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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-12-28, Page 34111111174.••,;••••••••4•44444.A.44404!4•4044414**04•004$44•4 ..171.0(1.5-P10..L1'. DAINTY DISHES. Shortbread. --Take one peund of fine dry flour, six OnnceS Of caster sugar, and half a pound of butter, Knead all w11 together. Roll out, 'arid eat ieto shapes. Place en a baking tin, 4nd bake' elowlY, Ram in Jelly.—Put half a glass of eurrant jelly in a chafing dish with a tablespoonful of butter. When it is hot, lay in eight thin slices of void boiled ham and sim- mer five niinntes. Serve on toast triangles. Tender Drumeticks.—To make the first joint of turkey or chicken tender and juicy, with a sharp knife split the back of the leg to the jeint down deep to the belie. PnII out eaeh hard tendon, beginning at be top and working downward. Sprinkle in a little salt and careful- ly sew up to retain shape. The re- eult will be A tender, inic)7 Pieee- Snow Cake, --Cream a quarter P pound of butter with a quarte of a petted of caster sugar ; add 4 w11-beate* egg; then sift in gra- dually half a pound of potato flour, add a little grated lemon riud,,and beat for ten minutes. Bake m flat buttered tin for three-quartera of an hour ia a, slow oven, Tide 'cake should not be allowed to get browa. Iotato littlfs.—Boil one pound, el potatoes, pass them through a wire sieve, mix well in two ounces of butter, orte -ounce of flour, a little baking powder and enough water to make it into a stiff paste, Roll tide out and eut into rounds, place a little well-tiavered minced beef in the centre of each, roll them up in- to a ball, and fry to a golden brown in boiliog deep fat. Sausage Pudditig,—One pound of sautages steeped in boiling water to remove their skins, Make a suet crust, and line a pudding basin with it. Place on the crust the sausage meat, any scraps of cold meat you have, 1 onion chopped small, a few sage leaves, also .011opect, pep- per and salt, some stock, and mush- room ketchup to moisten the whole. Cover the pudding with suet crust, and boil in a floured cloth for three hours. Mutton Rechauffe.—Here savory dish. Slice the cold roast mutton thin, and season with salt and pepper; have some cold boiled macaroni, in inch bits; put alter- nate layer of cracker crumbs, the meat, and the macaroni, in a but- tered baking dish, with a spoonful of tomato catsup on the latter; pro- ceed until the dish is filled, finish- ing with a thick layer of the crumbs moistened with two tablespoonfuls of melted butter. A breast of mutton, if carefully cooked in this way, is a very good joint and we all know that it is not an expensive one. Tie the meat in a thin cloth, and simmer gently, allowing ten minutes for every pound of meat. Take it out of the cloth, place in the oven, cover with melted dripping, and baste con- stantly. Ten minutes before serv- ing, dust it thickly with crumbs, place a few bits of dripping on it, and brown. Serve with thick gravy, and garnish with slices of carrots and bits of broccoli, or, indeed, with any 'vegetable in season. Lemon Solid.—Put the thinly pared rinds of three lemons in a basin. Pour on them a pint of boil- ing water. Let these stand for an hour. Squeeze the juice of four le- mons into another basin, beat up the yolks of five eggs, mix into the lemon juice a tablespoonful of corn- flour, Jtow put a breakfastcupful of loaf sugar into a stewpan, strain into it the water in which the le- mon rind has been soaking, add the lemon juice and eggs Stir the mix- ture over the fire till it thiclens, but do not allow it to boil or it will curdle. This will make a large raould. Stewed Celery.—Trim and cut to the same leagth a number of heads of celery, split them in two length- wise, tie in bundles' with thread, and parboil for a quarter of an hour in salted water. Drain these carefully, place in a clean sauce- pan, add an onion, a blade of mace, pepper and salt to taste. Adel enough stock to cover the contents and cook gently till the celery is tender. Take away the string, ar- range the celery neatly on a dish; take some of the stock in which it has been stewed, remove all fat from it, thicken with a little bid - ter and flour, pour over the Celery( and Terve. ' SALADS. Cream 1,.‘la3rennaise.---11.1x half a eup'of sour Orram, two tablespoons • of .prepared miistarcl„ three or, four • ieasPooils--of 'sugar: -Delicious for• , coldmeats. • Cabbage Pudding. — Use six crackers rollea fine, three pounds 'of Cabbage. 'chopped' fine? 'one-half ,caap of:butter; salt and pepper to , taste; enough 'sweet nii.lk;to mois- n;, coVer with large leaves of C,alo- eabe and bake, .- eBottl.c . ',vinegar three:quarters of , .cup.; epeon. Let vinegar and 'butter come to a boil, beat the sugar and eggs together; add mustard, stir into the boiling °vinegar until it thiekens, but do not boil. Remove from fire, plape in bottle, and keep in a cool place. This will keep finitely, and always ready for use, CONFECTIONERY, - Cocoanut Drops,—To one grated cocoanut add half it$ weight of -sugar and the white of one egg beat- • en to a stiff froth; thoroughly and drop on buttered White paper or tin sheets. Bake fifteen min- utes, Throe Minute Butter Seetela — Use three-quarters cup of sugar, one tablespoon of water, butter the size of a walnut, one-half a table- spoon of vinegar, Boil until brit- tle; pour on buttered plates. Uneooked Ca.ndy,—Mix one pound of powdered eager in the white of one egg. Flavor to taete, Thi% can be mixed with nuts and Melt- ed in any 4ipa or used to stuff dates with, It is better after stand- ing awhile, It also can be used as a for chocolate creams. Wet Coria to Pop —When cora wUl not pop try dipping the earn d corupopper in cold water, -theu pop it. You will be surmised how much better it will be and the kernels will be twice the ordinary size,„Take a cup of sugar, a half oup of water, and three table- spoonfuls of vinegar; boil until it etrings, pour the sy,rup aver the pepped .01731, Make into balls, Wet your hands irt cold water se the cora will 11Qt stick to your hands. GET A TIN TABLE, Housekeepers who have never had a tin -covered table for kitchen nee are still unacquainted with one of the most valuable articles of doom tie economy, An ordinary kitchen table takes kindly to the metal cover. Fit a sheet of tin on the table, and perforate the edges for tacking. Tile tin should cover the thickness of the board top, that it may be tacked on the underside of the table, A table so covered needs no serubbing, is impervious to hot kettles, sheds grease as the prover- bial duck's back does water, and, in fact, cheers the heart of the kit chenmaid or housewife more than anything on earth. HOUSEHOLD 'TINTS. Soap will go twice as far va, I dried. It should be cut into small blocks. nod then arranged in tiers with spaces between to allow them to dry, The best way to keep windows frora steaming or frosting is to clean the inside of the window with 4 cloth moistened, with pure glycer- ine, wiping it so as to leave only a trace of the glycerine. An excellent mixture to remove grease -spots from clothing is made of four parts 'alcohol to one part of ammonia, and about half as much ether as ammonia. Apply •the liquid to the spot, and then rob with a sponge and clear water., To prevent a goose being greasy pare a lemon very thin so that the white part is very thick. Place this inside the goose just before cook- ing, and remove it before dishing up. The lemon will not only ab- sorb all the fat, but it will also im- part a delicious flavor to the goose. Shabby velvet can be improved as follows: First brush thoroughly so as to remove all dust, then spread a damp cloth on a hot iron, and over this draw the wrong side of the velvet. As soon as the steam from the velvet ceases the hot iron must be removed, or the velvet will scorch. A Nice Way to Cook Sausages.— Put a pound of sausages into a saucepan with one pint of water and boil for three-quarters of an hour; then place on a hot dish in the oven to keep warm while the gravy is being thickened with two tablespoonfuls of flour and a little browning. Season with pepper and salt and pour over. When washing a new blanket for the first time, begin by» soaking it Lor twelve hours in cold water, then -rinse in clear water. Thin will remove the sulphur used in the bleaching. After this wash the blanket in a lukewarm lather made of boiled soap and water. Rinse Well in clear water, shake thorough- ly and hang out to dry. It is very, injurious to children's teeth to allow them to eat brad • and butter biscuitS, or any farina- ceous food in bed at night, and to , chief secret of comfort lies in not suffering trifles to vex ite and in cultivating our . undergrowth of small pleasures, Tr Y to regard present vexations as you will re- gard them a month hence. Since we cannot get what we like, It us like what we can get, WEllill CEREfilOMY IN CEYttitt A BATTLI1 AGAINST DEADLY COBRA. BITE. • • Attempt to Save a Man Who Bad 1:1`13*47111SON.Fallen a -Victim to the Poi. Captain Walter Long, A-D,C, to sonous RePtile. his Royal ighncss the ).G'-e°aVresillooldr'„ a nTdhseulalitaia; heavde:leoern nonen;liolfY But and, has had a brilliant career in the army, He served throughout tjler,e- waa the preepeet of a change. the South African War, was fro- oillster eniall clouds which had aqnudentrieyeimveedntitehneedp,koldesopaaptethaileis fois;14,, 71;7:r tthheqiin.slu larger 1 heldU had been fol- Efj- joog. :nlilsarna.:lh,teeirZHI:lelomsatebsiLauneentg°f0, f awtella lBi aaenundug turl tetabhcrleknorth s t rewast e 4(1 a e tominoush eluding that of Chief Secretary for ;04aPrec)hre'd aLredsie„onotplYii;gt,h\evaiotliirargeed, by the first •skirmish of the ap-, proacbing -storm, The wind stead- ily increased in force, ard the clouds rose, darkening the region over which they passed. There, f m base to summit a str X ht separated for an ea Uri% c.kmass, and a momenta a distant rumbling reached 441 • oni the troubled heavens» s wee a steady ;subdued light eAstlng around well ;defined shadows. on tbe dry earth. But few persons were abrly 'allcio'nalliVheuNrcrtiePtthat oeeasioua1l by in tio hunoof caching his destinatien before- the tempest burst, tile road "WaS left to 0 dust, which was blown along in diagonal linos, says a writter in the pau, Mall (4azette. in one of the native dwellings tha lay hack from the road, crailyx\ver cd .1 palms and a wealth of tropica ation, &young roan lay he - life and death, He bad been Cntaia 'alte Long, C. Ireland, and who was o of tho three in the running, the other day, for Ilalfour's Into position, Like his distinguished father—who ' the idol of the squires 451:1 mon of England—Capt. Long exeole in field sports of all khaki, lie ;a 0, gond polo and cricket player, an Ncollent shot, and a keen •cross- untry rider, For three years he discharged the arduous dirties of adjutant of the famous regiment, tho Scots Greys, COVNTING TRE STXR Dutch Astronomer Says Nun About 842,000,000. ia BITTEN BY A COBRA, and an inclination to sleep was over-powemng lore than proceeded his fervor iricrea,s , un til hismovements became He was a°:0EM,QpaPniAedi?liNisiAspearo dio gestures and grotesque- postures, by the other dancers. $tiodeuly they would become motionless, with bands outstretched, singing to the unhallowed tamping of the ton toms; and then, as momentarily, they would ,bend their knees .almost to a sitting posture, and advane. by slow and convnisivo. steps, while their trinkets tinkled and theuwiW eng ad c tetiors -to the tempest, THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSO INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DECEMBER 31. 4. 4. rr• " .4 4 74. Review. Golden Text, I. -4`.c.'n 1. 0, If we confess our bias, he is faith- ful and just to forgive us our sins, and -cleanse us from all unrighte, ousness —1 J-1 1 9 shaken night, 'Then their move- -,--TOhaettrlauethfilil'fillims eLnet'E'30°In pTi!oapc1111:es; men,ts would become anOre tihrie theelialbaitxthoof strerek(kmig.1.44St°17 CMS until they had worked them- selves up into a frenzy, in which tbe tottituta beaters fell ted ;10fT.L.a.oev4e‘imea,n3—e.Totosliseolevkthat4thte Xing The latter struelc the)i;PiaerstieliPUtaentsi 11 all 4) save est.—Tho re. with bare hands. and with, great a a,", df 0:mTeo,niaal,el tehxeprteissmieoncea.nte;taintgbethaecir. se to PuPil:'5 I_ .„ faces until they assumed tile,. most viewfag of troops. eversee torm the esth .0%er nr: Pre aahnN),,,a.i',, amensde:I:vitera:portrfelelasols:iteed1,1:1:wih:os d habiqecl na'B's fleIndn' 'tteitrn;:s4i76 'a, .1 'cleft 'ijr:ei tnhfi-jrn:g,'Dsb: c'e verohoolecusti41:1:g4;, Iw treme, for the flevil dancers clapped June. I saw some boys and young sueh mauner so wi/d that it a test. There,. for hours, they wjth had marched hack and forth. before 'Ow Xle,sseel the cc-,remony many times goverment 1113.-Pectc'r- and before. •4 aer.os.,,, up and down the field thoy Al length they desisted, and tl2 " went, They pitched then'. tents and emates of the hut grew more coin- /milt their camp Area, • Thny sholyed PPsell' The sitc'rea, too, had shown t, all that they beat slgUS Pr abating. The lighti*; was.; tiPn- NOt one nan4ift Ake. The ss vivid, and, except. i;ow and then', officer was "reviewing. ga,Ftt unnSuaily dazzling, it party and they were revmwing -lrab was assing away to other districts, they had beee. learning all o The thunder was heard (Ally ai year, tilstant ruirlbilivaa and the dark benk.i Lesson Stery, We have come -4:o of cloud which had heralded the 'a day like that in our lesson study. approaching storm bad travelled on We are to review wha,t; we have through its silvery fringe, been learning and to prove our anted Op ,:irejoo,nie 111,5's of the faithfulness along the way by what on. T" 11A,One,4,10W, UPP,A know now that tho review 'IV fresh vertu, SOOOOn ny too com- ha -5 eQmo. If we, Its,ve really studied Ire all' ' inaValatQdletharoniuQglif ththeco;n71 twelaitull p,,,,,k4lut7;ttiohjeis answers .° the red no rest th4 night, The Ka?, tehrean 1 I door Of (MO WIMSO mates had se- "who prophet was called to be a ala was stoopitig over the Pros- What wm the recuein=, of the vis - of the great strean;"that 00 ,ved MP bOneltil OW temple .; Who led the children 9f Israel .. their return from eaptivay?, Why ut thew lay a foundation for a Annm, n(Iii toriplel 'Who wrote % song of ' ce for th M I 'Why?, r *" ked her life W ping, of Rol- tsedhazizta ° 1 who interpre- 0 'What kind of leader l(r.,:" prove Inrusel le long r... 4 baak to Jeraealem ? Why did Nehemiah mako noble, imselfish prayer to 9 kill, ,- 11ow Was his nr.nyer an,w( c ' What difficulties beset him irt bis work and how dal he meet them'? What wls the Feast of the Trim- ,lei,tetltl\sliartnte,t,Ehinagw was it first eelebrat- a et prophecy'?" Why did he eoniel How long shall he reign 7 11,liom did he come to seek and to rave? trate. form of the ock man, All ap-, once he had closed Ilia VreFi and al-• P4relitlF was still. for oma 1k413 lowed ins head to drop, and for a. tune had resisted the frantic effort, of his friends to arouse him. The Kapura la had been sent for, and had just arrived with his company t dancers, tomtora beaters and -ers and ibex_ were now mak ng" preparations for the cermet* by 2neans of which they would en- denvor to drive out the evil spirits by which the sick man Was invested, They covered him in leaves end flowers, and erected by his side. figure representing the demon they sought to exorcise, and, near at hand, they placed an altar, upon which they arranged offerings of r mendous task, that al count- iloweiT, rico and flesh, by way of ing the stars up to the 19tb magni- propitiation. Then they left to don tude, has been undertaken by the their professional attirement. Dutch astronomer, Prof. Napteyn, Meanwhile, the storm had brok- who has collected all the material i en with terrific) violence over =un- furnished by the most recent dis- ' lain and valley. The rain descend- eoveries, notably those. from the ed in torrents saturatin the parch - American observatories, ed jungle and causing t m roads, to ,,„„,„,,,,,,,,„1,L„, b„,„„....„, Stars of less size than the 14th welter in. floods of inutld,y water that `'"'''''''''''"''' '''''.4'1'"'"g"" 111 ill° stricken city. magnitude are found in millions in rushed along tho conduits on -,the There were so few helpers fit corn - the milky way, and the work of wayside, The black screen of cloud • ' parison to the dreadful number hurt counting them from, photographic which had east a» shade over the that we had just to turn to and as- p.lato,s can best be described as land was now merged in the natural even in the operations, and Similar to .counting blood 'corpus- darkness of the evening. Tho »sistl give the chloroform to the doctors. dies under a microscope. lightning became more and more Tiny children ware brought to the Prof, Kapteyn plaees the total at "vivkl, and the thunder louder and 842,000,000 stars, the average beim; more terrible. Flash after flash wharf hospital. One mite of a few weeks old, as black as a little coal, 20,400 stars to tha square -degree shot through the black mass, Mem- It bad been of the heavens. He has further heating the surrounding, country Was weePIng sadly' _ picked lip in the street, and went of Paris earn from 2.50 to 5 • n caleulated that the total light and revealing tho outline of the ad to sleep in, my arms as we carried (50 cents to $1) a day, emanating from all the stare is Picea mountains and then again round the food and oranges that ter amount <Ally whe equal to 2,324 times the luminosity leaving all stooped in darkness. had been sent by Sir, Alfred ones is given after hours of a star of the first magnitude. The thunder made the theart of the My black piccaninny made alt the small sum these girls, According to the Dutch scientist bravest leap. It was a. Wal - the boundaries of the universe, as purgis night indeed l—a night when patients laugh, even in their misery. are from, fourteen,. to One little boy, only seven or of age, must find iodgi far as human ,science has been able the whole company of evil spirits eight, was there with his mother clothe themselves and to penetrate, extend to 32,000 light were awake, and holding corn - years. 4, respite the extraordin- s of the devil dancers t nr n 2 The face WAS set, and t e a tranquillity about that aused the beholder to gaze a it earnestly for SOMO minutes, Then,- ceirq that his rites wore unavail- g, he turned away and taking the offerings of food and flowers from the altar as em,tom allowed, stole aut ini.9 the cool night, followed by his companions. The eobra had prevailed. CRILIMEN Affecting Incidents BeIated JJ Eye -Witness. At the of the earthquake at Kingston, ;Jamaica, in 1007, Hugh Oakeley Arnold -Forster and his wife were visitors at kingston. In her memoir of her ;husband, Mrs - Arnold -Forster tells of some of the 41 04I PAY OF PARIS SEAMSTRESS. Midinettes Keep Body and Soul `o gether on 50 Cents Daily. The midinettes, or seamstresses, munion in the neighboring jungle. and two other little ones. The from long distances, as The intermittent light showed in mother's legs were broken as she afford to live -only th each puddle, in each drop of rain, was pinned under the fallen. brick-- quarters of Paris, where WOODEN AMMUNITION. work of her house. the little bov chean. or on each leaf, a sudden sparkl- ing a,s of SOME DEMON'S GLANCE, that blazed for an instant and then as quickly disappeared; and. the "my babies" and watched me chatting, often singing, as sc feed them with much delight. Ev- munches her noonday meal, wIr',4 creed and Gerald de Souza were usually consists of fried potata two other little brothers, very re. or a piece of sausage. She NGO The -villagers had sought refuge fined and sweet, both of them hurt, long hours under( conditions av in their Luts,*and despite the rage who lay holding hands on one mat- with few exeeptions----Ire,- deP of the elements, were endeavoring tress the first night I was in the able; some of the big estib to sleep. But one family were up and hospital. When I fed them, they ments however, have already dos could not rest, for there the Kap_ insisted on knowing my name; and much 'to 'better, conditions. urala and his strange associates still' holding my hand, they said their Each midinette is a specialist conducted their midnight orgies over prayers, Praying for me very sweet- her line, as she does only onp,,,t1 • ly, and I tucked them up, and and can hardly hope to lea-. have a highly eccentric flight and the fleeting soul of the unconscious • hoped to see 'them a,gain. But on to make a complete dress. Th are c•alculated to do about equa,1 native.•The company had return- ,. Three years ago -civil war was raging between two Afghan tribes, the Ali Khel and the Mala Khel. The latter tribe built great hopes of success on a -cannon of such a size that 100 men were required to draw it. A Sikh trained in a British battery was engaged to work the gun, on the understanding that he received 20 rupees every time he hit the village fort of the foe. This did not prove renumerative for ac- -cording to an eye witness 'the am- munition consisted of "olive wood halls bound with iron hands which had scrambled back over the totter- The Paris seamsfress ing walls and debris, and had midinette because sho is scen saved both the babies, Ile was the streets .at midi. or ' midd very little hurt, and took me to see where she strolls along* siriiI4 , thunder; the music of its infernal gathering, .accompanied it like a blare from the Bracken itself... damage to friend and foe." • After d h • • I tl • e nextamornine their people reust of work, however, res,ults a, three days bombardment, in . , WhiCh the fort was bit only three times, the hostilities Came Co an end. THE. LONC.4 FOREST OF AFRICA. One of the great natural treasures go. to sleep with ,I-Sarticles of such of Africa, to . the need of preserving e the teeth. I f •w itch attention is eing irec e , is . state t a one vi mac , ng an lingine t e s 1 b " t ,‘ lass. le i slowly injures' the enamel. Clean that extends, .almost unbroken from of dernon,s., They had white King,- Edward °Teen by the purehase. fetched them away, for they apparel. The dancer's wore short have cotton 'skirts, puckered • up into were gone, and I clia not see thein flounces, and round their loins were again- . . thick leather girdles, gaudily. de - QUEER 11EMORIALS. , de- corated with colored buttons and metal knobs. Their breasts were Except call attention to the covered with a network of bea.ds in feet that, we are all mortal, a hearse concentric circles, and meeting in seems a verY queer memorial to the mechanical expedition. All is prepared for the seamstress& the premiers and the,,see-ondes/ wno; after the piecework is done, 6 eembie the various parts. h emoroidery which is se much . a feature of Paris toilettes is usually - done outside the aressinaking es- tablishment, in big.' tooniS-7,,,,,i the middle under bright discs of famous dead; but it was, recently oer t embroider workers exc srvely during the night; becomes, acid,- and -the irmnensa .extratropical forest 'done justie.e to the most whimsical had decided -to keeP Tliememory of such a velii.ele. A hear' -e also the chilelren's teeth the last thing the extreme southern end alon,, inetal crowns, tho castellated rim.s of every night. -. • -• the eastern highlands to the 'equal7- th.oesaecisse°vf etnIle, \oviellaavneile'sn' tascdo'finpflraol,netd, lce°nIngmreemigontaotfeQs itthecerilnYaincytovriiia.t.171esTahilids If it is necessary "to wash corsets. or. These are gaps in it, and the take °lit tlie steels in front and trees change in kind somewhat witli sil-v.er 1-lle an arraY of feathers, and is at Eurghers.drop, in Cape colan5,, sides. Lay the corsets on a ii.at siir- change of latitude, but upon the frameach hung: t''inket's and Pe' -'6 svhere the natives bought a gorge_ face, and with a small brush c'et'llb .- , it has i yi , t , ants an all varieties. Round tllgir ous llearsc to carry their dead to them thoroughly \vith a tepid or throughout. The attitude above neck's and on 111°,1' arra,, and feet the cemetery, the vechicle heari,?). ,p• ravel teal,- and the tt, • TI + 1 running, tap until the soap is all Natal and the Transvaal its altitude • . to erect - •a drinking -fobiiiitain in the inscrip ' - • le arsic,e .1 eolcl lat,her of white Co,stile soap. the sc,a changes regularly with de_ were a wca,Ith of ornament, neck_ a plate with When quite clean let cold water ron -ereaso of latitude. Ncai, the Cape lae,es of heads, heavy bangles, arm- ',Queen vietoriameutet,isi Hearse.), ' e Pa -1-11 les seale t is us -'d in a lionevcoml) o on them bv lioldin,g them under a the forest grows at sea -level ; • in lets and hollow 'anklets filled with facture of New York some time ago decided 4 000 1,1,i , 000 ,.The ceremony• was conducted in honer of the, rueme,,y of a eeiored hair, hat rinsed o' ff. Pull them lengthwise increases to 3 000 f ' 11 ' ' i(),000 feet, In the eqnsterial high' the features of the perforiners, but -Niemoias near Ravenna, in Italy, it ii ps32: u, a pulling them again when partly - fie e LACE FROI)1 HUMAN HAIR. Lace made from human hair manufactured in Germ lace is made in strap is held in place diy wax, .0therwise the and on approaching the °gnat_ thelight 0 a sina cocoanut oil pugilist, while even criminals are 1, ' = ..t d until they are straight and shapely feet; and let them dry in a cool place' or it riese to 7,000, and finally to lamp' which barely 'sufficed t° sh'c'w not witholit their monuments. la31 IS P'I'l e o very yi,,,,,,,....; the lightning, gle.f.iming almost with- put up a StatUO, to .the memory of, we drV. .,.. ,• •lands the ,growth is , , '' out intermission through the open the notorious Orsini who tried to '3. i - and the forest is an rich with the To make llre ilaPPY, 1 a ce time, c ' .1 d' 0, f kb ' doorwaY§ ill„atf.e. lint !eih' iths shA'r ['ic<ml- assassinate Napoleon' III. He • -it is of no use to fume and fret er e el, e al o,' Y8811113' • ItTS- ta,n t, represented on wav.. ec 'dangry housekeeper who dvin holdo han s ,StiTtET:Y butter, , a teaspoon, !melted; -sugar, .bas'get,lield of the wrong key, and , . twisting • himself about, the , . ne7third'cuP`', eggs fourj,:mu,st;a-rd,,,,,[.puslies, shakes.' 'aaid.r.,att,ls,ita,b.„,orit Ic..epii.res, was chantin. ,g stral.ig,e,, or,o' a teaspoon,, tuade, lock ineol rit an, in which the, 'What, aalki?An ater • '*elt 4 , 44140,p, " Isa aa; fa `ir