Loading...
Exeter Advocate, 1912-1-4, Page 3POLI5E1101.P TESTED RECIPES. 'Chicken Turnovers.—If you have too small a quantity of chieken t� serve in any other way, try c1t- on tutelovers, Mince, the meat fine, iesaeol with sant, pepper, apd a pinch hef -nutmeg or mace, end moist/era• well with eold <thicken gravy, Roll out zonie short pie trust, and eut in rounds the size of a fiancee'. Wet the edges with veld water, place one tableepege of meat dotted with bits of butter, en one half of the rend, fold over the other haif, turning up the reiges a little and pinching them well te- gether. Bake ie the oven or Ery in deep fat. Graham Bread.—When mixing epouge for five or six leaves of white ,,•ead, take half of sponge, add scant half teaeup of eookipg pomade earrante, one-half pounuh molassee, two tablespoons of sugar, -citron, one-qaarter pound candied and one eup of white flour. Thee lemon pee), eme.half pound ground mix with fine. grenind graham flour almonds, tire teaspoonfuls vanilla, sate a smooth, herd loaf, not sticky aness. When light, pet i fltns and let loaves double in size. eke a trifle louger than ,Ord'inary white bread. Homemade' Sausage.—Use two pouode lean pork (fresh), one polled fat peek, three teaepeons salt, three teaspoons eifted gage, two tea- epoone white pepper, and put through meat chepper, Almend Sterpretea-Dissolve .011,0 package of raspberry gelatin and half a pa t of granulated sugar in one and a. half pints ef raspberry juice from canned fruit, as this imparts a better flavor; strain it, thee tand away to tool, Wheu it is elightly stiff stir to it elf a pound of ground or rolled ehoeolate almond; put it in the re- frigerator, and when perfectly firm et1rve icy *old turned ant upon glass dish, or in individual glace punch glasses, with one tablespoon - of whipped 'create on Op of each cup. Th ie. well to prepare all dish. es where gela,tie is used the day be- fore they are required, thus giving them ample time to stiffen, and voiding anxiety on the part of the eoolt, Banana Bisque.—Beat one white egg with one tablespeon erealn; heat one-half pint eream and elle- half pint milk m chafing dish, italt, pepper, and add a pinch of celery Galt. Then pour in egg mixture, heating or stirring until smooth, and lastly add one sliced banaea. Serve with spoonfel whipped cream on top, Cheese Dainties,—Take two cakes of cheese; mash; add tablespoon aweet, cream or mayonnaise dregs- ing aed one-quarter cup of finely chopped walnut meats. Mix well with a pinch of salt; mold into balls (size of a hieltory nut), saving a small portion of the nuts to roil the balls in. These can be served with. salads *r as a relish in place of olives. Quick Lemon Pie.—Prepare the crust in the same way as for oils- te,rd pie. Take yellow rind and juice, of one lemon; add one -cup of sugar, ene orip of cold water ; roll and add four sodacrackers and yolks of two eggs well beaten. Mix all well and pour into the crust. Bake same as custard. When done cover with the well beaten whites of the eggs to which has been added ono tablespoon of sugar. Put back in oven and brown. -S-decota,sh. — After soaking a qua.rt of dry Lima beans over night, rinse well; put to cook in a gra- nite kettle with cold water, and let boil about twenty minutes. Put in a teaspoonful of baking soda; let slimier for fifteen minutes; pour off the water and add fresh boiling water; a tablespoonful of sugar and the same of salt. 'Let cook• until tender, then add a, can of sweet corn, also one-half pint of sweet cream, a lump of butter, pepper and salt to taste. Set back on stove and let simnaer slowly about twenty ' minutes. Cold Tomato Sauce.—Peol and chop fine half peck of tomatoes. Drain through colander. Chop fine two large stalks of celery, two large red peppees, half cup of chop- ped onions, half cup grated horse- radish, one cup of -dark and yellow mustard seeds mixed, one cup of brown sugar, half cop salt, one teaspoonful each of ground china,- ' mon, mace, cloves, and black Pep- per. two teaspoonfuls c1 enspice, and one quarto „of the loest cider vinegar Mix well together; put cup water. Bail until syrup will thread, thee pour it over the el - monde, which have been mixed with the stiffly leeatee whites of two eggs. Beat until eool enough to spread; let stand twca days; thee ice. Boiled Toing.---Boil one cap, of granulated sugar a pinch of cream ,of tartar, and ent.-half cup of water until It spms a thread when drop - teed from the spoon,. Pour it on the stiffly beaten white of one egg; continue heeting until etiff enough to stand alone; add flavorind gan spread quickly on the cake with a knife dipped in het water,. Fruit Oalte,--Oreana One-half pound butter, with one-half polled sugar, oue-half polled and two minces flour ; brown half the flour in the overi; generate the, yolks from the whiteof eight eggad add beaten yolks to first mixture. Put elle teaspoonful of cream of tartar into the 'avliites, beat well, and add to mixture. Then add the flour even, sifted with orie uutmeg grated, three teaspoonfuls of cas- sia and one-fourth teaspoonful of ground eleves. Reserve flour enough te dredge two and one-half ciee teaspeoutil essence of ratafia, glass brandy. Mixture will melefieitely, Sponge, Calte,--The hest way to make sponge cake without powder is by taking eig eggs, one eup of powdered sugar, and one and one- half tablespo-onfuls of vinegar. Beat well, then add one cup of flour gra- dually, and Stir while adding flour. Then bake in elew oven far one Calte.---To three-quarters cup eiagar add one teaspoon butter, one '"'e milk two eggs two heaping esea e teareoons baking powder. Stir an flour enough to make a good,bat- ter. Put in shallow baking pan. sprinkle over top with ehopped peanuts and cinnamon, and bake about tweety minutes in moderate •-en, AROUND ITE 114013'SE, A 'convenient way to keep belts, ribbons, and eollare in order is to use a curtain stiek or old cane. Wind around it some 00Iored cam- the.' ',G.-;:e"ek,s used eradiesPlor their teeing or other distortion of the brie or ribben. Place two lar e egildren, hut the Romans did re - 0 . .e 5 re sonaet m 4 tTO 'Ilitet =lilting or 111:°"1 resentatioe o their devices hear- ing L;teirleti hooks in wall so that they exte tarmoDs QF TraNsp TRE LITTLE BABIES, .1 urious Superstitious emu; Dadien Tribes in This Oanneelion, • When the Arst niother picked up her first child, to carry it from where it, was to where elie wanted it, the first step in the great busi- ness of fetehing and earrying was tats mad ardetreucerainjeTes' at the food. aboutr„Y; feet long ling wirier at the head, To hi the conventional heel made of kins, was fastened, The Utee ud Nez Perces similarly form their -adies of kite -shaped beards, tee beatitifelly ornamerited, to hielt the bed le attaehed, with Protective hood, to shield the in- fant' face and head froia the sun and elements. Dugout cradles are made by the Indiane of the North Pacific cozen and basket, work cradles by many tribes of Cali - fernier Orogen, Washington and Nevada. Often the basket, cradles are made like little -chairs, in which taken. Since then many thous- the baby site, with its feet free. ands of devices for earrymg the No doubt this departure from the baby have been trine; but it ear,. usual custom is due, to the wildeess not he said that the oldest et all of the 'climate' lihtdie cra411'21 problems in traffic has yet been consisting 01 a number of vanes or finally and satisfactorily solved, sticks arranged in an along hoop The New Guiaea baby, says the frame, are used by the ITc`ia'vlese PlillndelPhia Record, liyee in a. Yumas and Wiebitas. The Apaelies, ovt the eniisei rsuspendedloftalnovtwes gferzoimurt itstIthrt rridg ewatfehirloel .* ing, and osikteiic nbagonadrtdhPe en,Q1 io:4hEr dmillao) :lei type, 'atnl Amerieahead with a. hoed or awning. The spend Plea of their time in haw,' 3-'1Zaralos make the bed °lit of skhu mocks. The Afrieelas never laj heavily lweed with leather thongs, vented any oereca for tee coneenrl but the Pueblos usually make use immo of their little canes, either at 1,,,1°I cluths Purchased frolu the' trail - rest or traveling. Usually theing stores, for the bed. negro mother gathers her child in Afost of the tribe e phece bands er the folds of her shawl or other ger- c'r straps upon the r' -id fram° ment, It it hermene thet ehe the cradle* so 4rran,r;:(1 that thY wears no garment to serve 45 4 ean he Ouced ar°‘111` thP mc'th°'''° sod a sing in which to carry the foreheao, permitting the cradlit to belay, the youggster elinga around rest upon her le'aela The burden her neek, is thus well distributed, plums; no Wheeled carriages for babies unequal etraiu apon one aide ox the were devised by lairopeane, body, as is the ease with the method sistiug, in their simplest form, err of carrying the babe eornmoo to an oblong frame with a ernde re_ the mothers in civilieed 'contemn- ePtaele for the infaet, and two ities• Frequently another strep sole attached to Om oross1)(ir., is 'laced Aq the top of the rigid re commonly European moth. frame, by which the eradle may be and Areerieen mothers ef swung from the Pommel of a sad- Eubrioops.an descent earr s_their ale, susPended from the limb of ba upon the left arra, riF alt tiee, er hung upon a nail driven in • , a u 4 i 8 t ru n g e I Y eucm gb 3, tile I u eu- a n• m h" l'' (:iao:oltil:elaurtie):'ittibael?:qta iswefbor.rearQrnIcIgleeirr:ghuri;sbt-.1:iaet:111a::4'41:cei;a1 Psbve;:;101°'fiu.i7.-irre:ribt:vee:11. 91111etQxu. tuhle temple methods of carrying the baby this the wall of is the woret, wreeching the apinel THE INDIAN'S CABIN, DISTORTING THE BODY, ; or nevex Pineen the cradle, fa +1 sl. her ae earryiog the Oltrist.ehild ira leaned in a nearly epzegat posi, kb—eir:gre34:v a-tslIP45:4Vp!ial s .11: dr .kg:hylielir Stt*1:1:e5;:nr ads °hen: P 1 7° he:hilort:r.°1 3 , Pletures, of the 11I5.4101111a. represent th° 443)Y 31/` t' il" 141°11 ill° S trap the nneient Egyptiaes Red the an- `c"livsuuPP°Tt' Ii11°'''s ur British workmen escap4d. eient Hebrewe carried teeir child, peds of fur, hair, shredded bark .or In 13v, while Edward was estabe t n astride their shoulders (Isaiah feathers are always used, often in !iusrbredelvibeerfaorpehiliOapipaaiswetansticillistasgheiTioidn ailILt v, a ' - P9 I doasear a way intended to produce a flat - "S r./IBUCT Philippa, Wife. of d Ilia Save ed !ANT§ of .11,"rong-doegs, The Edwards of England. hay been eeveral member, and for the. mest part, of pleasant mem- ory in 'the land. The story of their marriages, too, makes better read- ing than that of many othee kings— from the first Edward, erecting reorial, 'erosses te beloved Elea- nor, eYGn to the preeent day. The charming., stories of the wife Qf INTE a DAY 74 o o Luk°e t Tet, r 0 bolward wPo Alexandra rse 1-rierod, ki"' judaear." the gracious came "from aere-s The first os HeroOs menti°ned the Noeth Sea." are revived by in the New 'Testament and founder Mr. A. Peal -twee in "sae Seven Edwarde of England." Whatever I/15X be the, derearids of the modern period, it is well that in those Of an Idumaean Munly which far, rulers fQ,14„co,itulhge cillawliat j,;:fd.?sf werc, nni,szhee,d, 247 r kings wed ether troubled daye some women stood Bered the Great and Teigned rrorrt tbougbts tidr Palestine awl adjacent ccamtriee, He is h-nown alISQ ae. with the eirl Philippa, across the aellarlas are set? an foot., Nat leered by Jehovah." Sipes tae, time the marriage w Of the Count .of ilolland and Hain, hecu 411vided into tweaty-fonr North se17,n,. an,d uegaiiatiau.s tc-,r "e, r.ere,ning tcraLly “rernem7 long. afterward phiiippa, dangftterr of David the Jewiele priesets had prat, WaS CrOWned. cpaegn„ groups or l'emerees," eaeh of which Neer Eleanetes oresa, in chea.... retatien was responsible for the - side, a eplendid pageant, waa (gar teiaple servieee for one week. Each played. Icnights of England ebal- would, thus o elate twice a • „ meervat ei.x menthe, et Absjah --es tee fie said to e,; -e ofriciat- and -October. ler:Aaron-- T ai bro1 of the lenged their feilOWS Qr thQse 01 year, France to the eecounter of skill. T.be cours The roYal family was there,' and ' eighth, an the queee, with her lathes, were e,t1 in Ap seated upon a, temporary woodee Danghte etagieg, k seeedante In the mielet or the exr 'ait' a4SeS) an and gutter a this scene ot viii heod tri the queeiee platform gave wa 6. Ilightoeu,5 she fell, together with her . . pietas gebrews, ainidet the heoken timbers, grandtether, wae furious with the 9' ri:11 eulit("11 °1 t the insgtbeient strueture, arid er4 f"atiwis wh'Wh 'ea -ch would have bad them killed br group cd .9t5cating Prie5ts cruelly punished. But your:- rerf°1114. °3-1Ue WQ/414 °ffio Iglward, with the. hot blood o his °Iw'erv4Ilee 't:14e' maeter workmen who bad put lip tlee Was t'') de6de' by t Ged—O "ti t philippa played here, the.parth ni the 'Nutt of the temple at the al tar he has beewne ortel of burnt offeriug. Zacharias%ot hiah and, Provided. for that purpose, or tile deraulteng earpeuters.,4 this manner, although it is :34PC' t• • t leau or some other and soft 1.oree and the lan epees ae bunds say that, Ale AON'Qr did it. Both . . otrcenIng. since ed twiee dely iert watinn the templet ately in front of Iv of Holies, ngel of t, nger, slightly. Place yeur stick en hooks rug some res3embilaWoo to those 11;o4i where on the cradle, to serve as and you have a neat rack. This by the Sioux Indians. * rattles and phothings for the rip- :-_aves much time and keeps your by cradiesllin-Udeh the child poose. Ofteg_ii.t' harms and_ amulets hnreau drawers tidy. ' is Placed and tightl f heed • t -, ure Prurhie4 iu^ th° hclief that they Firm Pasta—Take two ounces of ped there, are touid in 'f)Northernsl''9- will keep away evil spirits from Pulverized gum arabie, one and one- Europe, Northern Asia and North the ilmmahleirtie°susaustu'peratitionn survive half *maces of fine seerele and one- Amereia. The cradles of the. Lap_ • • , Diseolve the gum arabie in as much with a hood for the protection of to the cradle. Among some of the various tribes relatmg- half ounce et granulated eugar• handers are hollowed out of a. log, "mug water as you would me for the the child's head, ante Samoyed the tribes of the far north it ie starch lei:Heated. Mix the starch cradle is described as (fa. box ebap. customary for the mother to take d sugar with the inuelage; then ed like 4 GOniu and laced with the cradle ae SOOD as the child has cook the mixture in a double boiler aarrow strips of bide, in winch tee entgrown its use and secrete it ie should ho as thick as tdr. It can The Yukut cradle is said to be, Placed, wrapped in furs:, a hollow tree or other seeure place in the woods. It le their belief until the starch heeomes clear. It ellild is of the Tongus, inhabiting the ahores that any injury to the cradle will "shaped like coa,Iscuttle," and that be kept indefinitely by the addi- tion of a teaspooeful of camphor unfavorably affect the health, lifo lined with reindeer fur closing up or fortune, of its former occupant. or a few drops of oil of cloves, 1 of the sea of Okhotsk, is e. box Make Individual Towels.—In theAmong soine of the tribee &squaw 1 t d t ell the tightly, with a velve el leather for crc'u 11°' . . The baby's bed and carriage, oracle an whieli one of ber children the admission of air. made together or with the bed firm- had spent the first months of its ly attached to the carriage, is 'rem- life for all the silver dollars it re mon to almost every one of the med- yvould hold. Among other tribes ley of peetples of the Ruesian era- to use the same -cradle for more than one baby 'would be considered , , , . . AN EXPENSIVE AUTOGRAPH'. pire, including tbe Georgians, Tar- an lisPealtaule imPletY• 1 A favorite ammo:tient of society Among the Pueblos the cradle is in vecterien days, says Lady tars, Nogais, Kalmuck's, Yeltuts, Buriats, Ostilts, Samoyeds and a sacred object and is handed down Dorothy Nevin, was the bazaar. Y o to the first married daughter for . Many great ladies became ea 't . pei others. The general sireilarit f many generations, as the most high- in the art of wheedling visitors 4f,..to bathroom of a certain well regulat- ed hoesehold, where there are SOY. - oral small children, there is a row of little white towel hooks and above each •oee is printed with white enamel the name of the own- er from ?Papa" down to "Baby," and last, but not least, "Our Guest. Put Salt in Lamps.—Putting tablespoonful of salt into kero- t le,se cradles to those use y le vent le lamp from exploding, but sibly, be considered an areument 6 may, pos. ly prized of heirlooms. In some paying generous sums for use,ess communities a notch is cut in the articles. However, the victim of Sene lam].) after filling it will Pre- North American Indian t tl will not mar the lighting quality in favor of the opinien that the frame for each child that occupies "brigandage" named by Lady of the oil. American tribes are of siatic it These people believe that Dorothy—in "Under Five Reigns in —himself invited disaster, and was • 8 O. " To Remove Wall Paper.—When origin. the sale of a,eradle would result I red to in Dan. . 9. 1 and taking off old wall paper if a s_mall CRADLES USED BY TRIBES the death of at least t besides, quite able to afford it. his behalf confhet with the reeots; theneht and when her work was done, the in"t-erla-eniiate heriug,Peee? valient queen went over to Caleis, init., her huseagd. among the Sadduceeti, Who "not, without trial and danger,''te 13'eliet them Was C Mal.CM And there, in a scene that Neill skePtics rcanY Pciirds eef fultb never grow dim in the pieturergat, in orthodox Judaism., lery of our imagination, Philippa 13' 1`°1131—'"Meau'i"g litera/17 on knelt before the king and wits:tied fever of Jehovah."' Fuller notes in for the lives of the burghers who, John the Baptist will be given NhveaaiteddediubyshEii?tstaanedit4b;tileterStiol:iiieertr:1; Tet Studies fQr rbruttrY arnl their townsmen. Greatnes Eighteen years had passed since, Lord is by' the in her wedded girlhood, she lied knelt in Cheapside to pray for the master earl:enters. She had berme Edward many children, and had journeyed many long days' jour. neys. "Lady, I would thou hadst not asked it of lee," protested Edward; but the clay was won, and the six condemned mon were clothed and feasted. abstinence -ire drink. The posit tributing to the is iudieated in the nex he shall be filed with h Spirit. The negative element out the positive would have beee incomplete. 17. Go before his e—The faeo of Jehovah, signifying his preeence. It was to be John's function to ea. nounee the nearness a Tz,homh to his people and the approa Anne, manifestation of his presence in the birth of the promised 3iteeelab. The spirit and power of Moth were those of a sturdy and feeriess .g prophet of righteousness. For the Old Testament prophecy alluded to, compare Mal. 4, 5, 6. 19. I mei' Gabriel—Two engeis only are mentioned by name in the Bible. These are Gabriel, refer- c,Miichia2e11,m3encition? jedrin. Dleon.h1.0. 1'e y all these tribes nd peoples, ems •e r ,em lo ed at a bazaar - ' ' e te/"' P ting your paper it 1,1,in not dry as in- that occupied it. In case of the g Silent and not able to steak when wet with water but seeks Oa habiting widely separated regioes death of an infant customs vary as was Probable* that devised by the , d 1 paper, which easily is removed from wall or ceiline Did you ever hear that in the spring of the year, when ,ehills and colds are more easily taken than at any other time, primroses and cowslips in a bath are most excel- lent sedatives'? One to three hand- fuls of these flowers suffice. he sight of the aesoeiated-11;i:h ee and st,rong elernent eons ikVs One of the most ingenious strata- . THE LAST CAILD quantity of dissolved .glue is added Mere probably the cradles used to water with which you are yvet. g c were devised to suit elimatic eon: to the disposition of its cradle. The famous writer, George Sand, when —.,- sign, an ea the same time a created v the nomad" habits Pueblos k'eop it for use when an- holding a. stall at a eharitable safe rebuke and Punishment fel' Iser're— the people. That the 'cradles nomadic . of and Apaches break it up, burn it f other child i born The Navajos in avor r P les. Baron James de Rothschild hap- i 21. Marveled while he tarried-- ditions, or becanse of the needs lief. • . • •,14 WHERE POULTRY PAYS. , China, is the greatest poultry - producing nation in the world. the more than three hundre-d mil- lion population of China shown. by the last census, there are few in- deed who cle not in the corse thin.- in the • ti teods en, 'eyed for -fe t advance' but, the ,yumas and for, the sum mentioned, Passed °31 the first age -second chaphee•-, ci differences in the materials used are . P s 'with the 'antograph. semble those of the tribes of North glace it upon the baby's grave. Pening to pass, the fair saleswo- Or, at his tarrying. Priests were America is doubtless due to the face- In some tribes it is customary to man addressed him' with the usual expected to perform their duties the tribes of Russia and Siberia re- or that all lived largely by hunting t, . place the dead infant in, its cradle request to purchase something with promptness and precision and , ,. . They, therefore, devised beds for. vet as in life, and to bury the `What can I buy'?" asked the then retire from the sanctuary. baby and its bed together. This baron. "You have nothing that I 22. Had seen a vision—Had been of can do anything with. But stay 1 vouchsafed some unusual revelae their little ones that were easily appea,rs to have been the custom transported, and in which the the prehistoric cliff dwellers. and idea strikes me. Give me your / tion in the temple. acciderital injury on long journeys, tribes it is usual practice to break ' Madame Sand promptly took a the Walopai and 'I'onto antogra,pla. Sell me that." 0 . • . ...3 When thedays of his week of service in the tem- tration were fulfilled—At the end babies were reasonably safe from Among .. . ... ys of his minis - Although tliere, is a, certain sitnil- and well- protected from the cold, the oracle in pieces and then throw sheet of paper and wrote; "Receiv- throw the fragments away in Some ed from Baron James de Roths- pie. arity of design in the ci•adles used wild and rugged spot where they child the sum of one thousand e t * t f 11 t -''- n order o apprecia e u ,y i by the tribespeo 1 f North are unlikely to be found i francs for the benefit of the dis- p e o• charm a,ncl beauty of Luke's ant - America, the whole, way from Among most of the tribes pre- tressed Poles. George sand." . ductory narrative covering Alaska to Mexico. there are oreat parations for the advent of achild M011SiellT de Rothschild read et, eee childhood peried of the made b fashioningthe cradle thanked her, and .pre.senting Jesus one roust read, at a - a year, eonsume some e ie Way -of poultry-achielrens or ducks , ,aese.--;e1neln 'certaiely a 'large TEA DRINKING- IN SIAM. eninf_c the babies in the receptacles San Carlos Apaches wa in. the child's wrappings and in the little one is born. The San ,ornamentation., ,Many of these ----------------. s inake the cradle to number of. eggs. Ducks are pick'o , _ he len, dried, tinriecl, and otheraeis divergences may .. traced to ell- ' erved arid shiPlied to manY /natio influences, and. the, natural it. SC)CM Outgrows this 'first rceePta* 1 TO is to be found in every tent and in. conjunet.ion with AI:It-thaw ti are awa.. from a home seep ,. r, ,e a -narrative co -vein -3e the same period a' larger one ' 4 dwelline - There is always ' d k ng a ed. will ke,r, for of P• kin - s as use', ze e• etre Many of the tribes of Alaska and usually for diffe_re.nt sty e_s o „,reoared Loi rill. ,r., in" two quart glass jars and. seal. it all d , 1 ir sy, atici ,., nee s n0 000 ' '' ' cured by-buryin... in Pi iy arid 11M-0 l'qoy ignvesterti celled% cradles °radio for girls and boys, making -,lci ' h .di., • --II i itt .., • . , • bad Of courss Gospel. Our four lessons for a,ry are devoted to these two eh ters. This makes possible then repeated reading, both separately/ Pies ' `C ` who • - r s f the regions an 'which ber that tune y rtn , G -o el men - 1 t)"ft • fill d with tea. and (matt. 1 alla 2). Eaeb. - 'the woeld, to` ..h.n se w „ :Parts ° • 1-- Eges . . .ready for its .u.se,. , The .unsa, kettle on t . le. e • - . ,.; f event,„ 1 2 ir which " tions •clifter,ent. sel_es o , , ear. - • • ) . • - • • • . •3_ b one y a n /in "t.", e,./.and..aceording to tile peculiar interest CAE.F,S. 'cASehloi. cheese. Theerlairek;ss a• -•'"e fern, of a trough:, adorne,s; berate an•d -sparing neither. labo .6 -his beverage, and is said to be and purpose of its 'authe'r, ' uneil,41,tey acquire son e of tee of ber,decig 3,,,r -to er,,e. those , oys , 17101e C , egg.. this the.i„ way of. fr2caeg ,i1"6;ield$1feitif,-1`,..ianaiense esueatiteee. poreP,pip.e, 110-Liig, it nor exPense in' their adornment; ploasaartijeer .one • bOommes. acn cts.:- • eTillie,Oensiv..9.`Foilnd, ,---- farnitP"i:.-141, it,P4**, „ oanOls, and r'"irel's' With' • Th Max and oth-- ..` So `the cradles.'ipacic. .the unz.„. tomod to., . A re61}liar mode,. of affeleoile-halt'elips flour add f Chine, and er tribe's , =Ike thed...cradle,s °lit eolith squaws are not m -ere 'articles ,herpiteeite is shown ey these pe,2_, ne • ' ' ' ick- , • , of raercliandise) ,to be baugh..t't likee in .re:f erep,ae, it DOESN'T PRIN'll ST.ALE NEWS. 8888884 n alf 'a-i'e 'much aic"' ';',5,9Mria°n (3' • a ti d into the sli.:1P0 a 4) h,of arde,„ Ita .-10 -Lair ,est of sin -Des' or, any other article. is a_ 1-avay,, s at the -dispOsal'°f r;gq.asiret.he " .44-1,e'e,t.tert °fie ,', 'The r,b,a1e;:,4"wAelet5alei. '0°1.12,1' tc.inredaih,gial e Oat thie clac ohf. eyafhplaa- 5aein,edee-itlitre,°, eN'v,l-tnoe.a•,\.-tyrapYos.we-,h,e,s1S1 "es e itgar alad , t , ,rti is the is the newspaper Tdr. Titinnu se. " responded the ,. Bea ' 'lex.'? 1 e ,:" o n fi '1g:trhoene-North do with i.iroi.:-1• )i"thei• • aate etis_ leaoshtal•by bugleY,stal ;..1 ev,i t,eLe--1,,'otrh at he sehortt 44 -i' ;. 1/d.n pele,te giu, e , `th'eir ,niohvellierltS With Kee -lark- The - Cotes nch os ant o • . o ha .r- dainsbAndYearrgP• tCs0t 10 •e zi . 5e. iffeto1re5°I'idP:17l\eaXil acodttglyeyeYjlar 011(8 r,nfto -great cities Eoh i,.h1lIoed1iiesa diesied sltais, to , • • • ;mi • •,,,t a•eiteraliv made R.ry v,e, been, t„, aeer-pree sTrotd;,,i, .and ornar.conte,,f.1, ilea ace,<)1...cae ' 35 pocrisy '••• "I‘Aai•e5,: leasL with the best ttnau fh Ike ann. procott,. 11 141 affix' e 1 11s aper s • VS 41