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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1905-04-27, Page 2A Comedy }# In Mourning 1. A clout. rod -faced uutn was seated at the table next to ours; a corpu- lent. vulgar -looking individual, with Il,•artsl, watery eyes, and a large, Wiley bald head. The man disgust - ea :no. lie carried with hint au air of stair complete satisfaction and smug pomposity that I inwardly marked hint down as a hypocrite and a humbug. lie was "]tumble" in- carnate, only he had exchanged his par,chial uniform for badly -fitting evening -draw. "Awful -looking creature sitting next to us!" I whispered to my friend. Sir Charles Settee turned round, glanced at the roan idly, raised his eyebrows, and the two nodded to ono another. "I apologize for what 1 said," I whispered again; "I had no idea that he was a friend of yours," "Only as acquaintance. Not ex- actly beautiful, is hes answered Sir Charles. Sir Charles relapsed into silence, and the subject dropped. Presently we heard the hoarse voice of a nowt/boy screaming through the streets. "Assassination of the Grand Duke Sergius in Mos- cow; latest details; official." The fat, red-faced man immediately ordered the waiter to bring hire a paper, and, looking over his shoul- der, I noticed that he paid no atten- tion to the account of the Grand Duke's murder, but was engrossed in the sp.orting columns. "Your friend doesn't seem much interested in politics," I said to Sir Charles. "Doesn't he? Them he's a wise man." "But this assassination is a ter- rible thing. It seems that more will follow." "Probably. I have heart all inter- est in such matters." "Since when?" I asked, with a laugh. knowing that my friend had been for years entbrolled in the sec- ret matters of State. "Since the murder of Prince Nich- olas—some ten years ago." "Yes, I remember—terrible, wasn't it?" "Very amusing, I thought it," answered Sir Charles, with a slight twinkle to his grey eyes. "Amusingl Why?" "Because I was in Warsaw at tho time." Sir Charles knocked the ash off his cigar and called for some more coffee, and told me the story: Some ten years ago (he said, in his quiet. monotone), I was engaged on certain matters in Warsaw. Of- ficially I was an English tourist, busy collecting materials for a book on the Polish people, but I may tell you in confidence that I had to per- form some other duties of—of s— well, a private character. Ono of my duties was to know everything that took place in and about War- saw. I knew a greab many thing's that were not generally known at the time, and never will he known to the public. I knew that Prince Nicholas, who was loathed and hat- ed throughout the length acrd breadth of Poland• owned a private house in one of the statuette of War- saw. I knew that he used this house as a retreat when there seemed more likelihood: than usual of the people putting their openly -expressed threats of murder into execution. I discovered, one evening in Oc- tober. 1894, that his hiding -place had become known to his enernies. I called on him at once, and he re- ceived me very civilly for a itussian prince --that is to say. he treated mo as something between a dog and a harmtleos lunatic. lie raged and C stamped about the room, kicked t some of the furniture to pieces, and r sworn that I was mistaken. . a "i inust tell your Imperial High- t nerve again that this house has been b (discovered by the Revolutionaries, and that you aro henceforth a mark- s ed man in Warsaw," I said obstin- ately. d t 11 r posits to the empty house, and the announcement naturally caused a' flutter of excitement throughout Warsaw. Alae, he developed a ha- bit of reading and going through his papers • tory evening in a front roots looking out into the street. On these occasions the room would bo ablaze with electric light. and the head and shoulders of the prince were perfectly silhouetted on the window -blind. Such conduct as this you may well say was suicidal. Still, everything remained quiet, and the prince wrote me a joking let- ter, in which he laughed ab nw fears and express e d the conviction that he was the best -loved man in Poland and Russia. I put the letter into a curio box, and replied with five words --a lull before a storm. II. Then carne the night of the catas- trophe. I left sky hotel as usual, and I walked briskly in the direction of the princes residence. There ho was, as usual, seated by the window, and apparently engross- ed in his books and papers. The room was brilliantly lighted, and his large head was perfectly silhouetted against the window -blind. 1 looked at him, cursed h.s imprudence, and crossed the road to the empty house. I felt along the crevice of the door for my pin. It had gono. I recognized the significance of this in an instant. Someone had opened the door and had entered the house (luring tuy absence, and my pin had been dislodged from its po- sition anti was now probably buried deep in the snow. 1 glanced up hastily at tho prince's residence opposite. 'There he sat. nodding over his papers, and evi- dently completely unconscious of his danger. I stepped back Into the roadway and looked up at the win- dows of the empty house. What I caw sent the blood running chilly through my veins. The bottom of the second -floor window had been opened about two inches, and through this tiny aper- ture, pointing straight at the prince opposite, was thrust the nozzle of a gun. In an instant I had bounded up the steps of the old house, thrust my key into the lock, and flung open the door. I stumbled blindly forward in tho dar•kne•ss, and the door slammed behind ate. As I reached the tint landing I lurched forward with a cry of horror on my lips. The deafening report of a rifle -shot rang out through the sil- ence of the night, and T heard the sound of splintering glean. T had come too late. The unknown murderer had accomplished his task. I felt that Prince Nicholas was a dead man. I was too excited to think of personal danger, and with a wild heart sprang madly up the stairs. In the darkness I stumbled again. The door of the second -floor front. room was flung or en upon mo, and the concussion nearly- knocked me off my feet. The next moment the re- volver was wrenched from nw hand. A huge form flung itself upon mo and dragged me, panting, to the landing floor. The murderer had elated with me. I was fighting in the dark with an unknown miscreant, who 1 telt would think more of a pinch of snuff than taking my life. One of his great hands was on my mouth, but I gripped hint firmly round the body and we rolled over and over to- gether in the darkness. Even at that moment, when my life hung upon a thread, I heard the hoarse shortie of a crowd rising to us from the street, and I knew for a certainty that Prince Nicholas had been murdered. I remember wondering why the as - sateen did not stake use of the re- volver which he wrenched from my grasp. My brain seemed to be on Are., my heart thumped desperately against ray breast, and my eyes strained in their sockets. Then 1 lost corm -internees. Dnrknoss roweled into my brain, and 1 f+ It hat 1 was dying. The giant hands mind my throat never relaxed their wtul grip for an instant, and I felt he life being squeezed out of my civ. My senses were cleared by the plotter of a match. hardly realit- ng whether 1 was alive or dead, 1 ragged myself up to a sitting met- ure. A lace peered at net throu;h he darkness. and d sank back into nknown arms, transfixed with ter - or and amneenumt. I wee in the arae, of Prince Nich- olas hirnself. (►uteide in the street i could dimly ear the pxeo;'le shouting that Prince! icholns ons murdered, but the Haan inr.velf was before me in flesh arid lood. "Not a word," mid the prince, Ith a grin. "But what does It mean', What as happened'!" T gasped in won- erment. "It menne that 1 ant dead, that have shot myself. 1 will explain verything only you niust keep Met. You nearly spoilt everything ith that shooter of yours. 11 it nil gone oft we should hnve beenseovered. Now, i believe you knew het 1 ant—or, rather. wn.—the best seed man In Russian Poland. My fo was not worth a minute's mu- erte. T know this rind determined end it—to end the horror of an Oriente blighted by the prospect f imminent death. t knew sooner r later i 9henld be nsvnssinated. 50 (letern1MAA to do the btisl►less nes- t?. I took the mansion oepo+Ile o empty house for that purpose,. very night I placed a wax dummy myself by the window of env sec- nt-floor ronin for the same pur- pose. But nobody shot me demmy n, thoutrh I waited for over a week, net nt teat 1 wits obliged to do e Ilene myself. 3fy two net -tants i re in the secret; my heed Is suf pos- 1 to have e.m 9tneeheed by a rifle - diet: diet; noel in a few (late the I oily n ttnssien pen•nnt. who eked this r. ill he interred with Royal iie consigned me to the nether legions, and told me in plain Eng- lish that T was a /far. I left him and his house in rather a had temper, but. before leaving the street I noticed that the house int- imediately fronting the one occupied by Prince Nicholas was empty. This h looked rather serious, andbefore the N next morning I had a key to the h empty house In my possession. soonh As as night fell I left my ho- tel and Nipped into the empty (heel- W ling -place. 1 examined the rooms ofl and ices with scrupulous care, and h found nothing to excite my suspic- d fon. At the same time I was rie- tennined to keep a close eye on the I old mansion. a9 it afforded an ideal e place of concealment for a would-be . q murderer of Prince Nicholaw When w 1 clotted the front door I silently in- h Pert -(l a tiny whalebone pin in the di crevice between the deer and its t fronts. it the door was opened the h pin would he dialoged, and T shone! 11 know that somebody In my abeenre ch had entered the hnmme. ! nutnaged to nettles so well that the hone, ons ex token out of the flans(; of agents, o need WAS no longer advertised for o Pale. Thus anyone entering it did 1 20with an ulterior motive. so All went well for three day',. Every th night 1 made it hutting -we huttinse to walk E through tho street and exninine the of door, end the head of Hey whalebone o pin was fast becoming dlscolnrecl with dust f began to think that al things were not 90 serious as i had n 1ninginel them. th Meanwhile, the condert of Prince a Nicholas can only he described as in- e( sane. Ifs caused It to be omefally ht announced that he was living with of only two servants In tho retreat op- p• honors. That will be the funeral oft Prince Nicholas—and 1 .hall attend the ceremony in a private capacity." "But—but what du you profuse r • - do now?' el'0 live et n►,v e.+se as a private ge•ntlenian in that sleepy-headt"I country called England." The crowds were still shouting out in the streets when the "dead prince" let me out of the old hate,• through a back entrance. Next day Russia was in ari uproar; Europe also. 1 attended the funeral with the prince's two faithful servants. As we looked at one another the al- most winked, and it was rather dif- ficult to keep a straight taco when we saw the prince, himself. standing with bowed head, amongst the crowd of onlookers. That is my little story. • • • • • • Sir Charles Saave drunk up his coffee and relit his cigar. "Shall we go to a theatre for an hour's' he said, with a yawn. "Yes, I don't mind." As we rose to leave the restaurant the hideous rod -faced roan, who was seated next to us, nodded to my friend twain. "What a dreadful -looking crea- ture!" I whispered, as wo walked out. "As I said, ho is not beautiful." answered Sir Charles; "but the newspapers used to call him very handsome when ho was Prince Nich- oia.9—of holy Ituasia."—London An- swers. DOGS AND DEER. Travellers' Adventure in the Wilds of Siberia. Tho strength of heredity, both in wild and in domesticated animals, is brought into clear light by an inci- dent related in a recent book, "In Search of a Siberian Klondike," Tho authors of the book were travelling by dog -team through the wilds of Siberia. At tour o'clock in the afternoon the dogs suddenly broke into a swift run, and we knew they had scented something that interested them. We soon perceived that we had struck a deer train, and that wo were nearing an encampment.. Wo turned a bond in the road, and there, a hundred yards ahead of ns, we saw the cause of the dogs' excitement. A team of reindeer were running for their lives. Their Tungus driver was lashing them with the whip, and was urging them with all his might., for he know ns well as Wvo that it our dogs overtook thein before the camp was reached, we seven men would bo utterly powerless to prevent the dogs from tearing the (leer to pieces. Our driver put on the brake with all his might, but it had not tho learnt ef- fect. The fourteen doge had become wolves In the turn of a hand, and no brake could stop them. 'There were many etetntps and other obstructions along our way, and my driver had great ditlicult.y in prevently a smash- up. For a short time the deer held their own, and in fact gabled on us; but before the porta (village) come In sight wo were gaining rapidiy. 1' While wo were still at Dome distance the people of the village, warned by the cries of the dogs, comprehended what was the matter, and awning t themselves with sticks and spears, came running toward us. As they B came on they spread out in a fan- 1i like formation across the trail. When the terrified deer reached the lino, the l men spread out and and let the team' u through. and instantly closed again io to dispute the passage of our dogs. ; a Our driver was nowise minded to let the nutivee club his dogs, and i s Perhaps injure the valuable animals, so he resort -:l to the last expedient. ! m Giving a shout of warning to toe, he{ suddenly, by a deft motion, turned! at our sledge completely over, landing st Inc in a snow -drift on my head. in this position the sledge was all t to brake, and the dogs were forced to to *.top. They were leaping In their har- m nese and yelling like fiends incarnate. tt I sat up in the snow -bank and laughed. The other drivers had fol- lowed our eeantple, and the strug- ai gling tangle of sledges, harness, dogs and men formed a scene t hat to the novice at leant was highly ludicrous '17to drivers and the Village people were belaboring the dogs, and the entire herd of reindeer ►eelunging to the village was escaping in all direc- tions up the hills. The reader may well ask how the 0 natives can use both dogs and relit- ea deur, if the sight of a deer has such ig a maddening nRec t on the dogs. The wi explanation is simple. The two never e. f__f4l,itui 1Nl.! T moved. Dredge the Ash with a little! ARE SIR 1NGERS TO THEM flour un both aides to prevent stick- t a big, and cook it meat site down. 111 your tire is sufficiently hot it will COUNTRIES FAMED FOR CER• 11 brown tory quickly; then turn it very I TAIN PRODUCT;- . • carefully to pre+est breetking, and _ About the ....House finish evoking on the other side. Re- move the too pieeve of fish very carefully to a platter. Butter gener- ously. Salt while cooking• Raked haddock is very nice. The �MNltillrM�1.01,61141►l►i t fill way bo put in Mu oven in an NOME 1)e\ t \'1'1 LI:illl :i, i open or a covered pan, with salt rubbed tour it, and generous pioc•es Roman Sauce.—Yet one teacup of of butter upon it, for those who real Turkish cut&w in T+:ri.eee l)t water and one of milk on the ►ire to from principle do not use pork, It scold. stir In a tirbl-spoun[ul o[ may be stuffed, or not, as desired. smoking the authentic 1 gt 'tion cig- dour and throe well beaten eggs. About. 40 minutes will usually bake antic's in Egypt? U( eating rich, Season with (Tepper and salt, two a moderate.sized fish. The water in ►netting, luscious Smyrna figs in ounces of butter, and a tablespoon- ful the Pais which has come from the tintyrtta? 01 washing owes hands of vinegar. (toil four eggs, slice and lay (,ver the dish. Servo with boiled tongue, beef, venison, or liar. Chicken Curry.—Singe and cut tho Egypt Produces Poor Tobacco, and Turkey's Cuffec• Is Very Bad. What traveler has not de • :teed of EIS drinking genuine curacao in the lit- tle island where grow the °run;,o grove of Curacao? (11 siepiug the fish will have absorbed some of the with the only original castile soap butter; if not enough, add more, with: in fair Castile? a little flour, and you have your }tow do these travelers' dreaut3 gravy. 1 materialize? Alas and alack! They ehickeu al Use joints and remove the Haddock may be Cut in a thick are but clouds and shallows. 'They breast bongs. Wipe, season with salt piece and Lolled, like halibut, and it don't come true, says a writer in and p,e•ppxr, dredge with hour, and hs very nice served with a satire made the Argonant. brown each side lightly in hot fat. by rubbing butter and flour smooth-; For in the beautiful Met in the Put it into a stow pout. Fry one, ly together and adding hot water tel Leeward Island group tvh re grew the largo onion, cut in thin slices, in the 't while stirring rapidly. +gtroves of Curacao orunse fess in hot fat left in the frying -pan, till Haddock cut in small pieces, dip -u Lho aforetinte, Vlore aro now none. yellow, being very careful not to Ped in Indian meal and fried, is aka' But the world, being used to the burn it. Mix one heapingtablespoon- have1 very n[re. ]tut we wonder how Horny. flavor of the Curacao orange++ in its over tried beef fat instead of ful of flour, one teaspoonful of sugar,' curacao, will tolerate no other. do and one tablespoonful of curry pow -i Porktor lard to fry It Lt. It is the world has its way. 'l'he liqueur der, and brown thorn in tho hot fat, adding a little more it there is less than a tablespoonful. When well browned, add slowly ono cup of ora- tor or stock, and one cup of strained tomatoes, or one stew apple, chopped fine. Add more salt and popper, fine. Add n►ore salt and pepper if needed. Pour this sauce over the chicken and simmer one hour, or un- til tender. Add one cup of milk or cream. :Arrange the meat nicely on the middle of a large platter, with hot boiled rice ter a border. Your the sauce over the meat, and serve at once. Potato Pastry.—!Toil some nice, dry potatoes, and pass them when cold of roosts. 'There are possibly several many places, the tobacco comes front through a sieve or masher. Take different arrangements which would 'Sontewhere Else. The highest grade three ounces of mashed potato, three bo equally satisfying to the eyo and tobacco there apparently is imported to com[urt. But in rooms of ntodor from Europe—from itounrolia .The ate size, having found the most suit-' next hest comes from northern Syria able position for largo objects such' —the beet -known grade of this to - as bods, sideboards, bookcases, it is bacco being known to leur•opeans as bettor not to make any change in ; "Lasakhia," although not so called these. Ono is sometimes surprised at ' in Egypt. Persian tobacco is also the unnecessary, projecting awkward- imported. In short, Egypt imports Hess of, say, a tvatrdrobe, and when the tobacco, the wrapper», the boxes the person responsible is asked why and the sinekcrs, and then you have she put it there, she will probably the I.gyptinu cigarette. reply, "Oh, I thought I'd like a "But still," contends the enthusi- change!" in carrying out our plains ast, "there can be no coffee like tho of alteration, do not let er overlook genuine 'Turkish coffee. Ah, think of the comfort of the master, or, ln- the Arabian nights! And Scheherce deed, of any roan of the household.' zade! And lady \\'hat's-ift,r-`':ono, The with change man dohs not like to the English peeress who wore Turk - eels with in the familiar o e ish trousers, lived in Turkey for j+rts of the room ho lives in. The years, and sipped 'Turkish coffee with ,•h;iir he Likes best ought always to all, and you will have a very dainty- 1:a in the sumo place. 1)o not from Turkish pashas. And of the bearded looking dish. 1tICIO love of change, rrmo:o his book sheiks in the de seri—with bubble - bubble pipes—and harems of heauti- tho quantity of root ginger you ro- rack, or the small table which holds tut flack -eyed houria►—all sitting on yulre into bailing water Query night Isis newspaper—not even to what ono divans—and all sipping coffers—with and morning for fifteen days; then re- aright consider a more aI)ProPrinto all the comforts of a home --out in move the outside »kin with a sharp place. The comfort of all the mom -,the desert! Conte, now! You must - knife. Boil the ginger slowly in wa- bers of the household is the first con -give in on the Turkish coffee." ter till quite tender, and cut in sideration. Do not sttggeest reproving! P0011 COFFEE iN TURKEY. a writing desk without the user's un -1 To this I can only reply that they qualified approval end consent. !lav may have had good coffee in Turkey ing made concession to the material In the time when Sultan Hai -oust -al - comfort and confirmed habits of the itnschild walked his city's streets in - other members of the family, wo may cognito, but they have not now. You lacing in jars. indulge our tickle fancy to the throe- can get, better 'Turkish coffee (so Lemon Curd—'Take two lemons and tion of picture -hanging. 'There are called) In this country than in 'liur- 'ti many of our own pictures with which key; you can get much better Turk- s we are little familiar, because they ish coffee in our first-class hotels hang in rooms or in situations where than you can in Stamboul, l'era, we seldom giro them more than a Scutari, Smyrna, Beirut. Jerusalem, Passing glance, A yearly interchange or Cairo, of some of these is a source of great now about the luscious figs of interest. A chane of horlroom plc- Smyrna? Well, my experience was tunes would be agreeable to the most that the nearer we got to Smyrna conservative men. Of course, any- the poorer grew the figs. \\'hen wo thing which is specially a personal reached Beirut they were pretty end; de Poastsslon, or which is Peculiarly when we were off Smyrna, the ped. to ono There idutl, ought not to (Ilurs brought. some aboard that be metol. is, however, a great were very bad; when we got ashore charm of its kind in the house which at Smyrna we were offered some on never varies the details of its turns the quay that were worse; in the lure. .. i hotel they were wormy, and when we got into the heart of Smyrna the BRIGHT PARAGRAPHS. flgs were aide to walk nround rho dealer's counter. What Clever Men and Women Are I used to be very fond of Smyrna Saying. figs before I went to Srnvrna. 1 have not eaten any since. The three qualities I admire in aany again. avec er and ore wholesome than curacao is still made in large quan- ta and if tho flavor of the pork' lilies, but it is not a Curacao Ilryu- ta desired, a slice or two may bo used for that purpose, eur. It is made out of everything +—as it Is an orange liqueur, ovti1 of ARRANGING FURNITURE. I oranges sometimes; but the Amster- dam house that hanrdles it largely is To most housewives one of the do- said to make it mostly out of po- lights of spring-cleaning is the op- tato alcohol and prune juice. portuuity it 'Words for giving the EGYPTIAN TOBACCO ITA i). roosts a different api earanco by the re -arrangement of the furniture. When How about the delicious Egyptian every armee, even the heaviest, has cigarettes? The delicate legeptian been moved out of its accustomed tobacco? Alas admin! The native place, the inclination is strong to • Egyptian tobacco is so 1 ad that no - try their tercet in different positions., body smokes it but the natives, and Tho natural love 01 change is grati- not even they when they can get Aoll, as if wo had got a new suite ant/thine else. In Egypt, as in so ounces of !lour, ono teaspoonful of baking -powder and a pinch of salt. Mix ali well together, and then rub into it with the linger -tips three ounces of lard or good beet dripping. Add sufficient cold water to make it into a stiff dough, roll out, and Viso for pies, fruit tarts, puffs, etc. Ilam and Eggs with Itico.—First boil a teacupful of rico till tender, and dry before the fire till each grain is separated- Put a tablespoonful of bacon fat into a saucepan, add the rice, season with pepper and salt, and make hot. I'ut the rice, etc., on a hot dish, and arrange on it slice.; of fried ham. Place a lightly poached egg on each, and serte. Scatter finely -chopped parsley over lengths. Prepare a syrup of one pound of nugar to every half-pint of water, clarify it, and put the ginger in it: Boil till clear. Allow the Preserve to set quite cold before x outgo; of loaf sugar, rub tho agar on the outside of the lemons ill the zest is ail removed and only he white pulp retrains. Put the su- ar into a basin and add the strain - d lemon -juice. 'I'a►ke four ounces of utter and make it hot in a basin on ho stove, then pour it on the sugar nil work with a spoon 011 thor- ughly dissolver!. Grutunlly add lir eggs to this mixture. Lastly, (Id as much cold boiled potato as will make the "curd" of a nice con- tatency. Potted Rabbit may ho made a very avory course as follows: Take it co fresh rabbit, remove the liver, dneys, etc., and stew in a little oak tvll h ono onion stuck e eel Was a carrot, some celery, and a w allspice. When tho meat is quito rider. cut it small, and pound in a ortar with sufficient cooking butter r moisten it. Season highly with I shell osier eat ►lt, cayenne+ pepper, a little mnce, woman are: Beauty, urw"ltiehtueav, Never mind why. d, it ncce'sary, a little powdered gentleness.—T. I'. O'Connor, in Castile i found no castile soap. a Ispice. A few drops of anchovy I su9{u Ct that five or three eerie bey rlid not know what T meant; sauce with help this relish, soil should furies hence, po9terity will think of they had mover heard of Caatttle soup. bo thoroughly mixed. When all 19 us ns snvngca. "ir Oliver Lodge. This irritated mo. so I began inves- pounded smoothly place in jars, press Why rho so moray women spoil rnen tigatink the castile soap problem. down, and cover with run butter. even ns they ,poll horses by too 1 learned—or was told—that castle, The hones and vegetables can have a lavish use of spur cord whip, and »c►np is not made: in Castile: Is not s little more water added to them, and bearing rein? •")tits." !sold in 1:a»tile; is not uwd in ('ns - will stake exp -(lent ~crop. our minds find In books what our tile• that it is nark in Mar„•ille9 out Brown Broad.—Weigh seven pounds bodies fist in our surroundings — of olive oil Inq,orted from 1'alestInc. f wholemeal flour, put it into a health or disease, according to ourThus we note this strange anomaly n. and stake a hole In the centre. constitution.—Sarah Grand. I—rho some given to a so p comes 11 two 01111(8 and a half of yeast No one is too old, too young, or from n country which knows naught th one quart of warm water, pour ton feeble, to take some form of of this pnrticulnr soap. it le tnnnu- rrkie i o etnoup;h lflmurn ntovitltto storm oonexercise; no one is too strong or too factored in a city using little or no healthy to do without it.—Dr. F. el soap, out of materials canting from light hotter; dart aunts flour Durr •Sawyer• a country which uses nn soap at and set to rise for one hour haler r sereible people could wish to o fire. After thlr time the dough • exl,rrt to sec a war between Cer-all. 11 have riven and the veal will to many and Greet Britain. Tho Ger- • ncke,l Then wutk in more water .man fleet is Intender( onl for de. WHY Wl•: MUST HAVE SLEEP. d n deaaertspxloufui of salt Until fence.—Count yen Rulow. y :Tome curious and remarkable retie have kneaded all Int,, a light No business firm o,r ht to sons are assigned for the desire ugh and all the 99310 has worked g gfre everybody has for sleeping. It is your hands. yet this to rise for credit to a woman anti norime the husbnrxl is liable without finding attributed by some people to an me hour, revering with a clot h. cumulation in the system of the eke Into luaus and hake one hour. out whether he is going to ray or y t. ...1.41 I. \\,. 1.. Nolle. peis<rouns products of the wear un l e, put un- pound of white Aver to Af this bread is browner than you ; nopresiglt 1 110S who de the hard tear of the body during the day. pounds of Whole tocol. work ore the purrest paid, thus,, 'ncere wems to be sone measure of wh1ose work is ensu are better re- truth in tha, for in many dis.eas a munerateel. whilst those who do no- the patient,. are often sleepless. Art - 1\'A\"8 07' COOKING I1.tilix)CK. !thing receive nn►st.—(i. iI. Shnw. other hypnt),eais is that the n(rte- 'Id you ever have the bone rernov in these p•rew, grinding tiniest re- I cels of the brain dw,•11 apart from laecntions. hedih' and mental. are each other, a9 it were dorsa; sl ep. from a small haddock and broilrho brain is coinpostierl of million, of over a hot Are, remove it from the auptremee nee'ssltir•s. and nowhere ran Mel' 10 a platter and cover ir..nuen1nl rnlrtxntion he trn,n(l more tiny hodie9 cadl0rl cella, each hating th a gemeru ,9 r(unntily of buster, readily. cheaply. and elf a rly than in several delicate p,rolong,+tb e r IL and i'epper? .fust try it. it is fiction —John Oxr•nhaur. hrnnrhes, for the prurpoee of cone ole:-f,lshinnal way 01 serving an I 'l lie -hill and the man oro alike munitaling frith other cella, {then s called broiled scrod, in the gouei ti"' pr•e('ttct of heredity and environ- !the brain is fully active all th •se I date'''. 'This way of cooking stent. No one deserves prefer or cells are in with one , or ready to be Wel- in contact, with onanother; hie the ck was practiced more generally !Annie, reword or pnenahnemt, for time accnrirmnily comes, it is ten the old-fnsl•:lnn(el grid -iron wee comfits -I d+te eels lv to his here:llt v vogue. If ; eu are net fortune's. and environment. --hr. Alfred Russe.il thought, when the btheir 19 of nil mriih to pass• se en • of theme fan ty Walleye. the cello curl up, and their isolation Plea, and do t: t ,• i.. h to nae a �— 'rn+(ns that complete conrmenteatine ester. tthiCh :� lilticult t., , between the cells cease. The state nieulate, take a 1.. • iron fry_ SMALL O\F.N• I of body and mind that follows is Pan and heat it vert b, 't, p►t n One of the gnea10 t curiosities what we call sl•,•p. Thee most protr •y little butter in it, , t eno+;gh ame.ng the demerit ice, NI anItmnbs of Able eepinnntiot of Lep, however, ke 1' tie fish front stiel.etl;. 1,u? du' C4'. 1M1 :s :t 1 r :•.I ,.t r,1r1 • i •,,,aro to is that in eemn.. way or other the in- t add lent more ehtriig theetto:cing tee misses 5 e� 1'„ -.r•:,,f , •nein+ t,'rnel cnnditien of the relle it tc:•rs. 1'oe:r I'!+h, if p• „f+• 1, I1 . t . • •ugeal, In'ily from ,•th:rsstion. pre 123 r t the tnar:,,•t. , i!1 a,l .,1,• , • `,t i . t' „ I, i '''''l'r , •rat:•a' of di s:Intsheel sti- t0 teen si'iit Aen ;thwpse, all ,,f eh.• n ens et 'h • ,e•. r,e• , r • • I,s - • ' ''it', fut:t other parte of the 4 part tee. off end the bone re- 341 1.1. in h i :.t. t., go together. 'There is the dog roun- th try and the deer country, but they w( do net overlap. Confu9ion i9 Often a unavoidably caused by travelling tit with (legs through n d".r country, we but the notices do not take it in ill le. part, knowing that it they thetn- selves have to travel with deer through it deg country they will cause quite as notch ieconveoionce. an Ye ort ♦---- M THiST MAY As'1't)l; Nlt YOIi! lik 11 you want to appreciate temple 811 arithmetic at its proper t aIle, look at the following table: 1 time 9 plus 2 elrgal9 11. 12 tithes 9 pl+'9 3 equals 111. 12:1 1111108 9 plus -i ermine 1111. e(1 12:11 times !) plus ., equals 1 111 1. it 12:11:, titn,•s 1► plus tT penal, 1111 11. br' 1'2:t13ri tier". H plus 7 0g11519 tit 1111111 851 1231:,(:; tinges 9 plum 8 equals an 11111111. wa 1231:t6r78 times 9 plus 9 0411119 t 111111111. wl 1 time R plum 1 equals 1), in 12 times 8 plus '2 °punk, 9M. -n 12:1 (1, 109 R phis :i erpuale !►M7, art 1231 tittles R plies 4 e'iitnls At;7n. he, 12313 times M plus 5 a -view pgeee. ran 12:.1:di tiniest 8 plus t\ ',pude 1 in see r.rl. vet 1231:017 tint, a 9 plus 7 e'tu:hIs to 947 6513. mei l e:115(17M flue s g plus et o vial, pre 9A765132. pr. 12315't7M' times R wise 9 c;tints h:) 9871:,1:121 • hca