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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-11-9, Page 37'7 Hints for Busy 11 usekeepers. Recapee and Other Vatuahle Information ei, Partleulair interest to Women Polka ..........g.sommamanaw.p.momage4aarmamarramemottmecoatarogrumnw .........14....1.141.4.12.4,1aana.$114...01.9*X•444.10(4001=.11010011.049.1.12 CH1ISTMAS RECIPES. Grapes for Christmase—Take lareo pumpkin and eut off a rouud piece of the top. Take out the seeds end theu UI the pumpkin with large bunches of eouesi erapes. Wheu filled place +.,-.back': tie carefeley, crumbs, ono tablespoonful salt, cayenne to taste. Mix all the in- gredients well together and pack firmly into a, greased square bread tin. Turn upside down into a greased baking or roasting pan and bake in moderately quick oven one and the tep will seem to grow in kew-h BY leaving' Yt-' /n (11141'.° plc. peace in a cool co.y plth ace tin e loaf retaius all its moieturo until the holidays, when eou will and has no rust* -When d°n°pnt l ut find the grapes neost delicioue and 413`.'aY totticold and then cin u Eiend, The pumPkin can be used thini she"' and )serr° wiLh t(nn4t°- center piece fthe table filled eeferY "dulee. Ver the say-ee take as a or with, fruit. This is worth trying, and I cen vouch for it being- a very eatisfactory way of "keeping grapes for christmes.—C. Christmas Fruit Cake—Cluistmas •fruit cake and pudding should be mede now, as both improve with time, and eggs are reasonable in price to what they will he later in the season. Appended are the re- eipes. There are uefie better, One pound of flour, one, pound sugar, one and one-eighth, poeede of bet- ter one-half round cendied eitroa four pounds currants, four pounds raisins (stoned and chopped), Jinn eggs, one tablespeonful each of matte, nutraeg,, einnamon, cloves and three gills of brandy. Beat sugar and butter to a erealn, add eggs, well beaten; flour ad spices well sifted together, and lest -the fruit, well dredged in flour. This twelve large, ripe tomatoes, few ripe 01` green peppers, two onions, three large heads of celery, two tablespoons of ealt, two tablespooes of sugar, and three cupfuls of vine - ger. Peel the tomatoee and Qaioas and ehop very fine. Add the other ingredients and boil -one and one- half hours. If you dike it hotter, add ceyeene or hot pepper to taste. Put eauee away in well seeled bot- tles, ORIGINAL RECIPES. Pickled Figs. --For every pound of pulled figs allow three-fourths, pound sugar and one eupfel of water to each polled of sugar; 'boil five minutes end skim. Drop in figs and let simmer tietil fork will penetrate them, being eareful thet they are net too soft. Pet in jars with a few eloveS, bits of cinnenion, amount will make two cakes or one and very little mace. Cover well • large one. Can be baked in a low with syrep. Do not elose jam e for earthea crock lined with oil paper. three mornings. Each day pour off For half the quantity it will take syrup without removing figs; re, three hours In moderate oven. It heat to bailieg point and pour over 411 keel) for Years and imerove figs. On the third moraine mea - with time. Wrap in oiled paper and keep in airtight box Plum Pudding.—One pound of butter, one pound of suet freed from strings and chopped fine, elm pound of eugar, two and oue,half pounds of them, two pounds of currants, picked over earefully after they are 'washed, two pounds of raisins eeed- ed, 'chopped, and dredged with Rota, one-quarter of a, pound of citron shredded fine, twelve eggs, white and yolks beaten separately, one pint of milk, <me cup ef brandy, one ounce of cloves, one-half ounce of mace, two grated nutmegu. Cream butter and sngar, beat in the yolks when you have whipped them smooth and light; next put in the milk, then the flour alternately with the beaten whites; then the brandy and spices; histly the fruit, well dredged with flour. Mix all thoroughly, wring out your pud- e, ding cloth in hot water, flour well pour in the mixture and boil five hours. Steamed Christmas Pudding. -- For the hest recipe in a. competi- tion open to the world Queen Vic- toria gave the prize of two guineas to this recipe: One pound of seed- ed raisins, three-fourths of a pound of stale bread crumbs, one-fourth pound of flour, seine of brown eugar, one pound of currants, one- half pound of minced candied orange peel, one pound of chopped ,suet, a cant teasPoonful of salt, five eggs, one-half a tumblerful.of coffee or brandy, one-half nutmeg, and the grated peel of a lemon. Mix flour, fruit, and spices well, add crumbs and suet, beat the eggs, add to them the coffee Or brandy, pour over the clry ingredients, and mix well. Pack into small greased molds and steam eight hours at the time of making and two hours when wanted for use. Better re- sults are obtained by steaming than by boiling—it is more tender and better in every way. The Fater must be kept boiling stead- ily, adding to it occasionally, This tan be made weeks before Christ - etas and will keep indefinitely. '5erye with any preferred sauce, ?bough Gernian sauce or currant ,elly sauce are favorites. 'TESTED RECIPES. Plum Pudding.—One and a half iounds soda crackers buttered and esaked in sweet, milk over night. 'flash fine, add four ,beaten eggs, me and one-half pounds seeded ntisies, cupful of good molasses, me -half teaspoonful growl:Pi china - eon, half a nutmeggrated, axle- ightli teaspoonful of ground clove,s, •he mixture must be as thick as ianeake batter. Put a layer of the .iata• in the -bottom of a baking then a laver of raisins, sere*. ad with flour, and -continue until • e1 material is used, with' a layer if batter on the top. Bake two aed t half or three hours de a rather .1:CflAr oven and serve either hot or old. Sauce ler the same is made is fellows Ofie cepful of butter, 'tess cupfuls of sugar beaten till then add four table spo lintels thick, sweet cream. Flavor with nilta. This is delicious for Christ- • yea anti is a tested recipe. Beef Loaf.—Beel Loaf with To- t -reef -Celery Sauce—Three ponials tf bee E froni lower round and • a piece, of suet' the size of a lemon mend twice' -two small onions ik fisoppel flee, two tablespoonfuls of erste v chopped fine, three-fourths nful Milk, three eggs, eight da ersolt s •rolled into fine is very often the case if the news- paper is not employed, To Dry-Olexin Lace Collars. -,- Mix white .lour and bran together and gently rub this mixture .with,‘ a clean piece of flannel into the eol, lar, which should be stretched out on a hard surface. Beat out the mixture with a stick, If necessary repeat the process. For Cooking Vegetables,—All egetables except potatoes should be put into boiling water. All ex cept peas and beans should be boiled with salt—boil peas with sugar; beans with fat. Roots should be boiled 510W1Y witli the lid <If the saucepan on. &il greeri vegetables quickly with the lid off. 1/1.* MISTAKES ABOUT 11Aft,KS, We syrup and allow eue eupful of vinegar to three cupful of syrup:: Boil and pour over figs; seal while hot. e Spaghetti, Bacon and Toreatoe, —One 5 cent, package of spaghetti, five slices ef bacons cut iiito maall , squares and fried ,erisp; oue-naa anof tomatoes. Empty epaghetti. to two quaete of rapidly bailing silted Water, add a half teaspoon ful of ,papper (red or black): friuf boil bard fot twenty or thirty min- utes; .stir fregeently to :preveut corehieg; drain epeglietti hi a, col, ander and ripse, thoroughly in cold running water. Now add, to bacon anti tomatoes, season to taste, and, boil thirty Minutes. This will serve six persoua. It is just as palatable Whoa reheated, Delicious Saiad.—One-half head of cabbage, finely Shredded, One cup of celery cut in half inch pieces,. Two medium sized apples eut in small squares. Juice of hall a le- rnon and a teaSpoopful of sugar. Mix with the following dressing, while dressing is hot. Dressing — To one cup of -vinegar .add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one tea- epoonful of dry mustard, a gener- ous pinch of salt, and a sprinkling of pepper. Put over to boil. Cream four tablespoonfuls of flour, add to the boiling vinegar, stirring con- stantly to prevent lumping, cook five minutes, and as soon as taken from the fire add- two eggs well beaten. This amount will suttee for one pint of salad. Serve salad cold on a nasturtium leaf, gareished with two nasturtiums. EVIL REPUTATION ATTACHES TO THE WHOLE TRIBE. Their Yoraeity aed Weestion Fights to ,Deathin the Sea, Sharks are both cowardly and cruet but it is. difficult to study their ways iron the deck of a ship, as they move slowly m arefractrve medium such as water etime twenty or thirty feet below tne- observer,. Hence tee many errouemis dedue- them of seamen with respect te these unsociable denizens of the deep whive appeer to justify not nly the etateneeet of Le Conte that the evidence of the senses if often unreliable but also the jocular op- inion ef a novelist that "no story with a elmrk ieeidentally „, thrown in eau fail to be interesting." Yet the shark belongs to -a type which has 'survived the night f<A time, white other more attraetive speeiee have eeased to exist, The early vori"erli were wont to attri- bute eupernatural preseienee t the shark,. Often during light winds •oue of these sea seaverieers will fellow a low sailing ship for severalsueces, sive days and inehte, and it was er- ly assumed that be does so HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Onion skins should be boiled in soup, as they make the liquor a nice color. 0 Sweet ;orange peel, if dried and powdered, makes an excellent flav- oring for cakes. and Puddings. When stewing prunes add a hand- ful of stoned raisins to every pound of prunes. This is a great improve ment on -the ordinary method. Delicate cretonnes may be wash- ed in a lather made of Castile soap and warm water. This soap con- tains nothing which will injure the colors. Badly stained lamp chimneys may be cleaned by rubbings. with methy, lated spirit. It the stain be very obstinate; add 'a little whiting. Boots- that have become hard fronrwearing in snow or wet wea- ther can be softened by being rub- bed With mutton fat. • To keep carpets • fresh looking, wipe, them over once a month with a cloth wrung out in ammonia and water. This must be done -after sweeping. After washing a teapot, dry thor- oughly and leave the' lid off so -that air may enter. Remember it is im- possible to dry the ,spout, and if you clese the pot tightly it will very likely smell musty, ' To keep leeiens hang them rip separately, so that they do net come into contact with anything, This prevents the juice remaining in one, place, which is certain to decay the fruit. A hair -ribbon shield never be ironed. Make a warm lather, wash the hair -ribbon and rinse it in warm water, then wino' it round a glass bott.les When dry it will look as good as new. When ironing, Place a newspaper between the sheets of the ironing - cloth. This will prevent the article being ironed from curling up, as aware in 'eoute 'nlyterious yof an impending death au and whieh will insure for him eernptemes repa,st Heredity has eunilarly been put forward as an explanation of this tendency for a eatery shark to keep company with a ship, writes W. Allingham in Chamhers'a Mag- azine, although the experience of countless generatioas has not suf- ficed to impress upon him that the result is equally against the man did he haye all his wits about him. Nevertheless circumstantial accounts are in evidence of in- stances where the shark has been defeated by the man. At Jamaica, a huge shark is said to have been a terror to frequent- ers of the harbor he affected. Once he overturned a boat carrying pro, , visions. to the shipping ane devour' ed the wife of the boatthen. The maddened widower reached the nearest ship„ SEIZED A SHARP KNIFE - invoked the aid of his patron saint, leaped into thewater, gave battle to the shark despite the ewful odds and sueceeded, in avenging his wife by slaying her destroyer. At Bars bedoe similarly, if we •may aveept the report as authentie, a 'seaman eought with and killed a shark that had eaten a slnpraate- Youno. Maoris, male and female , • , were once proficient in the slaying of sharks in open water. They would swim into the eurf armed with, a knife, dive under the near- est shark, rip open their eneiny and return to the shore. Daring the last decade it is ,said the sail - maker of the American warship Alliance, then at anchor at, St, Thomas, West Indies, leaped over- board and killed with a. knife huge shark whih Was gaining upon some of tho vessel's, crew who had disobeyed orders by venturing, an ewiin. A dog which was with them \Yes seized by the shark, but the latter did not get beyond this hors d'oeuvre. A single female shark is quite eapable at stocking a, incident aquarium with yang of eotisider, able size at one birth, and were it not for the want el emnething to eat and the liability tobe eaten, certainparts of the ocean. must teem with such voraeitme and fevuud eisitore In July, 1910, on the Passage, from Australia to New Zealaed, the erew of a eailin vessel eaught a shark eentainin 44 young,and in 1909a iliac foot n lone specimen capthre* on the. Auseralian eoast had 27 young al- most mature. Records of catches set forth in ships logboolts show that the numb - of ;sourer sharks produced at one irth vary from 83 to 2. With this nduuuuu total a doubt is nite, because parturition may have leen nearly completed jest prior to the shark's capture. STRANGE NAN OF SuionE. Gave Instruetions to Rill Po:where and Then Ban Into Danger. LEATH BY TORTURE awaits auy shark tyho dares seize a bait that trails attrattively from ehiphs stern and erieloses a stout book that will not be denied. Na- tural history notes by illiterate sea- men on imperfectly appreciated data are worse, than useless, for they are misleading Many a shark is preceded by a few ,shimmering companions known as pilot fish beause they are supe posed to warn tee shark of danger ahead, but they n" ver prevent this hestis humani generis from. swal- lowing the -tempting morsel and its cunningly concealed hook. These irxkleseent pilot fish move hither and thither in close proximity to the •shark's cruel mouth, and sone assert -that they oecasonally take refugetherein should tiangde threat- en. Inasmuch as the shark's mouth is inconveniently placed behind his snout and underneath his body this can only be oiscerned from above when the' turns on his back and despite travellers' tales to the con- trary it ie simply unbelieveable that either pilot fish or yonng sharks seek ,safety within the cavernous -jaws of a mature shark, for he would never permit egress to any bonne bouche so easily obtainable. A SHARK'S VORACITY is not less marvellous -than los dig- estion. , Whether the bo 'a man eater by choice (as seems the more probable) or by the compulsion of hunger (as is occasionally asserted) the fact remains that any one who happens to fall overboard in the vicinitly• of. a shark is likely to be snapped up by the latter without ceremony. It is the evil reputation attaching to the .whole shark tribe .as regards, indifference whence Comes ai meal that renders them so abhorrent. of seafarers. Old sailors never weary of en- larging upon the voracity and the dig,4Stion of sharks When in the - China Seas, as related by the late Capt. Basil Hall, a laege shark was eaught by H. M. S. Aleesth which was found to contain, among other things, a buffalo hide that had been thrown overboard the preced- ing day. One of the sailors explained this in a way which seemed irresistibly logical in the opinicin of his ship- mates "There, my lads," said Jack, "what d'ye think if that? He swallowed the whole buffalo right enough, but he couldn't 'digest the hide." As a matter of fact the carcass ,Of the buffalo unknown to these amateur makere of history, was still on board the Alceste. , •,There are not wanting writers io would have us believe that men lose their lives -owing' to panic' ' when in the bre-once of a shark in' his nativ 1--r•nt, but probably' THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON I:AESSON, NOVE)113E11.12. Lesson VII.—BelsheZear'efenet and fate, Dale 5. (Temeereece Sun- day) Golden Text 14 lel. "ae Vose 1. A great feast to a thou,- sand—Everything about the ban- "(lifteet psuaglegeeeinwhich4s°rienit t4lwato5relieleec: with its immense halls, its c„olumae, its tapestried walls, and its etatues, was ono of the wonders of the world, Before his prinees and tile rest Belshazzar (known by the Babylonian inscription as "the Crewe Priece"), seated en a raised dais at the end -of the banquet chamber, and facing the guests at a separate table, drank wiue,- This was the eustomary manner of eous eluding a feast, wine flowiag freely, and everyone becomind intoxicat- ed in the spirit of willrevel. The unusual feature was the presence of the king, ina.smodh as he ordia- rily banqueted in; solitary etete his ewu private ehanibee, none be - ng present but the qemea and at, fondants, 2. Tasted the wine ---Gradually came under ita powerful iefluepece Oommaetled to bring the ve.esele—See, on Dan, 1, 2, Word Studiee for September W. The act was one of wild and irreverent Wily. The well-known example and decrees.ef Nebuchadnezzar ought to have 'been a warning. Assuming that the feast was in honor of some Babylonian deity, there eotild hard- ly be eorieeived a more impious in- sult to Jo'hoveh than this publie eetion of the saered vessele vitieb, had been seized. in the holy nple, is father ---We know that "ki- s azzar was the son of Nabunaide But by inarriage Nebuchadnezzar May have been his father-in-law, or his grandfather. In either of these eases the word father, aeeortling to Hebrew usage, would bo perners, sible, Wives , . , concubines—The pres come of women was not in keep. iug with ancieut custom. In the Septuagint these words are omit- ted, as if there were an inexplicable impropriety here. But there was nothing too rude or shocking in this feast. a, 4. Drank in thern—It was Pt Suicides often adopt ingenious nethods, but the art of the felo do se seems not th have advanced ;Aerially durieg the eenturies. The modern case -of heavily in- sured broker who' on a feigned hunting trip stoop hare -legged in a quagmire for hours and so Wil- Inily contracted a fatal pneumonia, ie matched in cleverness by one five hundred years old. The folk -wing facts are well vouched for, and, in- deed, were never questioned: Sir ),Villiam Hankford, ajudge of the King's Bench in the reign of Edward III., Henry IV., Henry V. and Henry VI., and at the time of his death Chief Justice of 'England, was a, man of melancholy tempera- ment. Re stems,to have contem- plated suicide elle greeter part of his long life, and during his later years the idea. became a fixed pur- pose. The act was of 'peculiarly serious consequence in those days, for the reason the law treated it as a, capital crime. The offender was buried at the cross roads, with a stake 'driven -through his body, and all his goods and property were forfeited to the Crown, to the ut- ter ruin of his family. Rankford made good use, of, his wits and succeeded in accomplish- ing his purplise without incurring either unpleasant penalty. He gave ,open and notorious. instruc- tions to his gamekeeper, who had been troubled with poachers in the deer preserve, to challenge all -tees- pessere in the future, and to shoot to kill if they would not stand and give an account. One dark night he purposely crossed the keeper's path, and upon challenge made motions of resistence and escape. The faithfurservant, failing to re- cognize his master, followed in- structions to the letter as was ex-' pected of him, and Sir William fell dead in his tracks. The whole truth of the affair was common knowledge., but it was im- possible t� establish a case of etricide, by legal proof. The ser- -vant wes protected lei his inti'- Tim suggestion has been Made that18110111d Y011 refrain from discussing zar, as the language of verse 11 ma imp/y. 13. Then was Daniel brought in —It seems strange that his excel, lent spiri_t, or surpassing abilltit (12), had been overlooked. But this was generally the ease until the critical moment arrived. There is nothing Orientals esteem more highly than riddles, unless it is tile an who can solve them. 17. Lot thy gifts be to thyself— Compare E? kings 5. le, When he has thus cleared himself of any ob, ligation to the king he has paved the way for his fearless denuncia, tion of the kizsg's conduct. 18-24.—David prefaces his inter, pretetion with a daring reference to the affliction which came apon Nebuchadnezzar fOr his preSump- tion, and an arraignmetit of the present king for his impiety, brut. ishness, disobedience, and irrever. ence. The blackness of Belshae- zar'e guilt is intensified by the light in which he had sinned—the est all this (24 __ItIctletuheo,uAgthetitiel,asTbelec:In, otINpphieea4esdei in aa effort to decipher these words, The theory of a Freuelimap, 'melee Olermont-Qapneauthat we havt here the nam eS or 'three weights, a shekel, and two ?eras (or half -mina), has Met -With most favor( Just WhY Belehazzar and the magi -perieneed any' •diffieulty in read, fl cannot bDog bewords on h titeteesrre ittseeemM'a been beeau$e of sonic peenliarity A their arrangement. The mystery el their interpretation is another mat, ter, But the key appears to bf„ found in reridering each word tWiCe " - the lirstWQrd ineans het ceetinted" or "numbered," 0414 • 'handed over"; the eeetied meant weighed" and "thou art light" while the third means "fragments,' and "the Persias" or "Media antt Persia," From this key it is ens) to obtain the interpretation el th thing 03.26), 29. Clothed Daniel 'with...purple-1 el with the promise made hisn In view of 'the near apprf)aell nI the aralY OE Cyrus, the goolnee ith which. Belshazzar gives thi ommand is inexplicable, VALUE OF SILENVE. tural that lips which wantonly PralS:ed their heti:then idol% of every descriptiont from gold to stone should also defile the holiest things with embruting wine. 5, And th.o king saw -.4 was pe- culiarly fitting tliat retributien should descend upon *le heedless, riotous company' in the Same hour with their bestial revel. But as a sort of prelude, of warning,, seen at first only by .the king, there appear- ed over against the golden chande- lier, and therefore an a part of the, wall conspicuously bright, tho fin- gers of a man's hand. As the wall Was either painted white, or con- sisted of slabs of alabaster, this would render the moving hand still more visible. 0. Tho king's countenance was changed—The color of ,youth and the flush of wine gave way to the pallor of fear. Hie eon -science trou- o futh Talking 03 the eons of Failu res. ly the failures in. business professional as well as eociel ide are due to injudicious talking. A young el apparently very oderate ability has recently as. finished his fellow 'workers by his noticeable etiecess business "Pure luck" it has been called, but a policy or natural habit of eilente is the real cerise, says the Youth's Companion. In his first position - lie succeeded a man of long experience and ex- cellent judgment, a circumstance that made his youth and inexpert- eneo conspituous by contrast. Ho made no apologies and asked little advice. He was courteous to hi's superiors, considerate, of his busi- ness inferior, but absolutely deaf to all the 'gossip and irresponsible talk so prevalent in every large business office. He had held his. position for a year; gossip had it that he had fail- ed, for in that time he had not sug. gessteri a single innovation or en- larged his department in any way.1 But soon it became known. that he had proposed a change that would k„.t. result in an annual saving $2, - bled him deeply, so that he 1 000. Gradua,lly his Step became eontrol of himself and fell into' vio- firmer, his manner more assured,„, lent trembling. The events of Ne- aoad he no longer outstayed the* Imehadnezzar's reign were too re - Slowly but sure -1 cent for him to be ignorant of the Janitor at, night- ly he gained the confidence of the' awful Power of the God whom. he general manager and the heads of - had trifled with. other departments, and it soon be - 7. Cried aloud—Not merely a eame their habit to come to him: forceful command, but a shriek -hag for advice. At the. end of fivel ecrilficiellaends,witthonasiirlivoll).17 note an years, when his former associate -s were wondering if they could afe for September 10. The whole troop ford to 'get married, he was admit-) of Babylonian soothsayers and as- ted to membership in the firm. trologers, in the book of Daniel, In every establishment where a' prove themselves an inane and number of persons is rapioyed worthless class. But the king's re- there is always an untiereurrent af course to them was all that was lea „sae, to him in his utter godlessness. zie--ttielics lAlerclift7.:tttbi-sifie:€10,1teexliegwritaPhha- had joined in the prise of, graven nbacesekskteoeptieter teTlehpebohnoeookpkerato.v that images, u now e snows they can isle-, expects to get an inceei:eal.3ecoiiin- do nothing fax hem, and ho turns to the equally impotent magi. salary. The eleeater boy explains' Clothed with purple—A 'sign of that is gailwf , royalty. The Thhoenocnhadionnoef jgooslpi;lein(Ginedns aer.ebeettxecilleajleloo.e.d: Tuilliefsile leavebhiet,y soofboenic,:ii 41. 42).. A gold.en necklace was seeemen pleoperty. sometimes given as a, compliment, The employer, learning tlnat the and was worn as ,a token °hie:vile stenographer is eisseeiese, tees her The expression, third ruler that she may leave at her pleasure. kingdom, is 'difficult, but seems ,to The bookkeeper fails to geb his ire refer to some 8neh honor as that crease in salary and the elev•itor later enjoyed by Daniel Man, 6). Espeeially if y_Cyu are s8 a tified tions - Henkferd had honorable Nabunal,d, beingfirst ruler, an your p boy ldoe.s not get his, ",1101)7 t , elshazzer second, he. was making . d.1 burial and bus estate' -Pa'''sed' to roona for 'one wile With them .sheuhl A imin ,:loesn't always get wnal those, whfis inite,ests ae heirs he form ad -sere of ,esienaserate. How- is coming to liim when .the postmarl had so wisely considered. - - t Pe, • - ' ' • • c • ever, tue promise was ellaptY if we ears. ' 4' accept tlietehory that Cyrus had a]1 .' SWISS 'OITILS OWN , FORESTS. ready taken the cit Y and 13 1 h e s az- . In Switzerland Many of the best ram waS simply holding out in the , forests are owned by the 'cities, royal palace., . The city of Zurich has a highly 8. They could not read the ,writ- . deVeloped forest that has been pro. 'ing—In eve.ee fretence in, which they t ete4 sin:6e, '1680. It notydretui'Et net proht of 12 an acreandsup- portsthe city, no taxes being necessary. they ignom,inously fail. Their is - ability now fills with alarm not only the king but. his lords as we,11 ;14 (9), A seft answer , may turn away 10. The queen ---The queen mother, wrath, but sometimes it comes hard. who had not given her countenance Don't take advantage of the other to the fiendish revel, he was a fellow by betting on a sure thing % woman of high rank. Many regard Besides, you are apt to lose, her as the widow of Neleuehadnez- ":"Ift s..eue•fthiek ss • ss ss. •the world gle"lus• • 02, • partl •• . ...,„ •••••• .,. • • • • -.••••.•-• • .7-.7,-. ••••••,•:Nell-st.•stelt.t...ilittle.. Ault. . . . • .. • vhai l 1, .L.,. A A -- 3 ,.,10 same ts story is the same as a lie. Nally No, it's net. Aeisa---Yes, it is. cause my father said so. arel ,m father is a 'Or•efeS2Or ;`t, Sity, Nelly ---1 don't CaS`e if isa s. _ , , , my fattier is a real estate 'malt all he knows mo re abouyinthar your father done.