two .,eve, liamberg-Amerieen liner!leaspoteas baking pewder add to “Yes; two boxes of cigara:" was lhe batter and beat until fight. and the reply, smooth. Put in two layer cake , They were hamlet.' oter for ext pans and bane in quiet; atnination, and a (44 ef a 4"th''' twenty-five, minutes, When else], was dernauded, ad paid on eacb sin with fis 1.1.„te. bos. ilaAl the otfiviais only known -one pound ligs :fine', add one cup of it, there were 1t414enof water one-bulf cm) sugar ' eut rubies of conethieg over 53e,000. Tho mzin who eau.stal States Customs ofilegals, marc trcU- 1110 then any ether persop was tele famous gem snpoggier. li said that. :in nil, he imparted juine of one-half lemon.; simmer gently till it mast makes a smooth oae, t,vui befoi•e using. ite Fruit eake,„--Whites ef en eggs, one pound of flow, three- rths pound of butter, one pound Qf .be,.,t raisins ed them) one - HEAT OF THE FURNACES. Next there. is the antotoxie the - (ivy, atcording to which the high temperature causes the blood to be- come poisonous -to the nerve cells, especially those of the vasomotor centres and cardiac ganglia. Then there is the mierobie,theory of Dr. Sambon, which, however, does not seem to be supported by the facts. The view that in the opinion of the Lancet best, accounts for heat stroke is the actinic theory of'Col. F. Maude, R.E. This distinguished officer had suffered from several at- tacks of sun stroke, when he con- ceived the idea that the rays of the sun which caused such attaek-s were not the heat rays, but the a.c- tinie rays situated at the other end of the spectrum. It occurred to him that if he lin- ed his helmet with red to cut off these chemical or actinic rays, just as the photographer lines his dark room with red for the same reason in developing, he would obviate the disastrous effects of the sun. He tried it, with the result that for many years he experienced no fur- ther ill effects from the .sun. An officer who did not believe. in the theory, hoWever, one day sue; reptionsly abstracted • the. red lin- ing from Co]. Maude's. hat. as ', he; was about to. expose himself to the sun, with the result that Maude again -suffered from sun- stroke and experienced great chag- rin at the sapposed FAILUE .0E- HIS THEORY' until the repentant' Officer, told hiin what he had done. Another' officer Who .had previous- ly Suffered on, three occasions from 'China in 1894, He was then corn- the shipgoes, astern. The boats sunstroke, causing ,hini.to be inval- mander of "the errru'er " are expected to be able to travel at ided for nearly five years, also lint White erulsing IP 1;116 Yellow Sea unheard of speeds and are non- ad his helmet with red, with the 'rogO encoentered the stearnshiP oapsizahle. The invention has al- result that as .each succeeding hot Koe-shinr. thiug the British fiag ready bent testes; by the adn3iralty weather season ,nania round he was (eal•rvine' 100 Chinese ea.ldiers .t expel s„ bound for Asap.. Togo St.9ppel the teens -tent' and sent'. an 011it'.•er over •ifh, peremptory orders that Capt, enable to live without and diseem- fest from the sun, although he had pre. aously suffered' severely from Ofr.)1.71,111) SA TISIT Y UL Lt itianof toeessiane, ao.t. an . "" or.- -orarigee'llannel ,11 ' •-"b" filo Ieitttelle alanewa. to the • Japa.t_e,s.e ,ady (to .cler In servants'reg w ant a cook and .afat "CIerk--"Quite e6, madam just the sort We s'upply"I'' , thierefore certainly seems to deserve ,t. The ;hirrese itsicers aboard ttiel to C:alesivorthy to with these el•dei•s no • setae.- .te that' s WIIITE MAN DOOMED. Professor Thinns Fair Skinned bees Will Vanish From Earth. If we aro to take seriously the predictions of Prof. Lionel W. Lyde, of London University, the outlook for the white man on the face of this earth is gloomy in- dend Much has been written at one -time and another regarding the. the ability of the white man -to live in the tropics and to retain his bodily and mental vigon The CC91.- sensus of opinion, as pointed out by The Medieal Record, bas been that he cannot do so, but after a time he will surely deteriorate, physical- ly and mentally.' Furthermore, white natives whose ancestors have lived three er more generations in the tropics are not, with rare exceptions the peers either in body or inind Of their re- latives, living in ,the temperate zone. Prof. Lyda not only insists that the white man cannot live in health in tropical countries, but he also professes to b-elieve that the white man is (loomed to vanish from the face of the earth, giving way to the colored races. The English pro- fessor bases his belief on the the- ory that the original color of the human skin was dark brown, the variations of that color being the results of the weakening or strengthening of the pigment under different climatic conditions. Taking ordinary precautions it may be possble for the white, man, two years of azelimitization, to live in the tropics even more immune from tropical diseases than the black. But this period of_ immun- ity lasts for only about seven'years, after which the deteriorating ef- fects of the strong, solar light and heat begin to show themselves on the white skin; and render the pos- sessor thereof peculiarly suscept- ible to tropical diseases. In cense- quence the permanent settlement of the tropics by white men is im- possible. But while the 'pigment with which the colored races is provided is indispensable foT life in the tropics it is a source ef no da.nger the temperate or frigid zones; therefore the dark or yellow man can intrude into the domain of the man of fair skin with little or no danger. Never judge a woman pany Sile, IS COlalpeiled by the ,com to enter. 0)000 Is orth (If t'l-wnes "'''13"trt }lay- half pound crystallized eherries, a pelmet in duty. one-half pound crystallized pieg:- a dodges were eudle". ou a" apple, one-half pound citron, .(":ca.'"•1" he lad '.'1232.("°(/ w'''rth ('T half pound blanched almonds, tem it i 4inn-R)4(1S 4 rattle, "41 gave to small tumbler of sherry. Cut the 'People ' den seena . o ear ow a mon' eat d Ol t l A • ol " t - -, • th --- "- ii diet; sooderatioo must be practise<1 terested only in how 'you spend I a baby—Child of °f teer- fruit up . Clip raisius in tire or -vse passeegerseato play with while the onleials were Vemluctmg their seareh. At another time he had a, eonsignnwnt of diamonds MIA int() sugnrstick. Tbe sugar was transparentbut so, too, were lbatt,er. No baking powder is used. , the stones, and anyone eould exam- ClIng'er Cake. ---Two enpe light !brown sugar, two cups flour. en* lootli ith meat aLd ita !three pieces; cot almonds ftz.ro *bolt three or fUllr limes With a. ;penknife. Flour the fruit, ae other fruit ea.ke, and add: last to its the lamp of sweetness a am lite least suspicion that it wale any- thing but what, it eeemed to be. BETRAYED BY A GIRL On this Oecasion, again, be em- . pleated a child to help him carry through the deception. A fiveseear- old girl was borraweeL and taught to call him uncle. She carried the brain of eandy in her hand fts She lefethe ship, and whee one of the Custom House officials asked if he -might have a bite, elm cried. The trick was seecessful. - It was years beton he waS even uspeeted, for ha' was clever enough to announce openly that he emit im- porting gems, arid he always. de-- $011r cream, one tablespeson af orange peel (-ht.:Tried 'fine (the white s part must be omitted), ginger, Sileves and einpamon to make one tablespoonful, three tablespoons Pf melted butter (not warm), one tea- ,saioen eada. Mix this, well and then stir ie tty.o well beaten egg's. !Sprinkle the buttered pan well !with toast or cracker, erarabse Bak -e in moderate oven thirty or !forty minutes, Salad Dressing.—Salad dressing is best made at„heme. This recipe will stand the test of time. Use a small gra,niteware saucepan and in it stir a teaspoon of sugar, a little salt and dry mustard accord - i. goodly number of stones.,jng to taste three tablespeoes of Eventually, he -was betrayed by a girl. , He, had induced her to help him under promise of marriage. 'When she found out that he already had a wife, she ma.de the whole story public:, and he was not only heavily .fined, but sentenced to a term of imprisonment. Diamonds are hidden ip the hol- lowed -out heels of boots, in cakes, of soap, in the corks of perfumery bottles, and in the hollow legs of dolls. There are in the Customs Muse - urn in New York over a hundred different articles in whieh precious stones. have been discovered. Among these are a score of 32 -cali- bre revolver cartridges. The smug- gler had taken out the contents of the cartridges, replaced the powder with diamonds, and then put the 'bullets back. ' The trick weuld never have been discovered had not the would-be smuggler been so pleased with his own ingenuity that he boasted of it to a friend. A Customs secret service spy overheard him, and he was _arrested on arrival. , Perhaps the elverest dodge of for smuggling diamonds- was that practised for years by a_lady smug- gler. She hid them in ,the artific- ial grapes which adorned her hat. There is a heavy duty on silks im- ported tato the States. Uncle Sam was swindled by one firm who sent over packages of, apparently, cot,. ton quilts, and which paid duty as such. They were mere dummies stuffed with silk. WHEN DUTIES GO 17P. Another un scrupulous smuggler was professecly,an exporter of olive oil. It was a long time before the Custom House accidentally dis- covered that the flaks were dum- iiiieS 'with -a large conipartmeritin - each, . containing 'fine. . French.' -vinegar, and three of cream. When well mixed add two well beaten ,eseg yolks, place in a pan of boil - sing water and cods and stir till the mixture is like eream. The quantity cap be doubled or trebled, for. if placed in a cool place the dreasieg will keep indefinitely. et -- SAUCE SUGGESTIONS. The inexperienced bousewife is sometimes at a loss, as to the pro- per sauces to serve. The, follow- ing fist, if pasted in the recipe book, will often prOve beneficial: .-0 r e a in stance with sweet- breads. 2.—Orange salacl with roast ehicke-e. 3. ---Celery sauce with quail. 4.---St0ffed olives with fish balls. 5.—Horseradish sauce with boiled beef. 6. sHorseradish arid fried onions with liver. 7.—French dressing with sar- dines, ' 8.—Mint, sauce with lamb': 9 . o rks h ir e pudding with roast Ia.—Hard boiled .eggs and ley with boiled salmon. 11.—Cream gravy, strawberry pveserves with fried chicken. 12. ---,-Oyster dressing for turkey. -Celery —roCaeslt,eidyuciikl-donion dres'j'in8 lsbacicduck. 4.---,Tarcerape jelly with can. va ]5.—Currant jelly with roast goose. 16.ueurwitli corned beef. " catsup—Clnbe ears - a HORRID Wife (excitedly) -11 you' go on like this 1 shall certainly loSe my Husband—No danger, my deer, A thing' of that ' -size" is no ea1Y slitties go lose, eutorm.S°inon1. 13eeYrteead''sir',ateg°t-hte ehSotaarieifta s res'•12.' Oust abou the time a aasr gots f rpoot-1;11nd! xpdaotlyi_aap'asi :Ito) mtpeon). t(s1(,),(111raolp'.5r C.120.111LifnOiletrIfboli):: hfliXr£1to thve.